Archive for the 'Classes/Workshops' Category



11th Annual Day of the Dead Celebration

What is El Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead)?

Strumming Up the Spirits by Tres Taylor

The Mexican tradition, Day of the Dead, is a blending of both indigenous Aztec beliefs and Spanish Christian beliefs surrounding death. The Aztecs, Maya and other pre-Hispanic peoples of Central and South America saw death as a part of the process of life. They honored the dead by inviting the spirits of the dead to return on certain days, placing food offerings on their tombs. When the Spanish arrived in Mexico, they combined the Aztec people’s beliefs and rites regarding death into their religious calendar.

Day of the Dead is a family celebration, a reunion of the living with their deceased relatives. On November 1, departed children are remembered. This is known as the Day of the Little Angels or Día de los Angelitos. Adults are remembered on November 2. Different regions of Mexico celebrate in different ways. In some villages a boisterous masquerade parade takes place while in other areas residents hold candle-lit vigils in the cemetery. Mexican communities in the United States also celebrate the Day of the Dead, blending their traditional fiesta with modern festivities.

The Day of the Dead at the Indianapolis Art Center

The Indianapolis Art Center began providing Day of the Dead programming in 2000 as a response to the growing Hispanic and Latino populations in Indianapolis. It started as a way to engage this community through a celebration of culture and tradition. The Art Center has found that Day of the Dead programming bridges all communities because death is an experience shared among all people. Communicating the history and importance of this celebration through art activities that reflect the tradition and engage children and adults in discussion regarding their own beliefs has connected people from all walks of life. The Art Center serves an educational role regarding Day of the Dead and continues to strive to bring people of all backgrounds together.

The Art Center provides five different components to its Day of the Dead programming:

  • Exhibition of altars and shrines
  • Tours of altars
  • Exhibition of a Latino artist’s work in conjunction with the Day of the Dead
  • Workshops in the community
  • Celebration

Altars (exhibiting now through November 28)

The Indianapolis Art Center is celebrating its 11th Annual Day of the Dead Altar Exhibition and Celebration. Over the last ten years community members, artists, schools and families have been able to pay tribute to deceased loved ones or groups of people who have passed through the creation of an altar, ofrenda. The goal of constructing an altar, is to honor and symbolically welcome back the soul of the deceased person(s) during the 1st and 2nd of November, in Mexico this is known as Dia de los Muertos/Day of the Dead. In Mexico this is one way to celebrate this tradition of honoring deceased loved ones. Items on the altar celebrate the spirit of the deceased in a way that represents the life of that individual. Displaying such items as favorite foods and drink, photos and trinkets help to personalize the altar and tell a story about who is being honored.

This year’s Altar Exhibition Artists are: Montserrat Alsina & Roberto Ferreyra, Leticia Alvarez, Art Center Outreach Staff, Christ Church Cathedral, Consulate of Mexico, Mary Jo DeMyer, Patricia Hecker, Salvador Jimenez-Flores, The Latino/a Youth Collective of Indiana, Inc., Bianca Mandity, Andrea Marley, Amber & Estaban Martinez, Richard J. & Cassidy R. McGowan, Alyssa Oakley, Matthew Olson, Our Lady of Mount Carmel Spanish Class, Shelby Pendleton, Tamarindo Foundation, Kat Toebes and YMCA Youth Enrichment at Christel House Academy Foundation.

Shrines (exhibiting now through November 7)

A shrine serves as a type of memorial dedicated to an individual or a group of people who have died. Like altars, they’ve become a way of telling stories about people, providing individuals another way to express and transform loss into an experience of beauty. The shrine not only provides community members with an additional way to honor deceased loved ones but with a smaller format to work.

2010 Shrine Artists include: Logan Anderson, Erin Hanley & Crystal Mossberger, Patrick Flaherty, Mab Graves, Michelle Gunter, Joshua Harris, Kyle Herrington, Kris Hurst, Eric Jones, KEY Consumer Organization, Andrea Marley, Richard McGowan & Rob Millard-Mendez, Brooke Merry, Jacob Sexton, Michael & Michaela Shires and Erika Villarreal.

