Tag Archives: Featured

Art and Social Impact with Halcyon

A talk by Kate Goodall of Halcyon

8 pm Talk,  8:45pm Q&A with Audience

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Halcyon promotes social good by encouraging socially engaged creatives to learn, freely experiment, sometimes fail, and advance their talents and visions. CEO and Co-Founder Kate Goodall shares how Halcyon Arts Lab incubator has impacted the greater metropolitan arts scene. Presented in collaboration with Halcyon.

About Halcyon

Halcyon celebrates creativity in all forms and galvanizes creative individuals aspiring to promote social good. We bring together diverse groups of changemakers in art and social enterprise and provide a safe haven for their bold ideas to take flight. #halcyonincubator #halcyonartslab #halcyondialogue

About Kate Goodall

Kate Goodall is the Co-Founder and CEO of Halcyon, a non-profit dedicated to solving 21st century problems by providing space and access to emerging leaders in social entrepreneurship and the arts. Goodall continues to grow Halcyon’s offerings in 2018 with By The People, an international arts and innovation festival in partnership with the Smithsonian and numerous organizations throughout DC. In 2016, Goodall helped establish WE Capital, a consortium of leading businesswomen investing in and supporting women and women-led companies. Goodall has served as juror at national and international social entrepreneurship competitions, was listed as one of the Washington Business Journal’s Power 100 and 40 Under 40, Washingtonian’s 2017 Tech Titans, and Techweek 100 DC’s Talent Cultivators.

About Torpedo Talks

Every Second Thursday of the month, join us at 8 pm for a free discussion in the main hall. Created on the belief that the arts is for everyone, we invite a different contemporary artist, curator, or activist in the creative arts world to stop by and share their knowledge in a short power-packed talk. It’s a chance to get inspired while connecting with other open-minded folks in your area.

 

Architecture, Design, and Cultural Space

Cultural and public spaces are where social values can be expressed in real time. Three panelists, Ronit Eisenbach, Philippa Hughes and Khara James, will share their experiences with the design of various cultural spaces. Information about the panelists is available here.

Reception at 6:30, Panel Discussion at 7:30pm

$12 AIA members, Torpedo Factory members, tenant artists and Factory Society members; $10 students; $20 non-members.

Part of Virginia Architecture Week and the 2018 Women in Architecture Lecture Series.

Purchase Tickets Now

 

PANELISTS:

RONIT EISENBACH

Ronit is an architect, artist, curator and educator whose scholarship, pedagogy and multi-disciplinary, collaborative practice, StudioRED  joins architecture installations, exploratory performances and public participation in situ. Her ephemeral works spark dialogue about our relationships with the places we make for ourselves and with one another. Situated within museums, abandoned buildings and on public streets, Eisenbach’s interventions simultaneously operates at and connects two spatial and temporal scales — the intimate scale of the individual and the public scale of the city. A creative team builder, her works invite active participation, engaging a wide-range of partners in the ongoing effort of transforming, enhancing and attending to place while acknowledging inherent and meaningful tensions that exist between flux and stability. Co-author of Installations by Architects and Ruth Adler Schnee: A Passion for Color, she is a Fellow of the Beverly Willis Architecture Foundation, SandBox at Washington College, and the MacDowell Colony. At the University of Maryland, she is an Associate Professor of Architecture, Director of Creative Placemaking for the National Center for Smart Growth and the Kibel Gallery Curator. www.roniteisenbach.com

 

PHILIPPA P.B. HUGHES 

Philippa P.B. Hughes is a social and creative placemaker, creative connector, and cultural strategist, who designs inventive and collaborative projects that strengthen communities, connects people who would not normally meet in meaningful dialogue, and opens portals to art and culture for the culturally curious. She constructs human-centered activations that facilitate connections between neighbors, reinforce community bonds, and strengthen relationships. She believes that people are hungry for the opportunity to connect and build relationships with one another. Social and creative placemaking can provide creative portals that connection. She is also personally committed to finding ways for people to connect across political divides. For example, she has been hosting dinners with Trump supporters and opponents, as well as dinners with liberals who span the left side of the political spectrum.

