Trend-spotters alert: Three pretty amazing shows of drawings -- and two of paintings -- are now on view in Minneapolis galleries.
That isn't enough to call a trend, but it's a definite sign of something in the air. After seasons dominated by photo shows and sprawling installations, there's something refreshing about exquisitely finished pencil sketches and bold paintings, both figurative and abstract.
Soo Visual Arts Center
Contemporary fashion magazines often revel in misery. Gorgeous, lanky blondes gaze sullenly from glossy pages, their anxious eyes betraying fear and doubt behind their hauteur. These are the haunted creatures Serena Cole unmasks in nine drawings and watercolors in "Through a Glass, Darkly."
Cole has an exquisite hand with a colored pencil, conveying in precise lines and delicate tones the beauty and distress of her mostly female subjects. They float, apparently drowned and abandoned, in dark water or gaze from black mirrors, their features ever so slightly out of whack, with reddened eyes, too-small mouths, oversized noses. In her beautiful nightmares, surreal lovelies sport skull earrings, guns and tiaras as they run through flaming landscapes buoyed by clouds of beads and flowers. Her bleak assessment of the destructive undercurrent in the beauty myth is enhanced by a vast collage of her source material, all high-fashion photos tinged with decadence and decay.
Clever sketches by three other artists fill SooVAC's secondary gallery. Brian David Downs mashes together centuries of incongruous images -- John the Baptist's head(s), dapper dancers, Assyrian sculpture, Egyptian gods and grocery carts. Jason and Jesse Pearson, twins who also call themselves Dick and Wayne, have produced watercolors marked by gay jokes, fey insults and kitschy psychedelia.
Through Oct. 20. Free. 2638 Lyndale Av. S., Mpls. 612-871-2263 or www.soovac.org.
Burnet Gallery