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HIGH SCHOOL JURIED ART EXHIBIT APPLICATION

CurrentExhibit


Youth Arts 2010
An exhibition coordinated by the Youth Arts Council

June 3 to August 7
The Exhibit will be open to the public June 14 to July 17
Gallery Hop Reception: June 18, 5 - 8 pm

Lexington’s new Youth Arts Council has hit the ground running and are kicking high school arts participation and exposure into full gear. Coordinated by the Youth Arts Council, this juried exhibition will present art work from the talented high school youth of Fayette County. This exhibit will be juried by Rae Goodwin, Assistant Professor of Art, University of Kentucky. Fayette County High School students are encouraged to review the submission guidelines at the LASC Website and submit their artwork. Be sure to join us for Gallery Hop as The Youth Arts Council will also be staging impressive performances by local high school performing students as well.

Perform for Open Mic on Gallery Hop, June 18th 5-8
Cash Prizes totaling $150 will be awarded by audience votes.

Click here for the sign-up sheet.

 

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The da Vinci Pavilion
Models, Design, and Process
Associate Professor Anthony Roccanova and University of Kentucky School of Architecture students

May 15 to June 30
Gallery Hop Reception: June 18, 5 - 8 pm

Over the past several months, the LASC has collaborated with Tony Roccanova and his 2nd year architecture students in the creation of the da Vinci Pavilion, an interactive structure to be constructed of recycled materials on the grounds of the Living Arts & Science Center. The structure, inspired by Leonardo’s designs of simple machines, will be completed this spring.

This exhibit will feature the fabulous designs and models created by the students as well as a video created by media artist, Jim Voskuhl, about the process for the design and construction of the Pavilion. And, visitors may visit the structure and enjoy the many human-powered facets to the design.

This project was made possible through an ECO Art grant provided by the Lexington-Fayette Urban Co. Government, Department of Environmental Quality.

 

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Natural History of Central Kentucky
by Will Overbeck
May 15 through July 17

In the past, many plants in the wilderness of central Kentucky were adapted to limestone soils. Trees, like blue ash, grew with unique plants such as giant cane and running buffalo clover. These plants are still found at Henry Clay’s home though in a much diminished presence. This group of photographs, paintings, and accompanying information will focus on the importance of nature conservation, land preservation, and local involvement in environmental activism. Wildflowers, wildlife, and native plants of Central Kentucky will be identified through the work and will encourage interest in the protection of valuable natural resources of the Bluegrass Region.

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PastExhibits

 


April 7 – May 28
Gallery Hop Opening Reception: April 16, 5 – 8 pm

Juried by Louisville artist, Valerie Fuchs, this dynamic exhibition will present a range of contemporary works that invite interaction with the viewer.   Some works will contain their own movement and others will respond directly to the movement and sounds of gallery participants.  

Local and regional artists included in the exhibition are: Steve Armstrong, Michael Baggarly, Jennifer Bock-Nelson, Sarah Buckius, James Burgett, Ryan Daly, J. Daniel Graham, Dominic Guarnaschelli, Robert Halliday, Jonathan Johnson, Rob Millard-Mendez, Brad Meredith, Sarah Rozniak, Dane Webster, and Jessica Westbrook. 

The exhibit also extends to the LASC website as Louisville artist, Robert Halliday, invites you take part in his “Digital Conspiracy”.   You may submit a drawing or digital painting created on an i-pod, cell phone, smart phone, or computer.  PHOTOGRAPHS OR PHOTO MANIPULATIONS ARE NOT ELIGIBLE. 

Submit your work as a square format jpg file to:  rhalliday@insightbb.com.  For more info and to see the video of compiled images click here.

 

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Fashion / Function

February 15 – April 2
Gallery Hop Reception: February 19, 5 – 8 pm

We choose what we wear based on function, aesthetics, materials, status, value, and meaning. Whether we choose to wear brightly colored fabric, conventional or unconventional designs, highly embellished or embroidered patterns, homemade clothes or brand names, it all expresses who we are as individuals and as a culture and it conveys our personalities to those that we meet.

