Thursday, October 28, 2010

Menlo woman opens new art gallery

If I have to write about another art gallery in this area closing, I might dump a bucket of paint on my keyboard. And I wouldn't even get anything artistic out of the splashes. I can't paint with anything but words.

It's been a low few years for local galleries, to say the least. So it was really (sigh) nice to read about a local woman creating a new gallery, even in the big city. Last week, our sister paper the Almanac reported that Joan McLoughlin of Menlo Park was just opening up her McLoughlin Gallery on Geary Street in San Francisco. The spot is focusing on "established European contemporary artists and local emerging artists." It hosted its first opening reception last weekend.

So far, McLoughlin -- a longtime art collector who worked for several years in medical start-up companies -- has an eclectic and modern mix of creative types. There's Iran-born Dalia Nosratabadi, who photographs landscapes and other scenes reflected in puddles of water. French pop-art artist Renaud Delorme creates collage-painting hybrids that often incorporate found objects such as toys and computer bits.

My eye was particularly caught by Christine Comyn's portraits. The Belgian artist depicts women with an elegant, historic flair that has recently been inspired by Marie Antoinette. But the medium is modern: Many pieces are digital compositions on Plexiglas.

Pictured: "Adieu le plus aime," a digital composition on plexiglas by Christine Comyn, from the McLoughlin Gallery website.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Powerful profiles

Doug Fort fell into the gang life at age 13, after, he says, "crack came into our community." Today he works in violence prevention.

His is one of five stories told in video profiles, all talking about life and loss, violence and rebirth in East Palo Alto. For those of us who remember the frightening stories coming out of the city in the early '90s, the stories are grim and powerful reminders.


Made by high school filmmakers, the videos are paired with seven spoken-word pieces by youthful poets in a project called
"Alive and Free." The idea, as described on the project website, is to "shine a light on exemplary folks who found a positive pathway threaded through the violence, or who had turned their lives around from the lure of gangs, easy money and violence."

One thing that struck me in particular is how calm Doug Fort was during his video interviews, how easily he spoke about the pervasive violence that must have left a terrifying imprint.

The profiles and spoken-word videos can always be watched online, and they'll also be shown on the local Channel 27 on Friday, Oct. 22, at 6:30 p.m. The project is a joint effort by the
Midpeninsula Community Media Center and For Youth By Youth.

Pictured: A peace-march photo from the "Alive and Free" website.