Saturday, October 25, 2025

Francisco Eme: Future Rituals & La eco-resistencia at Oceanside Museum of Art

 By Patricia Frischer



For his exhibition Future Rituals & La eco-resistencia at Oceanside Museum of Art Francisco Eme has been tracking landscapes, particularly the canyon near his suburban home in San Diego for more than 5 years, recording and collecting artifacts and thinking deeply about the balance between wildlife and mankind. He has been involved in what he calls the canyon’s “eco-resistance” by nurturing native plants, removing invasive ones, and working in collaboration with scientists.

Some of those found objects have inspired fetish pieces that reflect the authenticity and depth of his feeling about the environment.

This series was first shown at Mesa College Gallery in 2023, curated by Alessandra Moctezuma. In 2024,  Francisco Eme was a SD Art Prize recipient and in the piece he exhibited at the San Diego History Center curated by Lara Bullock, Rain of Birds, a video of birds diving creates not only a background video, but can also be seen reflected as they seem to skim over the mirror surface of the pond he created in the space.  Eme poses questions more than shouting protests. Most important is the meditative quality of this work that gifts you with the time and space to think of these questions. In Future Rituals at OMA, he is suggesting a time when all we have left of birds is the recordings of their songs. By placing a metal rusted tube as an instrument in this part of the gallery, he asked, will you perform, will you become involved?

As a musician/composer as well as a fine art artist, sound is fine tuned into his work. The buzzing of insects informs the other installation The Resistance of Echoes with two videos, three tapestries and a ceramic sculpture. The video lens has been distorted, almost like we are looking at the scene through the eyes of an alien with altered retinas or maybe it is a bee’s eye view.

Oceanside Museum of Art gives us a wide variety of exhibitions (note below the line up), but in this exhibition we are reminded in a subtle and highly aesthetic way, that we share earth, not just with each other, but with animals, minerals and plants. 









 


Francisco Eme: Future Rituals & La eco-resistencia is on view until March 22, 2026.

Honoring the visionary architect of the OMA with a new exhibition, Modern Simplicity: The Architecture of Irving J. Gill in Oceanside, this show opens November 1, to April 26, 2026.

Surf Art: Exploring Southern California's Coastal Culture is on view until Feb 1 is a joyous exhibition celebration all things about our ocean waves.

2025 – 2026 Artist Alliance Biennial open Nov 22 and is on view until March 8, 2026

OMA will host an Exhibition Celebration for both on Saturday, November 22, from 5:00 to 7:00 PM, where the community is invited to meet the artist and celebrate all these OMA’s current exhibitions.

Oceanside Museum of Art 
704 Pier View Way, Oceanside 92054 h
Wednesday, through Sunday 11:00am-5:00pm
First Friday of Every Month - Extended hours 11:00am-8:00pm


Friday, October 24, 2025

The World According to Lynn Schuette: A Must-See at PHES Gallery

By Lonnie Burstein Hewitt. Photos by Maurice Hewitt.

 

Always Wear Lipstick #1

The title of the new Lynn Schuette show at Carlsbad’s PHES Gallery is Always Wear Lipstickbut that, as the artist said when we were lucky enough to be there for the hanging, was just for fun, to see how people would respond.

For 45 years she has painted large-scale canvases that express how she feels about society, the environment, and whatever else comes to her mind. In 1980 she founded Sushi Performance and Visual Art in a downtown warehouse, where she lived, did all the necessary work, and featured provocative, cutting-edge artists for 15 years. Then she left to work on her own art, which has been included in museums and private collections around San Diego County and beyond ever since.

This current exhibit includes several of the projects she’s been working on over the years.

“We start with Stagnation, and move into Revival,” she said. 

The front room in the gallery features pieces from her Stagnation Series, the beginning of her Covid-era work.  She’d had a feeling of some calamity coming, and then the pandemic happened, followed by lockdown.

Just When You Thought You Were Safe
 

She started ripping up old paintings to throw out but decided there was something else she could do: use the fragments to create new artworks instead. All the pieces on view here are “cut-ups”, some painted over, some not.

Study for Slipping Beauty and Study for WooHoo.
 

