• YouthCAN 06.08.2008 No Comments

    FAMILY DAY

    Free Family Day at YouthCAN!’s Community Imagination Studio
    YouthCAN!’s Community Imagination Studio hosts Family Day the first Saturday of each month. During our Family Day program, we open our studio to all families in Northwest Arkansas to come and participate in family themed art projects.

    Our next Family Day will be held on Saturday, August 2nd from 10-4pm.   This week’s theme is Passport to Art France!  We will be creating our own works inspired by impressionism, and our own sculptures inspired by Nikki de St. Phalle.  Family Day events are free for all participants and no pre-registration is required. The Community Imagination Studio is located at 818 N. Sang Ave., in Fayetteville. Contact Alison Carter for more information at alison@communityimaginationstudio.org, 442-8585, or visit www.communityimaginationstudio.org.

    SATURDAY STUDIO HOURS
    YouthCAN!’s Community Imagination Studio Saturday Studio Hours.
    All of Northwest Arkansas is invited to Saturday Studio Hours every week from 10-4! Please join us at the Community Imagination Studio, 818 N. Sang Ave. in Fayetteville. During Saturday Studio Hours, we open our doors to community members of all ages to come, use our studio space and art supplies to paint, draw, make collages, or get creative with clay. Staff artists will be on hand to help guide you. Each week, we will have featured projects that participants may also choose to participate in. Cost is $5 for adults and children. Free to parents of participating children. For more information www.communityimaginationstudio.org/ or contact Alison Carter at Alison@communityimaginationstudio.org or call 479-442-8585.

    Featured projects for Saturday, August  9th: Passport to Art!  This week’s theme is Native American art!  We will be creating molas, which is a type of Native American clothing.  We will also make dream catchers and works using sand paint.

    Featured projects for Saturday, August 16th:  Passport to Art!  This week’s theme is Good Ole Arkansas!  Come and learn about Jug bands, and make your own rag dolls and quilts.

    Featured projects for Saturday, August 23rd:  Passport to Art! Join us for an end of the summer celebration.  We will be hosting an International Art Show!  Stop by and see the art from around the world that was created during our Passport to Art program.

    Featured projects for Saturday, August 30th:  The Studio will be closed in celebration of the Labor Day Holiday.

    AUGUST’S ARTIST WORKSHOP SERIES
    The Community Imagination Studio invites all of Northwest Arkansas to participate in the Saturday Workshop Series. The Workshop Series will be held on the 3rd Saturday of every month and involves a demonstration of the facilitating artists’ methods, guided instruction, and a chance for participants to get feedback on their work.

    Jug bands, blues, and more! August’s Saturday Workshop will be all about Arkansas music! We’ll make instruments out of recyclable materials and have fun making music!  August 16th from 2-4.

    MOMMY & ME ART CLASSES!
    For Parents or Grandparents and their little ones ages 18 months-5 years of age. Together, you will explore art in all its wonderful messiness! Art teaches developmental and cognitive skills such as problem solving, cause and effect, color mixing, and many more! The masterpieces that you take home will be treasured for years! Class meets once a week on alternating Tuesdays & Wednesdays from 10 to 11 am. Cost is $10 per class, per child. Register for whole month and receive a $5 discount if you have more than one child. The Community Imagination Studio is located at 818 N. Sang Ave., in Fayetteville. For more information visit: www.communityimaginationstudio.org/ or contact Alison Carter at alison@communityimaginationstudio.org or 479-442-8585.

    Featured Projects for August 5th: This week we will learn about Native American folk tales, and fine arts. We will create our own pinch pots, dream catchers and make sand paintings.

    Featured Projects for August 13th: This week’s theme is “Where is the Beach?”  We will create an ocean in a bottle, beach themed diorama, and paintings.

    Featured Projects for August 19th: This week’s theme is “Back to School.”  This week we will create a bottle bank to hold our college savings!

    Featured Projects for August 27th:  This week’s projects are inspired by local art shows.  We will make sculptures inspired by Eugene Sergeant’s work at the DDP Gallery, and create picture books inspired by Wendell Minor’s work at Crystal Bridges at the Massey.

