Journal

Donald G. Longcrier, Artist Journal/Blog

Wooden Fish at Mainsite Installation

Wooden Fish by Donald G. Longcrier opens at Mainsite Contemprorary Art in Norman, Oklahoma on Friday, October 11. The exhibition runs through November, 9.

Opening Reception: Friday, October 11, 6:00 - 10:00 pm.

Artist's Talk: Thursday, November 7, 7:00 pm.

Closing Reception: Friday, November 8, 6:00 - 10:00 pm.

 

Installing Untitled (Whitehall Skiff)

 

 

Wooden Fish (Big Lumber)

Wooden Fish by Donald G. Longcrier required a trip to Timber and Beam Solutions of Tulsa for some oversized lumber. 

 

 

It is impossible to complete some of the projects that I attempt without the help of others. I owe a "Thank you" to Dean West, Leanne, Georgio, and the gang at Timber and Beam Solutions for helping me load up. Thanks also to Bruce Haynes of Haynes Remodeling and Construction of Norman, OK.

 

A really, really big "Thank You" to Sandra Longcrier for helping me unload at the shop. That's Sandra's steel toe in the foreground. 

 

 

 

 

 

Sometimes you get lucky! If a water pump has to go out, at least it waited until we were backing the trailer up to the studio door. 

 

 

Wooden Fish by Donald G. Longcrier will be at Mainsite Contemporary Art in Norman, Oklahoma in October 2013. 

Blackwell Flour Mill

©Donald G. Longcrier 2013

 

 

For those of you in the Tulsa area:
"Tune in or set those DVR's tonight on NBC Channel 2 to watch "The List" at 6:30! West Construction will be featured on their national segment for our reclamation projects with the Blackwell Flour Mill and an 1850 Confederate Civil War era Tennessee Barn!"

 

 

©Donald G. Longcrier 2013

 

©Donald G. Longcrier 2013

Blackwell Flour Mill

I spent the afternoon at the Blackwell Flour Mill in Blackwell, Oklahoma. Timber and Beam Solutions http://www.timberandbeam.com/  and West Construction of Tulsa, Oklahoma are dismantling the mill and reclaiming all construction materials.

Tonight, July 24, on Tulsa News Channel 6, at 10:00 pm,  Scott Thompson will have a feature story on the Blackwell Flour Mill.

 

 

According to their project website: http://www.blackwellflourmill.com/ 

"Timber and Beam Solutions, along with West Construction,  has the privilege to reclaim one of the oldest and largest wooden structures in Oklahoma.  The Blackwell Flour Mill was established in 1885.  Western Oklahoma was built on wheat, and farmers for miles around brought their wheat to be milled.  This iconic structure helped families to survive The Great Depression and The Dust Bowl by supplying bread to the hungry.  Being an essential organ to the heartbeat of America, it would be wonderful to bring awareness of reclaiming this building to the public.​"


 

 

Thank you Dean West and crew for showing me around the site. Over the coming days, I will be posting a few photographs of the mill. 

 

Art Now 2013 at City Arts Center

Art Now 2013
City Arts Center

GALA EVENT:  January 25, 2013
Exhibition dates:  January 21 – February 8, 2013
Curator Talk:  January 28, 6:00pm

Untitled (Chalk Box), 60" H. x 60" W. x 6.5"D., Acrylic and encaustic on wood with objects

 

Art Now 2013
City Arts Center

"Art Now is the contemporary art exhibition for Oklahoma, showcasing work by the state’s top artists.  City Arts Center’s premier fundraising event, Art Now has impressed audiences for more than two decades

2013 Guest Curator:  Louise Siddons

Assistant Professor and Curator of Collections at Oklahoma State University, Siddons is an art historian specializing in American art and the visual culture of modernity.  She received her Ph.D. in Art History from Stanford University in 2005 and joined the OSU faculty in 2009.  Before coming to Oklahoma State, Siddons was a visiting assistant professor and adjunct curator at Michigan State University and the Kresge Art Museum for two years.  Prior to that, she was an assistant curator of works on paper at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco for several years.  Siddons continues to have a museological role at OSU, where she is curator of an art collection that has particular strengths in twentieth-century and contemporary American art.  She is currently involved in the planning process for a new museum of art at the university."
http://cityartscenter.org/Web_v2/events/cafe-city-arts/

Untitled (Chalk Line), 60" H. x 78"W., Acrylic and encaustic on wood, Carpenter's chalk

 

 

 

 

Untitled (Fundamental Principles), 44" H. x 37"W. x 1"D., Acrylic and encaustic on wood with objects

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FISH 2012 Opening Reception Thursday, October 24, 2012

Two large-scale Native Trout paintings on display in FISH 2012.

"FISH is on display from Tuesday, Oct. 23 through Wednesday, Nov. 7 in the OU School of Art & Art History’s Lightwell Gallery.