Check back throughout the week of October 25-30 for more stories on Day of the Dead, the Altars & Shrines, everything Day of the Dead!

-compiled by Art Center Staff

Third Biennial Iron Pour Symposium

The Indianapolis Art Center invites the public for one of the nation’s largest organized iron pours

This fall the Art Center is heating up for its third biennial Iron Pour Symposium, October 7-10. Around 175 participants will take part in workshops, panel discussions, a juried sculpture competition and even an electrifying pyrotechnics show.

The event attracts independent working artists and faculty and students in sculpture programs from colleges and universities nationwide. This year, the Art Center is promoting spectator events, exposing more Indianapolis-area residents to this rare and exciting event that takes place every two years.

Aside from just watching the 13,000 pounds of iron being poured and the sparks fly in the Art on Fire pyrotechnics show, they will be able to work hand-in-hand with professional iron artists, learning how to make and design a scratch sand mold and then watch it get poured. (The pyrotechnics show is free to the general public and is from 9-10 p.m.; making the scratch mold is $15 per person and is from 6-7:30 p.m.)

Around seven furnaces will be set up in half of the Art Center’s east parking lot atop 2-3 dump-truck-loads of sand (to protect against sparks). The furnaces take up to four hours to heat to the 2800 degrees needed for pouring, so the best viewing will be in the evening when the molten iron beams against the dark of night.

Events for the general public:

Workshops to make a sand mold: Sept. 25-26 ($291*) Make a scratch mold & watch it be poured: Saturday, October 9 from 6 to 7:30 p.m. ($15 per person)

Art on Fire pyrotechnics show: Saturday, October 9 from 9-10 p.m. (Free) Watch artists pour iron: Friday and Saturday, October 8** and 9 from 3-8 p.m. (Free) * Art center members receive a discount **

In conjunction with the Broad Ripple Village Fall Gallery Tour Iron Speak: Since participants will get to walk-the-walk of an iron sculptor, the Art Center offers a glossary for them to be able to also talk-the-talk. Here are a few new phrases bouncing around the Art Center during Iron Pour:

Tap Hole: the opening near the bottom of the side the furnace where the iron comes out

Slag Hole: the opening near the top of the side of the furnace where waste comes out

Ladle: just like the kitchen utensil, except it’s bucket sized and holds the molten iron to pour into the molds

Spot: heard called out when someone can’t hold the weight anymore – just as in weight lifting

For more information, contact us at 317.255.2464.

 

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.

From a Beginning Printmaker to a Professional Artist

Local artist, Lisa VanMeter, is one of many artists being featured in the Indianapolis Art Center’s 2010 Open House. Lisa is not new to the Art Center family, but has been taking classes in the printmaking studio for years!

Lisa was named this year’s Best of Professional Students at the Art Center. She feels it a wonderful compliment to be chosen as “best of” in her group and is excited to be a part of her favorite annual Art Center event, the Open House.

Lisa says that the inspiration for her work that you will see at the Open House comes from the beauty of Indiana’s nature. After moving to Indianapolis from Georgia fifteen years ago, she began to fall in love with Indiana’s change of seasons. Her print (below), A Single Bird, was done on Lake Tippecanoe, in northern Indiana, where her family spends a lot of quality time enjoying the outdoors.

Lisa is not the first member of her family to be involved in printmaking. She became interested in printmaking as a young girl and has been learning the art of printmaking from her grandfather ever since. Even after his passing, his printmaking advice continues to guide and teach Lisa.

My grandfather was a mounted policeman in Detroit. After retiring, he took classes and devoured books on engraving and became a successful and talented professional engraver. He was a self-taught painter, print-maker and wood-carver; whose books were covered with notes and insights. After he passed away, my grandmother gave me his printmaking tools and books. It’s incredible to be working on a new technique and be able to read his thoughts on the subject. I’m inspired by his ability to change careers, successfully, late in life.