The unique works presented in this show were crafted and created for the body. These fine examples of wearable art represent a wide range of styles and purposes defined by local artists such as Laverne Zabielski, Mallory Dover, Sandra Welleford, Sarah Estes, Lanette Freitag, Sarah Muehlbauer, Jamie McIntosh, Mary Nehring, Marilyn Swan, Judy Kushner, Traci Cassily. These artists create art for the body with consideration to the aesthetics, the meaning, the form and function while also considering what transpires when juxtaposed with the human form.

Within this exhibition we will see work made with traditional as well as unconventional methods and materials—continuing Kentucky’s long tradition of wearable art.

 
The band Hallwa playing a piece of artwork by Sarah Muehlbauer at the Gallery Hop reception.

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The Emerald City
January 6 – February 2, 2010

“There’s no place like LASC!” You’ll see the truth in this statement as you view the annual H’Artful of Fun Preview Exhibition showcasing the work donated by local and regional artists to benefit the Living Arts & Science Center. In conjunction with the Living Arts & Science Center’s 20th anniversary H’Artful of Fun fundraising event, The Emerald City will feature an array of fine art from the area’s most respected and appreciated painters, photographers, printmakers, mixed media and fiber artists.

PLUS, if you find something you can’t live without, don’t take a chance on missing out on it in the auction at H’Artful of Fun. You can take advantage of our Buy It Now feature and take the work straight home instead of waiting to place a bid during H’Artful of Fun. If you purchase more than $350.00 of artwork during the preview exhibit, you’ll receive a FREE TICKET (a $60 value) to The Emerald City, the 20th Anniversary H’Artful of Fun which takes place on February 6.

 


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Creative Camera Club:
39th Annual Print Competition and Exhibition

November  18  - December 30
Gallery Hop Reception:  Friday, November 20, 5 – 8 PM

Lexington’s Creative Camera Club traces its roots back to the 1930s making it one of the oldest camera clubs in the country. The Living Arts & Science Center is pleased to host an exhibition for this club which includes award-winning photographers who exhibit and work from the local to the international arena.  This will be the 39th year of the Club’s Annual Print Competition and Exhibition.

The Creative Camera Club’s mission is “to promote an interest in, and an understanding of, the art and science of photography for individuals of all levels of expertise,” a charge upheld by its more than one hundred members. In addition to monthly meetings, the group holds at least four photography workshops annually, bi-monthly photo competitions, and features talks by area professional photographers, including photojournalists, landscape artists, sports photographers, portrait and commercial photographers. The Club also has photo outings throughout central Kentucky and has visited places like Red River Gorge, various nature preserves and the Smoky Mountains/Blue Ridge Parkway areas of Tennessee and North Carolina.

“We have a strong emphasis on education, which is one reason we're so happy to join forces with the LASC for the upcoming print competition and exhibition," says John Snell, past President of the Creative Camera Club. Viewers can expect to see more than one hundred photographs on exhibit, from flora and fauna, portraits, and still life, to sports and creative abstract works.


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Recordamos

(We Remember)

A group exhibition of Calaveras in celebration of Day of the Dead

October 17 – November 13
Day of the Dead Festival:  Sunday, November 1, 5 – 9 PM

In the Living Arts & Science Center’s continuing celebration of the Day of the Dead, this exhibit will focus on Calaveras, a traditional art form of the holiday, first popularized by Mexican artist, José Guadalupe Posada, in the late 1800’s. His hand printed illustrations depicted skeletons dressed in contemporary clothes and placed in scenes that portrayed the lives and souls of everyday citizens. Humorous and satirical verse was also used to create mock “obituaries” of well known figures --- even some who were still living.  The poetic calaveras are often referred to as “retaliation against those who would always win while alive.”  Today, la calavera has evolved into a widely practiced art form, using two- and three-dimensional skeletons and writings to depict the living as well as the dearly departed.