She is experienced in public and private collaborations having produced placemaking projects in collaboration with numerous Business Improvement Districts across D.C. and in partnership with the D.C. Office of Planning. She  executed two creative placemaking projects funded by the Kresge Foundation. Philippa is also the chair of the board of the DuPont Underground, a former trolley stop turned into art space and she has served on the board of the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities among numerous other boards throughout Washington, D.C. Philippa studied Foreign Affairs at the University of Virginia and also received her law degree from that institution. She practiced investment adviser regulation for six years before transitioning to the full-time pursuit of social and creative placemaking.

 

 

KHARA JAMES, RA
PERKINS EASTMAN

Khara James is an Architect whose design focus is predominantly on primary and secondary educational facilities. She has experience in all phases of design and construction including programming, schematics, technical documentation, and construction administration. Her passion for community-based design and architecture’s role in shaping the culture of a place serves as a foundation for her design approach. Khara was educated at the University of Maryland where she earned her Bachelor of Science in Architecture and Master of Architecture degrees. Since graduating in 2013, she has worked at Perkins Eastman where she is now an Associate. Khara’s greatest contributions have been to some of the firm’s largest school modernization projects such as Langley High School , Oakton High School, and the award-winning Roosevelt High School in Washington D.C.

 

MODERATOR

SARAH WATLING, LEED AP
PERKINS EASTMAN DC

Sarah Watling works at Perkins Eastman DC Architects in Washington, DC, on large-scale projects here and abroad. Before joining PEDC, Sarah practiced research, development and design both domestically and internationally for over 15 years. Her training in art history, environmental policy and planning, and landscape architecture enable a unique big-picture perspective. Passionate about resiliency, her projects have included master planning ecotourism infrastructure in Central and South America, regional sustainable economic policy modeling and implementation, research and evidence-based sustainable land reclamation in sub-Saharan Africa, therapeutic landscapes , and sustainable revitalization of fragmented urban cores. Her interest areas are the power of public art as mediator between ecology, economics and society; the prioritization of community-based strategies in sustainable urbanization; and building rural-urban linkages in response to economic, environmental and population pressures. She has presented her work nationally and internationally and volunteers regularly with AIA Women in Architecture, the District Architecture Center and on various public art installations.

2018 Emerging Artists

Opening Reception: Friday, April 13, 7 – 9 pm | Artist Talk 7:30 pm

Jury Panel Talk: Thursday, May 10, 8 – 9 pm

Target Gallery, the contemporary exhibition space of the Torpedo Factory Art Center, introduces a new annual exhibition series featuring the work of emerging artists of the D.C., Maryland, and Virginia region.

The public reception will be part of the Torpedo Factory’s Late Shift: What is Art event.

There will also be a talk with the jury panel on May 10, at 8 pm as a part of the Torpedo Factory’s Torpedo Talk lecture series.


“These artists are the future,” said Leslie Mounaime, director of Target Gallery. “It is our responsibility as a leading regional arts institution to foster exhibition opportunities, advance budding artistic endeavors and compensate emerging artists.”

The selected artists for 2018 Emerging Artists are:

Katie Barrie
Ronald Jackson
Hollis McCracken
Holly Trout

They were selected by a jury panel: Ksenia Grishkova, Director of Touchstone Gallery; Blair Murphy, Independent Curator; and Jack Rasmussen, Director and Curator at the American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center.

Katie Barrie (Richmond, VA)

Barrie’s paintings are rooted in abstraction. Her work is a nod to minimalism, breaking landscapes down to their simplest forms. Each painting contains specific references to colors, patterns, and structures—both organic and manmade—found in America’s National Parks. “I strive to create a balance between formalistically abstract paintings, while also addressing the impact humans have brought upon their land,” she said.

Ronald Jackson (Spotsylvania, VA)

As a figurative artist, Jackson captures intimate settings and uses them as a gateway to ponder the complexities of the human experience, as well as the society that influences them. “My goal is to create work that is visually poetic,” he said, “aiming to create an interactive experience in which the viewer is compelled to ponder possibilities that are likely reflections of their own experiences. I hope my work triggers self-discovery of value, beauty, and significance among people who in some way feel marginalized.”

Hollis McCracken (Richmond, VA)

McCracken’s uses reclaimed materials from vacant and derelict buildings to create sculptural works that communicate universal human emotions, such as abandonment, isolation, absence, and loneliness. “I’ve been particularly drawn to rundown and abandoned buildings,” she said. “I empathize with these sad-looking structures, that were once majestic, as former versions of myself, rough around the edges and neglected until someone sees through to their potential.”

