Archive for the 'Around Town' Category

SUPER Volunteer, Part 2

So as everyone knows, in just about three weeks downtown Indianapolis will go CRAZY with Super Bowl visitors and events! It is really exciting to see the preparations as the city gets ready for the big day. Those of us who are volunteering are getting ready, too – we had a big training session in mid-December to go over more of the details. Just imagine figuring out where 8,000 volunteers are going to park!  I can tell you that there are several sites around downtown that we’ll be able to park at and then get shuttled into the heart of the action.

I have to admit, I am really excited about what comes next – picking up our uniforms!  All volunteers will receive a warm jacket, long-sleeve shirt and either a hat or ear band with the Super Bowl XLVI logo. I am particularly stoked to get one of the “Super Scarves” that were hand-knit by volunteers.  Laugh at me if you will, but I am really proud to get to wear one.

And if you thought the Art Center wasn’t caught up in the Super Bowl excitement, think again!  We will be playing host to one of the 33 “Super Cars” painted with NFL team colors and placed at attractions all over town.  We can’t wait to find out which team’s colors will grace the Churchman-Fehsenfeld Gallery. We’d all prefer Colts blue, of course…

I’ll check in again as the big weekend draws closer – maybe even sneak in a photo of our uniforms. Until then, have a Super Day!

SUPER Volunteer

It’s less than 79 days until kickoff to Indianapolis’ debut in the national spotlight as the site for Super Bowl XLVI. Pam Rosenberg, the Art Center’s Director of Operations, was one of the 8,000 volunteers selected from among the 13,000 who applied. We asked Pam to share her experiences in a series of blogs.

Becoming a SUPER volunteer

As soon as it was announced that Indianapolis had been awarded the 2012 Super Bowl, I knew that I was interested in volunteering. Along with travel, volunteering around the community is something my husband Larry and I love to do (and we are raising our daughter to do, as well). As a breast cancer survivor, the Komen Race for the Cure is always on our calendar (April 21 in 2012!). The Super Bowl not only showcases our community, we’d be meeting people from all over the country and the world, kind of combining our two hobbies. It was too good to pass up.

Although our volunteer experience has only just begun, it has already been fascinating. We were introduced to plans for the Super Bowl at a volunteer kickoff at Conseco Fieldhouse in September, complete with celebrities and entertainment. You could feel the excitement starting to build.

Last Friday, I took the online Super Service training course so that I and the other 7,999 volunteers will be up to speed on how to provide Super Service. It covered general information about Indianapolis, our hotels, restaurants and attractions, details about the Super Bowl and logistics, plus some general safety information. I’m practicing saying “Have a Super day!” and responding “It’s my pleasure” to people who thank me for stuff. Also, I liked the concept of the 20:12 rule—we are supposed to make eye contact with people within 20 ft. and greet them within 12 ft.

The next step is coming in December, when we all attend in-person training sessions.

It is exciting to be a part of such a huge civic effort.  Even though the volunteer slots are filled, there are still ways for everyone in Indianapolis to get involved.  One way close to my heart is the Indy’s Super Cure Initiative. I know how important it is to support research into the causes and treatments for all types of cancer. I urge all women to consider donating tissue to the world’s only breast tissue bank. Donating is easy and actually fun – there was a free smoothie bar and great “swag bags” when I donated! Here’s the link to donate tissue https://komentissuebank.iu.edu/donation?action=welcome . Or you can always donate by texting CURE to 27722 to donate $10 to the Komen Tissue Bank.

I hope you’ll check back to the Art Center blog in the coming weeks — I’ll be updating my experiences throughout the volunteer process and hopefully giving everyone a taste of what it is like to be part of such a huge event. And, as I learned to say in my training, Have a Super Day!

Ceramics Instructor Tim Ryan

Indianapolis Art Center ceramics instructor, Tim Ryan

Tim Ryan is one of the Indianapolis Art Center’s ceramics instructors. We spent an evening with him in class to find out what makes him so popular with students. See a video of Tim on the Art Center’s YouTube channel at http://www.youtube.com/user/IndyArtCtr.  