Lisa has made her love of printmaking into a rewarding career that has recently taken a huge step forward. Lisa recently launched her website, www.lisavanmeter.com, as well as her own printmaking business, LVM Printmaking Company. She is hoping that her show at the Indianapolis Art Center can help expand her audience and increase her presence as a local artist. Lisa has big plans for the future, and says she owes a lot of her success to the Art Center.

In the next few years, I plan on building my body of work at the center and at my home studio. I have taken a painting class and many semesters in the printmaking studio at the Indianapolis Art Center. Once I pulled my first print, I knew I wasn’t going anywhere for a while. I’m so grateful to the Art Center; it’s taken me from a beginning print-maker to a professional artist.

Songbirds by Lisa VanMeter

It seems that art truly does run in Lisa’s family. Her eight-year-old daughter, Claire, recently took a pottery class at the Art Center and can’t wait to come back! Lisa was confident in sending her daughter to the Art Center because, “The instructors teach to your level. That’s why the center is such a find. Not all cities have such a place.”

The Art Center’s Open House on September 10 is a fantastic way for an individual to see exactly what types of things are possible at the Art Center. Instructors will be inviting guests to get “hands on” in each studio and see which medium suits them best. With student work on exhibit, just like Lisa’s, guests can see the skills that students are taught at the Art Center, from beginner to professional. Have you ever thought of exploring your creative side and taking a class?

Check out Lisa’s work at the Art Center NOW and until October 3 and make sure to stop by on September 10 for this year’s Indianapolis Art Center Open House!

Open House Info:  http://www.IndplsArtCenter.org/Open_House/

Fall Class Schedule: http://www.IndplsArtCenter.org/fall10

Posted by:  Molly Noonan (Art Center Intern)

A Magical Reunion

Joan Mernitz first took art classes at the Art Center nearly thirty-five years ago when the center was located at 31st and Pennsylvania Streets. At the time, her heart belonged to printmaking. Joan learned etching, intaglio, monoprints, and printing on fabric; her screen printing knowledge credited to instructor, Marilyn Price. After a long hiatus from taking art classes, (although she never truly stopped creating), Joan came back to the art center five years ago at the age of 70 to take up ceramics.

Joan finds much more at the Art Center than a way to create. Joan has found a way to get a life back. “I have a chronic illness, so I can’t get out all the time. At 70 years old, staying at home, you lose contact with friends. I am retired, so I don’t see work people. It just happens.” By coming to the Art Center Joan is getting out of the house and making new friends. “Thursday is the best day of my week. We bring lunch, we have fellowship, and we make art and make friends.”

Joan is an outgoing woman, who finds humor and joy in even frustrating things. “Art isn’t a steady process,” Joan says. “There are big leaps and then periods where things are just awful.” Smiling, Joan continues, “Last year was a breakout year for glazing for me; and this semester, things have been more organic than ever!”

Joan has severe arthritis and doesn’t have the strength to throw on the wheel, so she creates all her pieces by hand. “Hand built takes a lot longer than the wheel. I’ve been taking pieces of clay and putting them over forms or inside forms and see what happens. I like the things I am making; so much so I don’t want to give them away!”

Joan won an award for her piece “Meditation Pool” in the ceramics intermediate division of the Art Center’s Annual Show for 2009. “I can’t tell you what it means to be 75 and win an award! Mothers don’t get awards! I think the last award I got was in high school or college.”
Joan takes classes from instructor, Peggy Breidenbach. “I can’t say enough for Peggy. She is very encouraging, which for me, is a sign of a good instructor.” Joan adds, “It has been a joy to work with her. She has become a dear friend. She’s never seen a pot she doesn’t like. She sees something of value in everyone’s work.”

“After one class,” Joan recalls, “Peggy told us we had magic in our class today. And she was right! We go to a different place together and it is magic. I just turned 75 a few months ago, and at 75, to go to a magical place with other people, who are also your friends, is an exciting thing.”

