Jeff Jahn (born 1970) is a curator, art critic, artist, historian, blogger and composer based in Portland, Oregon, United States. He coined the phrase declaring Portland, "the capital of conscience for the United States," in a Portland Tribune Op Ed, which was then reiterated in The Wall Street Journal.
Jeff Jahn's cultural activities in Portland, Oregon frequently receive attention outside the region on CNN, Art in America, The Art Newspaper, The Wall Street Journal and Art News etc. Described in the press as "outspoken and provocative", and curatorially as, "a clarion call for Portland's new guard of serious artists—the ones creating a dialog that exceeds the bounds of so-called regional art." He originally took up art criticism when then Modern Painters (magazine) editor Karen Wright asked him to contribute to the then London based magazine in the late 1990s and in 2005 he co-founded PORT, a noted visual art blog.
Also, he lectures on art history or critiques at; Portland Art Museum, University of Oregon, Pacific Northwest College of Art, Portland State University, Oregon College of Art & Craft and Lewis and Clark College. In 2010 he was a Juror for the Andy Warhol Art Writing Grants. From 2002-2008 Jahn served as a board member of the Portland Art Museum's Contemporary Art Council and was elected to the vice president's post for a three year term 2005-2008. In 2006 he launched the visual arts non-profit Organism, which has hosted the work of artists Jarrett Mitchell Pipilotti Rist, Yoram Wolberger, Weppler & Mahovsky and Hank Willis Thomas. In 2008 he shut down Organism as the scope of his projects fell increasingly outside of its more narrow mission (living artists). One of Jahn's more recent curatorial project was a scholarly conference and exhibition dedicated to the work of Donald Judd with Robert Storr as keynote speaker at the University of Oregon's Portland campus.
Read more about Jeff Jahn: Exhibitions, Publications, Reviews and Interviews
Famous quotes containing the word jeff:
“Resorts advertised for waitresses, specifying that they must appear in short clothes or no engagement. Below a Gospel Guide column headed, Where our Local Divines Will Hang Out Tomorrow, was an account of spirited gun play at the Bon Ton. In Jeff Winneys California Concert Hall, patrons bucked the tiger under the watchful eye of Kitty Crawhurst, popular lady gambler.”
—Administration in the State of Colo, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)