The show at Mark Woolley is getting a great response.
Here is the Artist Statement for Imaginal/Manifest.
And below is the write-up by Richard Speer in this week's WIllamette Week.
Artist Statement:
This body of work explores the meeting place of the imaginal and physical worlds. The paintings illuminate the journey
of a thought from imagination to actuality. Here the entanglement of ideas and fruition are presented in the context of the
visual language of the garden.
a garden depends on planning, commitment, and action. It is a place where a seed’s
potential is realized and becomes flower and fruit, a place that inspires and sustains. The garden stands as both a physically
created place, and a metaphor for one’s inner world. These paintings invite the contemplation of what each individual
can bring forth from within. They ask the viewer to discover what is inside oneself: the seeds, the flowers seeking to blossom,
and the fruits that may be brought forth through one’s endeavors. They invite the recognition of the bridge between
dreaming and becoming.
The meeting place of the imaginal and manifest worlds is the place in which our lives are
actualized. Through cultivating what is within, one is able to embody the highest vision for his or her life, and in doing
so, create the possibility of transformation for oneself and for the world.
From Willamette Week, July
9th, 2008:
MARK WOOLLEY GALLERY
Tamara English
There is beauty in the manicured English garden but also
in the untamed weed patch, as Tamara English demonstrates in Imaginal/Manifest. The paintings celebrate overabundant vegetation
via pentimento effects, chalky outlines and flat, encausticlike surfaces with deep berry reds and hunter greens. Works like
Here in the Betwixt feature wallpaperlike strips that walk the line between still life and decorative art. While the body
of work feels one-note, the imagery is ripely seductive. 817 SW 2nd Ave., 224-5475. Closes Aug. 2. -Richard Speer