Education and Community Programs

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by Katherine Rochester at 1:09 pm 2007-01-30
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hornuarches.jpgI recently returned from Brussels, where I visisted Le Grand Hornu, an artfully rennovated, defunct coal mine-turned contemporary art venue. Since this was proabably my 7th trip to Belgium, but the first time I’d ever heard of Hornu, I wanted to share the revelation in order to guarantee that anyone with a yen to visit the lands of Memling, Horta, and Magritte, also appreciates Belgium for its contemporary art.

The show on view, Sisyphe: le jour se leve (Sisyphus: Day Breaks) was made all the more enjoyable for its inclusion of artists I see on a daily basis in the Walker’s permanent collection installation, The Shape of Time. To see On Kawara, Luciano Fabro, and Guilio Paolini in a small show (eight artists total) with a specific trajectory provided an entirely different perspective on their work. I had never previously associated Sysyphus–the ultimate existential image adopted by Sartre–with Arte Povera, the Italian movement in which both Fabro and Paolini took part. Now, however, when I look at Mimesi (Mimesis) I see the possibility for a darker exchange between the classically sculpted, white plaster models–an exchange more in the vein of Greek tragedy than comedy. Netiher, had Kawara’s meticulously sequential work ever so acutely suggested futility. One Million Years (Past), featured in the show at Hornu, consists of the last one million years printed on paper and bound into volumes encyclopeadia-style. Currently on show in The Shape of Time is Kawara’s TODAY Series, which I have always interpreted as meditative and ritualistic, but which is now opened up as a possible critique of pointless repitition. The existential tenor of the show at Grand Hornu was an interesting contrast to the luminous and airy gallery space, and particularly poignant in the context of a failed coal mine.

Here are some images of Grand Hornu:

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by Roger Nieboer at 3:03 pm 2007-01-25
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We’re busy gearing up for another session of The Artist’s Bookshelf by snooping around the current Walker exhibit Body Politics: Figurative Prints and Drawings from Schiele to de Kooning. In the process of gallery slouching, we are struck by a number of observations, one of the most obvious being the predominance of female subjects as depicted by male artists.

Without digging (just yet) in to the complex socio-historical web of how-and-why, let’s just say that we’ll use it as a convenient springboard into our discussion of Jamaica Kincaid’s enlightening novel Lucy. Here we have the literary equivalent of a figurative portrait. But in this instance we are blessed with a portrait of a woman by a woman, and the wide range of revelations that encompasses.

As one prominent critic put it, “ There are two ways of reading this novel… It can be read, somewhat conventionally, with a focus on Lucy, people, and places. In one sense, the novel is the story of an individual. It is a kind of growing up or coming of age story. It seems very much like just one more American book about a girl who wants to be an American. But the novel can and (I think) must also be read from a cultural and political perspective…”

And this is where the novel dove-tails so nicely with the exhibit. Both offer fascinating works that can be taken on a simple, “ what-you-see-is-what-you-get” level. But above and beyond that, they reveal a whole lot more about the substrata from which they arise.

Please consider the following in preparation for Thursday night’s discussion:

Lucy seems to be deeply conflicted about many of the situations and people she encounters. She even describes herself as “a very angry person.” What causes her to be so angry and thus, divided?

Lucy’s personal relationships (e.g., mother, Mariah, Peggy) seem important both to her and to the events and themes of the novel. What do we come to understand about Lucy through these relationships?

Lucy refers frequently to her sexuality and physicality. Why? What can we gather from this emphasis in the novel?

Lucy also speaks frequently about location, climate, landscape, seasons, sunshine water, and other elements of nature. Why? What is the ultimate effect on the reader?

Lucy’s persona is profoundly influenced by her West Indian, Antiguan, home. She seems caught in limbo between that cultural milieu and the USA. How does she respond? How does she resolve the conflict?

Lucy seems to be initially dislocated (both personally and culturally) and searches for something that will anchor her in this sea of dislocation. What are the results of this quixotic journey of self-discovery?

And, finally, one last tidbit of food-for-thought, our favorite quote from the novel, which once again could apply to the exhibit as well,

“How do you get to be the sort of victor who can claim to be the vanquished also?”

If only we knew…

For interesting interviews with Jamaica Kincaid, check out:

http://www.motherjones.com/news/qa/1997/09/snell.html

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by Morgan Wylie at 11:45 am 2007-01-18
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This post is woefully overdue. The event itself, a Free Verse artist talk with Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean, actually happened a week ago today. But I have been up to my eyeballs in budget work (along with the rest of my department) and this little piece of programmatic joy fell by the wayside. For shame! A brief synopsis:

1. There’s really only one phrase that accurately describes my state of mind around these two artists: fangirl. In fact, I’d been buzzing about the event for months but couldn’t tell a soul until plans were confirmed, flights booked, etc. Frustration!

