emerging artist: Megan Puls
Past cultures, traditions, colour, texture are all there.
My vision is always creating.
The Lawrence Arts Center is committed to supporting the work of the
artists around us and to infusing energy into the cultural life of the
region. We invite artists from around the world to work in our
facility, share their expertise, to teach and interact with the
community to create new work. From commissions to project-based
residencies, to year-long residencies, we support the creative and
dynamic interplay of the familiar and the new.
The Visiting and Resident Artists program at the Lawrence Arts Center
offers area residents a unique opportunity to study visual arts with
practicing artists of varied backgrounds and diverse skills. New artists
are invited each year to become a part of the Lawrence community and
share their professional skills with Lawrence Arts Center students and
artists.
The residency will begin August 1 and end on July 31.
The ideal candidate should have an MFA in ceramics, and be
self-directed and able to work independently. Preference is given to
candidates who have demonstrated artistic excellence as well as interest
in experimentation and innovative techniques.
The Lawrence Arts Center, built in 2002 and located in downtown
Lawrence, Kansas has 40,000 square feet of programming spaces,
consisting of 5 exhibition galleries, a 300 seat theater, 2 dance
studios, 2 arts-based preschool classrooms, and 7 visual arts studios.
The Arts Center offers programs to the public, attracting 200,000 people
annually.
Located 30 minutes from Kansas City, Lawrence is home to the
University of Kansas, which hosts the Spencer Museum of Art, and Haskell
Indian Nations University. Lawrence is a vibrant art, music, and
cultural community. Brackers Good Earth Ceramic Supply is located 5
minutes from the Arts Center.
The Art Center’s mission is to enrich individuals and the community
by nurturing love for the arts through education, exhibition, and
performance.
This 12 month Artist in Residence program is designed to provide a
creative and supportive environment in which artists may immerse
themselves in creating new work and expanding their own understanding of
ceramics and other mediums available at the Arts Center. The residency
is a multi-faceted experience that will include teaching, community
outreach, interaction with other artists, and studio care, and will
culminate in an exhibition of new work.
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| image by Ayumie Horie |
If you’re on Instagram and not following Ayumie then you’re doing it wrong.
She’s a pro at all things social media and she’s compiled a guide to using Instagram which will get you in the game if you aren’t and will clean up and focus your game if you’re already using Instagram as a marketing tool for your practice.
Go check it out here.
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Guastavino tiles seen inside the Holy Trinity Roman Catholic Church on West 82nd Street in Manhattan.Michael Freeman
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“The Guastavino construction method was absolutely revolutionary in its
day for three big reasons,” Ochsendorf said. “It was fireproof; it was
incredibly strong; and it could be built with no support from below
during construction, almost like magic.”
Read the whole story here on Aljazeera.com
Thanks to musing reader Naomi Duffey for the heads up on this one!