A free, public reception will be held on Thursday, Oct. 25 from 6-8 p.m., offering a variety of locally sourced, sustainable and seasonal food, donated by LOCAL of Norman, and fish hors d’oeuvres prepared by Pepe Delgado’s."

http://www.facebook.com/events/358566510899773/

FISH 2012: Artist's Statement

Native Trout of the American West

The Native Trout paintings represent a discussion of some of the American West’s most pressing contemporary issues, the first and foremost of which, will always be water and its management. One cannot speak about the West without discussing public land and private ownership, environmental and economic concerns such as mining and irrigation and farming arid land.

The native trout species I have chosen to paint were once common to most rivers and streams from the Pacific Ocean to the Rockies, from Mexico to Canada. Now, they number a fraction of their original population and many are only to be found inhabiting tiny, isolated headwater streams in small areas of their original range. Where some of these fish once grew to legendary size, Lahontan cutthroat trout were reported to reach sixty pounds, many now survive as six to ten inch specimens.

Wild, native trout populations are indicative of the environment in which they live, and reflect the choices we have made and will be making regarding the use of these watersheds. Native trout habitat has been affected by mining, grazing, farming, and irrigation needs. Blocked by dams, spawning runs have ceased. Many native species have been displaced by the introduction of non-native species.

Recovery efforts supported by, private organizations, government, and tribal agencies are underway throughout the region. 

A simpler explanation of the paintings might have to do with the fact that research for the work requires me to spend as much time as possible, chasing after wild native fish in remote but untouched locations. Regrettably, the time spent on research is never enough. But, fishing is all about hope.

 

FISH 2012 Installation

Installation of large-scale Native Trout paintings in the entrance of the Fred Jones Jr. Art Center on the University of Oklahoma campus with Sandra Longcrier and Jeff Beekman, Assistant Professor of Foundations.

The paintings are being exhibited in FISH 2012, an international exhibition of art that explores the culture of fishing. The exhibit is curated by Assistant Professor of Foundations, Cedar Marie and hosted by the University of Oklahoma School of Art and Art History. The exhibition runs October 23 through November 7, 2012.

 


Installing Apache Trout, Oncorhynchus gilae apache, Acrylic and encaustic on wood, 54" H x 108"W.

©2007

 

Installing Apache Trout, Oncorhynchus gilae apacheAcrylic and encaustic on wood, 54" H x 108"W.

©2007

 

Installing Apache Trout, Oncorhynchus gilae apacheAcrylic and encaustic on wood, 54" H x 108"W.

©2007

 

Installing Westslope Cutthroat Trout, Oncorhynchus clarki lewisiAcrylic and encaustic on wood, 54" H x 108"W. ©2007

 

Installing Westslope Cutthroat Trout, Oncorhynchus clarki lewisiAcrylic and encaustic on wood, 54" H x 108"W. ©2007

 

 

Installing Westslope Cutthroat Trout, Oncorhynchus clarki lewisiAcrylic and encaustic on wood, 54" H x 108"W. ©2007

 

 

Installation view:

Left: Apache Trout, Oncorhynchus gilae apacheAcrylic and encaustic on wood,

54" H x 108"W. ©2007

Right: Westslope Cutthroat Trout, Oncorhynchus clarki lewisiAcrylic and encaustic on wood,

54" H x 108"W. ©2007

 

Installation view:

Left: Apache Trout, Oncorhynchus gilae apacheAcrylic and encaustic on wood,

54" H x 108"W. ©2007

Right: Westslope Cutthroat Trout, Oncorhynchus clarki lewisiAcrylic and encaustic on wood,

54" H x 108"W. ©2007

 

 

 

