1,000 Cranes: Artworks Gallery is creating a public art project with the Forsyth County Health Department
We will turn the Covid-19 health forms into folded cranes that will be displayed at the Health Department buildingĀ iat the end of the Summer.
The folding of 1,000 cranes comes from an ancient Japanese legend promising anyone who folds 1,000 cranes will be granted happiness, peace, and eternal good luck.
Want to be a part of folding the 1,000 cranes?
Come to the Gallery on these days and help: Saturday, June 26, 2-4pm Friday, July 2, 7-9 pm ( Art Hop) Friday, August 6, 7-9 pm ( Art Hop)
Event is free and open to the public
Artworks Gallery, Inc. 564 North Trade Street Winston-Salem, NC 27101. Gallery phone: 336-723-5890
July Gallery Hours: Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday 11-5; Sunday 1-4 Or by appointment at shop@artworks-gallery.org
Artworks Gallery Presents: Karen Moran Kopf:Memories Downtown Seth Moskowitz:NEWds – New Interpretations of the Female Form
Exhibition dates: June 27 – July 31, 2021 Gallery Hop: Friday July 2, 7-9 pm Meet the Artists Reception, Sunday, July 11, 2-4 pm
Karen Moran Kopf | Memories Downtown
Karen Moran Kopf received a BA in painting from Wagner College, NYC and studied in Austria and Spain. While she lived in Spain, she exhibited in various European locations. After returning from Europe she continued to paint, but primarily taught school for twenty years. Now that the artist has been painting full-time for several years, she has joined Artworks Gallery and has begun an exhibition schedule with this show.
Seth Moskowitz | NEWds – New Interpretations of the Female ForM
Most of Seth Moskowitzās artwork focuses on nature and nudes, usually shown in combination. For this show, the artist focuses on nudes to create works incorporating many of the same compositional elements, used differently to different effect. This approach is similar to the printmakersā practice of using recurring visual elements – perhaps a leaf, a fan, a bird, or a wheel – repeated in a series of images to elicit a kind of acknowledgment from the varying combinations. Moskowitz is fascinated by the beauty of organic forms and how the interplay of those shapes, along with hue, tone, and texture affect the emotions evoked by interpretations of the human body and the natural world. Most of the images in this exhibition employ a relatively small set of compositional elements in a variety of ways to create images that are, very closely related to one another but are very different in their ultimate appearance and impact.
Seth Moskowitz is a Winston-Salem based artist who creates and combines photographic images into artworks that rarely resemble the images they incorporate. Moskowitz made a living immersed in the constant chatter of written and verbal communications, working as a journalist for five years, followed by many years of corporate communications and issue management in a controversial industry. He began to create visual art as an escape from the verbal cacophony of the workaday world – a way to enter a peaceful, magical place that is literally, beyond words.
Artworks Gallery resumes full hours in July! July Gallery Hours: Wednesday – Saturday 11-5; Sunday 1-4 Open for Gallery Hop: Friday July 2, 7-9 pm Meet the Artists Reception, Sunday, July 11, 2-4 pm Exhibition dates: June 27 – July 31, 2021
“Industrious and enterprising are the first words that come to mind when seeing Woodie Andersonās solo exhibition at Artworks Gallery. ā¦ Anderson is a talented, resourceful artist whose specialty is printmaking, and her exhibition āTooth and Nail: Fragmentsā leaves no doubt sheās been busy. Sheās also clearly had a lot on her mind.”
“There are of course no real knives in sight, and nothing else potentially dangerous, but if close attention is paid, this exhibition promises to sharpen eyes and minds.”
Tom Patterson, Winston-Salem Journal, June 20, 2021
Artworks Gallery Presents: Woodie Anderson | Tooth and Nail: Fragments (solo show)
Exhibition dates: June 3-26, 2021 Gallery Hop: June 4, 2021, 7-9 pm (Meet the Artist Reception)
Woodie Anderson | Tooth and Nail: Fragments
Working with original drawings and text, found images, historical snippets, and the fever-dreams of an exhausted soul, Woodie Anderson continues her āTooth and Nailā series exploring the tenacity of the human spirit. This exhibit features new work, including screenprints on paper and reclaimed fabrics, watercolors, and mixed media. A pop-up gift shop featuring Anderson’s popular hand-printed tea towels, note cards, HankiePankie Art Hankies, and patches will also be on-site.
While studying fine art and graphic design in college, Anderson began experimenting with the tensions between fine art and commercial applications of visual languageāareas she continues to explore in much of her work through the use of text, infographics, and other collected graphic materials. Often starting with well-worn household fabrics, she employs a variety of processes including stitching, dyeing, screen-printing, and drawing to build layered, textural pieces that are full of life. Letterforms and textsāincluding original and appropriated writingsāare integral to much of her work.
Her current series, āTooth and Nail,ā is formally inspired by banners and pennants dating from the Middle Ages, while its content centers on identity, self-protection, and self-projection. Found images of unidentified women and the accouterments of battle are also an inspiration for this in-progress series.
Anderson lives and works in North Carolina, where she also teaches printmaking at the Sawtooth School and participates in the Art-o-matĀ® (Clark Whittingtonās vintage cigarette vending machines repurposed to dispense original artworks). Andersonās work is featured in The Art-o-matĀ® āUnpackedā Book and in āArt Quilts at Playā by Jane Davila and Elin Waterston. She a member of Artworks Gallery, the longest-running cooperative gallery in Winston-Salem, and has exhibited at regional and national venues including the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, SECCA, and The Turchin Center for the Visual Arts at ASU.
