Posts Tagged ‘ grass hut portland ’

“Balls Out” Group Art Show at Grass Hut

Balls Out 2 at Grass Hut in Portland

Opens First Friday, April 2nd, 2010 from 6pm – 10pm

Each artist is doing a single piece on an 18×18 panel. and the option of doing a 9×9 as well. the artist goes balls out on it, working with all the magii they can muster. here’s the line up.

Artists: APAK, AJ FOSIK, AMANDA VISELL, ANDY KEHOE, ARBITO, BEN WALKER, BIGFOOT, BRENDAN MONROE, BRENT WICK, BRIAN RALPH, BUFF MONSTER, BWANA SPOONS, CHANMEN, CHRIS JOHANSON, CODY HUDSON, CUPCO, DALEK, DAVID FREMONT, DAVID WIEN, DAWN RIDDLE, ERIC INKALA, ERIK RAILTON, EVAH FAN, FAREL DALRYMPLE, JASON VIVONA, JAY HOWELL, JESSE RENO, JESSIE ROSE VALA, JILL BLISS, JOHN STUART BERGER, JOSH HERBOLSHEIMER, JUDIT NAVRATIL, JUSTIN LOVATO, KATOPE, KEITH GREIMAN, KINOKO, KIYOSHI NAKAZAWA, KRISTIN CAMMERMEYER, LARK PIEN, LE MERDE, LORI D, MAIJA FIEBIG, MARTIN ONTIVEROS, MATT FURIE, MAXWELL HOLYOKE-HIRSCH, NATALIE PHILLIPS, OLIVER HIBERT, PINKS, REUBEN RUDE, RYAN BERKLEY, RYAN BUBNIS, RYAN DE LA HOZ, SCOTT C, SCRAPPERS, SHAWN WOLFE, SPENCER HIBERT, TIM BISKUP, TRIPPER DUNGAN, WILL McCURTIN, and YELLENA JAMES

Runs April 2nd – 31st, 2010
Grass Hut Art House
811 East Burnside, Portland OR.

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STAYING PUT! Print Show at the Grass Hut Art Market in Portland

Are We Not Men? DEVO by Shawn WolfeOpening reception First Friday February 5th, 2010 from 6-9pm.

In an era when galleries and shops big and small are dropping like flies
Grass Hut‘s doors will be open in the same place it ever was. 811 East
Burnside right here in Portland Oregon
. So come by and have some handmade
teas from Mr. Tea and enjoy and support the beauty on their walls. Because they
just signed a new lease and are STAYING PUT!

It’s a celebration. Bonus points we will be donating some dollars from the
show to Art Loves Haiti.

Artists include – Studio Folk, Scrappers, Shawn Wolfe, Chris Johanson, Tim
Biskup, Little Friends Of Printmaking, Ian Lynam, Yellena James, APAK, Brad
Simon, Mauro Gatti, a few selections from Tiny Showcase, and of course More.

LFOP - Sprint Finish

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Skinner Presents My Guitar Wants To Kill Your Mama at Grass Hut

Skinner at Grass HutArtist Reception with Skinner on First Friday, January 8th, 2010 from 6pm – 9pm
Grass Hut ~ 811 East Burnside, Portland OR 97214

My Guitar Wants To Kill Your Mama
Sacramento, CA. artist Skinner will be attending the opening at Grass Hut

R.L. Burnside by SKINNER

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CALENDORK Show with 12 Artists – 12 Months at the Grass Hut Art Market

Calendork 2009 Art Show at Grass Hut

2010 Calendork Release Party, First Friday December 4th, 2009, 6pm – 9pm
Grass Hut Art Market ~ 811 East Burnside St. Portland, Oregon

12 artist 12 months
Original paintings and a printed calendork to help you keep track of all these days.

Artists include:
Jay Howell
Jill Bliss
APAK
Souther Salazar
Bwana Spoons
Martin Ontiveros
Arbito
Le Merde
Scrappers
Scott Barry
Tripper Dungan
Lori D.

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Canadian GRUMBLE TOY at Grass Hut in Portland Oregon

Grumble Toys at Grass Hut Gallery in Portland GRUMBLE TOY, November 20th, 2009 from 6pm – 9pm
Grass Hut Gallery ~ 811 East Burnside, Portland OR 97214

Chris Bryan and Ainsley Sturko, from Grumble Toy will bring you handmade plush, precious paintings, custom toys, and even a Grass Hut exclusive Manmorah!
Bwana Spoons put together a short interview for Hungry Eyeball with Chris and Ainsley:

How did you and Ainsley meet?
Ainsley: Chris and I met at the video store that I worked at. He would come in every Tuesday for the 2 for 1 deal and suspiciously he always ended up at my til. haha

Chris: :-)

Was there any one thing that steered you in the direction of making monster art?
Ainsley: I always like to paint animals and little creatures but the monster art is definitely inspired by the toys that Chris and I collect.