2. Target Free Thursday Nights is a beast of a gateway program. TFTN brings it to the Walker, no question. People started arriving at 3pm to get in line for a chance to get a ticket. People drove in from all over the state and even out-of-state (thank you, Cincinnati!) to attend. I made several trips from my desk out to the lobby to check out the enormous crowd that stretched from one lobby to another. Amazing! And so many folks had never been to the Walker before. See what I mean? TFTN brings it. Here are the first folks in line:

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3. I got to play bouncer at the front of the stage for a while, and then my big moment came! My colleague, and TFTN director, Sarah Peters, took me backstage to meet the artists. I embarrassed myself appropriately with just the right amount of fan enthusiasm.

4. Dave McKean expounds on the mystifying allure of superhero comics, and Batman’s “ears” – claims he just doesn’t get it.

Dave McKean and Batman's ears

4. Neil Gaiman read a few poems and regaled us with witty stories about his 20 years working with Dave McKean, and the bedtime stories his father had told him when he was young about the adventures of two squirrels that lived in a tree outside his house. They had ridiculous names that I can’t remember now, like ‘Squibby’. Well, the talk will be immortalized over at the Walker Channel, so do find out those squirrels’ names for me, please.

5. The next day I got in to work to find an e-mail from a guy who was at the artist talk and saw me there. He told me he spent the evening torn between admiring the work of Dave McKean and trying to remember how he knew me. Turns out, I showed him an apartment last May (I manage a couple of apartment buildings part time). Small world!

The budgets are calling, folks. Later.

 
 
by ilene at 4:43 pm 2007-01-12
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Are you an insatiable recycler? Do you have a creative kid at home? Why not try our project Phone Book Towers.

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For one of the projects at Free First Saturday in January 2007, we combined the theme of recycling with the artwork of Eva Hesse. The Walker is currently showing Eva Hesse Drawing until February 19, 2007. Here’s what we did.

Each person got a piece of screen cut into a 4” by 10” strip, a plastic top from a yogurt or deli container, and a page or two of the phone book. These materials reflect my mania for recycling, and I bet we gave out 400 plastic lids that day, which ended my 3 year collection. Those phone books are in your household too, so unclog the kitchen drawers.

Now that you have an idea about the materials, let’s look for some inspiration from the artist Eva Hesse. I was interested in 2 of her ink wash and line drawings of cylinders that are in the exhibition. They are easy to recognize even if their labels say No Title 1967. What I like about them is Hesse’s distinctive rendering of each cylinder, as if each one had its own body language. Both of these drawings were studies for a work called Repetition Nineteen I.

Eva Hesse experimented with all kinds of materials latex, fiberglass, and resins, but she started with papier-mché. This project blends papier-mché techniques with acrylic matt medium. The acrylic medium was chosen for it strength and flexibility. I preferred the matt medium because it’s more pliable. Please note that you can buy the acrylic matt medium at any art supply store. By the way, the acrylic medium could be glossy instead of matt; that’s for you to decide.

Ok if you’d like to have the recipe, here’s what I recommend.

  • Lay the screen flat
  • Tear up the phone book pages into small pieces (approximately 2” x 2” and they can be irregular)
  • Brush matt medium on the pieces of paper
  • Collage the pieces on the screen
  • Fill the entire screen with paper
  • Repeat this technique using the paper on the top of the plastic lid
  • Roll the screen into a cylinder
  • Seal it with more paper like a band aid
  • Set on plastic lid
  • Apply smaller strips like a band aid to attach to the lid
  • Brush the cylinder and lid with matt medium
  • Add words found in the phone book
  • Touch up with yellow or tan paint
  • Set out to dry
  • (It takes about an hour to dry!)

Ilene K. Mojsilov, Art Lab Coordinator

If you come to the Walker Art Center for a tour and an art lab or drop in for an exhibition opening, you’ll see me in the Star Tribune Foundation Art Lab; I concoct these activities for you. So, tell me what you think.

 
 
by Morgan Wylie at 4:57 pm 2007-01-03
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ECP welcomed its newest addition – Baby Anna – on December 23. Tour Programs Coordinator Susan Weir is the proud mama. Congrats, Susan!

Baby Anna

 
 
by Morgan Wylie at 3:32 pm 2007-01-02
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Ah, the Brits. The British Television Advertising Awards. This long tradition of Walker screenings of the Brits brings a special breed of mayhem to the holidays. And if the comments on Joe’s post are any indication, the Brits are one of those holiday treats worth fighting for. And scrambling for. And bargaining for. And begging for.

I myself waited until it was almost too late. I scraped up a ticket at the very last gasp, then raced to find a good seat.

There were a lot of great winners this year. (The public service announcements are always big favorites with me.) Some of the adverts were so great, in fact, that as I watched them I began to hope that they would turn out to not be advertisements at all. I wanted desperately for the clip to end without some product being thrown in my face. I wanted to know that the designers and producers were making something for the sole reason of great design and execution, and not as a stellar attempt to sell me a less than stellar beer or pair of jeans or whatever. The perfect example of this, for me, was an ad for Sony’s Bravia LCD television. It was so beautiful, and the song so lovely, that I kept my fingers crossed that this one would turn out to be a music video. No such luck. But please enjoy it anyway.

Hands down, my favorite of the whole affair was a VW Golf ad starring Gene Kelly. I won’t ruin the surprise for you. Check it out.

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