Smart types have always paired art with something more commercially promising, especially in Minneapolis where there is a long tradition of art galleries cum hair salons, frame shops, ad agencies, architecture firms and now tax prep. Three-years-old and thriving, Fox Tax Gallery is staging a new show, "More Is a Four Letter Word," opening as part of this weekend's Art-a-Whirl celebration.
Located in a one-time felt factory at 503 1st Av. NE., Fox Tax is conveniently located a few blocks from the Mississippi, where Northeast gentrification blends into the neighborhood's more bohemian precincts. Proprietors Alyssa and Mark Fox are accountants specializing in services to artists and musicians, so it seemed only natural to make a gallery in the front end of their bare-brick offices.
Guest curator Emma Berg, a fashionista with a 10-year track record in human resources at Target, picked five young artists as a sample of the kind of talent that fills the lofts and warehouses of Northeast. More than 500 neighborhood artists, musicians, photographers, sculptors and performers will throw open their studios this weekend in an annual ritual of commerce and camaraderie that attracts thousands of revelers. Berg loves the excitement of Art-a-Whirl, but wanted to concentrate and distill the otherwise sprawling event.
"Art-a-Whirl doesn't have many curated shows so it's a chance to focus, and it's an amazing opportunity to put some new artists out there to be seen," Berg said. The show's title is an ironic nod to the recession, which seems to have put a useful cap on conspicuous consumption and "all that vulgarity," she said. But at the same time, "We can't stop making art or enjoying culture; we have to go forward."
With its track lighting, leather banquettes and well-worn floors gleaming under fresh varnish, Fox Tax has a comfortable ambience for its up-to-the-minute art. The "More" five are a trendy bunch of recent art-school grads whose paintings have the signature look of young art today -- colorful, winsome, artfully unfinished, illustrational and/or accented with Pop culture and art historical allusions.
Magical styles
Even so, there are five different styles on display, or rather four different styles since two of the artists, Tynan Kerr and Andie Mazorol, collaborate on every painting. At about 8 feet tall and 4 feet wide, their largest is a high-gloss peach-green-and-blue scene of snakes slithering through a crowd of men in casual wear. Their smaller fantasy portraits vaguely suggest perhaps Humpty Dumpty, Queen Victoria, Hitler, a masked Indian. Or perhaps not.
"They're very loose, washy portraits of people who are just barely there, in a lot of senses," said Kerr. "They feel sort of magical to us."