Chris: Most of the art I still do is minimal audio works… Ainsley is the one with the visual skill. I’m always thinking about monsters, we get excited about ideas and she is able to bring them to reality. I feel better about my own drawings than I used to, but I much prefer Ainsley’s. If we count the custom toys.. well.. toys brought me there.

Is Grumble Toy a studio, brick and mortar shop or a web village?
Ainsley: Grumble toy is more of a web village. We run the business and do the art making right from the comfort of our home. :)

You now have two of your very own grumble creations Wormrah and Manmorah. What’s next for Grumble Toy?
Ainsley: Chris and I are hoping to put out some more toys in the future. Wormrah and Manmorah were both sculpted by Amapro in Japan. We feel very lucky to be able to work with Amapro and hope to collaborate more with him. Chris and I are also planning on producing toys that we have sculpted ourselves. We also hope to make vinyl toys based on a few of my characters such as Mookie and Ookie and the forest gremlin.
Chris: Yes, I think you can count on some more minis from the same world as Wormrah and Manmorah soon… that and some vintage inspired dinosaur toys.

Your favorite toy maker and why.
Ainsley: I have many favorites! But I guess I will just name two.
One of my favorite doll makers is takiyaje from Russia.? Her dolls are very well crafted and her attention to detail is amazing. They have a sort of surreal, spooky quality to them that I like.
One of my favorite kaiju toy makers is Elegab. I love his designs and his sculpting style. His toys are very textural and have great facial expressions. I really like that his designs are original. It seems many of the kaiju toys are tributes to movies, television or vintage toys.

Chris: Akk… I can’t name just one favorite! Amapro for sure, for so many reasons. Butanohana is great. I would love to see him do more original figures from his drawings. Yamomark is so much fun… ahhh… the list would go on and on. Dream Rocket and Siccaluna-Koubou for amazing paint applications… If you just look at the Grumble Toy shop.. those are all my favorite. :)

Tropical seas or big trees?
Ainsley: I dream of tropical seas but I am happiest in the prairies where it is hot in the summer and brutally cold in the winter. I think being cooped up in the winter forces us to be creative and make art. If the weather was nice all of the time we would probably spend all of our free time outdoors and not get much done. Haha!

Chris: Big Trees! I’m scared of tropical weather. We don’t have any seas here, or really big trees for that matter. I’m with Ainsley on our winter.. so cold, but we get a lot done, and don’t feel bad about staying in and playing video games for hrs on end.

Ok i think that’s it.

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Mark Warren Jacques at Portland’s Grass Hut Gallery on East Burnside

Mark Warren Jacques at Grass Hut Gallery in Portland OregonOpening Art Reception, First Friday, Nov. 6th, 2009 from 6pm – 9pm
Grass Hut – 811 East Burnside, Portland OR 97214

It Out There
In Here

New paintings and installation by Portland artist Mark Warren Jacques at the Grass Hut.
6th / 27th November 2009

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Hungry Eyeball interviews Portland Artist Justin “Scrappers” Morrison

More Thrills by Scrappers

I love Justin Morrison, many know him as Scrappers. You might find him painting up some food cart, building a set for a musical or see his ass on the cover of the Portland Mercury, Oct. 22 to 28, 2009. He seems to say yes to everything. He’s a hard working artist, art director, gallery owner, husband and dad.
I’ve known Justin for a few years now and I wanted him to reflect on some past landmarks and explain how they have shaped his art and life. Enjoy and thanks Justin!

> Growing up in California?
The whole time growing up in California (Burbank, Tujunga, and Palm Springs) I thought that I belonged in the Pacific Northwest. You see, that’s where I was born, on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. My mom and dad had moved to a piece of land, where they built a log home and birthed me. Growing up, I heard stories about how that was the good life, I had a family then, I had family land, I had a dad, I even had brothers and a sister. So the whole time growing up in California, I planned to move to the NW and make up for all the wrong, that I felt had been done to my childhood. Of course, that’s how it influenced me “artistically”, I still love hiking into California’s wilderness and I miss all the friends and family I grew up with, but it’s kind of a bad place for people to live. Not enough natural resources to support such a big population.
Bike Warrior by Scrappers
> Living in Portland, Oregon?
Portland has been good to me and my wife Amy. We’ve always been able to find amazing jobs here, amazing friends, amazing co-workers, and the chance to make any dream a reality. We moved here from Arcata, CA (a small town in the redwoods), so Amy could work in the environmental non-profit industry (I don’t think industry is the right word). I didn’t really paint before moving here, I was a photography nerd in California. Amy and I made a lot of collage work and started selling our work for super cheap on the streets of Last Thursday and First Thursday. Somehow the art I made to sell, to nice people, on the streets sparked something that set off a wildfire and it continues to spread in the work I do today.

