HOLDING

  • Current
    • Happy New Year
  • Artists
    • Hayley Barker
    • Alisa Bones
    • Jodie Cavalier
    • Nan Curtis
    • Jovencio de la Paz
    • Dru Donovan
    • André Magaña
    • Tannaz Farsi
    • Claire Fontaine
    • Raque Ford
    • Derek Franklin
    • Leslie Hickey
    • Michael Lazarus
    • Erin Murray
    • Tabitha Nikolai
    • Umico Niwa & Peat Szilagyi
    • Dan Paz
    • Jess Perlitz
    • Nicolas Sassoon & Rick Silva
    • Stacy Jo Scott
    • Eileen Isagon Skyers
    • Sheida Soleimani
    • A. Swiderski
    • Shelley Turley
    • Sarah Wertzberger
    • Paula Wilson
    • Yamamoto & Paiko
  • Exhibitions
    • Jess Perlitz / Glory Glory
    • INFANT / AXAA-0-P
    • Jodie Cavalier / Fool's Gold
    • Sarah Wertzberger / Heat Wave
    • Stacy Jo Scott / Lo, A Vase in the Dark
    • Jovencio de la Paz / Cumulative Shadow
    • Shelley Turley / Sound of Silence
    • Tannaz Farsi / A More Perfect Union
    • Liquid Dungeon Byproduct
    • Umica Niwa & Peat Szilagyi / Solar Coochie
    • Leslie Hickey & Erin Murray / What We See and What We Know
    • Nicolas Sassoon & Rick Silva / CORES
    • Jess Perlitz / People Making People Sounds
    • Sarah Wertzberger / Color Vision
    • Michael Lazarus / Untitled no. 10
    • Jovencio de la Paz / Innumerable _______ hold close the _______
    • Takahiro Yamamoto & Andy Paiko / Hanging River
    • Dan Paz / The sun never knew how great it was until it struck the side of a building.
    • André Magaña / Pinopuenteros
    • Nan Curtis / NUMB
    • Tabitha Nikolai / Utopia Without You
    • Claire Fontaine / Same war time zone
    • A Swiderski / POM---PALM
    • Eileen Isagon Skyers / Eyes Without a Face
    • Paula Wilson / FLOORED
    • Hayley Barker / AMPM
    • Dru Donovan / Holding A Fray
    • Raque Ford / con•fi•dence
    • Derek Franklin / To Leave No Trace
    • Alisa Bones / Your clothing is animal hair, your purple is fish blood
    • Sheida Soleimani / Social Learning Theory
  • Projects
    • Artists for Black Lives
    • Weather Report
    • Weather Report — Materials
    • Feeling Documents / Don't Shoot Portland
    • Feeling Documents: Archives
    • Winter Formal
    • Cold Flow, A Slower Fountain / Physical Education
    • Archives for Black Lives: A Liberated Archives Exhibition
    • Archives for Black Lives: Portland Archives
    • Archives for Black Lives: Opossum Incident
    • Archives for Black Lives: Responses
    • Stop Killing Us: A Black Lives Still Matter Installation
    • Carly Mandel / I'm Blue
    • Roz Crews / Benefits Package
    • HOLDING Happy Hours
    • If a Tree Falls...
    • CARRIAGE / NYC Exhibition
    • This is Our Summer Group Show
    • Jess Perlitz / Rocks Moving Rocks
    • 2018 Shareholders Exhibition
    • maximiliano / venus ii : condens
    • Ariana Jacob / Personal/Political Feel Tank
    • First Brick featuring Kaija J. Xiao and Lu Yim
    • Stolen Angels: A Black Lives Matter Exhibit by Don't Shoot Portland
    • angélica maria millán lozano & Laura Medina / rolas in pdx
  • Gallery
    • About
    • Contact
    • News
  • Shareholder Program
    • About
    • Shareholders
  • Holding Co
WK6.jpg

PORTLAND ARTISTS MAKE SPACE FOR GALLERIES

August 24, 2017 by Iris Williamson

“Williamson Knight has taken over the Pearl District space formerly occupied by Hap Gallery with ambitions to bring radical and marginalized voices to one of the city’s most monied neighborhoods. Co-director Iris Williamson became a significant part of the operations at Hap during its successful run, and when owner Judy Jacobson wanted to retire the gallery, she offered to subsidize the space for Williamson and John Knight’s vision. Even with help, running a Pearl district gallery without funds on hand isn’t economically feasible. So they’ve designed an equitable model of distributed ownership that puts the artists first. This dovetails with their curatorial vision to provide a platform to voices and radical themes that are rarely seen in their neighboring galleries.

Their hope is to provide space to artists they consider politically and socially relevant while creating a platform for social and economic capital when needed. The 2017 curatorial program includes exhibitions and projects by: angélica maria millán lozano & Laura Medina (also known as rolas in pdx), Sheida Soleimani, Alisa Bones, Don’t Shoot Portland, Derek Franklin, Raque Ford, Dru Donovan, and Hayley Barker.

The inaugural show, Social Learning Theory by Sheida Soleimani, was one of the more visually and conceptually complex shows of the year. The small gallery was dominated by large, blobby fabric sculptures and complex photographs of similar sculptures in constructed spaces. These used a variety of visual techniques to thoroughly confuse the spatial reading of what was being photographed. That complexity and their vivid colors led many viewers to assume the images were photoshopped rather than constructed entirely by hand. Similarly, there’s an engineered confusion to the reading of the goofy, colorful fabric sculptures. Once you understand that the images that are digitally printed on the fabric are some of the only extant images of Arabic women imprisoned, tortured and executed for political or religious views, the cognitive dissonance becomes an important, disquieting feature of the show. The material is quite heavy, and you’re compelled to look deeper. 

In addition to their ambitious and intense roster of shows for 2017, W|K hopes to test their business structure in the real world this year. They’re developing a stockholder model that will allow anyone to buy dividend-paying shares in the gallery, the proceeds of which will all go directly into the day-to-day operations of the gallery and support the artist-centric business model. Contact the gallery if you’re interested in becoming a shareholder.”

— article by Ním Wunnan for Oregon Arts Watch

August 24, 2017 /Iris Williamson
Dru Donovan, HOLDING Contemporary, Derek Franklin, Raque Ford, Sheida Soleimani, angélica maria millán lozano, Portland, Oregon Arts Watch, Hayley Barker