FISH 2012 From the Curator, Cedar Marie

FISH 2012
From the Curator 
Cedar Marie 
The University of Oklahoma School of Art & Art History and the Lightwell Gallery present FISH, a 
multimedia art exhibition that explores a concern for one of the planet’s most diminishing food 
resources. The exhibition is on display from Tuesday October 23 through Wednesday November 7, 
2012 in the OU School of Art & Art History’s Lightwell Gallery. A free, public reception will be held 
on Thursday, Oct. 25 from 6-8 p.m. Coinciding with the exhibition, The School of Art & Art History 
welcomes visiting Guggenheim Fellowship artist Ray Troll. Troll will give a public lecture on 
October 30 at 10:30 a.m. in the Mary Eddy and Fred Jones Auditorium at the Fred Jones Jr. Museum 
of Art. 
FISH offers a compelling range of perspectives on the culture of fishing. Interpreted broadly, the 
artworks in the exhibition include sculpture, painting, video, and good old-fashioned storytelling, 
among other media, from both U.S. and international artists. Oklahoma artist Donald Longcrier 
speaks to some of the “American West’s foremost contemporary issues, particularly water and its 
management.” His nine-foot wide paintings of native trout act as sentinels in the main entry to the 
Fred Jones Art Center. Tim Waldrop and Catherine Reinhardt broaden these environmental and 
habitat concerns, addressing topics related to Hurricane Katrina and the Deepwater Horizon Oil 
Spill. Dave Beck makes historical connections, referencing Americankitschandpatriotismofthe1960s.Bangkok-based photographer Jane Iverson documents the simplicity and fragility of Asian 
fishing culture, while Brooks Dierdorff and Brenda Oelibaum fish the Internet for appropriated 
images to deconstruct notions of the trophy. 
FISH also comprises artworks that foster community awareness and education. Texas-based artist 
Christine Foerster creates interactive installations based on green design. She takes her work to 
public schools and universities where they are integrated into the curriculum. The Sitka 
Conservation Society in Alaska works to deepen youth understanding of local food resources with 
their “Fish to Schools” program, which develops strong connections with local fishermen and the 
fishing community, and integrates locally-caught seafood into public school lunches. 
FISH recognizes and includes the voices of fishermen, the men and women who risk their lives 
daily on the open sea in order to bring a quality food product to the table. In her audio story 
Sisterhood, writer and commercial fisherman Tele Aadsen explores what it means to be a woman 
“trolling for truth” in a male-dominated field; while Fisher Poet and performer Moe Bowstern 
catches—and releases—stories written by the various “species” of fishermen in her arty zines. In 
his photograph Ryan Harris Sea Rescue, commercial fisherman and photographer Joel Brady-
Power guides a Coast Guard rescue team in a miraculous save of a nineteen-year old fisherman.
 
Visiting Guggenheim Fellowship artist Ray Troll’s quirky images based on the latest scientific 
discoveries bring a street-smart sensibility to the worlds of ichthyology & paleontology. His 
drawings and paintings are also a delightful commentary on the fishy behavior of humans. The 
author and illustrator of nine books and lead band member of the Ratfish Wranglers, his unique 
blend of art and science has reached a wide audience in major shows at the California Academy of 
Sciences in San Francisco, the Oregon Coast Aquarium in Newport, and the Denver Museum of 
Nature and Science. He has been awarded a Gold Medal for Distinction in the Natural History Arts 
by the Academy of Natural Sciences, and is the art director for the Miami Museum of Science’s 
Amazon Voyage traveling exhibit. Sharkabet: a Sea of Sharks from A to Z, and a new exhibition 
based on his book Cruisin’ the Fossil Freeway–written in collaboration with Dr. Kirk Johnson–is 
currently on tour. 
Taking a stream to plate approach, FISH offers the public an opportunity to consider how we tend to 
our relationships with the food we grow, harvest, and consume. 
The University of Oklahoma’s School of Art and Art History is located in the Fred Jones Art Center 
(FJC), 520 Parrington Oval, in the OU Arts District. The Lightwell Gallery is located on the second 
floor and is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday and closed on holidays and 
weekends. 
For special accommodations call 405.325.2691 or email art@ou.edu. 
From the Curator Cedar Marie 

FISH 2012 Press Release

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                    

CONTACT: Cedar Marie, cmarie@ou.edu

CONTACT: Jessica Upson, jess@ou.edu

OU School of Art & Art History

(405) 325-2691

 

 

OU Art Exhibition Offers Glimpse into the Culture of Fishing

 

NORMAN, OKLA. (October 12, 2012) – The University of Oklahoma School of Art & Art History and the Lightwell Gallery present FISH, a multimedia art exhibition curated by OU professor and artist Cedar Marie. The exhibition explores a concern for one of the planet’s most diminishing food resources and includes sculpture, photography, video, and painting from U.S. and international artists.

 

“FISH offers the public an opportunity to consider how we tend to our relationships with the food we grow, harvest, and consume,” said Cedar Marie. Artwork represented in this exhibition includes pieces from Bangkok-based photographer Jane Iverson, whose work documents the simplicity and fragility of Asian fishing culture, and Texas-based artist Christine Foerster who creates interactive installations based on green design. Other artists address Hurricane Katrina’s aftermath, the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill, American kitsch, and patriotism.

 

Coinciding with the exhibit, The School of Art & Art History welcomes visiting artist and Guggenheim Fellowship recipient Ray Troll. Troll will give a public lecture on October 30 at 10:30 a.m. in the Mary Eddy and Fred Jones Auditorium at the red Jones Jr. Museum of Art.

