GALLERYLAND
Naked & smiling
By Chris Thompson
Having closed up shop at its old location in January, the Filament Gallery re-opened
last Friday night in its new home: the former Munjoy Hill Market at 181 Congress
Street. The grand unveiling of its new space coincided with the First Friday
festivities, and kicked off with a solo show of work by Portland artist Michael
Branca. The renovation of the new gallery went right down to the wire, resulting
in what Filament proprietor Jill Dalton called “the lighting performance,” as
the gathering visitors had to wait outside for fifteen minutes and watch as she
and several others struggled to get the track lighting attached to the ceiling.
And then Branca’s show “Naked & Smiling” was open for business. It includes a
range of his paintings and prints, as well as the preserved insect work for which
he has become locally famous. Doing business as “Mike’s Real Dead Bugs,” Branca
provides Filament visitors and potential customers with an assortment of laminated
dead insects, available at the bargain price of twenty-five cents apiece.
Branca’s work, from the tiny printed editions to his larger paintings, poses a
series of musing explorations of humans’ ambivalent relationships to nature and
its inhabitants: vegetable, animal, and human. In his statement accompanying the
show, he writes that he imagines “a world in which all decisions, big and small,
are based on their social and environmental merit, not on the fictitious value-scale
of the dollar bill”; in addition to the ideas and aims that his work addresses, he
also feels compelled to make artwork that you don’t need to earn six figures to
afford.
On opening night, one budding arts patron, a boy about seven-years old, felt that
Branca’s work was something he simply had to have. He pushed through the packed
crowd, found Filament proprietor Jill Dalton, and handed her a shiny quarter.
Puzzled, she asked him what it was for. He proudly displayed his bug, and announced
his plans to take it home and scare his mom. The new Filament Gallery had made its
first sale.