> How about Portland artist Janet Julian?
Janet is a major inspiration to most Portland artists who give a damn about being part of our community. She helped nurture a love of junk as an art supply inside me, she’s been a sister, a mother, a grandmother, and she hooked me up with my first art show. It was at the Star E. Rose on Alberta. She’s amazing and for some reason nobody ever gives her any credit for being a founding mother of Portland’s art scene.

> Portland art collective, Junk Town All-Stars?
If you go to a place often enough you’ll see the same people over and over again. I kept seeing the same artists over and over again selling on the streets with me. Some good, some crappy. I asked all the best if they wanted to work together on something. Junktown was a way that all us artists could continue to sell the work we sold on the streets though the rainy winter. We built pop-up walls and set them up at indoor music venues and bars. When I realized that Junktown wasn’t going to grow beyond that, I moved on. But all the artists who came together have stayed together and have
become friends who constantly encourage each other to keep up the good work.
Bike Warriors by Scrappers
> Portland’s downtown Oak Street including the independent book store Reading Frenzy, coffee shop Half & Half, and Independent Publishing Resource Center?
I like to think of that neighborhood as “the Acorn”. It’s kind of shaped that way from a bird’s eye view. All those business owners have let me make art for them (murals, zines, print ads, sandwich boards, beer coozys, zines, etc…) and all for trade, so I end up eating, reading and learning a lot there. It’s an important watering hole for my brain and spirit.

> Your good buddy Bwana Spoons?
I’m not sure if we’re good buddies, our families have never had dinner together, but we have stuffed burritos into our faces while we scrambled to get a show hung. I’ve always looked up to him as an artist and when he asked me if I wanted to team up on a gallery I jumped on the chance.

> The Grass Hut gang?

the Grass Hut gang is kind of a front, kind of make-believe and in the end totally real. When Bwana asked if I wanted to open a gallery inside his “Grass Hut Shop”, I said yes, well yes and…let’s move the studio from the back room to the front window and run the shop and gallery in the same room, let’s try to get the best artists in town to help us run the place and lets just call it Grass Hut. People think we are some kind of art collective, but that’s not true. It’s a business model and it works as long as everyone works for free, for something greater then themselves, to elevate the human conversation. Many other gallery/studio/shops have opened up in town since we started, and some even credit us for the idea. Over time though the Grass Hut gang has grown to more then just the 5 official members (Bwana, Apak, Scrappers, Le Merde and Martin Ontiveros), the Grass Hut gang is more like the people who come to all the opening, all the book releases, and all the random field trips. Shit, I would have to admit that the Grass Hut gang mostly exists online, in Flickr, in Facebook, in encouraging emails and stuff. It’s way bigger and more important then the 5 artists. But mostly it’s just an idea and one simple idea can mean different things to different people.

> Any other artists?
Yup, but honestly the local scene is getting weaker every month. As local press (the Mercury, WW, Port art blog and other visual art media ignore the work of our best artists, they end up moving to better towns to work in or their work ends up looking safe and sellable (do you really want to paint birds and trees for the rest of your life, really?).

> The Portland ad agency, *Wieden + Kennedy*?
The most talented, intense, and productive people in the world work for Dan + Dave. The other people there work for Wieden + Kennedy. That’s all I will say.

> Being the Art director at the Portland Mercury?
I’ve learned a lot about editorial design. They’ve also given me the chance to raise the visual standards (and lower them in some cases) to levels that i think are more Portland-centric. It’s awesome to help make the best zine in town and to beat the pants off the competition as the “underdog”. I also get to hire all the overlooked artists and photographers who live here. You wouldn’t believe how rewarding this work is!
Justin Scrappers Morrison
> Your son, Camper?
I don’t want to do anything other than make his life amazing. I swear I would walk away from all this art shit in a heartbeat to spend more time with my son. I would rather build him a treefort then make 20 affordable paintings to sell in some friend’s gallery. But I’m working, making money, saving it up, and I’m going to buy some family land, and we’re going to live on it until I die. When I die Camper will bury me in the family land. He’ll plant a tree above me and his children and his children’s children will climb and swing in that tree. My son Camper has helped me realize why I work so hard.

If you want to ask anymore question take a look at the work I do at scrapperstown.com The work might be more interesting to people then my personal life and work history.

Thanks for the interest,
-Justin

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