• FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. - Did you ever wonder what a grid filled with colors described in a novel, say, War and Peace, might look like? Or what mental images might be evoked when viewing a naval signal flag? Art professor Marilyn Nelson did, and the results are currently on display in Mullins Library on the University of Arkansas campus.

    компютри втора употреба

    Artwork titled “J,” “M,” “Middlesex,” by Marilyn Nelson. Used by permission.

    One of the hallmarks of art that transcends the ordinary is a glimpse through an alternative way of seeing. Nelson, associate professor in the department of art at the University of Arkansas, creates just that. Both projects allow the viewer to explore alternative ways of conceptualizing the written word.
    The first project, titled “U.S. Naval Flag Signal Narratives,” is a suite of 26 editions of serigraph prints - one edition to represent each alphabetic flag. U.S. Navy maritime flags are used to communicate with other vessels while maintaining radio silence.

    Each flag represents a single letter in the alphabet when hoisted on a halyard as a series, but represents another maritime signal when singly displayed. In addition, each letter also represents a word in the military alphabet code, such as “Charlie” for “C,” “tango” for “T,” or “Romeo” for “R.” Nelson begins with these multiplicities of meaning and adds on additional evocative layers of images, colors, diagrams, documents - all of which are suggested by the original naval flag.

    Nelson explains that the flags are “visual abbreviations for the words they represent” and her imagery “revolves around lyrical interpretations of these words.” Each serigraph represents complex layers of meaning, which Nelson, whose father was a career naval officer, says often arose from “personal histories and iconographies” that have “emerged and evolved to reveal patterns of experience and memory.”

    The second project, titled “Color Interpretations/Meditations,” is a series of paintings depicting Nelson’s interpretation of the “vivid color descriptions” in novels such as Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises and Tolstoy’s War and Peace. A “grid field” painting shows each color in the order in which they appear in the novel, and a companion black and white “digital grid” shows the actual color words and the page number on which a reader can locate a specific color mentioned. Nelson says that because the color order is arranged according to the text, “many unexpected color juxtapositions occur” and “areas of pattern, or blocks of similar colors emerge.”

    Nelson received her Bachelor of Fine Arts in printmaking and her Master of Fine Arts in painting from the University of Colorado in Boulder. From 1979 to 1987 she was art director and designer at Celestial Seasonings Inc., an herb tea company in Boulder, Colo. On the faculty at the University of Arkansas since 1993, she currently teaches Visual Design. Previously, she taught at Eastern New Mexico University, University of Oregon and the University of Colorado. She has received grants and awards for her teaching activities, including the Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences Master Teacher Award. Her work has been viewed in many solo exhibitions and juried group venues nationally and internationally. These include La Biennale Internationale D’estampe Contemporaine, Québec, Canada; Siggraph: 30th International Conference on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques, San Diego; Gallery Pecanians, Mexico City; Gallery International, Baltimore; aRaMoNaSTuDIo and Gallery 402, New York City.

    “A Diversity of Shape, Color and Design” will be on display in Mullins Library lobby level through the end of June. For more information, call (479) 575-6702.

  • There are currently 3 positions open and there has only been one applicant.

    Applications are due tomorrow at 5 pm.

    The application (pdf) for the Arts Council is on the City’s Web Site at accessfayetteville.org

    Applicants can either email them to the City Clerk’s office or hand deliver them.

  • Latest ‘Stay More’ Novel Promises That Farther Along We’ll Understand Why

    Donald Harington
    Donald Harington

    FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. - A man runs away from himself to live in a remote cave in the Ozarks. Two women, an elderly widow and a mysterious redhead, try to save him from alcohol and despair. Arkansas novelist Donald Harington mixes these individuals with others, both living and dead, to reveal his newest story of Stay More, Ark.

    Harington, who had been a professor of art and art history at the University of Arkansas for more than 20 years, has published 14 novels of the imagined Ozark village of Stay More. In the most recent, Farther Along, Stay More is an isolated, abandoned town inhabited by descendents and shadows of characters from previous novels. The title comes from an old hymn commonly sung at Southern funerals. Its chorus promises: “Farther along we’ll know all about it, Farther along we’ll understand why; Cheer up, my brother, live in the sunshine, We’ll understand it all by and by.”

    Farther Along by Donald Harington

    In Farther Along, a man leaves his career as a museum curator to live as a Bluff-dweller, one of a vanished tribe of American Indians. He shares his cave with a dog, lives on venison and plays tunes alone on a hair comb and tissue. Each night he drinks himself to sleep with moonshine produced by the Hermit, an “oddling” from a neighboring mountain. In the end, the Bluff-dweller comes into the town, where he lives as the Dying Man and plays Scrabble with the red-headed woman. His change occurs with the help of the two women and the spirit of Kind.