In the next room there’s Essential Décor--eight pieces sold together as one piece. A significant part of this is a portrait of Artemisia Gentileschi, a 17th century Italian painter who managed to become a celebrated artist despite a violent rape and living in an age when there were virtually no opportunities for female artists.

The artist holding her Artemesia. 

Another part of Essential Décor: an illustrated James Baldwin poem.

 In an adjoining space is the One Dozen Roses Project, started in the late 1960s as a tribute to anti-war protests and created from photos she had made of aging roses. It’s an ongoing project: when a work is sold, she does a new painting to keep the dozen complete.

One of the One Dozen Roses: Je Suis Fatigué de Sang (I Am Tired of Blood.)

In the last room is Schuette’s Revival, a large scale three-panel portrait she made of a photo of dancers from the company of choreographer Pina Bausch, a photo she loved and kept in her home studio.

“I never paint figures, but I decided to do it,” she said. “It was sort of like shedding my skin… a revival.”

Revival. 

As her exhibit was being hung by gallery owners Paul Henry and Ellen Speert, she was not just an observer; she and her assistant, Lauren Nett, found plenty to do.

Lynn Schuette and Lauren Nett at work at the hanging. 

“It’s fun,” she said. “I don’t want to just scribble something down; I do it all. I like the whole process.”

This exhibit can be a full-on experience. Seeing these works in person and taking your time with them you really feel the spirit of the artist coming through.

It’s not about lipstick; it’s about life.  Don’t miss this show.

Lynn Schuette: Always Wear Lipstick
PHES GALLERY
On view through December 14, 2025.
2633 State Street, Carlsbad Village 92008
Gallery Hours: Thursday-Saturday, 2-5 p.m., and by appointment.
info@PHESGallery.com


Lonnie Burstein Hewitt is an award-winning author/lyricist/playwright who has been writing about arts and lifestyles in San Diego County for over a dozen years. You can reach her at hew2@sbcglobal.net

Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Fiber Art Now: ARTwear and Interpretations 2025 at Vision Museum of Textile Art at Liberty Station

 by Patricia Frischer


Denise Yaghmourian

For those who subscribe to Fiber Art Now, this small selection of artists in the ARTwear exhibition were all  juried into a print exhibition included in the fall 2024 issue of that magazine.  Beth Smith, Managing Editor and Exhibitions Director of Fiber Art Now was a previous director of the Vision Museum of Textile Art (MoTA). MoTA Curatorial and Education Manager Armando Garcia-Orso made the selection for this display which is small but focused. As the title suggested all the works are made to be worn although maybe some for very special occasions.

The selection of just five of the works below are not clothes that would find a way into a closet, perhaps, but seem very at home in a gallery. Denise Yaghmourian gives us a patchwork of  patches. MartyO takes the humble twist tie and Frankensteins it into a blouse. Amy Seeler’s necklace/scarf/albatross would certainly keep you anchored. Omar Antonio gives us a Met worthy Halloween costume.  Jesse Aviv presents 21st century amour and Gitty Duncan’s shoes would make Fred Astaire’s day. 



MartyO


MartyO, detail


Amy Seeler

Omar Antonio

Jesse Aviv

Gitty Duncan




The museum’s juried biennial, Interpretations 2025, has more than 40 artists included and continues to elevate the textile art form. Jurors include Holly Brackmann, Luisa Gil Fandino and Paula Kovarik. The selection below does not include any of the award winners, so there is plenty more to see in this show which covers an enormous variety of techniques and materials. The choice before was made with criterial of what seemed the most unusual and was photogenic. 


Maggy Rozycki Hiltner

Maggy Rozycki Hiltner - detail

Rebecca Edwards

Meredith Strauss

Meredith Strauss - detail

Diane Melms

Diane Nunez

Hanna Wojdała-Markowska



Fiber Art Now – ARTwear
 
Interpretations 2025  

Vision Museum of Textile Arts

Both on view Oct18 to Jan 31, 2026
2825 Dewey Road, Suite 100 | San Diego, 92106
Wed /Thurs. 10 am to 2 pm, Fri/Sat 10 am to 4 pm

Thursday, October 9, 2025

Radenko Milak: Four Seasons Interrupted at Madison Gallery

by Patricia Frischer



These black and white watercolors by Bosnian artist, Radenko Milak appear at first glance to be photographs. They are so detailed but a close examination reveals the shorthand the artist uses to suggest figures and structures. In this new series of 16-18 paintings you are not really asked to figure out the seasons…his interest is really in climate change but that is created more by a mood than the obvious portrayal of snowbanks, fallen leaves, spring flowers or summer heat.  The seasons are merged together. These are New York City and urban to the core.