  • An exhibit by contemporary artist Robert Glick will be on display from June 23 through Aug. 22 at the Anne Kittrell Art Gallery located on the fourth floor of the Arkansas Union. A reception  will be held from 6 to 9 p.m. Aug. 21. The gallery is open from 12 to 3 p.m. or by appointment. For more information, contact UPART@uark.edu.

  • BY MARSHA L. MELNICHAK Northwest Arkansas Times

    Three quotations circle the life of ceramic artist Beverly Norton Walker — one from a Japanese artist, one from an American philosopher and one from a fortune cookie.

    A quotation of Shoji Hamada, a potter who was declared a national treasure by the government of Japan, is pinned to a cork board in Norton Walker’s Fayetteville studio where she can see it daily.

    “Making pots should not be a struggle. It should be just like walking downhill in a gentle breeze,” Hamada is quoted as saying.

    Norton Walker agrees to a point.

    “It’s walking downhill in a gentle breeze, but you’ve got to get to the top of the hill first,” she said. “That’s the part I think should be added to that.”

    Norton Walker, who creates award-winning clay art in the backyard studio of her home, has been climbing that hill for about 30 years.

    From Michigan to Texas, back to Michigan, to Oklahoma and now Arkansas, she followed the trail of art wherever it would lead her, however she was able. She has reached the point on the trail where her art is her livelihood.

    As a girl in Michigan, she wanted to be a marine biologist.

    “I would sit and do detailed drawings of seaweed,” she said.

    Through the course of her life, her goal changed, but her interest in the creative process did not.

    “I think it’s the freedom. I was always kind of a rebel,” she said. “I like the freedom to be kind of crazy, if you want to, and do your own thing. The independence really appeals to me.”

    Her art trail included an attic studio, several garages and a barn basement in the Michigan cold on the fruit farm of which she was a part owner. In Texas, it was her living room.

    “When my daughter would go to take a nap, I’d set up my canvases and start working on them. I had to put away everything and get it out,” she said. “Now I’ve finally got my own studio, and I’m just in heaven.”

    The independence of being an artist also leads to being inventive.

    She couldn’t afford canvases for her “bigger, bigger, bigger” paintings, she said, so she learned how to stretch and prime them. Then she started going to junkyards to find doorways and other old pieces that she could use as extra-large canvases.

    She said she liked painting, but she wanted to do something a little more challenging.

    “Then I got into clay. It literally grabbed me,” she said.

    Norton Walker said she is not degreed to the hilt.

    “We had this great art center in Kalamazoo (Mich.), and I just went down there and started exploring some of the classes,” she said.

    It was there she learned “the nuts and bolts” of working clay, she said.

    She did the same in Houston, advancing her art, her technique and her knowledge by taking classes that were open to anyone willing to try.

    “I’ve had more of my training at art institutes and on my own, learning through workshops and reading and trying things,” Norton Walker said. “In 30 years you can accumulate a lot, but I’m always wanting to learn more.”

    The trail to her art success today took a left turn in Oklahoma.

    “When I moved to Oklahoma, I went totally leftbrained and got a job as a financial aid specialist,” she said.

    For 16 years, she made time for art as much as she could around her work schedule.

    “I did like helping people,” she said. “We worked with a lot of displaced homemakers, getting them started on the right plan with kids to support. Nine out of 10 of them weren’t getting financial aid from their husbands. They were starting over with no skills. My heart went out to them.”

    Seven of those years she commuted from Fayetteville.

    “I retired from there about five years ago and went into total clay, so this is my livelihood right now,” she said. “I haven’t regretted it at all. I’m not retired; I just retired from the left-brained world.”

    While in Tulsa, Okla., her art trail took her again to the junkyards, this time during her lunch hours. The skylight, doors and windows of the studio where she turns gray clay slabs into colorful art today came from those noontime quests.

    Her fortune cookie advice reminds her of how she reached that point where her art became her life.

    “You will be successful through innovation and determination” stares her in the face from her mirror each morning.

