Archive for the 'Exhibits' Category



New Year’s Resolutions

From Indianapolis Art Center President and CEO, Carter Wolf.

I have always felt a New Year’s resolution was just another way of disappointing yourself when you did not make it come to fruition. You know: losing 15 pounds or exercising five days a week. However when I think of resolutions as goals and objectives they make more sense and attaching action steps gives them a much better chance of success; oh and keeping them written down doesn’t hurt either. Okay here we go; five 2011 resolutions for the Art Center.

1. Customer Service: We have made much headway in how we deliver service to our students and members such as easy online registration for classes. Restructuring staff alignment to better coordinate the front desk, events and marketing efforts will help to give clearer, more accurate information to anyone calling or walking in the door. Good service and information up front can go a long way to keeping people happy.

2. Space for classes and new technology: Thanks to a generous gift by Norm Levine we are replacing old equipment and exhaust systems in the Moxley Glass Studio. Additional plans to improve programs like ceramics and sculpture and grow digital arts will improve program delivery and create new opportunities for students.

3. Careful growth of events: With so much good about the Art Fair and ArtSparkle we will find improvements to enhance the experience and yet not reduce the wonderful arts core that have made them so much fun.

4. A gathering place for artists: For many students and artists, coming here means attending classes or working in studio. Other opportunities like exhibit openings create space for artists and families to gather. We will look to expand opportunities for them to just hang out and build relationships and enhance the “community” of art. Coffee or wine anyone?

5. Faculty and staff: After a year or two of economic and leadership changes we will look for ways to nurture and enhance the experience of our faculty and staff as well as our “customers.” Without them we would be just an empty building. They are the ones who bring so much to the community.

-Carter

Annual Student Show Just Around the Corner

 CALL FOR ENTRIES!

It’s that time of year again. February brings the Art Center’s Annual Student Show, now in its 73rd year (!), where we showcase the work done by our students - and we have some pretty talented people roaming these halls.

Images L to R: Alice Lee; Lisa VanMeter; Martin Friedman; Shelby Bertsch- 2010 Winners

Art Center students, ages 4 to adult and of all skill levels are invited to enter this year’s juried competition and exhibition. But as with any competition, there are some rules. I’ll go over some of the basics here, but for every iota of info please visit our Student Show website.

To be considered for the show, artwork must be delivered to the Art Center on Thursday, February 3 (9am-8pm), Friday, February 4 (9am-8pm), or Saturday, February 5 (8am-12pm). No late entries will be accepted as the jury process begins right away on Saturday.

Then there’s the money. In the Youth Division it’s $5 for up to two artworks. For the Adult Divisions, it’s $25 for up to two artworks with each additional entry being $5 each.

So who’s eligible?

  • Art Center students – adult and youth – creating at all levels who have taken at least one class or workshop at the Art Center since August 1, 2008. Please note: Students who are also Art Center faculty are not eligible to enter.
  • Students who have participated in art classes taught through the Art Center’s ArtReach program, St. Vincent New Hope Program, or Indiana School for the Blind and Visually Impaired program since August 1, 2008.
  • Indianapolis Art Center studio monitors who have monitored since December 1, 2008.
  • You must be a current Art Center member! If you’re not sure of your membership status, give us a call or e-mail us, or we can get you set up when you deliver your work.

Beginning, Intermediate, Advanced, Professional…how do I choose? Visit our Student Show site for info on where you fit in. Entering in the Youth Division (ages 4-17)? All Youth entries are accepted!

How do the jurors make their picks? Entrants in the adult divisions are invited to stay and hear the juror’s comments about their process during a walk-through following the selection of artwork and awards from about 3:30-5pm. Please note: No awards will be announced during or after the walk-through. You’ll have to wait for the awards ceremony for that.

Juror Walk-Through (2010)

And yes, there are awards! Possible awards include cash awards, gift certificates to local and regional art-related businesses, art supplies and, of course, solo and group exhibits at the Art Center for the Best of Show and Best of Division winners. How sweet is that?

The Annual Student Show Opening Reception and Awards Ceremony will be on Friday, February 11, 6-8pm, with the ceremony taking place at 6:45pm. The exhibit runs through Sunday, April 10.

For more information (oh yes, there’s more) and the official entry form, visit our site.

Good luck!

Kate

Photo Credits: Anya Aslanova & Kate Oberreich/Indianapolis Art Center

Happy 2011!

Happy 2011! 2010 saw the 40th anniversary of the Broad Ripple Art, the re-opening of the Basile Studio Shop, and some of the best exhibits ever. We’re ready for more.

