Attended this evening, with two dear friends, the opening of the Bellingham National 2017 exhibit at the Whatcom Museum. An excerpt from my video poem SCRO is in a show on the theme of “Drawing Practice.” The curator, Catharina Manchanda of the Seattle Art Museum, has gone past the usual sense of drawing – an implement marking a markable surface – to investigate all the senses of the verb. What’s it to be drawn on? to be drawn to? to be drawn out? to be drawn into?
There are drawings there in the usual sense. Also torn canvases, their matter physically drawn out.

And sheets of paper drawn across abrasive surfaces. And one video I loved drawing the lens over road lines at traffic speed. Another video watched light draw on water it appeared raw crude had blotched.
What all my favourites (here’s another

) had in common was a quality of absorption. I was drawn in. There was a mind there, its evidence made it over to my mind, and drew it in closer.
My own piece was caringly placed, in a nook of its own, with – am I imagining this? – a bench to sit on and watch.
I feel a bit of an imposter in a gallery, identify as a poet not a video artist, but I guess I do because it suits me to. “Oh I just stumbled into this by accident, I don’t really know what I’m doing …”
Gimme a break. No one knows what they’re doing. It’s no excuse.
Seven one-minute vids are up. Check ’em out if you’re in town. And, fourteen still to make, so let me know what you think, if you feel so moved.
Link to the exhibition, and the pieces by Yamahira and Lynch, here.
Hi Christopher, Nice to meet you fellow Bellingham artist from the 2017 Whatcom Exhibit! I am happy to learn that you self-identify as a poet! Fine work, and wonderful blog. Cheers, Christen
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Hi Christen, nice to e-meet you! And thanks for tracking me down. I look forward to checking out your work & blog some more. And yes, nice to have a fellow local in the show. Cheers, C.
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