 Q. How would you describe your teaching style?

I’ve been teaching here a shocking 23 years.  I had no intention of ever being in one place that long, but there you have it. And it’s still fascinating to me. I’m still taken by surprise by somebody’s idea or somebody’s approach that there’s no reason it wouldn’t work, especially if I give them some technical support. For me, artist and teacher are so wrapped up together. New ideas that I have in my studio will be folded into my teaching. And vice versa.

Both here and at the Indiana School for the Blind and Visually Impaired, any teaching I do really, I try to differentiate instruction. I’m trying to seek out a student’s level and work with them at that level, looking forward to the next one, to bring them up to the next one. Clay is, there’s such a diversity of methods, ideas, it’s just all over the place. That’s why usually in here you’ll see wheel throwing and slab building and sculptural things because I think one informs the other. Any work you’re doing with clay will inform any other type of work you’re doing.

Most folks want to give the wheel a try. Ceramics takes repetition and practice. And changing it from instructions and ideas in your head to a kinetic memory in your hands and body. That’s what the repetition will help do. And that’s what you kind of have to do. You have to know and have a plan and create a structure, but at the same time you have to relax and let the clay be fluid and work those things over and over again so you’re not really thinking about it, so that your hands go where they need to be without having a map in your head.

 

 Q. Describe for us a typical class.

It always depends on what work everybody’s pursuing. Sometimes I’ll be doing demos on the wheel. Other times I’ll being helping somebody with trim in hand-building or slab-building.

The thing I like about my classes is there are so many people going in so many different directions that somebody walking in cold can see a lot of different things right off the bat. The people who take classes here, there’s really something special about them. And everybody in here at one point becomes an instructor. (It’s like) being the leader of a jazz combo and knowing when to let another player solo. And that happens in here.

 

 Q. You’re known for doing a really good job at creating community in your classes. Is that difficult given that all your students are at different skill levels?

Tim Ryan with his Wednesday night ceramics class

 

We’re always stressing basics. Whether you’re advanced, whether you’re 20 years into it or it’s your first week, the basics still need to be built upon. And it’s always good to review them. As you advance in technique and your ideas it’s easy to lose sight of the basic foundation of the thing and take it for granted. We welcome beginners in here because it’s a good opportunity to take everything down right to the beginning level as if you don’t know anything about clay. “It will no way impede your genius to stress basics over and over again.”

We usually do strive to find a method or approach or technique that suits (each) person. The great thing about these classes, the different backgrounds coming together and everybody has a different approach and looks at it differently usually because of the career they’re coming from. That keeps it fresh.

Everybody in here is very supportive. And it’s a “we’re all in this together” kind of attitude. It just happens that more experienced students wind up giving advice or lending a hand to the beginners. That’s so appropriate. It’s great for anybody to hear things put in a different way, it might be phrased differently than the way I say it. Or it might be done a little bit differently than the way I do it. And that’s fine. We try to encourage everybody to take a sampling of everybody’s approach and that way forge their own.

 
 
 

Tim Ryan's assistant, Darlene

 

Darlene, Tim’s monitor and assistant in class and at the Indiana School for the Blind and Visually Impaired, shares her thoughts on what makes Tim such a popular instructor.

(The students) are having a lot of fun. All the energy is there in the room. Everybody’s helping everybody. A lot of questions, answers, ‘how’d you do this?’, ‘how’d you get that effect?’ It’s just real fun.

I like working with Tim because of the way the class is constructed. Everybody’s working on their own, whether it’s hand-building or wheel-throwing, there’s all different levels—beginners to advanced. Everybody is helping one another. Advanced students sometimes you forget the basics and so it’s nice to have beginners in the group because you’re hearing Tim centering and all the foundation, wedging, and everything you have to do in centering and opening, once again, said and repeated. Everybody’s like “oh, yeah.” It’s a lot of fun.

In clay, it’s so broad. There’s so many aspects to it. You can spend a lifetime in clay and never get to all of it. So it’s nice in this class to have a little taste and snippet of things.

I’ll get in here and the next time I look at the clock, it’s 9 o’clock. The night just flies by.

Indianapolis is lucky to have a center that offers this type of medium to individuals. There’s not anything in town that does high firing and raku that I know of. Usually it’s for universities. For adults that have always wanted to try something, but were never able to do it or they did it in high school or college and then come back and have a facility like that is a really nice thing.