Holly Trout (Washington, D.C.)

Trout’s work explores the ways in which cast-off objects and materials can be transformed from their normal order into anomalous objects and systems. She creates drawings and small sculptures from a broad range of sources and materials such as children’s toys, plants, anatomy texts, crafting materials, and home repair supplies. “I attempt to understand the absurdity, alienation, and disorder within the world I experience,” she said. “Through hybridization of the real and artificial, and craft and trash, my work is playful, often with darker underpinnings.”


About the Artists

Katie Barrie is an abstract painter based in Richmond, Virginia, where she is a master’s of fine arts candidate at Virginia Commonwealth University. She received her bachelor’s of fine arts from the University of Michigan, School of Art and Design in 2011. Barrie has shown her work professionally throughout the United States as well as internationally in France, Iceland, and Spain.

Ronald Jackson is a figurative painter originally from rural Arkansas who currently resides in Spotsylvania, Virginia. He studied Architectural Design at Mission Viejo College in California before pursuing a career in the U.S. Army in 1992. In May 2014, Jackson retired from the Army after 21 years of service and has since worked as a professional artist. His art has been on exhibition throughout the D.C. metropolitan region, and as well as internationally in a group exhibition in Seoul, South Korea. He is currently represented by Galerie Myrtis in Baltimore.

Hollis McCracken is sculpture artist originally from the West Coast. She has shown work primarily in San Francisco and Tucson, Arizona. McCracken currently lives in Richmond, Virginia, where she is a master’s of fine arts candidate and an adjunct faculty member at Virginia Commonwealth University, School of the Arts in the Craft & Material Studies department. She received her bachelor’s of fine arts at Academy of Art University in San Francisco in 2011.

Holly Trout is an interdisplinary artist working primarily in drawing, sculpture, and installation. Trout is currently based in Washington, where she is an master’s of fine arts candidate at American University. She received her bachelor’s in art history from Mount Holyoke College in South Hadley, Massachusetts. This will be her first exhibition in a professional gallery space.

8th Annual March150 Art Party

#March150

Target Gallery’s popular annual exhibition and art sale, March150, returns! The March150 Art Party, presented by the Factory Society, is the closing reception for Target Gallery’s March150 Special Exhibition and Art Sale, where all remaining artwork is discounted to just $100. All proceeds from artwork sales support future exhibitions and programs at the Target Gallery and the Torpedo Factory Art Center.

Join us for a lively evening featuring a special menu of hors d’oeuvres provided by Catering by Seasons, a wine bar sponsored by Sonoma Cellar, fun hands-on art activities with the Mobile Art Lab, a green-screen photo station provided by the American Geosciences Insitute, live music set with DJ VicoVibez, and more! We will also be presenting special artists awards at 9pm selected by Factory Society, The Art League, Torpedo Factory Artists Association, the Friends of the Torpedo Factory as well as the People’s Choice Award. We will also be allowing for the first time for your purchased artwork to be picked up the night of the party!

Tickets are $25 in advance/$30 at the door. Ticket’s will go on sale starting Friday, February 23rd!  You may purchase tickets at the online or at the door. (pre-sale tickets end on Thursday, March 22nd at 11:59pm)

Note: Tickets are transferable, but not refundable. 

Get Your Tickets

A special thank you to our sponsors:

 

March150: 8th Annual Special Exhibition & Art Sale

Art Party: Friday, March 23 7 – 10 pm | Awards @ 9 pm

Target Gallery’s popular annual exhibition and art sale, March150, returns to the Torpedo Factory Art Center for the 8th year. Proceeds benefit future exhibitions and programs at Target Gallery and the Torpedo Factory.

Target Gallery, the contemporary exhibition space for the Torpedo Factory, collected more than $13,000 in 2017 through March150. This yearly all-media exhibition features over 200 works created by artists local to Alexandria and the greater D.C. region. The only requirement to be on view in the exhibition is that artists needed to use the gallery-supplied 10” x 10” panel. All work in the show is priced at $150.

March150 is a perpetual favorite with patrons and local artists alike,” said Leslie Mounaime, director of Target Gallery. “This exhibition is a low-pressure environment. It encourages new collectors to buy original art, exposes seasoned collectors to new local artists, and sets the stage for artists to test new techniques and ideas.”