"The mission of my gallery is to bring global contemporary art from artists worldwide to Southern California." Says Lorna York, owner of Madison Gallery in Solana Beach on Cedros. We are grateful to Rebecca Hiller, the principal art dealer for showing us around. What a boon for North County to be able to see such impressive world-wide art works locally.

 





Radenko Milak: Four Seasons Interrupted
Madison Gallery
on view until December 21, 2025
Opening reception Nov 8 from 6-9.
320 S Cedros Ave., suite 200, Solana Beach, 92075
Regular Hours: Monday - Saturday 10am-5pm

Saturday, October 4, 2025

Unknown Frontiers at Techne Art Center

 by Patricia Frischer 


Jonathon Schipper 

Crash and bang are the first sounds I heard entering TECHNE Art Center for the Unknown Frontier exhibition. But this was not an accident. It was sound coming from the falling works by sculptor Jonathan Schipper. In Schipper’s world, time isn’t just the ticking of a clock—it’s a sly accomplice. He makes you watch the world fall apart… slowly, artfully, and with impeccable timing. The framed art in the center of his wall, lifts straight out of the wall, a mechanical arm emerges with a life-like finger which then rotates and upsets the other works, one by one. Is that central work of mirror image cathedrals the robot winner of the wall? Maybe or maybe Schipper just has a fondness for reminding people that time will have its way with us all.

The humor of this work, literally knocking the art off the walls, set the tone for this show and I found myself looking for humor and finding some in much of the art on display. Hurrah…beauty and humor are valuable commodities in today’s world and we need as much as we can find. 

Jonathon Schipper 

Jonathon Schipper 

Jen Hitchings creates a meditation on the age-old romance between humankind and nature—a relationship as mystical, mythological, and codependent as any doomed love affair. 


Tim Murdoch art is hand (or foot)-worked, repurposed, and lightly seasoned with humor and exists as aesthetic public mischief.


Tim Murdoch- detail

Tim Murdoch

Will Hutnick is looking through a queer, ecologically tuned lens that refuses to play nicely with binaries.


Will Hutnick

Delilah Strunkel explores imaginative micro-worlds and patterns—those hidden little universes you didn’t know were lurking inside you, like houseguests who never left. 


Frank Webster paints the natural world the way a poet might transcribe an avalanche—delicately, yet with a sense you may not get out alive. 



Kate Stone's works is perfectly timed for Halloween. A simple piece of beige carpet, but look close and it is so creepy and funny at the same time as the teeth are very similar to the pile of the rug.


Kate Stone - detail





Christopher Lin is building the future’s ruins while we’re still tripping over today’s.


Christopher Lin

David Kramer takes the chatter in his head: disclaimers, distractions, and self-deprecating jokes that elbow their way onto the surface of his hooked rugs. 



Briana Miyoko Stanley Lane has given us part memory palace, part obstacle course, and part séance for the things we’ve lost. In short, she has built a world you can walk through—though she might gently suggest you watch your step.



Briana Miyoko Stanley Lane

Hwang (Bo) Kim has dabbled in everything—drawing, assemblage, printmaking, photography—before settling down with oil paint, the way someone might finally surrender to sensible shoes. So comfortable, reliable and and you want them to last forever.


Chuck Thomas, is owner and curator of this show and it is always a thrill to see his studio open and the work on view. I find the motion and the color in his work, just pure joy. 

Unknown Frontier
TECHNE Art Center
Curated by Chuck Thomas
On view until Dec 5
Other artists featured include artists Jeff Feld, Sylvia Fernandez, Nathanael Flink, Jason Clay Lewis.
Thursday, Friday, Saturday 1-6pm
1609 Ord Way, Oceanside, CA 92056