For this exhibition, and in honor of this rich and colorful holiday, we have invited visual artists and writers to create their own calaveras that pay homage to those revered and perhaps reviled; to those prominent within his or her own personal life or acknowledged on the world stage. These calaveras will portray heroes, leaders, politicians, artists, or other notable figures and will express many individual voices and points of view.

Guests at the Living Arts & Science Center’s Day of the Dead Festival on November 1 will have opportunities to create their own Calaveras as well as other traditional Day of the Dead crafts and to enjoy traditional dance, music, and food.

Day of the Dead Award Winners
The LASC enjoyed a wonderful Day of the Dead Festival on November 1st and appreciates all of the involvement of the community and the participating artists.

Congratulations to the award winners from the Gallery exhibition and the exhibition of alters.

 
Recordamos Awards:
 
1st Place ($250) Adan Utrera "El Jinete Ganador"
2nd Place ($150) Jim Brancaccio, "Dust Thou Art"
3rd Place ($100) Jennifer Reis, "Serpents & Sinners"

     

Altar Awards:
Best Traditional Altar ($200) Jacobo Aragon
Traditional Altar Honorable Mention ($100) Roberta Burns, John Walker, Gareth Walker
Best Conceptual Altar ($200) Ann Allen with Sayre Middle School
Conceptual Altar Honorable Mention ($100) Marilyn Rose Swan, Laura Bischoff

        

 

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COLOR UNFOLDING

Paintings by Lennon Michalski

September 11 – October 13
Gallery Hop Reception:  Friday,  September 18, 5 – 8 PM

Painting should be like a visual rollercoaster: Put your hands up; ride” says artist, Lennon Michalski. The ride you take through Michalski’s paintings is into luxurious and mesmerizing color and through abstract and organic shapes. The feeling of moving through his paintings is made all the more vivid when using the Crayola Chromavision glasses through which many of his paintings are intended to be viewed. Michalski’s work has been exhibited internationally in Brazil, Columbia, Mexico, Peru and China and in numerous shows in the United States. He earned his Master of Fine Arts degree from the University of Colorado at Boulder, and his Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from Eastern Kentucky University. Michalski lives and works in Lexington while teaching in the College of Art at Eastern Kentucky University and at the University of Kentucky. This exhibition continues a new interactive and participatory focus of the Gloria Singletary Gallery. While viewing this exhibition, guests will have the opportunity to experience artwork in new and unique ways including interacting directly with some of Michalski’s paintings and trying their own hands at creating images that take on a three-dimensional affect with the help of the Chromavision glasses.

 

 

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Showing Off
June 10 to August 30
Opening Reception
Friday, June 19, 5:00 – 8:00 pm


T
he Living Arts & Science Center is rich—rich in talent that is! You may know the talented people of the LASC as the patient and creative teachers for your children, or the very expert instructors for your own adult classes. And, you may have witnessed the interactive programs that the LASC staff produces such as Discovery Nights, field trips, or our art exhibits in our gallery. Or, you might have attended the spectacular fundraiser, H’Artful of Fun. Whatever your connection to the LASC, what you may not realize is that all of these individuals, teachers and staff, are also talented individual artists and individual artists are represented on our Board of Directors as well. As artists they produce individual work, exhibit in shows, create works for sale, participate in large artists markets, mentor other artists, teach and train emerging artists, serve on panels and juries, and contribute in numerous other capacities in their lives as working artists. In this exhibition, The Living Arts & Science Center is very pleased to present the varied talents of the LASC teachers, staff and artists on the Board of Directors. From printmakers to painters, to fiber artists and photographers, we are so proud of the individuals who contribute so much to our community and who are so successful with sharing their talents and expertise. The success of the LASC classes and programs is because ALL of our teachers and ALL of our staff are trained and experienced artists. Artists … they’re everywhere and we all benefit not only from the beautiful and thought provoking artwork that they create individually but also from their creative thinking, problem solving, and ingenuity and community involvement that comes from their experience in the arts. Be sure to stop in and enjoy the work of artists who make the Living Arts & Science Center such a dynamic and lively place!
Top: Sarah Miller
Right: Bob Kelly