Everyone is back in the swing of things after a holiday week off. We hope your holiday was a blast!

Big things are in the works for 2011 here at the Indianapolis Art Center. We have an exciting series of exhibits, tons of classes, the Annual Student Show, Fine Arts Day Camp and of course the 41st Broad Ripple Art Fair!

Keep an eye on our blog and website for the latest.

-KO

Beat 2 the X – Two Generations, One Show

This mother and son team up for a truely compelling show. Eleanor Spiess-Ferris’  narrative paintings and her son, Michael Ferris Jr.’s, figurative scupltures and ink drawings all delve into the psychological realm.

ELEANOR SPIESS-FERRIS – ARTIST STATEMENT

My work reflects a deep involvement with my native New Mexico – not as much visually as spiritually.

My childhood was a melting pot of surreal attitudes surrounded by such diversities as the Spanish Penitentes, early Catholic retablos and American Indian artifacts. All were woven among family tales and myths. My ancestors were among the first Spanish settlers of Northern New Mexico.

Behind our house in Northern New Mexico and just beyond the irrigation ditch was a wild and unruly orchard of apple trees, plum trees and one cherry tree.

This untamed home to birds, snakes, lizards and small animals as well as to the occasional Holstein calf was my refuge throughout my childhood.

My family would often travel to Taos where my mother’s cousin had an art gallery.

While the works of Victor Higgins, Ernest Blumenschein, and Bert Phillips were the pivotal artists of the gallery, it was the folk art that held my interest.

I can remember sitting on the wooden floor admiring the cottonwood sculpture of a six foot snake, mouth wide, devouring a cottonwood rabbit.

The near life size skeleton, eyes of flaming mica, sitting in a rustic wooden cart, was another favorite.

The retablos and the bultos of the saints and Christ created by the native peoples enchanted me and captured my imagination.

So it is that these experiences are at the root of my own artistic endeavors and these images continue to inform my work all these many years later.

As I grew up, I felt the tragedy and the glory of the people and the landscape. Incubating within me, these attitudes and remembrances continue to inform my work.

I enjoy juxtaposing the frightening with the beautiful – the comin with the tragic – the real with the unreal.

My adult self, my schooled self, my Chicago Self has embraced such western artists as Hieronymus Bosch, James Ensor, Paul Delvaux and , certainly not least, the Mexican masters as well.

MICHAEL FERRIS, JR – ARTIST STATEMENT

Ferris creates many drawings in connection with each of his sculptures. He works on these drawings as the sculptural process progresses and develops, until completion. Each drawing has a different purpose and is connected to a specific stage of the sculpture’s construction. Initially these drawings take the form of straight portraits. At this stage, issues of likeness, proportion and mood are most important. As the sculpture making process unfolds, the drawings serve to work out ideas connected directly to the 3-dimensional piece such as pattern, form, scale, and concept.

In the sculptural work, Ferris creates a dialogue regarding the use of recycled materials, with the initial intent to render an accurate likeness of the subject. However more compelling, is communicating the sitter’s “inner world.” By contrasting the sculpture’s stoic, classical form with its contemporary multi-patterned surface, the aim is then to express the psychological and spiritual complexity of each subject.

Beat 2 the X is on view now through January 30, 2011 in the Churchman-Fehsenfeld Gallery. Exhibit opens with a reception this Friday, December 10, 6-8pm.

Winter Exhibitions Open December 10!

The Indianapolis Art Center livens up the holiday party season with an opening reception of winter exhibitions on Friday, December 10 from 6-8 p.m. in conjunction with the newly reopened Basile Studio Shop’s holiday party. Five new exhibitions showcase the works of eleven artists.

 

Beat 2 the X. Generation X-er Michael Ferris Jr. (Bronx, NY) crafts textured wooden busts that contrast intricate geometric designs with stark realism. His mother, Beat Generation artist Eleanor Speiss-Ferris’ (Chicago, Ill.) narrative paintings add to the surreal exhibition. This exhibition is the rare chance to see the work of a mother and son who function as two independent professional artists.

 

 

ARTIFACTS. Noted Chicago artist and art advocate, Paul Klein, juried the ArtCenter’s Art from the Heartland show last Spring and selected six winners to return for this winter’s ARTIFACTS exhibition. Artists include:

  • Amy Brier (Bloomington, Ind.) 

 

  • Connie Noyes (Chicago, Ill.) is inspired by irregular shapes to create her large-scale multi-media works.   

