
today
8 a.m. Armack Orchestra Rummage Sale Arcata High Multipurpose Room
read >8:30 a.m. Audubon Field Trip: Arcata Marsh Klopp Lake, foot of I St.
read >8:30 a.m. HCAR Holiday Craft Fair and Rummage Sale HCAR Sunrise Plaza
read >9 a.m. Arcata Farmers' Market Arcata Plaza
read >9 a.m. Tai Chi for Everyone Arcata Plaza
read >9:30 a.m. Lanphere Dunes Restoration Pacific Union School
read >9:30 a.m. Disovery Walk: Introduction to Architectural Styles Eureka Theater
read >10 a.m. Holiday Craft Fair Bethel Church
read >10 a.m. Jacoby Creek School PTO Annual Holiday Boutique Jacoby Creek School Gym
read >10 a.m. Celebrate Madhavi Arcata Plaza
read >10 a.m. Earlier than the Bird: Pre-Holiday Sale and Fun See Event Description
read >11 a.m. KMUD's 4th Annual Battle of the Rock Bands Mateel Community Center
read >11 a.m. Downtown Fortuna's Autumn Fete See Event Description
read >11 a.m. Mexican Folk Art Sale Private home in Eureka
read >noon Dreamscapes The Oasis
read >2 p.m. The Uniontown Jazz Trio Morris Graves Museum of Art
read >2 p.m. Friends of the Marsh Tour with Art Barab Arcata Marsh and Wildlife Sanctuary Interpretive Center
read >4 p.m. Acoustic and Open Mic Has Beans
read >6 p.m. Matthew Cook Cher-Ae-Heights Casino
read >6 p.m. The Tumbleweeds Chapala Cafe
read >6 p.m. Jesse & Lee Libation
read >7 p.m. Saturday Evening Dinners for Singles Private House in Arcata
read >7 p.m. Musaic Old Town Coffee & Chocolates
read >7:30 p.m. Joe & Me Cafe Mokka
read >7:30 p.m. Saul Kaye Six Rivers Brewery
read >7:30 p.m. Depaver Jan Westhaven Center for the Arts
read >8 p.m. Defending the Caveman Arkley Center for the Performing Arts
read >8 p.m. Opal's Million Dollar Duck Redbud Theatre
read >8 p.m. Getting It Arcata Playhouse
read >8 p.m. She Loves Me North Coast Repertory Theater
read >8 p.m. Nightshade Serenade presents Gypsy Alchemist Cabaret Redwood Raks World Dance Studio
read >8 p.m. The Medium Gist Hall Theater at HSU
read >9 p.m. Karaoke w/Chris Clay The Boiler Room
read >9 p.m. Austin Alley & the Rustlers Bear River Casino
read >9 p.m. Triple Junction Cher-Ae-Heights Casino
read >9 p.m. Mission Critical with DJ Dub Cowboy Jambalaya
read >9 p.m. Pato Banton and the Mystic Roots Band Six Rivers Brewery
read >9 p.m. Ponche! WAVE @ blue lake casino
read >9 p.m. Play Dead Humboldt Brews
read >9 p.m. Blanket, Emily Lacy, The Candles The Lil' Red Lion
read >9 p.m. Jeff DeMark, UKEsperience Muddy's Hot Cup
read >9:30 p.m. Live DJ Ragg's Rack Room
read >9:30 p.m. DJ Marv The Playroom
read >9:30 p.m. Jimi Jeff & the Gypsy Band Riverwood Inn
read >9:30 p.m. Abstract Rude, DJ Drez, Myka 9 The Red Fox Tavern
read >10 p.m. DJ Blancatron Aunty Mo's Lounge
read >10 p.m. DJ Itchie Fingaz Sidelines
read >11:15 p.m. The Metal Shakespeare Company, 33 1/3 The Alibi Lounge and Restaurant
read >previous columns
Aug. 2, 2007
The image collector — Kim Sallaway’s perfect moments
SoHum photographer Kim Sallaway is one of those people who ...