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CUTTING EDGE

April 13 – June 5
Gallery Hop Reception
Friday, April 17, 5 – 8 pm

Weaving, quilting, knitting, and sewing have been around for centuries (some longer than others) and have been essential to everyday life. From the great and intricate Flemish tapestries to the clothes we wear today, fiber has been employed to create works of fine art and cover our skin. In this exhibition we celebrate fiber as an art form and go further to uncover work that pushes the boundaries of what is often considered craft. Cutting Edge is an exhibition of artists’ works that promote yarn, thread, fabric and more to contemporary fine art. It also presents artwork that challenges traditional notions of fiber in interesting and provocative ways. From small wall hangings to sizable works in the round, this exhibit hosts a variety of fiber works that transcend domestic and utilitarian functions to express artists’ visions that are both unique and engaging. Come see contemporary fiber art at its finest and behold work that is on the cutting edge.

 

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Simple and Sophisticated: Works by Donna Lynn Eads
February 9 – April 4, 2009

Gallery Hop Reception: Friday, February 20, 5 – 8 PM 

In an age where technology rules and we are running at a pace we can barely keep up with ourselves, Simple and Sophisticated: Work by Donna Lynn Eads reminds us of times that are both literally and figuratively down-to-earth. An exhibition that includes vintage farming equipment, old photographs and historical documents in addition to oil paintings of rural landscapes, original pastels, graphite and mixed media pieces, this installation reflects, as the artist herself describes, “a wholesome lifestyle which modern society seems to desire at a time of uncertainty.” About the exhibit Eads adds, “This exhibition would speak to a large number of individuals who may be longing for peace, reconnection to nature and a sense of community.” 

Donna Lynn Eads lives on a farm in Bourbon County that serves as a source of inspiration for her work. It is the landscape and place of stories upon which she draws for Simple and Sophisticated. The artist returned to Kentucky after earning a degree in Studio Art and a minor degree in Art History at the College of Charleston in South Carolina. Upon completing her degrees, she spent some time traveling the world and surfing only to return home to focus on her artistic career. The Living Arts & Science Center was the “artistic birthplace” of Eads’ talents as her mother enrolled her in “almost every class” at a very young age. The Summers at the LASC she credits for helping her grow into an artist with diverse skills in oil painting, realistic graphite drawings, pastels and watercolors. Eads now teaches at the LASC and we are very fortunate and delighted to have her sharing her talents with us once again.

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ABOUT THE GALLERY

Once a double parlor with grand, wood pocket doors, The Gloria Singletary Gallery at The Living Arts & Science Center is a small jewel of an exhibition space in a renovated 1847 antebellum mansion located near downtown Lexington. Two rooms, both with 11-foot ceilings and totaling 108 running feet, can be used together as one exhibition space or individually. Three exterior walls with oversized windows provide extensive natural lighting. Visits to the space during gallery hours are encouraged and a floor plan is available upon request. The Gallery hosts eight to ten exhibitions each year and schedules shows at least twelve months in advance. For more information, contact Jim Brancaccio, Interim Gallery Director or call 859.252.5222.


 

The Gloria Singletary Gallery exhibitions program at The Living Arts & Science Center aims to provide our members and the public exhibits of exceptional quality and outstanding artistic merit. The LASC is also dedicated to offering innovative emerging and established artists an opportunity to continue developing their creative potential and investigations while affording valuable exposure. A non-profit organization, we seek to provide a diverse context for area art production by supporting artist’s projects and collaborations also associated with other regional non-profit organizations. Our goal is to increase awareness and appreciation of the visual fine arts and to promote critical contemplation and discourse within the local community and beyond.
All exhibitions are free and open to the public.
@ The Living Arts & Science Center

 

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THE GLORIA SINGLETARY GALLERY @ The Living Arts & Science Center requests proposals for 2009 exhibitions. To view the RFP submission guidelines and submit a proposal, click here.

For additional RFP entry forms, click here.
 

 

 

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