March150 Art Party

Target Gallery is partnering with the Factory Society, an independent young-patrons group that supports the Torpedo Factory, for the March150 Art Party on Friday, March 23; 7 – 10 p.m. Guests have an opportunity to mingle with other art enthusiasts and meet many of the artists who have artwork on view in the show. All art is priced at $100 exclusively during the Party.

The evening also features music by DJ Vico Vibez, hands-on artmaking with Alexandria Office of the Arts’ Mobile Art Lab, and a green-screen photo booth provided by the American Geosciences Institute. Hors d’oeuvres provided by Catering by Seasons and the wine was hand-selected by Sonoma Cellar. Tickets are $25 in advance; $30 at the door.

Artist awards will be given by The Art League, the Torpedo Factory Artists’ Association, Factory Society, and Friends of the Torpedo Factory. Party attendees can vote for the People’s Choice Award, with a prize presented by Target Gallery.

Get Your Tickets

Sneak Peek at Late Shift

 

Sneak a peek and build your wishlist at a special preview of the 2018 March150 Special Exhibition & Art Sale. Proceeds benefit future exhibitions and programs in Target Gallery and the Torpedo Factory Art Center.

Hear Post-Grad artist Lyric Prince share about her experiences at the Torpedo Factory. In the New Project Studio, welcome Shadé Reneé, the emerging artist selected for Experimentation/Exploration, a partnership with Olly Olly celebrating emerging artists in the region. Join us in the main hall for a special reception honoring GMU students with with zines curated by Christopher Kardambikis and available for sale at the Torpedo Factory Gift Shop.

About The Late Shift: Sneak Peek

 

The Late Shift: Sneak Peek

Sneak a peek and build your wishlist at a special preview of the 2018 March150 Special Exhibition & Art Sale. Proceeds benefit future exhibitions and programs in Target Gallery and the Torpedo Factory Art Center.

Hear Post-Grad artist Lyric Prince share about her experiences at the Torpedo Factory. In the New Project Studio, welcome Shadé Reneé, the emerging artist selected for Experimentation/Explorationa partnership with Olly Olly celebrating emerging artists in the region. Join us in the main hall for a special reception honoring GMU students with with zines curated by Christopher Kardambikis and available for sale at the Torpedo Factory Gift Shop


Sneak Peek (March150 Preview)

On View: “March150 Preview”– Target Gallery (Studio 2)
Sneak a peek and build your wishlist at a special preview of the 2018 March150 Special Exhibition & Art Sale. Proceeds benefit future exhibitions and programs in Target Gallery and the Torpedo Factory Art Center.

Gallery Receptions, Open Studios, and Special Activities

Creating Engagement Among Arts Professionals

A talk by Ruth Abrahams and Jennifer Riddell of ArtTable DC

Torpedo Talks @ Second Thursday

 

8pm Talk,  8:45pm Q&A with Audience

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ArtTable is a national organization focused on support and development of professional women in the visual arts. ArtTable DC’s program State of Art/DC: A Conversation explores the impact of contemporary visual art and art-making on the region. Co-Chair Ruth Abrahams and Communications Co-Chair Jennifer Riddell discuss the evolution of the program and the four editions presented to date.

Presented in collaboration with ArtTable DC.

About Torpedo Talks

Every Second Thursday of the month, join us at 8 pm for a free discussion in the main hall. Created on the belief that the arts is for everyone, we invite a different contemporary artist, curator, or activist in the creative arts world to stop by and share their knowledge in a short power-packed talk. It’s a chance to get inspired while connecting with other open-minded folks in your area.

Shadé Reneé in the New Project Studio

Experimentation/Exploration in the New Project Studio

Experimentation/Exploration is a partnership with Olly Olly to provide support and mentorship for a local emerging artist. Founded by artist Jessica Kallista, Olly Olly is a new alternative artist-driven space located in the historic City of Fairfax.

Shadé Reneé, a graduate of Parsons School of Design, specializes in couture, fashion that is custom and made-to-measure. Her work is treated with opulence, love, and fierceness. She’s best known for hand-embroidery and bead work, dedicating more than 3,000 hours to this talent.

To Shadé, fashion is her art form, and fashion is the art of self. She sees her purpose as tailoring more access to creativity and creative living. Her work involves her client’s bodies and those individual nuances to create something that surpasses a simple “clothing” denotation to create “The Art of You.”