 

 Q. Why does a ceramics class take so many weeks (15 weeks)?

Any art medium has its challenges. Fifteen weeks (for ceramics) is a nice amount to stretch out into because it is such a process-heavy medium. You form the pieces. They have to dry. They have to get bisque fired. They have to get glazed. They have to get fired again. There’re so many steps in the process that we really need that timeframe to spread out in so that you can at least see your first wave come through. It’s going to be weeks before you actually see the results of the first piece you made and can learn from that and adapt or build on that. So the 15 weeks is very useful.

It’s amazing who comes in on their first night and can center a piece of clay and can center it and pull it. It happens. For some folks, it kind of is that easy for them. But usually it takes a lot of repetition, a lot of practice.

  

Q. What’s the most common mistake for beginners?

Nobody slips and scores enough usually when they’re hand building. The kids at the Blind School will say, “now I’m going to imitate Mr. Tim. Don’t forget to slip and score.” I probably say it 100 times. That’s something that everyone takes for granted; that’s how we attach parts. That’s the way handles get attached or sculptural elements get attached to each other. Otherwise, it’s all over the map.

It’s kind of fascinating how a rank beginner will do certain things beautifully and other things different from the person next to them. I have a theory that as far as the wheel goes, we all have a form that we throw naturally with doing the least amount of thinking. For some of us, it’s bowls; for others it’s something vertical. You can always tell which one someone is usually.

I think (students’) expectations are as diverse as their backgrounds. Some people have come in and have seen wheel throwing and it looks really easy. So that’s the first shocker—that it’s nowhere as easy as it looks. Some folks are here with specific projects in mind and products that they’d like to produce and others are here for the enjoyment of the process. I think everybody feels that spark from the potential that’s in the creative process, the power that’s there. Even if you’re not sure really what direction you want to take, being involved in that process is very compelling.

A lot of people are going to have a fear of entry into art making just because a lot of people haven’t done it since they were in middle school or high school. We also have some people come in here who are degreed in fine arts as well and want to get back into an art form. On that score, clay is one of the more available doorways for people. I think a lot of people see it as an entry level. It’s a little safer than brush and paint on canvas. It doesn’t seem to be as intimidating to folks.

Tim and 20-25 of his students are exhibiting a selection of their works at the IUPUI Campus Center’s Cultural Arts Gallery. The exhibition, Hands in Clay: Ceramics Works by Tim Ryan and His Indianapolis Art Center Students features about 100 works and runs now through April 29.

 

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

 

Mona Lisa Smiles at Penrod

If you visited us at the Penrod Art Fair a couple weekends (Saturday, September 11) ago you may have met Lisa…Mona Lisa that is.

Our staff invited Penrod patrons to become part of da Vinci’s masterpiece, Art Center style. Mona Lisa’s Art Center logo tat is a personal favorite.

Check out the new faces of Mona Lisa, here. And, here’s a peek at how she was created…

Were you Mona Lisa’d at Penrod? Become a fan on Facebook and be sure to tag yourself. Be on the look out, Mona Lisa might be making an appearance at an upcoming Art Center event.

Story, photos (and painting!) by Kate Oberreich

Irina Smulevitch, Art Center Instructor and Current Exhibiting Artist

One could chat with Art Center instructor, Irina Smulevitch, for hours and still not know all the adversity she’s overcome to become the successful artist and instructor she is today.

Throughout her life, Irina has been uprooted, always struggling to say goodbye to people and places she has grown accustomed to. Art is her way to cope, not only with saying goodbye, but with making a connection in a new home. It was advice given to her by a good friend Barbara, who said, “it’s not only the people who make a town yours, but also the places.” She advised Irina to paint different places of whatever new town she moves to as a way to “feel ownership of the city.”

Irina’s work currently on exhibit at the Art Center features watercolor paintings inspired by photographs on old postcards of places that no longer exist. She wanted to give new life to these extinct places that many people once loved, to share her experience of keeping the past alive as a way to deal with saying goodbye.