    Harington was born and bred in Little Rock, Ark., and spent most childhood summers with his grandparents in the Ozark hamlet of Drakes Creek. Before losing his hearing to meningitis at age 12, Harington listened to the visitors in his grandparents’ general store and post office, absorbing a folk dialect that has nearly vanished from daily speech but lives in the rhythm and language of his novels.

    Entertainment Weekly has named Harington “America’s Greatest Unknown Writer.” The American Library Association listed Harington’s The Architecture of the Arkansas Ozarks as one of the year’s 10 best novels in 1975.

    He has won the Robert Penn Warren Award, the Porter Prize and the Heasley Prize, and has been inducted into the Arkansas Writers’ Hall of Fame. The Winter 2002 issue of Southern Quarterly is a “Donald Harington Special Issue” with tributes from fellow novelists, scholarly essays, interviews and a selection from his 40-year correspondence with William Styron. He received the inaugural Oxford American award for Lifetime Achievement in Literature.

    Farther Along is published by The Toby Press, which also distributes Harington’s earlier novels.

    Harington, who had been a Distinguished Professor in the department of art in the J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Arkansas, retired in May 2008.

    ###

    Contact:

    Donald Harington, Distinguished Professor, department of art
    J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences
    (479) 575-5202, dharingt@uark.edu

    Barbara Jaquish, science and research communications officer
    University Relations
    (479) 575-2683, jaquish@uark.edu
  • Feed Mill Summer Film series begins on third Thursdays June, July, August

    On June 19, July 17 and August 21, New Design Center will launch a first annual summer film series! This summer’s theme is creative process. We hope that if you are an artist or want to learn more about creating that seeing how others create might inspire and inform you. The first film in the series is about an installation artist, Andy Goldsworthy. Color, line and texture taken all from a single location in nature come to life in Rivers and Tides. In the second film, a film maker takes the challenge of recreating his famous art film, The Perfect Human. Each time the specifications for making become more technically, socially and emotionally challenging. The final film or set of films will be about local artists and composed by a local film maker. This will be announced at the second film. All shows begin at 8:30 and benefit the nonprofit organizers New Design Center and Film Alliance of the Ozarks. All shows are $5 each. This series is cosponsored by KUAF radio.

    To read reviews and see film previews visit:
    www.newdesigncenter.org/films.html
    Read more…

  • Join us at the 8th Annual Art of Wine Festival!

    Sample the finest of wines and food with your friends as you support arts learning programs at Walton Arts Center, a non-profit arts organization.

    The Winemaker’s Dinner at James at the Mill

    Thursday, June 5, 6pm / Tickets: $150 ($50 tax deductible)

    Dine in the elegant and picturesque setting of James at the Mill in Johnson, AR. You’ll enjoy a 5-course meal prepared by Chef Miles James; each course is paired with a specially selected wine. Returning guest winemaker Kate MacMurray of MacMurray Ranch Vineyards will guide you through the meal.

    Grand Tasting Events

    Friday & Saturday, June 6 & 7 6-9pm / Tickets: $70 ($15 tax deductible) Add the Reserve Room for $45

    More than 700 wines available to taste! Plus delicious fare from some of your favorite local restaurants.

    Wine Lover’s Brunch

    Saturday, June 7, 11am / Tickets: $45 (limited availability - get yours now!)

    Joe Farnan of Gallo Wineries will guide you through a mid-day exploration of food and wine, featuring Pinot Noirs and brunch prepared by James at the Mill.

    Visit waltonartscenter.org or call 479.443.5600 for tickets.

  • Photography by Helen Thomas will be on display June 5th through June 22nd.

    Hours are from noon to 4 p.m. weekdays, 10 a.m. to noon Saturdays and Twilight Walk 4-8p.m. June 20th.

    Located inside the Historic Rogers Little Theater
    116 South 2nd Street
    Rogers, AR, 479-631-8988.

  • TheatreSquared, Northwest Arkansas’ professional theatre company, is back with another installment of our immensely popular Summer Drama Academy!  This year we will be offering one session for older students in Fayetteville, and an academy for grades 3-12 in Bella Vista!

    This summer, TheatreSquared will be producing “A MidSummer Night’s Dream”, and students will have a once-in-a–lifetime opportunity to work with the actors from the production to explore the work of the bard!  These creative weeks are designed for students who are new to theatre as well as students seeking to further develop their skills. .

    Students will work on Scene Study, Character Improvisation and Comedy Improvisation and Movement. Through rigorous classes, students will learn about Shakespeare while they improve stage skills like presence, focus, leadership and communication.  Week-long T2 camps enhance life skills of self-confidence, discipline, integrity, commitment and teamwork.

    Read more…

  • BY SUSANNAH PATTON Northwest Arkansas Times

    Posted on Tuesday, May 27, 2008

    URL: www.nwanews.com/nwat/News/65620/

    Organizers of the Fayetteville Arts Festival are hoping to receive $ 35, 000 from the Advertising & Promotion Commission in order to salvage the two-weekend event held in the fall.

