Top Ten of 2006

Featured in Austin Chronicle


Top 10 Visual Arts Exhibitions of 2006 (in chronological order)
BY AMANDA DOUBERLEY
1) The Gospel of Lead: Dario Robleto and Jeremy Blake, Arthouse
2) Public art synergy in the spring: Christo and Jeanne-Claude, The Würth Museum Collection, Austin Museum of Art; Austin Green Gates, Austin Green Art; Open Doors Collective: In Between, Butridge Gallery
3) Peat Duggins: The Moment That Changed My Life Forever, Art Palace
4) Paul Chan: Present Tense, Blanton Museum of Art
5) Again + Again: Cycles in Video and Light, Austin Museum of Art)
6) Candace Briceño: Nevermore, Women & Their Work
7) Jules Buck Jones & Caitlin Haskell: Beast-Footed Feathered Serpents, testsite
8) Videoperformance: Kalup Linzy, Erick Michaud, Laurel Nakadate, and Jill Pangallo, okay mountain
9) Luca Cambiaso:1527-1585, Blanton Museum of Art
10) Erin Curtis: House Painting, Mass Gallery

Top Ten Memorable Art Shows of 2006
BY SALVADOR CASTILLO
1) Kenneth J. Hale: New Works on Paper, Slugfest
2) Eric Zimmerman: Simplon Pass, Art Palace
3) Deborah Roberts and John Livingston: New Works, Studio 107
4) Chris Reno: Alectromachy, Concordia University Art Gallery
5) Katalin Hausel: Leaf, Gallery 3
6) Celebrated Skin, Butridge Gallery,
7) Birgitta Bjerke, Jenny Hart, and Whitney Lee: Fabricated, Gallery Lombardi
8) Jason Villegas: Repressed Burial Fantasy, Okay Mountain
9) Carla Herrera-Prats and Ursula Dávila Villa: The Burden of Decision, testsite
10)Christo and Jeanne-Claude: The Würth Museum Collection, Austin Museum of Art
Runners up:
11) Jules Buck Jones and Caitlin Haskell: Beast-Footed Feathered Serpents, testsite
12) Peat Duggins: The Moment That Changed My Life Forever, Art Palace
13) Liz Ward: Aqueous, Women & Their Work

Top 10 Visual Art Things of 2006 (in chronological order)
BY RACHEL KOPER
1) First Night Austin Big art, live music, all ages, free, all day and half the night. This was a Texas-sized art event and a great new tradition.
2) Repressed Burial Fantasy: Okay Mountain. Solo exhibition of works by Jason Villegas, who made lots of drawings, an asteroid sculpture on the floor that was the centerpiece, video art, and T-shirts with an Izod gator bleeding onto a Louis Vuitton logo that is seared into my mind.
3) Sugarcoated: Women & Their Work. With its megabright sherbet colors, this vibrant group show, curated by Lisa Choinacky and Katherine McQueen, had technical range and an energetic point of view.
4) Hitten’ Switches: Okay Mountain. Drawings that Michael Sieben and Travis Millard sent back and forth between Austin and Los Angeles through the mail in 2005. Really nostalgic and personally revealing, these are graphic essays about friendship.
5) duck, duck, GOOSE: Volitant Gallery. This solo exhibition by Matthew Rodriguez showed a large body of work with an added bonus of a memorable family history essay written on the wall.
6) East Meats West: Art Palace. In this two-man show, Austinite Heyd Fontenot’s graceful figurative watercolors contrasted nicely with Louie Cordero’s experimental pop art from Manila.
7) The Container Show: Stacked Studios. Held during but not part of the East Austin Studio Tour, this showing by 14 film-industry workers who made and installed their art in shipping containers out in a field was very Marfa and very ambitious.
8) The Downtown Show: The New York Art Scene, 1974-1984, Austin Museum of Art. Curated by Carlo McCormick in consultation with Lynn Gumpert and Marvin J. Taylor, this was a soulful show of work by many living New York artists and some who died too young. The inclusion of T-shirts, underground zines, graffiti art, gummy bracelets, etc., with the paintings and drawings added context and depth.
9) Blue Genie Art Bazaar: Blue Genie Art Industries. As they do every December, Kevin Collins, Dana Younger, and Rory Skagen transformed their warehouse into a staple venue for emerging artists, art-school dropouts, jewelers, and some of the best crafters in America (the Austin Craft Mafia and friends are in the house) to sell their art.
10) Father’s Day Show: Bolm Studios. Thirty artists made art, painted portraits mostly, of their own dads. The healthy intimacy in these works was palpable and touching.



POSTED: JANUARY 1, 2007


Art Palace


ABOUT ARTISTS EXHIBITIONS ARCHIVES CALENDAR 512.496.0687 - info@artpalacegallery.com We are open WED 7-9p, SAT 12-5p and by appointment. We are open WED 7-9p, SAT 12-5p and by appointment. 2109 Cesar Chavez, Austin, TX 78702 We are open WED 7-9p, SAT 12-5p and by appointment.

Location
2109 Cesar Chavez
Austin, Texas 78702
Map
Gallery Hours
Wed 7-9p, Sat 12-5p
and by appointment
Contact
info@artpalacegallery.com
(512) 496-0687