Tape is on a Roll

January 16, 2006

  • Tape is on a role
  • From adhesive art to duct-covered fashion statements, Portlanders can’t get enough of the household staple
  • Thursday, January 19, 2006
  • STEVE WOODWARD - The Oregonian
  • Link to the original story can be found here.

Not just dark and light. Duct tape also comes in three dozen colors, including fluorescent, and it definitely holds Portland together.

Duct-tape wallets. Duct-tape art. Duct-tape rock bands. Duct-tape songs.

Avon, Ohio, home of the nation’s biggest duct-tape manufacturer, may have its annual duct-tape festival, complete with parade and bands. But Portlanders are elevating duct tape to artistic, musical, fashion and countercultural stature not usually associated with the humble household adhesive. Chalk it up to Portland’s love affair with things DIY, anti-corporate, industrial and quirky.

— (snip) —

“A lot of people are doing duct tape these days,” Stenson says, “but gaffer’s tape has so much more potential.”

Try telling that to Mona Superhero, Portland’s — and perhaps the nation’s — premier duct-tape artist.

“I really love tape,” says Superhero, reclining on a couch beside a vivid self-portrait filled with whimsical hot-air balloons, a white rabbit’s foot dangling from an earring, an orange masking-tape swimsuit and puffy, white clouds fashioned from strapping tape.

“I almost cried the day when I discovered strapping tape,” she says.

The former stripper and cabaret promoter, who once dreamed of becoming a Playboy bunny, picked up a roll of duct tape in a Virginia hardware store one day a few years ago and began crafting portraits of musicians: Jerry Garcia of the Grateful Dead, Marc Bolan of T-Rex, jazz trumpeter Miles Davis and others.

Superhero’s 2003 art show at the Aalto Lounge attracted the kind of notice that now enables the self-taught artist to charge from $400 to more than $1,000 for her pieces. Nevertheless, though the 35-year-old woman no longer strips for a living — “My knees are shot” — she admits to occasional nightmares over the stability of her new career.

“I’m going to have to start stripping again,” she laments to herself in her nightmares. “This duct-tape thing just isn’t working out.”

Not to worry. She’s on solid ground, at least until May, when she has a show scheduled at the Rhys Gallery in Boston .

— (snip) —

Steve Woodward: stevewoodward@news.oregonian.com

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Category: press

Red Ink Studios

September 1, 2005

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Category: exhibits

Mona Superhero

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Barfly Magazine

February 18, 2005

Mona Superhero

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Willamette Week

February 16, 2005

  • Heroine Chic
  • Miss Mona Superhero tapes her way into fabulousness.
  • BY RICHARD SPEER
  • rspeer at wweek.com
  • Original Story can be found here.

“Twenty-six days,” Mona Superhero says to me in the bar at clarklewis, as we down the first of several screwdrivers.

“Huh?”

She reaches up to her neck, pulls down her pink coat and rock-band tee, and flashes me a bit of breastbone—and a patch. The patch. “Twenty-six days without smoking,” she clarifies. “Sometimes I used to smoke three-and-a-half packs a day! I’m frazzled. Plus I’m working nonstop getting ready for the show, and I didn’t sleep well last night, and…it’s been crazy!”

But a good crazy. Superhero’s album art-meets-Byzantium tableaux, intricately fashioned from multicolored adhesive tapes, have made a splash in Seattle and New York in recent months, and now the artist is back in Portland, debuting 13 new pieces at Gallery 500. The onetime cabaret dancer and co-founder of Danzine magazine has matured into a focused but conspicuously publicity-shy artist, and tonight’s interview is one of her first face-to-face sit-downs with the dreaded press.

WW: So where do you get all those wildly colored duct tapes?

Superhero: I’ve got a guy. Matt Coppo, Winston Tape Company here in town. But it’s not just duct tape. It’s utility tape, strapping tape, masking tape, cloth tape, copper tape, gold foil tape…I have this camouflage tape that’s neat, but you can’t use too much of it; it’s too busy; it’ll drive you nuts. Some of the tapes are rare or have been discontinued, and I have stashes of them that I hoard. I was saving this one roll for three years, using a tiny bit at a time, and I just used up the last bit of it today on a portrait of my boyfriend.

Do people get worried when they buy your pieces that the tape’s going to peel off?

Yes. Everybody wants to know if it’s archival. “Is it archival, is it archival?” Of course it is! There was a gallery owner who asked me that question as soon as she met me, before she even said hello. Archival, archival, I hate that word! Listen, I lay the tapes down on MDF, multidensity fiberboard, that has a vinyl coating so the tapes adhere, and after they’re on, I varnish the pieces eight times. Now, should you put them in your bathroom with all the steam? No. Should you put them in direct sunlight in the middle of the summer? No. But that’s common sense; you don’t do that to any art.

Where are you from, anyway?

I was born in Abilene, Texas, and moved to Austin when I was 12. I also lived in Butte, Mont., and Richmond, Va., for a while. From 1993 to 2002 I was a dancer on and off. That’s the period when I did Miss Mona’s Cabaret Show here in Portland.

Where was that—which venue?

Different places in town. It was great. But we’re not going to sit here all night long and talk about my stripping, are we?

No, I only brought it up to ask whether you feel any connection between dancing and what you do now, making art.

Hmmm. Yes, actually there are similarities between the two. It’s like a total Zen experience, both of them.

Looking over your newest work in your studio, I can see you’ve gotten more complex in your imagery and your technique.

Thanks. I want to lavish more attention on less pieces. My dream would be to spend an entire year on a single one, make it a total masterpiece, but there’s just not enough time. I’ve had a show every six months since I started doing this three years ago, so there’s always more work to be done.

I get a sense of the fantastical in your work, a pastiche, with all the kanji characters and skeletons, the horses in white John Travolta suits…. Where do you find your inspiration for all this stuff?

From Mark Twain quotes and vintage Playboy centerfolds and old wallpaper and things I dream about: snakes and sharks and kittens…it’s all candy color and butterfat! Lately, I’ve been getting up early in the morning to try to capture what the dawn sky looks like. I’ve always liked to draw faces, ever since elementary school, and I like to show people doing things, which is why I use roller-skating imagery. Roller-skating—I take it as my personal religion. I also put little icons in the backgrounds, things that represent other things.

And what about the conjoined twins you seem to return to? Do they have a certain symbolism?

It’s obvious, isn’t it?

Not necessarily.

I don’t know about those. All I can say about them is, they’re beyond my control.

Meaning?

They’re beyond my control.

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Category: press

Portland Oregonian “A&E”

February 4, 2005

Mona Superhero

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Gallery 500

February 1, 2005

  • Gallery 500
  • 420 SW Washington St, Suite 500
  • Portland, OR
  • (503) 223-3951

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Code Magazine // Amsterdam

January 10, 2005

Mona Superhero

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Exotic Magazine

November 21, 2004

Mona Superhero

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McCaig-Welles Gallery

November 1, 2004

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Category: exhibits