    The Fayetteville City Council approved a resolution last week to urge the commission to consider funding the festival. It will now be up to the commission to decide if the funding is granted or not. That discussion will take place at the group’s June meeting.

    The original resolution brought forth by Alderman Lioneld Jordan urged the Advertising and Promotion Commission to reconsider its position to fund the arts festival. Read more…

  • BY SUSANNAH PATTON Northwest Arkansas Times

    The Walton Arts Center expanding at its current site is the most viable option, according to Fayetteville Mayor Dan Coody.

    “It’s more feasible to do it here than it is anywhere else,” Coody said

    The preliminary results of an expansion study recommended three additional facilities at the Walton Arts Center in order to meet the growing audience demand. Those three facilities don’t necessarily have to be adjacent to the current site or even in the same city, according to consultants.

    While the Art Consultants Group — the team conducting the three-phase feasibility study — are considering sites in Fayetteville, they are also looking at Springdale, Rogers and Bentonville.

    The consultants reported that approximately 3 acres are needed for an additional 2,200-seat performing hall, 600-seat theater club and 100-seat black box theater. They also put a $180 million price tag on the three facilities.

    Coody said the $180 million price doesn’t include land costs.

    The city can provide the land adjacent to the center, he said, making the current site the most cost-effective.

    “Financially, it looks like a good place to expand right here,” he said.

    Representatives from the city presented an option to the Walton Arts Center Council in February that would allow the center to expand at its existing location. The city is negotiating a contract with Signet Devel- opment to construct a hotel, retail and commercial space and two parking decks on adjacent land owned by the city, including the large parking lot at Dickson Street and West Avenue, a smaller lot at West Avenue and Spring Street and the current site of Grub’s Bar & Grille. Officials said the project could be modified to meet the expansion needs of the Walton Arts Center

    Coody said he’s also made it known that the city has some bonding capacity. By restructuring the Hotel and Restaurant Gross Receipt Tax Refunding Bonds, the city could generate $11-12 million, he said.

    Regardless of where the facilities end up, the consultants said if the Walton Arts Center doesn’t expand, there’s the possibility that some other organization will build a performing arts center.

    Willem Brans, vice president of the Arts Consulting Group, said because of the anticipated demand, it’s likely someone else will step in to fill the need.

    Publication:Northwest Arkansas Times;     Date:May 24, 2008

  • Familiar businesses closing doors in Benton County

    BY JEFF MORES Benton County Daily Record

    BENTON COUNTY — While plenty of new businesses have opened their doors or are scheduled to do so in Benton County in the coming weeks and months, some familiar names have closed over the past couple of weeks.

    Two weeks ago, Oscar’s Steakhouse, located in the heavily-traveled Scotsdale Center in Rogers, served up its last cut of meat. The restaurant supplies have been cleared out, the lights are off and the real estate sign has been posted near the main entrance.

    The Vineyard Restaurant, at 3200 S.W. Regency Parkway in Bentonville, recently served its last meal as well. The parking lot is empty and the doors are locked.

    And on June 6, the downtown Bentonville Square will say goodbye to a non-restaurant business that developed quite a name for itself over the past three years.

    First Fridays at Fusion Art Gallery have been among the most popular events in the downtown Bentonville area since the art supply store and gallery venue opened its doors in 2005. The first Friday of every month, a new exhibition featuring local artists opened — and Fusion’s doors opened to masses of art enthusiasts. It was a monthly celebration of not only original art, but local art.

    But the First Friday event scheduled for June 6, which will feature every artist that’s even shown at Fusion, will be the last. Owner Cindy Suter recently made the decision to close Fusion Art Gallery for good.

    “It’s going to be difficult,” Suter said of closing the business. “When the economy is struggling the way it is, artwork, galleries and art supplies are normally the first to go. People have to buy groceries, put gas in their car and pay their mortgages. We’ve clearly felt the effect of what’s going on in the economy today.”

    Suter, who has made a name for herself as local artist, said she started Fusion because she was having trouble finding the quality of art supplies she needed. But when the two-story building at 109 N. Main St. came available, her business plan started to evolve. She purchased the building and, in addition to selling quality art supplies, turned a significant portion of the first floor into a gallery of original, local art. The second floor was turned into a space for art classes for children through adults.

    “I would say up until the economy began to go downhill, we were seeing a nice steady growth in our business and sales — even through last year,” Suter said. “In October, we began to see not quite as much as it had been, but we were still growing some. But when the new year came around, it’s been a reversal.”

    Suter said sales leveled out in January and continued to decrease ever since. Suter said she spent a great deal of time coming to her decision to close Fusion, but she said there really was no other option.

    Suter owns the 4,000-square-foot building and said once she has liquidated her inventory, she will attempt to lease the space.

    “We’re excited about our final First Friday, because it really will be a celebration of local art,” Suter said. “But it will be emotional when it’s all over.”

    Publication:Northwest Arkansas Times;     Date:May 23, 2008

Search

Post Archives