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Rick Bartow

Renewal and Regrowth​​​

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Opening Wednesday, May 14th, 5-7pm

On view through Saturday, June 14th, 2025

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Photograph by ofphotostudio

PRESS RELEASE

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INSTALLATION VIEWS

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IMAGES

I use erasers as much as I use graphite or color. In a more philosophical vein, I use erasure because my life has been shaped as much by what I have lost as by what I have gained.

-Rick Bartow February 6, 1988

 

Rick Bartow experienced extremes in his lifetime, living through tragic losses of loved ones, witnessing graphic violence, surviving addictions and other health crises. He also knew immense joys; loving and being loved, having deep and substantive friendships, being in a position to make and exhibit his art, performing and recording music. This breadth of highs and lows shaped his steadfast worldview that life requires sustained efforts of making continuous adjustments to find and maintain some kind of elusive balance. Entropy feels inevitable; it is so easy for forces that seem beyond our control to throw off our tentative equilibrium, but cycles of renewal and regrowth in nature offer a model for the possibility to correct course. The particular works in this exhibition are meant to illustrate these extremes. Serene depictions of flora and fauna are juxtaposed with images of decisive action.

 

Bartow (1946-2016) was a member of the Wiyot Tribe. He drew from personal experiences, cultural engagement, and global myths, especially Indigenous transformation stories. Animals, masked humans, hybrid-figures, and self-portraits populate his images. A professionally trained artist, Bartow lived and worked on the Oregon coast. He returned from the Vietnam war with severe PTSD and lost nearly a decade to addiction. In the late 1970s Bartow found his footing, through his art making and with help from a local elder on the Siletz Reservation. His artwork addresses both personal and tribal traumas. Bartow was a voracious consumer of art history: German Expressionism and Goya, European modernists like Francis Bacon and Odilon Redon, the lines of Cy Twombly and Diebenkorn. Bartow traveled widely, particularly to Japan and Germany. He was also an accomplished musician, performing regularly around the Pacific Northwest and recording several albums; he sang about love and loss.

 

This exhibition follows a Spring 2024 solo presentation in our gallery, and the Autry Museum of the American West’s 2018 presentation of Things You Know But Cannot Explain, a major retrospective Bartow’s art that had an eleven city tour over five years; it originated at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, in Eugene, curated by Jill Hartz and Danielle Knapp. A new major solo exhibition curated by Kathleen Ash-Milby will open at the Portland Art Museum in November 2025

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Rick Bartow’s work can be found in the permanent collections of over one hundred museums and institutions. Four additional museums and a major new foundation have acquired his work in the first four months of 2025. One of four pieces owned by The Whitney was on view recently in What It Becomes. We Were Always Here, a monumental pair of commissioned sculptures by Bartow were installed in 2012 on the National Mall outside The Smithsonian's NMAI. Other institutions holding his work include the Brooklyn Museum, the Yale University Art Gallery, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Peabody Essex Museum, Portland Art Museum, Denver Art Museum, The Heard Museum, the Hood Museum at Dartmouth, The Legion of Honor (SF), Minneapolis Institute of Art, Library of Congress, the Smithsonian, and the Seattle Art Museum. Recently his work was included in the landmark exhibition Indian Theater: Native Performance, Art, and Self-Determination since1969, curated by Candice Hopkins at the Hessel Museum/ CCS Bard. And in the exhibition California Stars: HuivaniuÌ„s Pütsiv, curated by Andrea Hanley, at the Wheelwright Museum. His late work Buck was featured in a Terra Foundation-funded touring exhibition titled Many Wests, from 2022-24, organized by Amy Chaloupka, Melanie Fales, Danielle Knapp, Whitney Tassie, and E. Carmen Ramos, with Anne Hyland.

Photograph by ofphotostudio

Photograph by ofphotostudio

Photograph by ofphotostudio

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Screaming Man and Burden II, 1992

pastel, graphite on paper
40 x 26 inches

Photograph by ofphotostudio

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Early Morning Singer (Shinpukuji Portfolio), 2007

graphite, mixed media on vintage Japanese handmade paper
26 x 20.5 inches

Photograph by ofphotostudio

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Tamul Bear, 2014

pastel, tempera, graphite

44.5 x 44.5 inches

Photograph by ofphotostudio

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Autumnal Metaphor 11, 3 Sparrow, 2014
mixed media - casein, graphite, pastel, watercolor, gouache on Japanese paper
37 x 69 inches

Photograph by ofphotostudio

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GC 6, 2014
pastel, tempera on paper

50 x 45 inches

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Cock Fight, 1979
pastel, graphite on paper

24 x 17.5 inches

Photograph by ofphotostudio

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Autumnal Metaphor 16, (four flower stems), 2014

mixed media - casein, graphite, pastel, watercolor, gouache on Japanese paper
45.75 x 65.75 inches

Photograph by ofphotostudio

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Regarding Rascals, 2008

pastel, graphite on paper

44 x 30 inches

Photograph by ofphotostudio

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Untitled crow man, 1999

pastel, graphite on paper

40 x 26 inches

Photograph by ofphotostudio

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