 

Ray Troll bases his quirky aquatic images on the latest scientific discoveries and brings a street-smart sensibility to the worlds of ichthyology & paleontology. “His paintings and drawings are also a delightful commentary on the fishy behavior of humans,” said Cedar Marie. His unique blend of art and science has reached a wide range of audiences in major shows at the Smithsonian, the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco, the Oregon Coast Aquarium in Newport, and the Denver Museum of Nature and Science. Troll received a Gold Medal for Distinction in the Natural History Arts by the Academy of Natural Sciences, and is the art director for the Miami Museum of Science’s Amazon Voyage traveling exhibit. An exhibition based on his book “Cruisin’ the Fossil Freeway”–written in collaboration with Dr. Kirk Johnson–is currently on tour.

 

FISH is on display from Tuesday October 23 through Wednesday November 7, 2012 in the OU School of Art & Art History’s Lightwell Gallery. A free, public reception will be held on Thursday, Oct. 25 from 6-8 p.m., with locally sourced, sustainable and seasonal food donated by LOCAL of Norman, Oklahoma, and fish hors d’oeuves prepared by Pepe Delgaldos.

 

The university of Oklahoma’s School of Art & Art History is located in the Fred Jones Art Center (FJC), 520 Parrington Oval, in the OU Arts District. The Lightwell Gallery is located on the second floor and is open from 8 a.m-5 p.m., Monday through Friday and is closed on holidays and weekends. For more information on the University of Oklahoma School of Art & Art History please visit art.ou.edu.

 

For special accommodations call 405.325.2691 or email art@ou.edu.

 

###

Preparing Native Trout Paintings for FISH 2012

Preparing two of the Native Trout paintings for the upcoming FISH 2012 Exhibition to be held in the Lightwell Gallery at the University of Oklahoma. FISH will run October 23 through November 7, 2012. 

The paintings to be exhibited will be Westslope Cutthroat Trout, Oncorhynchus clarki lewisi and    Apache Trout, Oncorhynchus gilae apache. The paintings are acrylic and encaustic on wood panels and measure 54" H x 108" W.

 

Apache Trout, Oncorhynchus gilae apache. Acrylic and encaustic on wood, 54" H x 108" W. ©2007

 

On Left: Westslope Cutthroat Trout, Oncorhynchus clarki lewisi Acrylic and encaustic on wood,        54" H x 108" W. ©2007

On Right: Apache Trout, Oncorhynchus gilae apache. Acrylic and encaustic on wood,                         54" H x 108" W. ©2007

 

 

Front: Apache Trout, Oncorhynchus gilae apache. Acrylic and encaustic on wood,                             54" H x 108" W. ©2007

Back: Westslope Cutthroat Trout, Oncorhynchus clarki lewisi Acrylic and encaustic on wood,            54" H x 108" W. ©2007

 

FISH 2012 International Art Competition

I will be exhibiting two of my large-scale Native Trout paintings in the upcoming FISH 2012 International Art Competition Exhibition to be held in the Lightwell Gallery in the University of Oklahoma School of Art and Art History. The Exhibition will run from October 23 through November 7, 2012. 
Apache Trout, Oncorhynchus gilae apache, Acrylic and encaustic on wood,
54"H. x 108"W., ©2007
Westslope Cutthroat TroutOncorhynchus clarki lewisi, Acrylic and encaustic on wood,
54"H. x 108"W., ©2007
FISH 2012 International Art Competition

Exhibition: 23 Oct - 7 Nov 2012

The University of Oklahoma School of Art & Art History will host FISH 2012 International Art Competition in the Lightwell Gallery from October 23 to November 7, 2012. The exhibition will feature "artists who focus on themes that relate to the culture of fishing". According to the exhibition prospectus, the exhibition will explore a "broad range of interpretations...such as fishing as an economic lifestyle, the process of fishing, work and gender issues, conservation & politics, environmental habitats & sustainability, food quality & safety, fishing for subsistence, fisheries collapse, & community education." 

Donald G. Longcrier to serve as Awards of Excellence Judge at 2012 Arts Festival Oklahoma

Oklahoma City University School of Visual Arts, Director of the Nona Jean Hulsey Gallery and Adjunct Professor of Art Donald G. Longcrier will serve as an Awards of Excellence Judge at the 2012 Arts Festival Oklahoma. 

2012 Arts Festival Oklahoma, September 1-3,
Oklahoma City Community College
http://www.occc.edu/afo/index.html

The First Tape Measure Piece

Untitled (Measuring Tape,Tape) was the first piece in which I used a tape measure. The piece is constructed using a roll of Kraft Tape and a Lufkin 50' cloth tape measure. The tape measure is wound continuously around and through the tape roll creating a spiral of numbers that repeat almost every turn. 

 Untitled (Measuring Tape,Tape) , 7.5"Diameter x 3" D., Measuring tape, paper tape, 2002

 

 

Installation view:

Untitled (Measuring Tape,Tape), 7.5"Diameter x 3" D., Measuring tape, paper tape, 2002

Untitled (Steel Disk), 44" Diameter. x 3.5" D., Steel, cloth, wood, 2001