Shadé Reneé Mission Statement from shade renee on Vimeo.


Meet the Artist: Friday, March 9

Part of our Late Shift Art Night, 7-11 pm.

Stop by the New Project Studio to meet the artist in person.

RSVP here

The Late Shift: Uncovering the Waterfront

Alexandria’s past comes to life with help from the Alexandria Archaeology Museum (Studio 327). Artists and innovators team up for a night of unearthed secrets, music, and trivia celebrating our region’s rich history. Presented in collaboration with the Office of Historic Alexandria.


Line up for a mix of basketball and football and hear more about Alexandria native Dr. Charles Jones and other African Americans from Alexandria who have made history.

Who’s the fastest?  Find out as you compete with model ships for a prize.

Get a drink and enjoy early American diversions.

Now it’s easy to get ice, but in the 18th century the frozen river was the source of this coveted resource.  How long would it last?

Think you know Alexandria?  Check out old maps and see how well you could navigate early Alexandria’s streets.

Stop by the Apothecary for a lesson in real plants found in Harry Potter and snap a picture in the photo booth.

  • 18th Century Music and Dance, 7 – 10 p.m.

Listen to the music of early Alexandria and test your skills by joining in with dancers in period dress.

Knot tying, whipping and splicing lines, and sewing sail cloth were all part of the job. Check out the skills needed for sailors in the 19th century.

  • Rope Making – Clare Nicholls

Try your hand at making rope the old fashioned way with fabric artist Clare Nicholls.

  • Trivia – Rounds at 7:30 p.m., 9 p.m. and 10 p.m.

Think your Alexandria history is on point? Grab a group and test your knowledge.

Stop by to see the rich history and natural beauty of Ivy Hill Cemetery’s 22 acres through historical writings, local art, and information on upcoming events.

Discover the science behind the discovery and conservation of Alexandria’s 18th Century Ship.


Gallery Receptions, Open Studios, and Special Activities

These special gallery and studio receptions take place until 9 pm.

Farm to Fashion: Opening Reception – Site 2

Farm to Fashion is a public art challenge exhibit created by the Loudoun Arts CouncilLoudoun Economic Development, and Franklin Park Arts Center to forge new connections between the agriculture and arts communities in Loudoun County. As part of the Rural Economic Development Council’s “Loudoun VA Grown, Loudoun VA Made” initiative, F2F worked to raise public awareness of the rich resources — both cultural and agricultural — in this part of Virginia.

Artists were challenged to create a work of “agri-couture” sculpture using products and equipment sourced from Loudoun’s farms and agricultural businesses. Mannequins were created with one of a kind ceramic faces made by Loudoun artist Amy Manson. The scarecrow-like figures included stable apple crate bases so artists could display their creations for this unusual fashion show (some artists created their own mannequins for the challenge).

Meet the Artist: Lyric Prince – Post Grad Studio (Studio 12)

Meet the Winter 2018 Post-Grad artist, Lyric Prince, and hear about her experiences making art in the DC area. View current artworks and take part in art workshops with her throughout the night.

Final Days: Suh Yongsun – New Project Studio (Studio 8)

Korean painter and sculptor Suh Yongsun completes his three-month residency at the Torpedo Factory’s New Project Studio space. View his new works up close and hear about his explorations of public, social, and political issues in current-day Korea and the DC area. Presented in partnership with the Korean Cultural Center in Washington D.C. and the Embassy of the Republic of Korea.

 

 

Factory Links – Meg Talley (Studio 209)

Stop by Studio 209 and talk to jeweler Meg Talley about the WWII-era memorabilia from her grandfather, who worked here as a machinist when this was the U.S. Naval Torpedo Station in the 1940s.  7-9pm.

Torpedo Talks: Diaspora in African-American Art @ Second Thursday Art Night

Enjoy a special Thursday after-hours event at the Torpedo Factory Art Center. Browse open studios and galleries, interact with artists, and enjoy special programming. Check out our monthly lecture series Torpedo Talks at 8pm in the Grand Hall, featuring some of the contemporary art world’s best-known artists, art curators, and art professionals.

