Art

Art

Cityscapes and Steampunk

Two seemingly disparate artists join forces for a show that finds unlikely harmony.

On the surface, Las Vegas artists Mark Mellon and Heather Hermann couldn't be more different. The former specializes in surreal, aggressively strange paintings of architecture and landscapes while the latter strives for enchantment with her art deco-meets-'80s-cartoons approach. Together, though, their work speaks to the issues of our time—construction stasis and crumbling real estate, and an expanding "mash-up" culture, old and new blended into a beguiling whole. Read more »

Art

Happy 10th, Art Basel Miami

Art Basel Miami Beach turned 10 this year. There is a lot of getting swept up in things at the fair and its ancillary activities—its many, many, many ancillary activities, like so many barnacles on a whale that the whale lists to the side. There’s satellite fairs to parties sponsored by champagne companies and fashion companies and car companies. What can get lost in the shuffle is that there is still very good art to be seen in the convention center. Read more »

Design

Deco on Display

Beauty celebrated through bold graphics

With Hoover Dam, its accompanying artwork and the original Las Vegas High School, Southern Nevada boasts prominent examples of large-scale art deco sculpture and architecture. But for those who yearn for art deco on a smaller scale, A Celebration of Erté, showing through December at the Martin Lawrence Gallery, focuses on the work of one of the period’s great artistic masters. Read more »

Art

Big Game Art

By hunting for society’s discards, such as cushion stuffing and gutted upholstery, a sculptor builds a new ecology

Bryan Christiansen: Trophy Hunter seems tailor-made for the Big Springs Gallery at the Springs Preserve, even though it wasn’t. The show, which migrated from the Nevada Museum of Art in Reno, addresses what we use and discard, what we value, and what is valuable. Both look at the natural world and how it intersects with human ecology. Read more »

Site to See

Montana's Back Pages

MontanaBlackArt.Tumblr.com

Montana Black doesn't really need a Tumblr account. The Boulder City-based artist has a website, an Etsy page and a number of paintings from her "Angels Unveiled" series on permanent display inside University Medical Center. Read more »

Art

Architectural Striptease

By turning the CAC inside out, Affect/Effect reveals the hidden potential of the ordinary

Scott Carter’s solo show, Affect/Effect, lays bare the bones of the Contemporary Arts Center. The 27-year-old Chicago-based artist has peeled away, sawn and cut the gallery walls, exposing pipe, plywood and two-by-fours. Read more »

First Friday

Meet the Old Boss: Cindy Funkhouser

It all started with a trip to Portland, Ore. That’s where Funkhouse owner Cindy Funkhouser found the inspiration for what would become First Friday in 2002. Read more »

Arts

Someone to Look Up to

A new show explores what it means to be a hero at a time when we could all use one

This summer, the departure of artist/UNLV professor Stephen Hendee ignited a firestorm in the art community. Amid the furor of sad fans and former students, one person made a disparaging comment about all this “hero worship.” Read more »

Art

Alien Attraction

This show’s bright painting/sculpture hybrids explore the push and pull of a transient, Martian-like Las Vegas

Christopher Bauder’s Las Vegas studio looks like a butcher shop run by Fisher-Price. An oversize curio box displays squishy cartoon lips. Belly buttons, baby bottle nipples and Smurf-like hands litter a table. Read more »

Art

View Finder

Jeff Mitchum’s athleticism and sense of adventure fuel his landscape photography

Photographer Jeff Mitchum reclines in a smooth, low-slung leather chair, his right ankle resting on his left knee. He’s wearing blue jeans, a light-blue button-up shirt and black dress shoes. The chair is a piece from his eponymous furniture collection, and it’s strategically placed in his eponymous fine art gallery, which opened at the Bellagio in April. Read more »

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