A Dream Denied

Irina was born in Odessa, a town south of the former Soviet Union during a time when political affiliation meant opportunity…and freedom. Her talent in art was encouraged from a very young age (her earliest memories are of drawing buildings in the sand on the beach with her grandfather) and her childhood dream was to be an artist.

But without protection and promotion from the Communist party, it was a long road ahead. Irina caught her first glimpse of the changing world outside of Russia in the form of The Beatles. For Irina, The Beatles were an example of freedom of expression. Although she could not understand a word without a dictionary, she felt inspired to internally question the rules and restrictions she lived under on daily basis. And another passion, for reading, gave her that huge imaginary world where you can escape from reality and be truly yourself.

At the age of 17, Irina accepted work at a local rug factory, spending long days drawing  and painting in watercolor miniature replicas of the large rugs that they offered at the factory. Although she was doing a task she loved (drawing), there was little room for freedom of expression. Artists were expected to create in the style of the traditional Russian artists of the past. 

After one year working at the rug factory, she was thrilled to be accepted to the Textile Academy in Moscow. Through her six years studying art and technologies, and despite consistent rejection and disapproval from select professors who were members of the Communist party, she graduated summa cum laude in 1989 and began to work in the fashion industry.

Things were looking up and she opened her own business. On a personal front, she met her husband and soon married. But it wasn’t long before her world was thrown upside down.

Leaving Home

Less than a year after they were married, Irina’s husband was offered a job in Dallas, Texas. For Irina, this was one of the most challenging times in her life. She was forced to leave all possessions behind. She didn’t speak a word of English.

But soon she started to learn the basics of the English language, reading books and taking classes at a community college. Her husband took a job in Long Island, New York and before long they had a son, Jacob, and Irina spent her days taking care of him, reading, and exploring the city. When they moved again, this time to Frederick, Maryland, Irina was painting again and for the first time since coming to America, she felt like herself.

Her work was shown in the Museum of Contemporary Russian Art in New York and she was selected for a solo show at Frederick Community College in Maryland. She began working at the college teaching watercolor, drawing, and fundamentals of design. Her dream of supporting herself financially as an artist was again becoming a reality.

The Frederick, Maryland community embraced Irina. A documentary of her, titled “Russian Artist in America” was broadcast in Russia. It was the first time Irina’s mother (still living in Russia), was able to see her daughter’s success. Irina continued to participate in shows in the Frederick area as well as D.C. and Baltimore.

Leaving Home Again

In the summer of 2008, Irina’s husband was offered a more advanced job in Indianapolis. Once again, she was about to be uprooted. But this time, when it came time to survey their new city, her husband, knowing it would take Irina some time to warm up to the idea of moving, took her first to where she would be able to make a connection. He took her to the Indianapolis Museum of Art. After visiting the museum, Irina decided that moving to Indianapolis may not be such a bad thing after all.

Home is Where the Art IsWatercolor Instructor Irina Smulevitch

Before returning to Maryland to pack her things, Irina visited Broad Ripple. She was immediately charmed by the district and leafed through the Broad Ripple Gazette on the plane ride home. She saw a small ad for the Indianapolis Art Center and made a mental note.

Immediately after her family moved into their new home, Irina searched the Internet for the Indianapolis Art Center. Here she has found a new home, teaching a variety of classes including watercolor painting and drawing for future painters. Irina credits the Art Center for her quick adjustment to her new community. “Art is my natural person and my true self,” she said.

Her involvement at the Art Center provides Irina with a place to work, teach, and be inspired. But perhaps the most valuable thing Irina feels she’s gained is friendship. Her students and colleagues have become trusted friends.

At this point, Irina can only imagine what her future will hold, but one thing is for sure: there will be art.

Registration for Fall Classes, including Irina’s classes in watercolor and drawing for future painters, is going on now at www.IndplsArtCenter.org/Fall10.

Glass Full

We’re proud to announce…and shamelessly promote!…an exhibition by Matt Kenyon, Herron grad and Indianapolis Art Center  instructor in glass the past five years. The exhibition at the Harrison Center (1505 N. Delaware) opens during the Independent Music & Art Festival June 12 from noon-8 p.m.

If you’ve been to the Art Center, you may recognize Matt. No matter what time of day or day of the week you stop by, chances are that Matt is in the glass studio teaching or hard at work crafting his distinctive creations.