    “I think that has really kept me going,” Norton Walker said. “Taking chances, that’s the innovation part. And determination that you’re going to do this, that’s the thing.”

    Those qualities added to her quest for independence, and a love of learning took what might have been the shadow of a dream and made it real.

    For art to work as a living, “you have to be driven,” she said.

    Wearing a lot of hats helps, too.

    To make a living as a potter, she has to do much more than work the clay she loves. She is a photographer, marketer, chemist, engineer, architect, inventor, problem solver, supplier, hostess for her Christmas show and a time-management consultant.

    Her studio shelves hold materials as varied as alumina hydrate, titanium dioxide and ginkgo leaves. A slab roller and a machine that recycles the clay are part of her studio equipment. Hand tools range from an arm-length rubber mallet to brushes and a favorite worn wooden stick about the length of a pencil.

    This will be the first year that Norton Walker won’t make her own clay.

    For 27 years, she stirred and mixed and beat clays, feldspar, flint and grog into malleable clay. She has decided, as a business person, that there might be better use for her time than hefting 50- and 100-pound bags of clay and components.

    She will, however, still be creating her glazes and slips for decoration to maintain control of their properties. Norton Walker is known for her glazes and their unique interaction with the clay work.

    “I don’t have any secret ingredients,” she said. “It’s how I use them.”

    Process

    Norton Walker works in stages. This month, she is building pieces. Several potential wall platters are drying on studio tables. Others, that have been fired, also wait for that time when she has enough built that she can begin decorating them.

    When she’s done, each piece will be unique. Many will have been inspired by nature; most will be functional.

    Some will have spoken to her.

    “It does. It talks to you, but it’s kind of a strange language,” she said. “It’s not something I can verbalize.”

    The clay talking to her can be as simple as an accident. Maybe the clay is softer than usual or gets a ding in it during the building or drying.

    “Then I work with it,” she said. “I think, ‘Let’s try this on it.’ Then it either likes it or it doesn’t.”

    And that is part of the art, the uniqueness of the piece, that the clay’s own characteristics guide what it becomes.

    “A lot of times, especially if I’m in the forming process, I have to get something in my mind, but when I start working with it, the clay wants to do its own thing,” she said. “Sometimes it’s just accidental, but actually, that’s what I love to happen.”

    Last week, when she flipped a platter to dry, it got hung up.

    “I looked at it, and I thought, ‘This might be a new direction for me,’” she said. “I let it be, and it’s going to lead me to where I put the handles.”

    Her “clay buddy,” Cheryl Buell of Winslow, said it is that aesthetic, that feel for the clay and for finding the best in it, that makes Norton Walker and her work special.

    “She surrounds herself in beauty,” Buell said. “She sees the beauty not only in objects but also in people. She has the ability to look at people and see the best in them.

    “She has the ability to see the potential or the shiny spots on a person instead of the rough spots.”

    Platters and bowls

    “Nature evokes the creativity in her, I think,” said Pete Heinzelmann of Fayetteville, who has Norton Walker art in his home.

    Bamboo, willow and ginkgo leaves are among her inspirations.

    Norton Walker said her work is influenced by Japanese art, but she doesn’t imitate it.

    “What she does is exciting,” Heinzelmann said. “Fayetteville considers itself a cultural community, and she’s a big contributor to that cultural community in my opinion.”

    Most, maybe 95 percent, of Norton Walker’s work is hand-built stoneware. On this section of her art trail, many are wall platters. Clay stamps, folds of clay and attached handles add to its distinct uniqueness, along with her special touches with the glazes.

    Sizes vary from piece to piece, but generally, like her earlier paintings, they are large.

    Norton Walker urges people to take the platters off the wall and use them as serving pieces. Even on her Web site — www.nortonwalkerstudio.com” href=”http://www.nortonwalkerstudio.com/”>www.nortonwalkerstudio.com — she tells viewers that the pieces have a rim on the back so they can be used on the table.

    “I want people to see ceramic art in a new light,” she said. “I think they’ve been so tuned in to just functional work.”