This February, join us for a reception in the Target Gallery and Associates Gallery, as well as art demonstrations and open studios. At 8pm, join us in the Main Hall for a conversation with Kayleigh Bryant-Greenwell to discuss the effects and influence of diaspora in African-American art, as a part of our monthly Torpedo Talks. FREE

Torpedo Talk

Diaspora in African-American Art
Speaker: Kayleigh Bryant-Greenwell
8 pm, Grand Hall

RSVP Here

 

In collaboration with Target Gallery’s Passages exhibition, Kayleigh Bryant-Greenwell, discusses the effects and influence of diaspora in African-American art.  Torpedo Talks feature some of the region’s best-known artists, curators, and creatives. Find them every month at 8 pm during Second Thursday Art Nights.

 

About Kayleigh-Bryant Greenwell 

Kayleigh Bryant-Greenwell, is a Washington, D.C. native and an award-winning cultural programmer with over 10 years of GLAM experience [Galleries, Libraries, Archives, Museums] , devoted to exploring ways to engage with marginalized audiences through art, museum, and social justice practice.

She is a contributing author to the recently published Museum As Site for Social Action [MASS Action] toolkit produced by the Minneapolis Institute of Art. In 2017 she joins the Empathetic Museum initiative in their efforts to increase empathy inside the museum profession. She lends her expertise in equity initiatives and transformational change to these social change programs.

In her new role as Education Specialist with the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of African American History and Culture, she curates participatory public programs focusing on social justice issues, which empower museum audiences to share their own ideas and strategies towards equity.

Before coming to NMAAHC, she contributed to the launch of the Women, Arts, and Social Change initiative at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, as the public programs coordinator. There she advanced feminism advocacy and brokered diverse and creative collaborations between the museum and local activist and arts leaders. Before that she served as an adjunct professor with P.G. College, and as a community organizer with P.G. County Arts and Cultural Heritage. Previously, she served as the visual arts coordinator at Strathmore, where she was responsible for an expansive portfolio of exhibition-based educational programming and a professional residency for emerging artists. Prior to that role, she served as operations manager at the David C. Driskell Center, where she wore many hats in programming, management, and collaborative projects.

As a curator, she has produced several contemporary art exhibitions exploring race, gender, politics, and social issues. She is a frequent juror of national and international art exhibitions and initiatives. She has served in the leadership of the DC Chapter of ArtTable, Inc. since 2014, and currently serves as Chapter Co-Chair.

Her writing has been featured with Americans for the Arts, the American Alliance of Museums, The Washington Times, CBS, and Brightest Young Things, among others. She earned her bachelor of arts in art history from the University of Maryland, College Park and her master of arts in museum studies from the George Washington University.

 

Gallery Receptions, Open Studios, and Special Activities

 

7 pm: Passages Opening Reception and Juror Talk – Target Gallery (Studio 2)

Opening reception for Passages, a group exhibition that explores the lasting effects migration has on cultural identity from the perspective of immigrants and immigrant families from across the global diaspora. This exhibition gives an intimate look in to their individual experiences and how these experiences have shaped who they are today. The juror for this exhibition, Adriana Ospina (Curator of the Permanent Collection and Education at the Art Museum of Americas) will speak at 7 pm.


6 – 9pm: POUR: Reception and Demos – The Associates Gallery (Studio 311) and 3rd Floor Landing

Jennifer Brewer Stone (@sobrightart) will demonstrate poured resin on panels, including a gold leaf application, mixing dyes on the spot, and doing a dirty pour and a striped pour. She also uses molds of resin created in prior pours and layers them into her finished works, and she will show how these are created. A gold leaf demonstration will begin the demo session, starting with applying the gold adhesive, and after adhesive is set, applying the gold leaf and brushing it off at the end of the entire demo session.

Whitney Staiger (@udopjewelry) will showcase how to cast into cuttlefish bones, one of the oldest ways of casting metal.  The demo will include the carving and instant gratification of casting, as she pours the metal directly into the cuttlefish bone, producing the almost finished end result.

Demo times (all demos will take place on the 3rd floor landing):

  • Whitney Staiger’s cuttlefish demo: 6:30 – 6:50 pm 
  • Jennifer Brewer Stone’s poured resin demo: 7:30 – 8:30 pm

 


6 – 9pm: Re-use and Recycle love: Upcycled valentine making – South Hall in front of Studio 16

Create unusual cards and love tokens with Torpedo factory Artist Lisa Schumaier (@lisaschumaier) and Upcycle Creative Reuse Center. Make magical messages using Recycled stuff and cool art supplies. All ages are encouraged to participate. Come and play!