Vermont Art Guide #5 is now available!
In our roundup of News & Notes from Vermontās art community, we report on City Marketās choice of muralists for their new South End Burlington location, the new director at the Vermont Arts Council, Johanne Durocher Yordanās Mobile Gallery, and the re-opening of an art park after renovations.
In the issueās editorial, āArt in Troubled Timesā, Vermont Art Guide Editor Ric Kasini Kadour questions the value of art during times of social and political turmoil.
āI mention these events because, moving forward, this is the world in which we live and if art is going to be relevant to people, if art is going to serve a meaningful function in the day-to-day lives of people, then we need to understand that this is the world that art lives in as well.ā
We take you to a cooperative space in Bristol Village that is building artist community. We head to Grand Isle to meet an artist making contemporary art with Raku. And we visit Ashley Roarkās studio at the Soda Plant in Burlington. Among other things, Roark makes collage out of pale muted papers and post-industrial office supplies.
The issue has a profile of Matt Neckersā Mobile Museum. Neckers purchased āa dilapidated vintage camper off of Craigslist for $500ā and spent a year turning it into the Traveling Mobile Museum. Weāve got the story.
We peek at Helen Day Art Centerās Annual āExposedā Exhibition. Now in its 26th year, āExposed. 2017ā features internationally renowned sculptors alongside more than a few local favorites.
In our story about Paul Sampleās Salute to Vermont being reinstalled at the Vermont History Museum, we conclude, āThe mural is a testament to artās ability to preserve and hold ideas over time. A visit to Salute to Vermont is an opportunity to reflect on where we came from and what our future holds.ā
Floral, a photograph by George Bouret, is on the cover of Vermont Art Guide #5. Bouret is one of the artists featured in the exhibition āConnection: The Art of Coming Togetherā at the Vermont Arts Council Spotlight Gallery in Montpelier and in an exhibition-in-print inside the issue.
Vermont Art Guide publishes Exhibitions-in-Print as a way of disseminating critical ideas and documenting them for the future. This issueās exhibition is a survey of contemporary Vermont art organized by artist networks rather than by aesthetics or media. As an experiment, curator Ric Kasini Kadour asked four artists from different corners of the state to submit the name of an artist they feel is part of their community or network. He then went to those people and so on until he had enough people to fill the exhibition.The results of this experiment, as well as Kadourās extensive commentary on the artistsā relationships and artwork, make up the Exhibition-in-Print.
Where to See Art is our curated list of 169 places to see art around the state. We pay particular attention to: Highland Center for the Arts in Greensboro | DaVallia-39 North Gallery in Chester | Two Rivers Printmaking Studio in White River Junction | The Kent Museum in Calais | River Arts in Morrisville | Brattleboro Museum & Art Center | Vermont Center for Photography in Brattleboro | Stone Valley Arts in Poultney | Brandon Artists Guild | Birds of Vermont Museum in Huntington.
and a Vermont Art Guide Artist Directory.
Thank you for your support!
(Subscribers & Gallery Members should receive their issue in 5-7 days.)