James Lavadour
James Lavadour: Land of Origin
James Lavadour: Land of Origin presents the most comprehensive survey to date of works by painter and printmaker James Lavadour (Walla Walla).
Lavadour has been a full time artist since the 1980s. Self trained, he achieved his first museum exhibition in 1990. Throughout the following decade, as Lavadour expanded his palette beyond dark and fiery earth tones, he explored new configurations of panels and moved away from his earlier skeleton imagery. Lavadour experienced a burst of productivity in the 2000s, energized by what he described as intersections between organic landscapes and architectural abstractions. Over the next twenty years, as his artistic vision and command of color matured, his national and international profile expanded; notably, Lavadour was included in the group exhibition
Personal Structures during the 55th Venice Biennale (2013) and was awarded a Hallie Ford Fellowship in the Visual Arts (2019), among other honors. His most recent paintings are spectacularly bold and luminous, physical manifestations of the artist’s statement “the land and I are one.”
Lavadour is an enrolled member of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. Throughout his career, he has been guided by a strong personal conviction that artists can serve their communities. In 1992, he co-founded the Crow’s Shadow Institute of the Arts on the Umatilla Indian Reservation near Pendleton, Oregon and served on its Board for over thirty years. This nonprofit center provides world-class printmaking facilities for visiting artists and offers training in traditional Indigenous artforms. Lavadour began his own work in printmaking in the 1990s as a means to explore layering and to deconstruct the ways in which he organizes visual information in his paintings. Etchings and lithographs included in James Lavadour: Land of Origin range from early work produced at printmaking residencies to his most recent editions published by Crow’s Shadow Institute of the Arts.
The exhibition catalogue for James Lavadour: Land of Origin includes essays by exhibition curator and JSMA McCosh Curator Danielle Knapp and guest writers Meagan Atiyeh, Rebecca Dobkins, and Marie Watt; an interview with Lavadour and JSMA Executive Director John Weber; a fully illustrated checklist with additional images of representative works; and a comprehensive artist’s CV.
Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, University of Oregon
3500-5000 sq ft
6 months
Art Bridges covers all costs to prepare and ship the artworks to the borrowing museums. The foundation encourages borrowing museums to apply for accompanying Learning & Engagement funding to support the activation and interpretation of artworks. Learning & Engagement funding supports multidisciplinary programming, interpretive materials, and community outreach.
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