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John Pomara Contemporary Legend Pomara takes painting to a level of intergalactic communication, with every blip-line running across the shiny taut surfaces of his painting reading like a trail line of a shuttle shooting through space. He's a futurist working in an ancient medium, a cyber-naut floating through space with paintbrush and squeegee in hand. Pomara has been bestowed the much-deserved honor of Texas "legend." More than a mythic figure, though, Pomara is a realist who sees painting's new potential in the digital age. In "Track and Field" (1997), a series of 45 photocopies, Pomara transforms a Xerox machine into a painting tool, manipulating paint drips as the copier-camera scans away. This survey of the artist's work includes paintings and print work from the early '90s to the present. The power of this show is in teaching us about the gifts of one artist using the ready-at-hand, from copy machine to desktop software, photographic pixel to digital bit. Through October 22 at the Dallas Center for Contemporary Art, 2801 Swiss Ave., 214-821-2522. (C.T.)