    She would like to get peo ple to support the local art community and tries to do her part toward that end.

    Besides buying supplies locally, when she is asked about classes, she directs people to other local artists: Susan Hutchcroft, executive director of the Northwest Arkansas Community Creative Center at the Nadine Baum Studio; and Kelley and Mike Wilks at Flat Rock Studio.

    “That’s the places you need to be going to take classes in clay,” she said, recalling her own art center initiation into the world of clay, stoneware and ceramic art.

    Norton Walker donated one of her centerpiece bowls for the most recent Empty Bowls silent auction.

    One of her pieces, “Shoshun Futaba,” which translates to “early spring sprout,” will be included in the 2009 Arkansas Artists Calendar published by the Arkansas Governor’s Mansion Association.

    In 2006, each recipient of the Governor’s Arts Awards received a Norton Walker work of art titled “Black Bamboo.”

    Her “Bamboo Leaf Platter” was chosen from among thousands to be included in the “Strictly Functional” pottery exhibit. Her work has also been featured in other national juried events.

    Norton Walker’s work was also included in the 2004-05 touring exhibit of Arkansas Women Artists.

    She has gallery affiliations in Little Rock and in Douglas, Mich. Locally her work is displayed at the Bank of Fayetteville and has been featured by the University of Arkansas and the Walton Arts Center.

    Norton Walker is not one to rest on her accolades and awards. She still works every day in her studio, building pieces for her next show, and she still is taking classes.

    “I’m always, always looking to learn,” she said.

    The third quotation that Norton Walker sees every day is attached to her refrigerator door.

    “Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you’ve imagined,” reads the Henry David Thoreau quotation.

    “Some quotes really hit home, and that one certainly has,” Norton Walker said.

    BROOKE McNEELY Northwest Arkansas Times Clay artist Beverly Norton Walker works on a new platter in her studio at her home in Fayetteville.

    COURTESY “Shoshun Futaba,” which translates to “early spring sprout,” will be included in the 2009 Arkansas Artists Calendar published by the Arkansas Governor’s Mansion Association. Beverly Norton Walker of Fayetteville is the artist.

    COURTESY This potter’s mark identifies the work of Fayetteville clay artist Beverly Norton Walker.

  • Planning for First Night Fayetteville is already under way.

    The theme for this year’s New Year’s Eve celebration is “Paint the Town Green!” A focus will be placed on using recyclable materials for visual arts projects and installations. Musical and performing groups will be encouraged to “recycle” old materials into fresh and new interpretations.

    The Imagination Station will be filled with recyclable materials to use for creation of the traditional “First Night hats,” and recycling bins will be placed around to collect materials and trash throughout the night.

    The family-oriented event will also have new leadership this year. Barbara Price Davis will serve as this year’s event coordinator.

    Davis served on the board of directors for First Night Fayetteville for the past six years and has served as head of the program committee and board treasurer. She is also the executive director for YouthCAN!

    Morgan Hicks, the coordinator for the past three years, chose to take a year off.

    Already recruited to participate are the Yvonne Richardson Center summer camp and the Summer Art Explosion students at the Community Imagination Studio. Students have begun creating giant flowers and “critters” out of recyclable materials. Donations of recyclable materials are needed to continue the work, including cardboard tubes, plastic water bottles, empty prescription and pill bottles, plastic foam, bottle caps, coffee cans, cat litter buckets, tissue paper, old matchstick blinds and similar materials. Donations can be dropped off at the Community Imagination Studio in Fayetteville at 818 N. Sang Ave. or call 442-8585 to arrange for pickup.

    For more First Night information, call Davis at 443-4797.

    Publication:Northwest Arkansas Times; Aug 3, 2008;

  • It’s that time of year again as Arts Live Theatre, Northwest Arkansas’ only dedicated Children’s and Youth Theatre Company, begins its Fall Fun with classes beginning the week of September 15th!