Matt has been honing his skills for the past 10 years in the ArtCenter’s hot shop, experimenting with shapes and colors, perfecting his much sought-after pieces of glass art.

If you know anything about glass, you’ll notice the complex detail work Matt is able to achieve. We’d explain, but to be honest, Matt is so much better and succinct-er at describing in easy-to-understand, non-technie terms that we encourage you to ask him. He loves to spread his love of glass among non-glass-types. So stop by the Harrison Center on June 12 and ask him. Or stop by the Art Center anytime and watch Matt at work. Both are guaranteed to be an experience you’ll always remember.

Story by Lisa DeHayes/Indianapolis Art Center

Photos courtesy of Matt Kenyon

Kaleidoscopers

Installation Nation, a project put on by Primary Colors, and now in its second year, is next weekend, June 4-5.

Installation Nation invites contemporary artists with experience in  installation art to submit proposals for a piece to be created within an 8′x8′x20′ shipping container. Of the 24 entries submitted, seven were chosen, including that of Indianapolis Art Center Steel & Stone monitor, Andrew Ball.

Andy’s concept for this project is simple- to create a visual experience which will be constantly changing throughout the day and night. People will interact with the art as “Kaleidoscopers” through viewing and turning the Kaleidoscope.

“Last year when I looked at the shipping containers of Installation Nation, it came to me that these would be perfect as giant kaleidoscopes,” Andy said,”Typically people walked into containers and looked at what was inside. As I stood outside I saw people inside and thought- why not make a piece which is both interactive and participatory by putting attendees into the work of art?”

Andy ball (left), Matt Warren (right)

Andy, along with artists Todd Bracik and Matt Warren have been hard at work in the Art Center’s Steel & Stone studio. Be part of the experience yourself at Installation Nation 2010, Friday June 4 (6pm-1am) and Saturday, June 5 (5-11pm) at 500 N. College Avenue. Tickets are $8, children under 12 are free. And $5 for IDADA members.

Kate Oberreich/Indianapolis Art Center

Photos courtesy of Andy Ball

Congrats to Walter Knabe- Official Artist of the Indy 500

Former Indianapolis Art Center Board Member Walter Knabe Selected as the Official Artist of the 2010 Indianapolis 500

Indiana-based artist, Walter Knabe, is making history at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway (IMS) this May. Knabe is the first Indiana-based artist ever to be selected as the Official Artist of the Indianapolis 500. Knabe shares this prestigious honor with other nationally and internationally renowned artists, such as Peter Max in 2003 and LeRoy Neiman in 2005. Walter Knabe’s original painting depicting the most famous race in the world will be unveiled at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway this month and will become part of the permanent collection at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Museum.

To commemorate this event, Knabe has created 10 variations of the painting and an edition of 33 screenprints.  Supporting local charity, and galleries, Knabe’s hand-signed limited edition pieces will be available for purchase at Editions Limited Gallery in Broad Ripple, ARTBOX in the Stutz Building downtown, and Evan Laurie Gallery, in Carmel. As well you can find these pieces on display at participating downtown hotels including Conrad, Canterbury and Omni.   A portion of the proceeds will benefit Knabe’s charity of choice, The Julian Center, an organization that provides shelter and counseling to victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, and survivors of child sexual abuse and has recently added the protection and support to the victims of human trafficking to their services.    In addition, the Indianapolis 500 winner will be awarded an Impact racing helmet adorned with Knabe’s artwork and a second helmet will be donated to the Riley Hospital for Children.

The screenprint techniques Knabe used on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway pieces he acquired during his 5 years of work in New York at “The Factory” with the most collected artist in the world, Andy Warhol.   Both Warhol and pop artist Keith Haring commissioned Knabe to create artwork for them, American icons Madonna and Michael Jordan followed suit.

To find out more about Walter Knabe and his work, as well as a list of galleries where you can find Knabe’s art, visit http://www.walterknabe.com.


 

February 2012
M T W T F S S
« Jan    
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
272829  

Twitter Updates

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 3,240 other followers

Archives

820 E. 67th St. Indianapolis, IN 46220


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 3,240 other followers