SAM ANDERSON – SENIOR SHOW
January 28 – February 7, 2019
Gallery 720, Christensen Center
SENIOR SHOW
SAM ANDERSON
ELIZABETH IHEKORONYE – SENIOR SHOW
January 28 – February 7, 2019
Gallery 720, Christensen Center
SENIOR SHOW
Elizabeth Ihekoronye
MEGAN ELLEN JOHNSON – SHADES OF OUR STORIES
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January 14 – 24, 2018
Gallery 720, Christensen Center
SHADES OF OUR STORIES
Megan Johnson
Continue reading “MEGAN ELLEN JOHNSON – SHADES OF OUR STORIES”
THEY/THEM PROJECT
THEY/THEM PROJECT
ALL-STUDENT JURIED ART EXHIBITION-2019
ALL-STUDENT JURIED ART EXHIBITION-2019
April 11 – 26, 2019 – Gage Gallery
Reception: April 16, 4:30 – 6 p.m. Oren Gateway Lobby
Awards @ 5:15 p.m.
SOOMAAL FELLOWSHIP EXHIBITIONS – 2019
SOOMAAL FELLOWSHIP EXHIBITIONS – 2019
August 1 – 29, 2019 – Gage & Christensen Gallery
Artists Talk & Reception: August 17, 2019, 6 pm
Gage Family Art Gallery
Soomaal House of Art (Soomaal) is a Minnesota-based Somali art collective that provides studio space, studio critiques, artistic community, mentorships for younger Somali artists and an annual exhibition space with educational programming.
Soomaal House of Art provides a platform for Somali visual artists who want to create and use art to shape and frame critical discourse around vexing local and global issues of our time. Moving forward, we hope the collective action of this group will lead to sustained partnerships with Minnesota institutions and, together, inspire more Minnesotans, especially Somali Minnesotans, to harness the power of art as a tool for intellectual and civic engagement.
Soomaal Fellowship is an initiative by Soomaal House of Art and in partnership with Augsburg University Art Galleries. The artists considered for these fellowships work in a variety of visual art media, including both traditional and new media. During the twelve-month fellowship year, each artist receives studio visits, access to technical assistance and a culminating gallery exhibition at Augsburg University.
Khadijah Muse and Kaamil A. Haider, the selected 2018/19 fellows, have each produced a body of work that culminates in an exhibition on August 1–29, 2019 at Augsburg University’s Gage Family Art Gallery and Christensen Center Art Gallery. The exhibition will have educational components to supplement artworks such as public presentations and panel discussions around the show and contemporary Somali visual art.
BARBARA KENDRICK
May 16 – July 18, 2018
MONIQUE LUCHETTI
May 16 – July 18, 2018
NORTHERN BLENDS
Northern Blends: The Artfulness of Coffee and Tea in the Canadian Midwest
March 1-30, 2019, Christensen Gallery
NCECA: March 27–30
Reception: Thursday, March 28, 5–9p.m.
NCECA 2019, Minneapolis, Minnesota: these neighbors to your north felt a certain kinship to this year’s setting. Minnesota is often affectionately referred to as “Canada’s 11th province” because of our shared love of hockey, reputation for unfailing politeness, and of course, bitterly cold winters. One of the great connectors in those freezing moments is a shared pot of coffee or tea. A warm cup can bring friends and strangers together, and create bonds across borders and cultures. It’s also part of many daily routines, active in both our social and individual lives. We form private and public rituals related to the preparation and serving of these beverages, whether we’re hoping for a moment of comfort, convenience, hospitality, decadence, or rest in the midst of busy modern lives. Now more than ever it seems like taking a moment for conversation over a shared cup could do our world some good.
With Northern Blends, a small group of Canadian ceramic artists would like to offer an invitation to consider the meaning present in the simple act of brewing, serving and enjoying a cup. Featured are pots that celebrate and examine our relationship to the common phrase, “Would you like a cup of coffee or tea?” Each artist offers their own particular response. As a collective, they showcase the diversity of the Canadian experience. Moving between practicality and pleasure, the single-cup and the generous pot, we offer seven approaches that highlight the unique role the hand-made pot has in bringing a sense of artfulness to our day-to-day lives.
While each artist takes their own approach to material and process, all maintain a shared dedication to craftsmanship, design and the pivotal role of the artist’s hand in creating meaningful objects. This exhibition also offers American and International NCECA audiences a window into contemporary functional ceramics from the Canadian “midwest”. The artists of “Northern Blends” are a diverse group. There are artists born and raised in Canada as well as recent immigrants, those who studied abroad and those whose education is based in Canada. The work in this exhibition gives audiences a sense of the rich range of experience and knowledge in the Canadian landscape. Northern Blends celebrates the traditions, relationships and moments generated from the simple pleasures of coffee and tea. It is an invitation for conversation across processes and styles, borders and barriers over a shared cup.