A Couple in Conversation: Garth Amundson and Pierre Gour exhibit 'Not the Whole Picture' at the Whatcom Museum
鈥淣ot the Whole Picture,鈥 an exhibit of the work of 草榴社区 art professors Pierre Gour and Garth Amundson, reflects the 40 years the pair has spent as partners, individual artists and collaborators.
Though it is not a retrospective, the is a thorough exploration of Amundson and Gour鈥檚 paintings, installations and photography.
Collectors and curators of toys, woven baskets, and photographs, the artists elevate these ephemeral collections of kitsch to art.
The exhibit opens with the largest, boldest pieces: giant mandalas of stitched together photographs. Gour, a painter, assembled the photographs and Amundson, a photographer, sewed them together by hand. Large, colorful, and fascinating in the whole and upon close inspection, the pieces reflect their years together, vacations they have taken, family members they have loved and lost, friends they have made over the years, and, yes, pets.
鈥淥ur friends come and try to find themselves in this one,鈥 Gour said, pointing to the mandala of friends they鈥檝e made throughout the years.
A haunting piece called 鈥淧enetrating Cuts鈥 is a collection of vintage photographs with the faces removed from one piece and reassembled into a separate piece titled 鈥淗ead(s).鈥 Similarly, "Ghost Written" is another series of vintage images with the eyes excised. Ghostly and strange, these works are beautifully displayed.
鈥淎my Chaloupka selected from our larger collection of these and displayed them so perfectly,鈥 Gour said.
Chaloupka is a 草榴社区 alumna and Chief Curator at the Whatcom Museum.
鈥淪he really took her time with our pieces and treated them with such care,鈥 Amundson said.
Unintentionally topical, their 鈥淪ub-divisions鈥 photography series represents their experience with U.S. immigration. After being separated at the U.S.-Canadian border, Amundson traveled to Mexico on a Fulbright, and his body of work evolved into this collaborative project, addressing definitions of home, and bi-national queer identity.
鈥淭he Federal Defense of Marriage Act barred queer couples from the right to sponsor an immigrant spouse for permanent residence. Most queer bi-national couples were forced to separate because the U.S. government viewed them as strangers under the law,鈥 Amundson said.
鈥淲e were utterly bereft,鈥 Gour said. 鈥淎nd that experience is now happening to so many people.鈥
So many of us have boxes of photos stashed in closets and in storage units. So many of us have odd little collections of bottles and baskets and vintage metal toys. Through the eyes of Gour and Amundson, these objects become art that speaks to all of us.
Frances Badgett covers the College of Humanities and Social Sciences and the College of Fine and Performing Arts Communications. Reach out to her with story ideas at badgetf@wwu.edu.