Art review: Show at Space makes connection between textiles and film Punctures: Textiles in Digital and Material Time is on view at the Portland gallery through July 3.
By Jorge S. Arango
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Suspended from the ceiling, “Iran Si Iran” (2019), by Eniola Dawodu, is at the center of the “Punctures” installation at Space Gallery.
Photos by Carolyn Wachnicki
We don’t normally make much of a link between textiles and digital film technology. Yet their natural symbiosis comes intriguingly alive in “Punctures: Textiles in Digital and Material Time,” through July 3 at Space gallery.
IF YOU GO
WHERE: Space, 538 Congress St., Portland
TROY, N.Y. — Ask any small business owner what they love about their job, and many will tell you they get to do something they re passionate about for a living.
A Boston company is currently in the City’s review pipeline for a proposal that would completely remake the Willow Street-Highland Street industrial area – building a brand new building that would house a 33-dock freight forwarding business consisting of three yet-unnamed tenants.
Seyon Management, of Newbury Street, is proposing to demolish the existing warehouse at 22 Willow Street, combine the lot with 250 Marginal Street (now a vacant parking lot) and construct a new 146,410 sq. ft. building with 33 loading docks for the purpose of airport-related freight forwarding.
Seyon Management is proposing to demolish this old warehouse building on Congress and Willow Street and replace it with a new building that would house three freight forwarding tenants associated with the airport.
Art and activism came together for an event in Portland Tuesday night. Roughly 100 people attended a ‘Day of Remembrance’ at 754 Congress St. to mark the one-year anniversary of the day George Floyd was killed by former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin. Sign up for our Newsletters Performers used the open-air stage to rally for social justice and equity. The event was organized by the Indigo Arts Alliance and included performances.