Jack Barkla has dreamed up hundreds of wild and wondrous sets for Twin Cities theaters. But the most fascinating stage he's designed might be his living room.
Every surface of his Linden Hills rambler is packed with objects that Barkla, 78, has created or collected. Sculptures, puppets and old stage props. Small, intricate models that Barkla carved and lacquered before building to scale. And the dozens of framed paintings hanging from the walls? Barkla did those, too.
The paintings are about to get their first audience.
After decades designing sets for the Guthrie Theater and the Children's Theatre, the Holidazzle Parade and Dayton's eighth-floor auditorium, Barkla is putting on his first gallery show. The exhibition, which opens Saturday at Hennes Art Co., reveals the theater veteran's lesser-known artistic life — one he's honed since high school. Some of the more than 100 paintings for sale are dark, baroque. Others are clean, cubist.
"An actor who comes onstage, he can be an old Italian man, he can be a Shakespearean character," Barkla said, explaining his varied styles. "I discovered that's what I think about painting. I do believe in adapting my style to what I'm saying."
Some pieces look like stages themselves. In one series, which Barkla calls his "ghost paintings," partially hidden figures appear in a strange land, where walls float just off the ground, trees appear cardboard-thin and curtains give way to trees.
A painted legacy
For long stretches, Barkla painted only theater renderings. He was busy. At one point in the mid-1980s, Barkla was designing for seven shows and had gone 13 years without a vacation.
"I was lucky, during that time, to produce one or two paintings a year," he said.