read >July 19, 2007
Beyond fingerpainting: A full palette of kiddie art options at the Graves
My son has been exposed to art pretty much from ...
read >Photos
The Last Brenda & Libby Show
By Katherine Almy
“My goal is to make my etchings colorful using only black and white.” I never knew Brenda Tuxford, the woman who said that about her art. I knew of her, but by the time I arrived she was already working primarily behind the scenes, so I didn’t get a chance to meet her before her untimely death. I’m pretty sure I would have liked her. It sounds like everyone who knew her did. But I’m not going to try to describe someone I don’t know. Instead I’ll just focus on her artwork.
I’m intrigued with the artist’s goal of making colorful images using only black and white. She does this with the depth of her perception and involvement with the story she’s telling. “Since my art, family and friends are totally integrated, my obvious love of my subjects make my art very romantic,” she writes in an artist’s statement from a previous show. Romantic? Well, not the Hollywood version. It’s romance with a definite quirkiness and a strong sense of humor. Proportions and perspective are all subject to interpretation in her work. Accurate representation of detail is not the point. What she did do, very successfully, was to show the world through her eyes.
Some artists concentrate on capturing the essence of the scene in front of them, but Tuxford’s strength was to show the rest of us what the ordinary world looked like from her own perspective. Her spirit and personality come through in her work, almost more than the subject matter.
She was primarily a print artist, but she got involved with other media later in life, as the toxicity of the printmaking process started to wear on her. Book arts were a passion in her later years, and she collaborated with best-selling children’s author Natasha Wing to illustrate a hand-made book. Fiona’s Tea Party uses the setting of Ferndale’s Gingerbread Mansion, and Tuxford’s energetic lines and rich decoration work well to illustrate a familiar place and the fiery Fiona.
Wing says she was attracted to Tuxford’s “odd and skewed vision of people,” as well as her playfulness. Of her collaboration with the printmaker, Wing says, “it was just like a couple of kids getting together and doing a project.” The last copy of this local treasure, framed pages from the book and other recently discovered works of Tuxford’s will be on exhibit and available for purchase during the months of August and September at A.G. Edwards in Eureka.
The exhibit also includes the work of her longtime business partner, Libby Maynard. It was these two women who gave birth to the Ink People back in the late ’70s. They met as students at Humboldt State University. Tuxford was just finishing up her MA and was faced with the prospect of no longer having access to the college’s resources. How could she continue her printing habit? In order to fill this void in the community and have access to a press herself, she and Libby founded the Ink People, which made a printing press available to all. The Ink People is still a resource to the community, and not only for printers.
Maynard and Tuxford were very close friends and they made an especially good team. “As a working partnership,” says Maynard, “we had very different kinds of skill sets and personalities.” They complemented each other, and sometimes clashed with each other, and the same is true for their art. While Tuxford’s style was broad, outgoing and narrational, Libby’s work is introspective, highly symbolic and often times inscrutable. “My work doesn’t sell well,” she admits. “People either love it or they hate it.” It’s the classic example of art work that makes people say, “But what does it mean?”
If you want to see a story, you’ll go for Tuxford’s work, but if you can live with the esoteric, the rich colors and intriguing marks of Libby’s work are certainly beautiful. And Maynard is okay with it if you don’t grok her work. She believes that art works in mysterious ways, and it is not of supreme importance for everyone to understand it. I don’t think she has a problem with art that people get, but art that’s over our heads is still art in her book. It has an energy of its own and works its magic regardless of human understanding. It is her gift to the world.
“The Last Brenda & Libby Show” will be on exhibit at A.G. Edwards, 318 5th Street, in Eureka from Aug. 4 through Oct. 4. The net proceeds from the sales of Brenda Tuxford’s artwork will be donated to the Brenda Tuxford Memorial Fund of The Ink People Center for the Arts, as will 10 percent of Libby Maynard’s sales.


















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