Create magic in your life by taking a class at the Art Center. Registration for the Fall Semester is going on now. Follow the link to see what classes we have to offer: http://www.indplsartcenter.org/fall10

Story by: Brooke Klejnot

Posted by: Molly Noonan

Art Center’s Twisted House Gets a New Spin

Community Invited to Paint Community Masterpiece Mural at Art Center

The iconic Twisted House in the Art Center’s ArtsPark gets a new spin as it’s re-invented for the Community Masterpiece mural project.  Designed by Art Center artist, Vandra Pentecost, the Community Masterpiece mural consists of seven panels; each one depicts The Twisted House in a different artistic style – surrealism, pop art, expressionism, realism, cubism, impressionism, and American Scene movement.

“This is another way to engage the community in a relaxing and fun way that is no cost,” says Director of Outreach, Laura Alvarado. The first two panels, surrealism and pop art, were completed at the Broad Ripple Art Fair to great success. People of all ages and experience levels contributed to the mural.

The Art Center welcomes anyone in the community to visit the Art Center on Saturday, July 10 and Saturday, August 14 from 10:00 am to noon to help complete the remaining panels. The finished Community Masterpiece mural will be on display for two years along the Outreach Lawn Wall in ArtsPark.

The Art Center is located at 820 E 67th Street in the Broad Ripple Village, just west of the Monon Trail. No previous experience or registration required! Just show up!

For more opportunities to engage in artistic activities, visit www.IndplsArtCenter.org. The Art Center offers workshops and classes in a variety of media for people of all skill levels and ages!

Vandra Pentecost

Vandra is an artist and designer who works in traditional as well as computer aided media. She describes her work as conceptual and figurative. She also creates murals for commercial and residential spaces as well as logos, illustration and graphic design through Linder Design.

The Twisted House

The Twisted House was created by John McNaughton of Evansville. It is made of cedar and is designed to invite ArtsPark visitors to stretch their imagination – and interact – visitors can walk and climb inside of it.

Story: Brooke Klejnot

Photos: Kate Oberreich

A Day in the Life- Painting Class

In Lois Davis’s painting class on Thursday mornings, everybody is doing their own thing…together. “Each student is unique. They bring ideas and I help them solve problems. That’s  what painting is- problem solving,” says Lois.

She doesn’t tell students what to do, rather she simply makes suggestions. Over 34 years of teaching at the Art Center, “I’ve learned to relax with people and find out what they want,” she said.

“She’s usually right,” said student Margot Bradbury.

“No, she’s always right!” Dave VanBruaene jokingly added.

Painting student Dave VanBruaene

Student Jan Herly clarified, “Lois makes suggestions and then says ‘if you want to.’” Lois laughed, “Most people like to be told to do, but there’s no exact answer. That’s where discoveries are made.”

Lois has been teaching for almost 50 years and at the end of the semester will retire.

What has been her favorite part about the Art Center? “The people!” she says emphatically and without hesitation. “A building is a building- it’s what’s inside that counts!”

Casey Roberts’ Cyanotype Workshop

The Indianapolis Art Center has been looking into new ways to bring you fun, informative, and exciting things to do when you’re short on both time and money (who isn’t, really?).  We’re also looking for ways to better connect the public with the exhibiting artists. To that end, we bring you the Community Engagement Series…ta da!

The Community Engagement Series has been designed by the Art Center’s Outreach Department to offer a variety of creative experiences at a low cost.

I took part in the first of these creative experiences this past Saturday, a Cyanotype Workshop (only $25!) with artist Casey Roberts (facilitated by Amanda Walters). Casey’s large-scale Cyanotype-based paintings are currently on view in the Churchman-Fehsenfeld Gallery through early June.

Artist Casey Roberts talks about how he creates his cyanotype paintings.

We started the workshop with a tour of the exhibit where Casey answered questions about his work on everything from the chemical and creative processes to framing to idea generation.

Then onto making our own cyanotype prints! It’s a process that is far more simple than I first thought. We were presented with a wide array of found objects, plant material, construction paper (which I used for my print), and other ephemera. Basically, anything that will block light can be used.

Laying out my design on the chemically treated paper.