    Classes will be offered in a variety of sections for grades K-12, including the popular Playmakers series for the youngest actors-to-be, and the Theatre Lab series for grades 8-12. Classes include various levels of acting from beginner to advanced, Comedy Improv., productions classes and more! Arts Live will also be offering special performance opportunities for enrolled upper level students.  Classes will conclude the week of November 17th with showcase performances.

    Arts Live provides professional training for young actors through classes and main stage performances. Past productions include The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe, High School Musical, Grease and most recently, Seussical The Musical. “Arts Live is a tremendous opportunity for young actors to receive outstanding training,” said Mark Landon Smith, Arts Live Theatre Artistic Director. “Our faculty comes with years of professional experience nationally and internationally, so whether a young actor comes to us with an eye at a professional career, or comes to us just to have fun, Arts Live provides an exceptional experience in a positive and creative environment.” Classes and auditions are open to any interested persons and no previous acting experience is required.

    Auditions for the original production of Christmas Carol High School with be Saturday and Sunday, September 27th and 28th.

    For information regarding fall class schedule, upcoming auditions, productions and sponsorship opportunities, visit artslivetheatre.com or call 479.521.4932.

  • BY MARSHA L. MELNICHAK Northwest Arkansas Times

    First, the Fayetteville City Council said no to using cash reserves in budgeting. Then it voted to pull $12,500 from the same reserves for an arts festival.

    With a 5-3 vote, the council approved a resolution “to request that the budget to be submitted to the City Council by the administration be balanced.”

        “Basically this is fiscal sustainability. To me, it’s a no-brainer,” said Ward 3 Alderman Bobby Ferrell, who proposed the amendment.

    He explained the idea is that when the administration brings a budget to the council for consideration, it should be prepared without use of the city’s cash reserves. Despite that request, the city administration may propose a budget that relies on cash reserves.

    “I’ll be bringing forward the best budget that we can. That’s my job. It might mean reserves,” Mayor Dan Coody said after the meeting. “I don’t know yet. We won’t know until we get all the budget figures back from all the divisions and process them.”

        Cash reserves can be described as the city’s savings, said Paul Becker, finance and internal services director. They are not a “rainy-day fund,” which is a specifically designated account, he said. Fayetteville does not have a rainy-day fund.

        City Attorney Kit Williams said the resolution was, as it states, a request.

        “I guess the administration can reject that request,” he said.

        Ferrell said his proposal was intended to tighten the budget, not tie staff hands in preparing the budget.

        Ward 2 Aldermen Kyle Cook and Nancy Allen and Ward 4 Aldermen Lioneld Jordan and Shirley Lucas joined Ferrell in support of the resolution.

        Lucas explained that the council works every year not to go into the reserve and finds itself whittling down the proposed budget.

        Ward 1 Aldermen Adella Gray and Brenda Thiel and Ward 3 Alderman Robert Rhoads voted against the resolution.

        Coody said at the meeting that not being able to use the reserves could mean raising property taxes or laying people off to have a balanced budget when it is proposed to the council.

        He said after the meeting that he would not advocate a property tax increase this year and that the city is not in a position to cut the workforce because it is already understaffed.

        Thiel said she would rather see what the city departments think is essential. Without use of the reserves to balance the budget, she said, the council could be put in the position of picking and choosing which city employees get laid off.

     

        Arts festival

        A few minutes after the budget discussion, Jordan proposed providing $32,500 to Fayetteville Downtown Partners for producing the 2008 Fayetteville Arts Festival.

        That figures was 13 times greater than the amount requested by the group and more than three times the amount of cash donations raised so far by the organization.

        Fayetteville Downtown Partners, which is producing the Labor Day weekend festival, did not request city money during the 2008 budget process but asked for $2,500 at the council’s agenda setting session last week.

        Downtown Partners board President Daniel Keeley told the council Tuesday that the organization had raised about $10,000 in donations.

        As part of his rationale for his amendment, Jordan cited previous council funding for trails, purchase of urban forest and support for the Botanical Garden of the Ozarks from the economic development fund.

        That money is part of the city’s general fund cash reserves and is part of the money remaining from the sale of the Wilson Springs Business Park property, now known as springwoods.

