art

art

February 18, 2024 @ 8:00 am 5:00 pm

February 16 – March 15, 2024

Opening Reception and Artists’ Talk: Friday, February 16, 12pm

VINCENNES, IN. – The Shircliff Gallery of Art at Vincennes University is proud to present In Blackest Shade, In Darkest Light, a traveling exhibition of seven Black American artists working in drawing.

Patrick Earl Hammie, Curator:

In Blackest Shade, In Darkest Light is an exhibition that centers around drawing as a technology from which artists speculate, recover, and collect communal histories, manifesting stories of desired futures from the margins of imagination into the realities of the everyday.

Drawing serves as an instant gateway for dreaming, recording, and sharing ideas. It moved from a mainly private practice to a form that asks questions as equally bold as other media. Today, artists utilize drawing as a method to hack into and build networks that engage across scholarship, art, and community.

The show’s title takes inspiration from DC’s Green Lantern Corps’ oath, “In brightest day, in blackest night, no evil shall escape my sight. Let those who worship evil’s might, beware my power, Green Lantern’s light,” from which members of the fictional space guardians access magical strength and gather the will to challenge adversaries using their imagination.

The artists in this exhibition revel in horror, Afro-futurism, magical realism, Ethno-gothic, fantasy, Black Quantum Futurism, utopias and dystopias, and superheroes. They draw from cultural aesthetics and philosophies of science and history to explore and improvise within set boundaries and beyond. Their work speculates toward un-fixing the physical, political, and social knowns and imagine otherwise how we will be and become.

Attached:

– Image: The Amazing Black-Man, 128, by Kumasi Barnett

– Image: Grace Jones, by Stacey Robinson

art

February 17, 2024 @ 8:00 am 5:00 pm

February 16 – March 15, 2024

Opening Reception and Artists’ Talk: Friday, February 16, 12pm

VINCENNES, IN. – The Shircliff Gallery of Art at Vincennes University is proud to present In Blackest Shade, In Darkest Light, a traveling exhibition of seven Black American artists working in drawing.

Patrick Earl Hammie, Curator:

In Blackest Shade, In Darkest Light is an exhibition that centers around drawing as a technology from which artists speculate, recover, and collect communal histories, manifesting stories of desired futures from the margins of imagination into the realities of the everyday.

Drawing serves as an instant gateway for dreaming, recording, and sharing ideas. It moved from a mainly private practice to a form that asks questions as equally bold as other media. Today, artists utilize drawing as a method to hack into and build networks that engage across scholarship, art, and community.

The show’s title takes inspiration from DC’s Green Lantern Corps’ oath, “In brightest day, in blackest night, no evil shall escape my sight. Let those who worship evil’s might, beware my power, Green Lantern’s light,” from which members of the fictional space guardians access magical strength and gather the will to challenge adversaries using their imagination.

The artists in this exhibition revel in horror, Afro-futurism, magical realism, Ethno-gothic, fantasy, Black Quantum Futurism, utopias and dystopias, and superheroes. They draw from cultural aesthetics and philosophies of science and history to explore and improvise within set boundaries and beyond. Their work speculates toward un-fixing the physical, political, and social knowns and imagine otherwise how we will be and become.

Attached:

– Image: The Amazing Black-Man, 128, by Kumasi Barnett

– Image: Grace Jones, by Stacey Robinson

art

February 16, 2024 @ 8:00 am 5:00 pm

February 16 – March 15, 2024

Opening Reception and Artists’ Talk: Friday, February 16, 12pm

VINCENNES, IN. – The Shircliff Gallery of Art at Vincennes University is proud to present In Blackest Shade, In Darkest Light, a traveling exhibition of seven Black American artists working in drawing.

Patrick Earl Hammie, Curator:

In Blackest Shade, In Darkest Light is an exhibition that centers around drawing as a technology from which artists speculate, recover, and collect communal histories, manifesting stories of desired futures from the margins of imagination into the realities of the everyday.

Drawing serves as an instant gateway for dreaming, recording, and sharing ideas. It moved from a mainly private practice to a form that asks questions as equally bold as other media. Today, artists utilize drawing as a method to hack into and build networks that engage across scholarship, art, and community.

The show’s title takes inspiration from DC’s Green Lantern Corps’ oath, “In brightest day, in blackest night, no evil shall escape my sight. Let those who worship evil’s might, beware my power, Green Lantern’s light,” from which members of the fictional space guardians access magical strength and gather the will to challenge adversaries using their imagination.

The artists in this exhibition revel in horror, Afro-futurism, magical realism, Ethno-gothic, fantasy, Black Quantum Futurism, utopias and dystopias, and superheroes. They draw from cultural aesthetics and philosophies of science and history to explore and improvise within set boundaries and beyond. Their work speculates toward un-fixing the physical, political, and social knowns and imagine otherwise how we will be and become.