I spent a fair amount of time cutting out black construction paper into leaves and stems (a common motif in my work) and arranging them first on regular white paper and then on watercolor paper that had been painted with the light-sensitive cyanotype chemicals. From there, the paper goes under a UV light to be exposed. The hope was for a sunny day so we could take the prints outside to expose, but anyone in Indy this weekend knows that was not to be.

The variety of materials used to create prints.

After only about twenty minutes under the light, the construction paper came away, the print was rinsed and I had a finished cyanotype print! Now, having just heard Casey talk about all the possibilities, color varations, and ideas available, I wasn’t content to leave well enough alone. I played with adding in more of the cyanotype chemicals (to create darker areas) and a bleach solution (to create lighter areas). I’m finally happy with the finished print. It’s since darkened into a much richer blue.

My finished (and altered) cyanotype print!

The gears are already turning… I now have several ideas on how I can incorporate this medium in my own work.

Make sure to keep an eye out on the Indianapolis Art Center’s website, our Facebook page, Twitter and the blog for more Community Engagement Series programs coming up! For more pictures of my Cyanotype Workshop experience, become a Art Center fan on Facebook.

–KO

Photos: Kate Oberreich & Amanda Walters/Indianapolis Art Center

Photo of the Week- May 3, 2010

This week’s Photo of the Week is a picture of an example of a Cyanotype/Sun print. I participated in a workshop with exhibiting artist Casey Roberts this weekend as part of the Art Center’s new Community Engagement Series.

Look for more information about upcoming Community Engagement programs at our websiteFacebook and Twitter. Until then, look for my write up on my workshop experience back here later today.

–KO 

Photo: Kate Oberreich/Indianapolis Art Center

Freaky Forests

I’ve long been admiring We had what we thought was a ‘Dark Side of the Moon’, a mixed media work by Indianapolis artist Casey Roberts hanging over the Guest Services desk here at the Art Center for the last few weeks. It’s a large scale painting of a mountain and lake in blues with a modified version of the  prizm/rainbow from Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon album (hence the title). What I didn’t know at the time was that this piece, as well as the others that will soon be included in the Art Center’s exhibit Freaky Forests: Works by Casey Roberts, was created using a chemical process that is traditionally utilized by photographers- cyanotype.

Cyanotype is a photo printing process known for giving a cyan (blue) color. You might better know it as a blueprint. English scientist and astronomer Sir John Herschel has been credited with inventing the cyanotype in 1842. The process was brought to photography by Alice Atkins who used the cyanotype technique to create a series of books documenting England’s plant life.

Casey Roberts puts this historic process to work in a different way:

I paint with this [cyanotype] light sensitive medium directly on paper or canvas. With everyday items such as baking soda, bleach and peroxide I am able to achieve a range of colors and textures through controlled chemical reactions. I repeat this process adding layers until the image is fully realized, often finishing with watercolor painting or a collage element. It’s not as nerdy as it sounds.

Nightlight

Freaky Forests: Works by Casey Roberts will be on view from April 23-June 6, 2010 and officially open with a reception on Friday, May 7, 6-8pm (along with several other exhibits) in conjunction with the Broad Ripple Village Spring Gallery Tour.

Want to try this printing/painting technique yourself? Casey will be teaching a one-day workshop, Saturday, May 1 from 1-4pm for just $25. Participants will receive a guided tour of the exhibition, learn about the history and process of cyanotypes and work directly with Casey Roberts to make their own print. Participants may also have the opportunity to hand paint their prints.

Space is limited- you can register here, or contact Amanda Walters at 317.255.2464 ext. 249 for questions. I’m already signed up, hope to see you there!

…..

Casey Roberts’ Cyanotype Workshop is presented by the Indianapolis Art Center’s Community Engagement Series. The Community Engagement Series is designed to offer individuals another way to interact with the Art Center and explore our exhibits, grounds and faculty expertise in a way that offers the community a unique creative experience. These creative experiences may vary and include but are not limited to – artist presentations, workshops and public tours associated with current exhibitions at a low cost. Dates and times and ages will vary depending on programming.

…..

To see more of Casey’s work, visit his website, www.wildernessoverload.com.

- KO

Images courtesy of the artist. Copyright Casey Roberts.

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