        “I know that we have talked a lot about supporting the arts program, and I think it’s time that we do that,” Jordan said.

        Allen quickly seconded his amendment, which would have changed the city’s contract with Downtown Partners from $2,500 to $32,500.

        Rhoads said he was torn between wanting to support the festival and not spending more than the city should.

        “If I had all the money in the world, I’d give you a whole lot more than $32,500, but down the road I think we’ll have to come up with some funds … to maintain and enhance the Walton Arts Center,” he said.

        The amendment to provide $32,500 for the festival failed with a 5-3 vote. Jordan, Allen and Cook voted for it; Gray, Thiel, Rhoads, Ferrell and Lucas voted against it.

        However, the council then voted unanimously to provide $12,500 for the arts festival.

     

        Other business

        The council approved an amendment about street design and access, the hiring of two police officers, adding a provision for an energy efficiency certificate to the energy code, and a planned zoning district for a Habitat for Humanity development.

        A proposal to allow Aframe signs was left on first reading at the request of city planning staff, which wants to make some changes to it.

        Annexation of Holcomb Heights III was approved with a 7-1 vote. Cook voted against it.

     

    Publication:Northwest Arkansas Times; Date:Aug 6, 2008

  •  

     

     

    By Skip Descant, The Morning News

     

    FAYETTEVILLE - The Fayetteville Arts Festival got more than it bargained for Tuesday night when the Fayetteville City Council unanimously agreed to fund it $12,500.

    The original proposal before the council was $2,500, which most members appeared to see as too low.

    In July, the Fayetteville Advertising and Promotion Commission voted to give the festival $2,500 if the city coughed-up another $2,500. With the city council increasing the amount, the festival will get a total of $15,000 from the two public bodies.

    The money will come from the city’s economic development fund, which now has about $1.2 million set aside as a reserve in the general fund, said Paul Becker, Fayetteville’s finance director.

    Because the City Council legally can’t give money to an event like the arts festival, Fayetteville will enter into contract with Fayetteville Downtown Partners - the organizing body behind the festival - which will use the money to “promote, produce and manage” the festival.

    “This will really help us with the marketing and advertising,” said Sarah Lewis, a member of the festival’s board of directors who spoke after the council vote.

    The arts festival’s ideal budget is $54,000, said Daniel Keeley, the director of Fayetteville Downtown Partners.

    So far, the group has attracted about $14,000 in in-kind donations and another $10,000 in private contributions. Another $15,000 puts the festival at $39,000.

    “We’re only going to spend what we get,” said Keeley, who hinted that advertising and printing budgets likely would need to be scaled back.

    However, if a previous proposal by council member Lioneld Jordan would have passed, the mood around the festival board would have been downright festive Tuesday night.

    Jordan’s proposal was to give the festival $32,500. That proposal failed in a 3-5 vote, with only Jordan and council members Nancy Allen and Kyle Cook supporting.

    “I support the arts, but I’m sorry, I can’t support this,” said Alderman Bobby Ferrell.

    “I thought $2,500 was too low,” remarked council member Robert Rhoads, “but I think $32,500 is too high.”

    Even Fayetteville Mayor Dan Coody, a self-described art collector, did not support the proposal.

    “How can we tell our employees, ‘We’ll give $32,500 to someone that didn’t ever ask for it, but we’re unwilling to give you a raise,’” said Coody.

    “But we did spend $75,000 to bring in a consultant to ‘talk’ about economic development,” Jordan remarked.

    Both Jordan and Coody will face each other in the upcoming mayor’s race.

    GO & DO

    Fayetteville Arts Festival
    When: Aug. 29-31, Sept. 5-7
    Where: Fayetteville Town Center

     

     

     

  • Film 06.08.2008 No Comments

    Wednesday, August 6th at 7pm

    The Garden Room

    Ozark Mountain Smokehouse

    205 West Dickson Street

    Fayetteville

    Reception immediately following the screening

    Hors D’Oeuvres

    Cash Bar

    Tickets: $20

    Proceeds benefit The Oxford American Literary Project, a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization.

Search

Post Archives