Garric Simonsen

Garric Simonsen (b: 1975) is a visual artist and musician living in Spokane, WA. Simonsen's artwork is autobiographically informed. Simonsen received his Bachelor of Arts from The Evergreen State College in June, 2005, and his Masters in Fine Arts from Washington State University in June, 2010.

Career Exhibitions

Jundt Art Museum

Drawn to the Wall VI, a triennial invitational at Gonzaga University's Jundt Art Museum, Simonsen created an 8' x 11' wall drawing which Simonsen painted over at the close of the exhibition.[1] Traditionally the invitational's idea comes from a temporary installation of charcoal drawings drawn directly on the wall by American artist Jim Dine in Ludwigsburg, Germany. At the end of the gallery’s event, the pieces were washed off and the walls were painted over.

Bellevue Arts Museum Northwest Biennial

In 2014 Simonsen displayed four dry-etched drawings in the Bellevue Arts Museum: BAM Biennial: Knock on Wood. These works responded to a large collection of his family's turn-of-the-century photographs of the Pacific Northwest's logging and railroad industries.[2] A critical response to Simonsen's drawings were featured in the Seattle Weekly blog in a review of the Biennial by arts writer Brian Miller. The Biennial exhibition was curator by a panel of four jurors; Greg Bell, Senior Curator of Vulcan Inc., Seattle, WA; Stefano Catalani, Director of Art, Craft and Design, Bellevue Arts Museum; Albert Lecoff, Co-founder and Executive Director of The Center for Art and Wood, Philadelphia, PA; and Heather Sealy Lineberry, Senior Curator and Associate Director at Arizona State University Art Museum in Tempe, AZ.

In 2010 Simonsen's work was chosen for a small group exhibition at Platform Gallery in Seattle, WA, by artist William Powhida.[3] A quote by the show organizers stated, "Through the use of associative thinking, non-scientific causal reasoning, symbolic expression, metaphor, metonym, and synchronicity the goal of artist and magician are the same seeking to affect change in the world. With this show we seek a synchronicity that will dissolve distinctions and help us to shed light on the dark and dark on the light. By looking at the production of art through much older means, we may discover new ways of experiencing and understanding its role."[4] The show was reviewed and published in Seattle's alternative weekly newspaper The Stranger by art critic Jen Graves.

Brucennial 2010: Miseducation

Curated by Vito Schnabel, the 2010 Brucennial was a large group in lower Manhattan under arts collective, The Bruce High Quality Foundation. Considered to be "the most important survey of contemporary art in the world ever, " the exhibition brought together 420 artists from 911 countries working in 666 discrete disciplines.[5] A critical review of the exhibition appeared in a New York Times article by Holland Cotter.[6] Among younger contemporaries, the exhibition included such names as; David Salle, Francesco Clemente, Ron Gorchov, George Condo, Donald Baechler, James Nares and Julian Schnabel.

Additional exhibitions and accomplishments

Simonsen's work has been exhibited and appreciated widely, most notable to this list are exhibitions at the Boston Center for the Arts,[7] Seattle University and University of Wisconsin Madison. Projects have been funded and awarded grants from the Vermont Studio Center, Artist Trust and[8] The James Washington Foundation (Seattle, WA). Additional achievements include 2012 and 2014 nominations for Portland Art Museum’s Contemporary Northwest Art Awards.

References

  1. Overstreet, Audrey. "Correspondent". The Spokesman-Review. Spokesman-Review. Retrieved 12 February 2017.
  2. Miller, Brian (2015). "A Walk Through the Wood at BAM". Seattle Weekly News. Seattle Weekly. Retrieved March 3, 2015.
  3. Powhida, William; Trosko, Eric (2010). "Magicality". Platform Gallery. Platform Gallery. Archived from the original on October 22, 2012. Retrieved June 1, 2010.
  4. Graves, Jen (2010). "Magical Thinking Or, What's the Difference Between Art and Magic?". Visual Art Feature. The Stranger. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
  5. Cotter, Holland (2010). "Who Needs the Whitney? They Have Their Own Show". Art and Design. New York Times. Retrieved February 25, 2010.
  6. Cotter, Holland (2010). "Who Needs the Whitney? They Have Their Own Show". Art and Design. New York Times. Retrieved February 25, 2010.
  7. Graves, Jen (2012). "What We Lost That We Never Had". Visual Art - Feature. The Stranger. Retrieved July 27, 2012.
  8. Graves, Jen (2010). ""The Spectacle" Is Coming Tomorrow". Visual Art. The Stranger. Retrieved July 18, 2010.
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