
Review of EVA SPEER: SUPERFICIAL INJURIES in The Oregonian
Friday, April 6, 2012
Speer is striving to achieve what every artist wants: the unique, the unusual. She wants to push the boundaries of representation, to find a visual language that transcends cliches and the customary. Speer wants to make art that's not just a union between form and content.
I have a theory that artists rarely feel satisfied that they've achieved the unique or the unusual. In most cases, it's the search, the process of getting there that seems important to them.
In Speer's case, right now this process is producing work that ranges from the muddled to the sublime. At times, the worked-over appearance of some pieces offers a metaphor in gift-wrapped form, the very thing Speer does not want to embrace: This is painting about effort and process. There's little to question in terms of Speer's ability or seriousness, however.
- D.K. Row

Visual Art Source Recommends EVA SPEER: SUPERFICAL INJURIES
Monday, April 2, 2012
What each of these passages accomplishes is a disorientation of the viewer’s perception, a breaking of the fourth wall to reveal that perhaps the great and mighty wizard might just be a little man crouched behind a curtain. That Speer carries this conceit off with supreme panache is a tribute to the seriousness of her intent. The paintings come across neither as gimmicky nor grandiose, but as earnest entreatments of the viewer to leave all aesthetic presuppositions at the door.
- Richard Speer

Review of GUN in Willamette Week
Thursday, March 8, 2012
The title of this show says it all: GUN. Each photograph features a gun in a different context. Some of the images are iconic, such as Bob Jackson’s capturing of the moment Jack Ruby shot and killed Lee Harvey Oswald. Others are less familiar but no less disturbing—case in point: Elliott Erwitt’s image of a young boy grinning as he holds a toy gun to his temple. The show feels more like a museum exhibition than a gallery show and represents a new level of sophistication in Hartman’s ever-evolving programming.
- Richard Speer

Review of JOSEPH STERLING in The Oregonian
Friday, February 10, 2012
Some of Sterling's later photos depict distorted spaces. In them, Sterling displays a touch of the Surrealist as architectural buildings and interiors stretch and bend like taffy.
The photos are a counterpoint, to a degree, to Sterling's documentary street photography. But like all of his work, they reveal a photographer who, curious about the world before him, tried to make modest poetry of it through pictures.
- D.K. Row
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