Life on the Eastern Plains

Deidre Adams - Bennett Landscape

©2011 Deidre Adams. All rights reserved.

This summer I’ll be starting on a new public art project to be installed at Anythink Bennett, a library serving residents of Bennett, Strasburg, and Watkins, a group of small towns on the eastern plains of Colorado. The project, whose theme is “Life on the Eastern Plains,” is the first in a planned series of collaborative, community-inspired artworks for the library district, under the umbrella theme of  “This is Who We Are.”  This press release has full details.

“Anythink” is the name given to a “new style of library that celebrates imagination, play and interactivity.” The concept is the driving force for the Rangeview Library District, a network of seven libraries serving the residents of Adams County, Colorado. It is a “new style of library that offers memorable experiences and transformations for its customers,” and in addition to books, also offers “innovative programming, technology, and the highest level of customer service so that everyone who walks into an Anythink feels welcome.” This video illustrates the spirit of the Anythink concept and the accompanying logo.

As part of the development of the artwork, I’m talking with residents of the area about their experiences living on the eastern plains. Members of the library district staff are assisting with the interviews as well as recording them for an oral history component of the project. We’ve had one community meeting to introduce the project to the public, and two days of conducting interviews. A final day of interviews will be held this Monday.

In addition to talking to people, I’m also asking them to contribute fabric for the artwork, which will be a stitched textile piece. I’m asking them to give me pieces of fabric that have some kind of a history: perhaps a scrap of an old work shirt, or a worn dishtowel or apron – something that was a part of the daily experience on living on the plains. I want the finished piece to incorporate literal physical artifacts that have come from the community.

I’m also asking for handwritten letters and photographs that speak to the experience of life in the area. These I will scan and return to the owners. My vision is to incorporate some of the handwriting into the piece either by direct printing on fabric or perhaps with a silkscreen.

Anythink publishes a newsletter called Spark. The June 24 issue of Spark has two articles about the art project. The editor, Ken Devine, interviewed me after I was chosen for the project and wrote a great article about my work and how I was selected. Evidently, having a love of grain elevators was a pivotal factor working to my benefit. But whatever the reason, I’m very honored to be a part of this project and really excited to start working on it.

Older grain elevator in Bennett, Colorado. ©2011 Deidre Adams. All rights reserved.
July 23rd, 2011|Art|2 Comments

SDA conference – gallery day, part III

2009 SDA Member show - opening reception

Opening reception at Katherine E. Nash Gallery, June 9, 2011

The Katherine E. Nash Gallery, on the University of Minnesota campus, is a large, beautiful space where several SDA featured exhibitions were installed. Here’s a small sampling.

Apparitions – Tim Harding

Katherine E. Nash Gallery, Univ. of Minn., Minneapolis, Minn.
Through June 30

Works in this exhibition are “concerned with the juxtaposition of body and soul.” Harding was inspired by his “growing recognition of his own mortality, the Shroud of Turin*, and the 9/11 tragedy in New York.”

 

Reflections on Water: Recent Works by Mary Edna Fraser,
Linda Gass, and Barbara Lee Smith

Katherine E. Nash Gallery, Univ. of Minn., Minneapolis, Minn.
Through June 30

The theme of water – “whether viewed aerially, from a distance or close enough to feel the spray of a wave” – is the common thread of the work of these three artists, whose processes are quite different. Show coordinator Barbara Lee Smith uses industrial-grade polyester combined with paint and stitching to create dreamy, atmospheric landscapes. The works in her exhibition “serve as reminders of the power of nature and the power of humankind to create and destroy.” Linda Gass paints and stitches on silk; her aerial-perspective landscapes are an expression of her environmental activism, encouraging people to consider water-use issues and feel inspired to take action. Mary Edna Fraser is also motivated by environmental concerns, seeking to convey “a sense of place often employing conservation science. Her work is inspired by Japanese “floating world” woodblock prints from the Edo period (1615-1868).

 

The WindFallMaps – India Flint

Katherine E. Nash Gallery, Univ. of Minn., Minneapolis, Minn.
Through June 30

A beautiful solo show of the work of India Flint, an artist known for her work with the ecoprint, an ecologically sustainable plant-based dyeing process. This exhibition includes wall pieces as well as long, flowing garments hung from branches, making for an immersive, forest-like experience. From the artist’s statement:

Some pieces are intended for walls, others to enfold the human body, which in turn marks its own kind of map upon the work as a garment molds to the wearer. Discarded clothes are encoded maps of bodies as well as maps of places the bodies have been. Cut open a well-worn garment and it will reveal clues of wandering, wear and shape; just as the Shroud of Turin* revealed clues about the form it once wrapped.

The maps in this exhibition aren’t intended to function as guides, rather as a series of travel notes in a personal code that remind me of places I’ve been. The processes are slow and mindful, a kind of immersion in intimate knowledge of the land as much as quiet concentrated work on stitching and piecing.

(See more about her process in my posts about her workshop here and here.)

 
 *What are the odds that two of the artists in these concurrent exhibitions would mention the Shroud of Turin?

 

June 17th, 2011|Exhibitions|5 Comments