Attached:

– Image: The Amazing Black-Man, 128, by Kumasi Barnett

– Image: Grace Jones, by Stacey Robinson

art

October 19, 2023 @ 11:00 am 12:00 pm

Starting with a focus on a single book of poems for young people—What I See, I Can Be (Brick Street, 2022)—Laurel Smith and Barb Shoup will discuss the process of “growing a book” from the germination of ideas to development of a text and the editing process required to bring one’s written work to fruition for readers/listeners. Aspects of writing and publishing will be addressed. Smith and Shoup look forward to questions from program participants.

LocationVU Shake Library, LRC, Room 112
AudienceAlumni/Foundation, Community, Current Students, Faculty, Staff
CostFree
Event TypeLibrary, Workshops
DepartmentsShake Library
Contact NameCharla Gilbert
Contact Phone8128885377
Contact Emailcgilbert@vinu.edu
DepartmentShake Library
Linkvinu.libguides.com…

art

August 29, 2023 @ 8:00 am September 1, 2023 @ 5:00 pm

During the months of September and October, The Open Gallery will welcome photographer Christopher Schneberger to exhibit his award-winning series titled, The Wanderers. This series takes the viewers on a twilight journey with young explorers that is at once contemplative, worrisome, dreamlike, and arresting.  Are they really exploring or are they lost?  Where do they want to go?  What do they hope to find?  What becomes of them?  Schneberger leaves us with this notion:  “This series is in some ways my own processing of being lost and finding my way, and gaining an appreciation of getting lost as a deliberate act.”   We hope you will come and take the journey for yourself.

Christopher Schneberger is an Assistant Professor of Art at Vincennes University and is director for the gallery at Shircliff Humanities Center.  Come welcome him to The Open Gallery this Friday, September 1 from 5 -8 p.m.  Light refreshments and live music will make it a festive evening. 

329 Main Street
Vincennes, Indiana 47591 United States
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art

July 7, 2023 @ 5:00 pm 8:00 pm

Join friends at Art Space Vincennes, Open Gallery, and Northwest Territory Art Guild Gallery for the First Friday Art Walk, Friday, July 7, 5 – 8 pm.  All three galleries will be opening new shows.

Art Space Vincennes LLC, 521 Main will introduce the time the boy lived, figurative ceramic sculpture by Taehoon Kim.  Originally from Korea, Kim came to the US to study at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where he earned a second MFA degree in ceramics.  He now lives and works in Chicago.  His pieces have a playful demeanor, and show connections with Korean anime, primitive art and folk art.  They however also carry a deeper emotional message, reflecting the inner turmoil that can lie beneath a cheerful exterior.  Kim’s previous work as a painter led to the brilliant color that enlivens these figures.

Unframed but matted photographs by Carol Messer and Tom Bartholomew will also be present in the gallery print bins.

Regular gallery hours: Tue – Sat Noon – 5 pm and by appointment: 812-887-6145 

Northwest Territory Art Guild, 316 Main will open a new show of art by area artists, who have been invited to submit their works in an open call.  Guild president John DeCoursey stated, “The Guild put out a similar open call last summer, and the response was so positive they wanted to offer area creatives the opportunity once again.” Last year about 40 pieces of local, original art were submitted, done by artists of all ages, backgrounds, preferred mediums and skill levels. “We were thinking about the fact that there are a lot of artists in our area that haven’t had any kind of exposure,” DeCoursey said.  “This is a great way to help them show off their art and bring new people to us who have never been inside our gallery.”

Summer-themed 2 and 3-dimensional artworks by Guild members will also be shown in a variety of media, techniques, styles, and subject matter.

Regular gallery hours: Tue – Sat 11 am – 2 pm. Additional hours by appointment; contact the gallery via Facebook.

The Open Gallery, 329 Main will once again welcome artist Stephen Black, a Professor of Art and Design at Vincennes University, who will exhibit new work in July and August.  This latest body of work features a variety of collage pieces that explore shape, color and imaging using letter forms and words.  Black will be on hand at the opening to talk with patrons and guests about his work.

Rosary craftsman Sam Williams will also be present.  His beautiful and inspiring work, which will include new creations, can be seen at the entrance to the gallery.

Visitors will again enjoy rollicking good Irish music by The First Friday Players

Regular gallery hours: Tue – Sat 12 – 4:30 pm and by chance.

812- 881-6475.

Main Street
Vincennes, IN 47591 United States
+ Google Map

Can’t Miss May Events

Flowers are blooming, trees are turning green, and our calendars are filling up with events! Although Knox County always stays busy during the cooler months, the summer is when it really shines. With something happening nearly every weekend, there is no shortage of things to do!
Keep reading to find out about just a few of the events happening in Knox County this month!


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