Everything in Its Place in Escondido.

Self-Portraits with Underwear Pulled Too High, Matthew Freedman, 1995. Acrylic on plaster.

Today a new exhibition opened at the museum of the California Center for the Arts, Escondido. Everything in Its Place: Selections from the Permanent Collection features a surprising variety of pieces.

The museum’s webpage explains how these works explore the shifting relationships between abstraction, the human form, and the environments we inhabit. In other words, the art explores just about everything and anything.

I found myself pausing before certain complex pieces, enthralled. And so many different materials! One unusual sculpture is made almost entirely of glass. There are creations on cardboard and on linen. One piece, created during the museum’s inaugural artist-in-residence program, is a ten-foot wall of open wooden boxes containing found objects–like thoughts or memories in the compartments of one’s mind.

I took photos of a few examples.

There’s humor, too. Look closely at my first photograph!

Untitled, Mark Jackson, 1983. Oil on cardboard.
In the Sun’s Blood, Doris Bittar, 1997. Oil on linen.

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I live in downtown San Diego and love to walk around with my camera! You can follow Cool San Diego Sights via Facebook or X.

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Richard Schulte

Downtown San Diego has been my home for many years. My online activities reflect my love for writing, blogging, walking and photography.

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