  • Michelle Stitzlein (Baltimore, OH) might be the Midwest’s most artful recycler, taking objects like bottle caps, license plates and headlamps to build larger-than-life wall-mounted sculptures.   

  • Sonja Thomsen (Milwaukee, Wisc.) is a photographer whose experimentation of composition and installation open up a world that is better felt than explained.   

  • Contemporary artist, Vera Scekic (Evanston, Ill.), creates bold, graphic works that reference scientific and natural themes.   

  • Jim Shirey’s (Athens, OH) modern, quiet yet dramatic photographs portray landscapes and the natural world.

Lost and Found. Linda Leviton (Columbus, OH) is fascinated with patterns and modular sculpture. Trained as a graphic designer, Leviton is used to adapting her art to suit client’s objectives, but she makes sure to exercise her own creativity as well. She is using her exhibition, Lost and Found to unveil three new wall-mounted installations inspired by her own artistic reveries. Leviton’s manipulation of shapes and materials is both clever and whimsical.

Bodies, Beasts and Blossoms. Visitors might never look at a stack of white paper the same ever again after seeing Deborah Klein’s (Bloomington, Ind.) exhibit of dimensional paper illustrations, Bodies, Beasts and

Blossoms. With subjects ranging from the mythical to the natural, Klein embosses, cuts and forms fine art paper into lively works that prove this Victorian era art form has a place in a modern context.

Calligraphy by Erika Woods. The ArtCenter is also honoring its 2010 Faculty of the Year, calligraphy instructor, Erika Woods. Originally from Vienna, Austria, Woods (who is also trained as a graphic designer) has been in the Indianapolis area for around 25 years. She will be exhibiting some of her recent works that show off her unique blend of tech nical skill and artistic ability. 

All exhibitions are on display Dec. 3, 2010 through January 30, 2011. The reception is the same night as the newly reopened Basile Studio Shop’s holiday party. Admission to the ArtCenter is free and members enjoy free refreshments all night.

Day of the Dead Celebration a Success

Another El Dia de los Muertos/Day of the Dead Celebration has come and gone for the Indianapolis Art Center and we couldn’t be more thrilled with the success of this event, now in its 11th year.

Consul Juan Solana (Mexican Consulate of Indianapolis) opened the celebration followed by a procession through ArtsPark led by Mariachi Sol Jalisciense. Sugar skulls were decorated, matchbox shrines created, faces painted, food, music, dancing and so much more enjoyed. 

If you missed it, or just want to see it again (in pictures), check out our Day of the Dead 2010 Flickr page. Remember, the Day of the Dead Altar exhibit continues through November 28 and the Shrines in ArtsPark will be up through November 7.

A special thank you to our fantastic volunteers for helping to make this event such a success!

–Art Center Staff

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

Colorful Exhibit is a Treat

If you visit the Art Center during the work week, you may know Erika Villarreal as the Outread Technician. If you visit the Art Center between October 1 and December 5, you will get to know Erika Villarreal, the artist.

Pachanga Celeste, which mean “party in the sky,” is a passionate and colorful exhibition exploring childhood experiences and how they teach us about value. The installation features hundreds of almost transparent candy-colored cloth “bundles” made of recycled curtain sheers dipped in beeswax. Erika explains that “the installation refers visually to the game of la pinata and the notion of possibilities inside the pinata.”

Part of the exhibit is a series of etchings based on the grid format of a Mexican bingo game, Loteria. Both the Pachanga installation and the Loteria series explore the culture of the home, specifically children’s games. “I like to think about how innocent games can influence a young player’s perception of value,” Erika said.

Pachanga Celeste is on exhibit from October 1 until December 5 in the Ruth Lilly Library at the Indianapolis Art Center.

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.

Art Center Altared

The Indianapolis Art Center is looking for community members – schools, artists, community centers – to create and exhibit large scale altars for the 11th Annual El Dia de los Muertos Altar Exhibition, October 8 through November 28, 2010.  

2009 Day of the Dead Altar

El Dia De Los Muertos, or Day of the Dead, is a traditional Mexican family holiday when people build altars to try to attract their deceased loved ones back for a day.  Altars are a celebration of love and life, and are generally adorned with the loved one’s favorite items, food, toys, and photos.  In order to be considered for inclusion, please complete and return your proposal to the Indianapolis Art Center by September 3, 2010

2009 Day of the Dead Altar

Submission forms, guidelines for creating altars, and information about El Dia de los Muertos can be found at www.IndplsArtCenter.org.  Contact Patrick Flaherty, Exhibitions Associate, with questions (317) 255-2464 ext. 238 or PFlaherty@IndplsArtCenter.org.

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