
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
Sept. 6, 2007
Do You Get It? Minimalist art at Piante
It's that awkward time of the month again when everyone ...
read >Aug. 23, 2007
Art at a Lumberyard?
One result of the popularity of Arts Alive!-type events is that every business in town wants to get in on the picture (if you'll pardon the pun). I'm certainly an advocate for art in the county, but I question the value of this. Not every business is a go
read >Photos
One Big Show
By Linda Mitchell
It was a powerful, wildly successful show, with unprecedented sales and community support, yet Jim McVicker described his recent exhibit at the Cody-Pettit Gallery as a roller coaster of emotion. "The response to the show was completely amazing, but the whole week was a blur," he said. "Nothing felt real because Terry wasn't there."
Jim gives his wife and painting partner, Terry Oats, credit for the inspiration behind the show, a retrospective "studio sale" featuring work he created from 1980 through 1999. "We were cleaning out our basement and I started pulling out painting after painting," said Jim. "I came up with the idea of having a studio sale, but when we saw how much good work was in storage, we knew it would be impossible to have it at our house. It was Terry who suggested the Cody-Pettit."
Realizing the exhibit could be a major event, both Terry and Jim planned to help hang the paintings and remain in the gallery throughout the four-day event, but on the Monday before the show disaster struck: Terry fell off their roof while trimming a rhododendron. "It was horrifying," Jim recalled. "I heard her scream and my heart just stopped."
The day after the accident, I visited Terry in the hospital and found her in high spirits, looking as radiant as ever. She apologized for not being able to help hang Jim's paintings, and said that although the X-rays had revealed a broken pelvis, she was convinced she would make it to Arts Alive! Saturday night. "Forget about the show," I instructed. "Just concentrate on healing."
On Wednesday morning, Jim delivered his paintings -- 89 of them -- to the gallery, where there was already a crowd of potential collectors awaiting his arrival. I helped Jim and my husband Bill Cody (who co-owns the gallery with Bruce Pettit) unload the van, while Jim updated us on Terry's condition. Her caregivers were coping with "pain issues," he explained. They suspected her injuries might be more extensive than the X-rays had initially revealed. A CAT Scan was being scheduled, as well as an MRI. The two sleepless nights Jim had spent since the accident were etched in his face. I suggested he return to the hospital, but he said Terry had insisted he remain at the gallery.
It would turn out to be a very long day, and the beginning of an even longer week. An immensely popular painter who hasn't had a public studio sale since 1983, Jim brought people to the gallery in droves. Four paintings sold before we had finished unloading the van. More people arrived and more paintings sold.
In between conversations and sales, we hung the paintings, putting images of Yosemite from the '80s and '90s together, then grouping the artist portraits that Jim had created for a 1992 show at the Humboldt Cultural Center. We hung street scenes from the early '80s on one wall and ones Jim did when he was painting with George Van Hook back when they were sharing that "very funky" studio in Arcata on another. "There was no hot water, no shower, just a toilet. Rats running around, the whole thing," Jim recalled. He remembers being happy, though. "We were outside all the time anyway, painting on the streets."
Jim's paintings revealed a variety of changes in the region since he began painting here, 35 years ago. The steps around the statue of McKinley, featured in "Arcata Plaza," have given way to flowerbeds, and an apartment building now blocks the view of Curtis Otto's house in "Eureka Street." Vegetation currently obscures the view of "Korbel Bridge," and "The Red Pepper," the Arcata restaurant Jim captured so luminously in 1980, disappeared decades ago. Two of the artists featured in Jim's portrait series have since died.
As he sold another painting featuring the Trinity River in 1985, Jim told the buyer, "Stock Schlueter was painting with me on the day I did that one. There had recently been a landslide and it created a big open spot in the composition that I thought was visually appealing." Vegetation has erased the slide over the years since, he noted, creating a completely different landscape.
Over the next four days, the gallery remained full, a community of strangers united by shared memories of a distant time and place, evoked by Jim McVicker's images. As a plein air painter, Jim's work has been very visible over the years, and many people remembered running into him while he painted in Trinidad or Loleta or Arcata.
Everyone had stories. There was Sal, for instance, who worked at the bowling alley behind Jim's funky studio in Arcata in the early '80s. "I could hear the pins fall while I was sleeping," Jim recalled. "Sal came by the studio often and I did portraits of him and his wife, Gloria, which they still proudly own. Sal reminded me that Gloria did my hand print and a palm reading from it in 1981. She predicted I would become a very successful artist."
In 1983, two years after that palm reading, Jim followed a girlfriend to Wyoming. "George and I had painted together daily for about three years, and it was a great period of growth," he said. "I spent the year in Wyoming finding more of my own voice."
Jim broke up with the girlfriend and moved back to Humboldt in 1984. He met Terry the same year. "Her influence on my work and life started another period of growth that continues today," he said. "It's great to have another artist in my life who has her own vision, which in turn makes my work stronger."
Terry remained on everyone's mind over the course of Jim's show, despite the whirlwind of chaos that defined the gallery. Further tests revealed Terry had compressed disks, a cracked vertebrae, fractures in the sacrum and a painfully inflamed psiatic nerve. She remained in the hospital and Jim remained sleepless.
More than 70 paintings ultimately sold over next few days. The gallery ran out of red dots, the price lists kept disappearing, and the bank handling the gallery's credit card account called to ask what in the world was going on. There was an outpouring of love and support for Terry, as well. Her spirits remain remarkably high. Her doctors predict a long but complete recovery.
Many of the paintings from Jim's show, treasures of a bygone era, now grace the homes of new owners, and both Terry and Jim are focused on the future. "We've already talked about how Terry's accident will impact our work, how it will change what we're painting," Jim mused. "We aren't sure how that will play out yet, but we're optimistic about what the future holds."
If you'd like more informationabout Jim's show or Terry's condition, please feel free to call Bill Cody at the gallery at 444-3995.


















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