By Jeff Petersen
Observer Staff Writer
t's time for a changing of the guards at Nightingale Gallery.
Cory Peeke is taking over as director for Jessica Plattner after
her two years at the helm.
Plattner is moving on to a tenure-track position with the Eastern
Oregon University Art Department teaching painting, design, drawing
and art history.
A Michigan native, Peeke, who is also teaching Art 101, moved
here from Seattle. There he worked in galleries, a children's museum
and as a working artist. He has a BFA from Kendall College of Arts
and Design in Grand Rapids, Mich., and an MFA from the University of
Idaho.
"We're thrilled to have Cory here and really lucky to have him,"
Plattner said, adding he was chosen from a strong national field of
candidates. "The art department is just getting better and better."
Peeke, a mixed-media artist who currently has a show at Eastern
Washington University, got a sneak peak at EOU last year as a
visiting artist. He said he was impressed by the faculty and
students.
"The interaction was so congenial," Peeke said. "They were
excited about what they were doing."
Peeke's art involves lots of experimentation with materials. His
current work is collage-based using paint chip samples that anyone
can buy at a local hardware store.
The gallery director job will offer Peeke several main
challenges. The first is organizing shows and bringing in
interesting artists from across the nation.
"It's important to challenge viewers to see work that is more
diverse and different from what we see locally," Plattner said.
The second challenge is promoting Nightingale as a connection
between the university and the community and between the art
department and the rest of the university.
The third big challenge is training student workers and giving
them experience in arts administration.
Plattner focused on those challenges and more during her tenure.
She worked to increase community involvement by making art show
openings more accessible to the public.
She also invited teachers to bring their classes to the gallery.
And she made the gallery more accessible to the campus community by
inviting professors from other disciplines to the gallery. For
example, she brought in Spanish classes and talked about the shows
in Spanish, drawing on her experience of living in Mexico. She also
brought in writing classes and gender studies classes to focus on
gender issues in art.
Peeke hopes to take what Plattner has built, and build on that
foundation.
The gallery is expanding its role. A milestone was being open
over the past summer for the first time for the Artists of Eastern
Oregon show, a biennial juried show that Eastern Oregon Regional
Arts Council grants helped fund. Peeke is hoping that show can be
alternated each summer with the top five award winners from the
previous year's show.
Nightingale is also in the process of building a Web site. The
site should be up by the first of the year, to give people a peak at
what Peeke is up to.