ART At Large by Melanie Hupfer • Going Green: Green Gallery East Opens on Farwell
Amidst the streetlight, headlight, and neon light interrupted darkness of the 1500 block of North Farwell Avenue, the bright white Green Gallery East casts an enticing glow. 
The art in the gallery operated by John Riepenhoff, director of the
Green Gallery West in Riverwest, and Jake Palmert is clearly visible
from the sidewalk through the large windows covering the front of the
building. The gallery is announced by a sign whose only text is a solid
green rectangle.
The Green Gallery East, which opened January 31, serves to expand upon
the curatorial work Riepenhoff has done at the Green Gallery West, 631
E. Center St., for over five years.
Riepenhoff started the West gallery while he was an art student at the
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, “out of necessity,” he said.
“Artists I knew didn’t have a venue to show their art,” he said.
Evolving out of the do-it-yourself mentality that fueled Riepenhoff and
his brother Joe when they ran a music venue and recording studio in
their attic, the Green Gallery West has expanded to host a number of
projects.
The space, in addition to showing work by artists local to
international, serves as a base for the Green Gallery Press, which
publishes books by artists and writers, a venue for local filmmakers to
share their films over Indian food, and a recording studio. It also
houses the John Riepenhoff Experience, “the world’s tiniest art
gallery,” Riepenhoff said, as well as “Club Nutz,” which may also be
the world’s tiniest comedy club. There is also studio space and a
bedroom for an artist in residence, though the space is currently
unoccupied.
The East gallery is a more formal venue designed to increase the number
of international artists showing in Milwaukee and to showcase “local
artists working at the same level as my favorite international
artists,” Riepenhoff said.
“We want people to have access to good art, art pertinent today, dealing with interesting issues,” Riepenhoff said.
At Green Gallery East
Paintings of personal trainer Joshua Van Schaick, framed scraps of
paper bearing Van Schaick’s thoughts and advice, and a flatscreen TV
projecting a short documentary explore the edges of the definition of
art and the artist in David Robbins’ “Lift: Part 2,” which runs at the
East gallery through March 7.
Michelle Grabner’s silverpoint drawings, along with a mobile by Brad
Killam, will bring an entirely different aesthetic beginning March 14.
Grabner’s radial drawings, which are the result of an extremely
repetitive and precise technique, examine the process of art making
while offering interesting visual effects. The play of light off
graphite, an intense sense of motion, a subtle softness, and other
rewards reveal themselves and recede with different viewing angles and
the passage of time.
At Green Gallery West
The West gallery features the collages, photography and sculpture of
Milwaukee artist Paul Stoelting through March 20, the tentative date of
the exhibition’s closing event and the release of a corresponding Green
Gallery Press book (visit the thegreengallery.tk for more information
closer to the date). Stoelting’s work is at once playful, modern and
pensive.
A small photograph by Brian Scott Zbichorski hangs in the John
Riepenhoff Experience, the gallery within the Green Gallery West that
is accessed by climbing up a ladder and sticking one’s head through the
opening in a small white box that serves as the gallery.
Viewing Zbichorski’s work in the John Riepenhoff Experience is an
unexpectedly effective transportation into a bright, meditative and
intimate experience involving numerous shifts in perspective.
Multimedia artist Frankie Martin’s videos, sculptures and paintings
will be up next at the West gallery on April 3. The exhibition will
explore death and the afterlife with footage shot in Pompeii, Italy. A
film about the birth of Venus will show in the John Riepenhoff
Experience.
Both Green Galleries offer periodic lectures and other special events.
Green Gallery East, 1500 N. Farwell Ave., is open Thursday and Friday
4-8 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday 2-6 p.m. For info: 226.1978 or
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
On the web: thegreengallery.biz.
Green Gallery West, 631 E. Center St., is open by appointment. Contact
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
On the web: thegreengallery.tk
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