Independent Collegian

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Arts and Life Monday, September 19, 2011

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5

Megan Aherne — Editor

Exhibit honors UT artist community By Caitlin Arthurs For the IC

The University of Toledo art community was well recognized at the 2011 Annual Toledo Area Artists Exhibition. Out of the 66 works included in the exhibition, seven were submitted by University of Toledo alumni, faculty or students. The TAA Exhibition is a tradition nearly as old as the Toledo Art Museum itself as the program hit its 93rd year. Brian Kennedy, Toledo

Museum of Art director and Amy Gilman, associate director, served as the jurors for this year’s exhibition and had some difficulty in determining which of the 757 submitted pieces would be on display. “We were basically looking at narrowing it down until we felt that there was a really good show, and it just so happened that that narrowed it down to about 66,” Gilman said. “It could be somebody that pushes the medium in a different direction, or anything

Courtesy of www.toledomuseum.org

Timothy Gaewsky’s piece “Things We Fear In Life Are Things We Can’t Control,” which won the UT Art Department Award.

like that, but really our largest determining factor was quality.” The winners of the various awards were recognized at the opening ceremony on Aug. 26. Leslie Adams, a UT alumna, received a First Award for her work “Senzione: A Self Portrait,” and was given the opportunity to display her work in her own exhibit at the museum next year. Gilman recalls what it was that made Adams’ work so effective. “There were a number of the elements there that we thought were particularly compelling,” Gilman said. “It’s a wonderful charcoal drawing, but it is also very interesting and complex in the fact that it’s a self-portrait and it has the medical component in the background. Leslie is a wonderful artist. She is incredibly skilled at portraiture and her work seems to be much more personal.” Adams was also presented with an award from the National League of American Pen Women’s Northwest Ohio branch. Her solo exhibit will be on display in 2012. The representation of UT’s artistic community did not stop with Adams. Seder Burns, lecturer of new media at UT, also walked away with an award for his photograph “Sunset at the RV Lot.”. The photo earned the Israel Abramofsky Award of the Temple-Congregation Shomer Emunim. The University of Toledo Art Department Award was given to Tim Gaewsky, a Toledo resident, for his mixed-media piece “The Things We Fear in Life Are the Things We Can’t Control.” This award is given based on

pushing the boundaries of a chosen medium. Jan Thomas, a UT student majoring in art history, won the Potters Guild Award for her ceramic piece entitled “Tattoo.” Among these, were still others who represented the UT artistic community. UT student Susan Mitchell also had her work “Jack-Jack Sleeps,” a three-color woodcut, chosen. “I See Myself Aging,” a digital photograph submitted by alumnus Karen Matthews and “Through the Looking Lens,” a watercolor by alumnus Chelsea Younkman, were also chosen. UT was represented again by Mania Dajnak, part-time faculty member in the art department, who submitted a piece called “Her Fractured Architecture 1,” a conte crayon and woodcut collage. The strong response by the University of Toledo artistic community comes almost as a surprise to Gilman, but not an unwelcome one. “I’m delighted,” she said. “The University of Toledo Art Department is feeding the community in a variety of ways by bringing professors here who develop deep roots in the community and stay here, by educating students that need to live in the community and by continuing to bring in the people from outside who go on to submit for the show. So, I think that’s fantastic.” According to Gilman, few museums continue to hold juried exhibitions of original artwork. “When this exhibition started,

Courtesy of Daniel Miller/ University of Toledo

UT alumna Leslie Adams won the First Award at the exhibit. there were many, many like it around the country held by museums and other art organizations and now there are many fewer of them,” she said. The support for the Toledo Museum of Art by the surrounding artistic community helps greatly to keep programs like the Toledo Area Artists Exhibition popular and growing.

“I think that [the support] was really indicated by the large number of people we had at the opening at the end of August, which was fantastically attended,” Gilman said. “I thought it was wonderful.” The exhibit runs through Sept. 25 in the Canaday Gallery at the Toledo Museum of Art and admission is free.

Courtesy of UpTown Toledo

PARK(ing) Day

Last Friday, the annual worldwide event PARK(ing) Day took place along Adams Street downtown. Participants artistically modified metered parking spaces to present the need for more urban open space. University of Toledo theatre, film, music and art students and faculty, as well as other local organizations, contributed to the cause to help improve health and space within cities.

A rosebud of a different Kane UT student’s film to appear in two festivals By Megan Aherne IC Arts and Life Editor

Courtesy of Lydia Kane

A still from Lydia Kane’s surreal film “Reflect” starring Weslie Detwiler. The film was recently accepted into two different film festivals.

Many film students dream of winning an Oscar in the best director category. This dream is one step closer to coming true for sophomore film major Lydia Kane as her final project in last semester’s Film I class was recently accepted into two film festivals. Kane’s film “Reflect” was accepted into the FilmShift Festival in Somerville, Mass., near Boston, as well as the Flatland Film Festival in Lubbock, Texas. The film addresses issues concerning beauty, insecurities and vanity from the perspective of a young adult female and stars Weslie Detwiler, a sophomore majoring in English, as the female lead. “Research was the first important step of being accepted into any film festival,” Kane said. “After I found the film festivals I wanted to submit to, I sent them a DVD and paid the submission

fee. Then I waited and prayed that I would be given a chance for my film to be shown in at least one festival.” Kane said she first became interested in film during her Media Communications class in high school. “I find everything about film interesting, including the whole creative process of filmmaking and showing my thoughts and ideas through film in an entertaining way,” she said. In Film I, the semester is spent conceptualizing pre-production for a short film, working with 16 mm black and white reversal film and digitally editing. Students also learn how to work with a Bolex camera, a vintage camera fashioned for combat during World War II. “This was my first experience working with actual film stock,” Kane said. “Film I motivated me to complete a project that I could be proud of.” The final project for Film I was to create a surreal film, a style in

the manner of dream-like states, to be shot on a Bolex. The project had to avoid any clichés of surrealism as well as adhere to basic principles of continuity and structure. “Holly Hey [assistant professor of theatre and instructor of the course] motivated me by making me think in a way I have never had to think before -- in a surrealist way,” Kane said. Other requirements for the project included shooting 400 feet of film, sending it to the lab for processing and transferring the film to HD format to be edited using the Mac editing software Final Cut Pro. Though the course was rigorous and demanding, if students followed the required standards it was nearly impossible to turn out a substandard film. Kane submitted the film to four festivals. “I passed the first round in all of them, but I was not shown in two,” she said.


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