| Exhibitions |


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Visions West Gallery :: Park Life

Park Life

| 03.14.2024 - 04.26.2024 |

Artists: Travis Walker

Travis Walker combines expressive landscapes with references to the art historical canon and media of his childhood to explore the atmosphere and ambiance of the American West. Born in Tokyo, Japan as an Air Force brat. Walker spent a lot of his free time reading comic books, consuming science fiction, and drawing the world around him. Currently living and working in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, Walker continues to be inspired by his childhood passions, now incorporating them into his love of western landscapes. Painting on location, Walker captures the open skies, sweeping prairies, and towering mountains iconic to the West, while simultaneously adding a fresh perspective into each composition; Walker often inserts motifs from popular culture into his landscapes, whether it be Darth Vader or Uncle Rico of Napoleon Dynamite. Other works juxtapose wildlife, such as moose, bear, and deer, with urban life, creating comedic reinterpretations of classical western symbols. Join us for an opening reception on Thursday, March 14, 6:00 – 8:00 pm.


Visions West Gallery :: Lacuna

Lacuna

| 05.03.2024 - 06.08.2024 |

Artists: Jennifer Nehrbass

OPENING: Friday, May 3rd, 6:00 - 8:00 PM. Lacuna, meaning the space between, will include portraits, landscapes, and sculptures. Nehrbass’s practice of layering explores the multifaceted aspects of identity, place, and the concept of the in-between. This in-between brings us together or separates us; past/present, thoughts/dreams, reality/imagination. All the work in the exhibition has a slight nod to Dadaism, specifically Dada collage, when disparate images come together to create a new image. Nehrbass spends countless hours scouring the internet for the perfect vista for inspiration to create her meticulously painted landscapes. The many layers symbolize ecological layers, layers of history, layers of identity and perception causing an emotive reaction to the landscape. The dreamlike setting evokes a longing for a place of peace that offers a light at the end of the tunnel. The softer lines add a sense of flow alluding to the need to navigate together to have a peaceful outcome for the environment. The portraits in the exhibition most clearly demonstrate the use of layering as a visual metaphor for cultural signifiers and historical markers. In the painting, Rush, the oversized necklace, and hat are symbols of the greed of Manifest Destiny while the shadow line creates a mask alluding to theft. A second painting, Harness, has layers of Hispanic culture and Meso-Ameican imagery referencing the complex histories that has interwoven the Hispanic community throughout the centuries. Made of cast away objects, the sculptures in the exhibition serve as 3D versions of the paintings. Much like the paintings, each carefully balanced sculpture is painted in layers and organizations of color, which bring ordinary objects into the realm of precious.


Visions West Gallery :: The Best Advice I Have Ever Got Was From A Bear

The Best Advice I Have Ever Got Was From A Bear

| 06.14.2024 - 07.10.2024 |

Artists:

Image Credit: Miasma, 2023, glass beads, canvas, wood, acrylic, 20 x 20 x 1.5 inches


Visions West Gallery :: Electric Coffin Solo Exhibition

Electric Coffin Solo Exhibition

| 06.28.2024 - 07.24.2024 |

Artists: Electric Coffin

Solo exhibition: Electric Coffin


Visions West Gallery :: Beau Carey Solo Exhibit

Beau Carey Solo Exhibit

| 07.12.2024 - 08.06.2024 | 5 PM MST

Artists: Beau Carey

A horizon line plays a pivotal role in establishing perspective, depth, and spatial orientation within a composition. It serves as the anchor point around which the elements of the artwork are organized, creating a sense of balance and harmony. For a viewer this can be a way to establish place and start conveying a message. For an artist this can be a starting point and something to refer back to during the creation process. For our own Beau Carey, it created a challenge. “It’s this amazing pictorial invention. A simple horizontal line across a page makes a landscape. But it’s fiction. In reality it happens everywhere and nowhere. Consequently, I thought I needed to disregard it entirely or explode it. So entered the idea of multiple horizons in one picture.” - Beau Carey Image Credit: Wildwood, 2023, oil on canvas, 52 x 66 inches


Visions West Gallery :: Half the Day is Night

Half the Day is Night

| 07.12.2024 - 08.29.2024 |

Artists: Danielle Winger

Solo Exhibition: Danielle Winger