Tugboat Gallery is the combined efforts of Peggy Gomez, Nolan Tredway and the newest co-captain, Toan Vuong. The unassuming gallery sits in the heart of downtown Lincoln, Nebraska above Gomez Art Supply. Tugboat provides showing opportunities for emerging artists as well as established professionals. The goal of Tugboat, as a non-commission gallery is to exhibit high quality exciting artwork.
Tugboat Gallery Proudly Presents “The Good, The Shiny, and the Subversive?” featuring South Dakota artists Klaire Lockheart, and Aaron Packard.
Klaire Lockheart is a bold realistic oil figure painter and Aaron Packard is an experimental photographer. Both share the use of punchy color, love of texture, the feeling of nostalgia and making the viewer scan every inch of the image not wanting to miss a detail.
Klaire Lockheart
Klaire Lockheart’s 6 to 7’ tall realistic oil on canvas portraits are from her Feminine Attempts series, where the woman looks like a combination of Bettie Page and Betty Crocker. The scale of the paintings allows the women to be seen as monumental and intimidating, but their outfits reveal Lockheart’s sense of humor. To highlight the contrasting roles women are expected to fulfill, such as chastity and sexiness, the women wear a combination of modest clothing and provocative footwear.
Aaron Packard created large archival inkjet prints on wood panel with resin for his Networks of Noise series. This body of work represents the transition of memory, from thought to thought, and investigates an abstraction of the image by deconstruction through addition: the hyper-photomontage. These glossy panels are composed of hundreds of layers of repeated images in vivid, primary colors. This artwork depicts how Packard frames his memory through an overlapping congestion of random visual moments and emotions.
Aaron Packard
Curated by Byron Anway, Abierto is a show of drawings, paintings, and sculpture by
Anway as well as three current University of Nebraska – Lincoln’s Art, Art History and
Design undergraduate students Belen Catalan, Chas Hyman, and Qiqe Panqeqi
Martinez. In Abierto, four artists reimagine their past, present, and future selves.
Stories become memories; personal and cultural heritage are evaluated for honesty and
accuracy. The student artists exhibiting in Abierto were selected because of their talent,
vision, work ethic, and dedication to their practice. Themes include childhood, religion,
queerness, loss, and play.
Byron Anway
Byron Anway is an Assistant Professor of Practice at the University of Nebraska –
Lincoln in the School of Art, Art History, and Design. His recent works draw on
memories of teaching and traveling overseas, particularly in Morocco. Among other
venues, his work has been exhibited at the Joslyn Art Museum in Omaha, NE, Manifest
Gallery in Cincinnati, OH, and the Soo Visual Arts Center in Minneapolis. His work has
been published twice in New American Paintings the West, Manifest Creative Research
International Painting Annual, and the Prairie Schooner.
Chas Hyman
Contemporary painter and drawer Chas Hyman is a black female surrealist. She creates
magical and imaginative portraits that are representative of her own personal childhood
and experience coping with mental illness, grief, and isolation. Chas has always been
inspired by contemporary surrealist artists such as Mark Ryden and Marion Peck, and
one of her goals is to add the black perspective and representation into the growing
collection of contemporary surrealist work. Chas is almost always listening to her
favorite artists while creating work, enjoys her cat being by her side during studio time.
Chas currently lives in Lincoln, Nebraska as an art student at the University of
Nebraska- Lincoln but sees herself moving to the Pacific Northwest in the future to be
alongside the rich geographical features of the area.
Belen Catalan
Belen Catalan is an undergraduate fine arts major at University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
They graduated from Grand Island Senior High School in 2020. Currently they are
based in Lincoln, Nebraska. Belen works with several media ranging from plaster,
fabric, and found objects to graphite works on paper. Their work explores themes of
cuteness, fragility, femininity and Mexican queerness.
Qiqe Panqeqi Martinez
Qiqe Panqeqi Martinez is an artist from Grand Island, Ne. She is currently an
undergraduate studio art major at UNL. Her paintings and drawings explore transgender
identity and first-generation Mexican experiences.
Tugboat Gallery Proudly Presents “Garbage Ideas” featuring Isaiah Jones and Julia Leggent
Julia Leggent and Isaiah Jones –
Our intentions can be destructive to the self and the world—the body in distress, the world in despair. Garbage ideas is a show consisting of 52 drawings and 52 etchings. Both bodies of work call attention to individual behavior; they encourage awareness of actions, consumption, and thoughts.
This event is free and open to the public.