Sunday, May 31, 2026

Endless Summer at Techne Art Center

 By Patricia Frischer


Yena Kim

Chuck Thomas wrote of this exhibition Endless Summer,  “ Endless Summer affirms that San Diego is not only a remarkable place to live, but a vital place to create. “ This is the second in a series started in 2023 with Fresh-Squeezed at Techne Art Center which continues to present their artists with multiple works in mini one-person exhibitions. The space accommodates this so well with multiple rooms and two levels.

Yena Kim’s whicker work was so impressive as it was if it grew in the room, looping over existing pipes and creeping up and down walls.  These baskets by Kim started as light shades but the wild nature of their shape took over and catapulted them in to sculptures.  

Gail Roberts’ flower in the work below is actually a composite of many different flower parts, but it reads as one. Her colors continue to impress with their vividness, as she develops from earlier works to these color field and natural selection series.  

Ashely Kim charming pots with elephant motifs and her hanging spoons/small shovels hanging from baby arms are a bit at odds with each other. The pots seem to be the way to go as their reflect on a more ancient history.

John Dillemuth continues to entertain us and this is another chance to see his contraptions and even play with them in a more casual setting than a museum.  

Jay Bell goes back to his first cars and moves on to trucks in this group of flat backgrounded compositions. A whole series of white trucks seems to have grabbed his attention as they represent the work horse of the modern era.

Lee Puffer presents paintings we have never seen before along with more disturbing version of her well-know ceramics. The color from previous sculptures in now splashed on canvas, and the pottery heads are left almost red clay bare.

You have to come close up to see Maddie Butler‘s photographic images embedded and laying on the surface of what looks like computer components. It is almost as if the hard surfaces are holding the real images captive.

Steve Harlow running images stretched down the hall, around the corner and even jumped the staircase into the next room and we ran right along with them. They are dense with color and imagery and maybe the pages of a story leaping right out of a book.

Scott Bruckner long lean finely finished wood sculptures are almost a through back to another time, maybe, mid-century modern meets Brancusi.

Other artists included in this exhibition: Phillip Ritterman, Kelsey Overstreet, Marisa DeLuca, Ahavani Mullen, Philipp Rittermann



Yena Kim


Yena Kim

Gail Roberts

Ashely Kim

Ashely Kim


Ashely Kim



John Dillemuth



Jay Bell

Jay Bell

Lee Puffer

Maddie Butler

Maddie Butler

Steve Harlow


Steve Harlow


Scott Bruckner

Endless Summer at Techne Art Center
Showing until August 1st, 2026
1609 Ord Way, Oceanside, CA  92056
Chuck Thomas 917-972-1752
Thurs, Fri and Sat 1-6pm

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