As a regional event, Disjecta's Portland2016 Biennial, a multi-venue, many-month happening, could serve to refocus attention on the breadth of artists who live and work in Oregon. But much of the press surrounding it contains little mention of who those artists are. So let's shed some light on one exhibition in this elephantine event.
While the Portland2016 Biennial is chock-full of “unorthodox” venues throughout Oregon, only two projects on the roster are based out of the often-overlooked space of the artists’ garage. Of these, Lisa Radon’s exhibition at Muscle Beach, The sphere whose center is everywhere and whose circumference is nowhere, presents the rare opportunity to see work from an established and exciting experimental artist in a genuinely alternative setting.