Artworks Gallery extends visiting hours in June with the addition of Thursday hours! June Gallery Hours: Thursday, Friday and Saturday 11-5; Sunday 1-4 Or by appointment at shop@artworks-gallery.org
Charles Hahn | Complexities, and Nuances of the Human Spirit
Charles Hahnās current project, “Complexities, and Nuances of the Human Spirit,” concentrates on characterizing the striking aspect of each personās sensibility and inner self. The artistās goal is to capture, in engaging black and white photography, the essence of an individual while letting the environment play second fiddle to the images of vibrant sentient beings. This body of work celebrates the subjects as individuals with their distinct souls, a center of being with a human quality to be appreciated. The way time moves on and things disappear; the photographs capture a moment in the past that one experiences in the present. Therefore, every photograph is ultimately about the passing of time, while preserving the spirit of the moment.
Since his youth, Charles Hahn spent untold hours in the darkrooms at school and at his home. It was during these early years that he cut his teeth on black and white film developing and processing. Early on he embarked upon a journalistic essay by photographing Chippewa Street, a seamy street in his hometown of Buffalo, NY, documenting in photography a world that would soon cease to exist. This first foray into street photography would be the predecessor of future projects, including work done in Winston-Salem where he currently resides. Although the people and places are different, the storytelling is eerily similar telling the stories of people who are usually overlooked.
Katherine Mahler | Wayfinding
The work presented in āWayfindingā by Katherine Mahler draws upon memories of time spent on the Great Lakes and Niagara River, serving as a metaphor for navigating the pandemic. This series began as a way to remember places and times from the artistās childhood in the Buffalo-Niagara region of New York and Ontario, Canada. Memory and maps, along with other wayfinding inspiration, speak to how we learn to find our way, literally and metaphorically and the guideposts and markers we need to navigate successfully from place and time.
The work for this show represents ideas about what becomes essential to know, what details are important to pay attention to, observations about the cultural abandonment of collective action in favor of individualism, and trusting your instincts amid chaos. This series of work emerged in the winter of 2021 and is still evolving.
Katherine Mahler is an art educator and holds a BA in Studio Art from Kenyon College, a BFA in Art Education from Michigan State University, and is an MFA candidate at Lesley University.
The exhibit is free and open to the public.
Artworks Gallery, Inc. 564 North Trade Street Winston-Salem, NC 27101. Gallery phone: 336-723-5890
May Gallery Hours: Friday and Saturday 11-5 Sunday 1-4 Open for Gallery Hop: May 7, 2021, 7 ā 9 pm (Meet the Artists Reception) Or by appointment at shop@artworks-gallery.org
Triad City Beat writes about Barbara Mellinās exhibit Lunaria: Carborundum Mezzotints and Original Haikus
The show available to view at Artworks Gallery until March 28. To learn more about Barbara, visit BarbaraRizzaMellin.com. Lunaria prints are available to purchase from Artworks Galleryās online shop: artworks-gallery.org/shopĀ
Chris Flory was born in Philadelphia. She has a BFA in Printmaking from Philadelphia College of Art, now University of the Arts (1972), and an MFA in Painting from UNC-Greensboro (1992). She has been a member of Artworks Gallery since 1993. She lives in Winston-Salem with her husband and two cats.
The works in the āAll Fall Downā exhibition are all graphite on paper, drawn in 2020. Most are about the anxiety and frustration which Chris Flory has been experiencing in Covid times. The āBreathā series is loosely based on some pastel drawings from 1995.
Susan Smoot: Roadside Compositions
From the heart of North Carolina, Susan Smoot studied fine art at Appalachian State University, earning a BA in Painting. After years in the corporate world of advertising, she has returned to making art as her primary focus. She has studied with locally and nationally recognized artists to further her talent and add to her skills to develop a straightforward painting style, elevating the commonplace to art. Smoot is an award-winning artist who teaches classes when possible. In addition to watercolor, the artist also works in pastel, acrylic, and fiber art.
āRoadside Compositionsā is Susan Smootās collection of original watercolor paintings. The works focus on long-standing architecture of utility. Farmhouses, sheds, barns, are depicted, showing evidence of their usefulness and the disrepair of time. These rural scenes and buildings, observed locally, were rendered to celebrate the details of age, tarnish, patina, and rust on these witnesses of the past.
LEAD Girls of NC Inaugural LEADher Circle and 5th Anniversary SoireeĀ featuring Original Art from Artworks Gallery Artists at Silent Auction
Winston-Salem, NC (March 9, 2021) ā LEAD Girls of North Carolina will host their 5th Anniversary Soiree on Sunday, March 28 in a virtual celebration and awards ceremony honoring the hundreds of participants, supporters, and partners of LEAD Girls over the past five years. Four LEAD girls will be recognized for their accomplishments at 5:30 p.m. All details can be found at:Ā www.leadgirls.org/2021-soiree/.
At 7:30 p.m., the Kimpton Cardinal Hotel will honor LEAD Girls with a pink and teal lighting of their building on Main Street to represent and celebrate the organization. The sponsors for the Soiree are:Ā The Chronicle,Ā Truliant Federal Credit Union, M Creative, Maynard & Harris Attorneys at Law, PPL, Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust, and CC Baller Creations, LLC.Ā
In conjunction with the soiree, LEAD Girls has launched the LEADher Circle. This Circle – which is based on the belief that every girl deserves the chance to thrive – was created in partnership with three local leaders and friends of LEAD Girls: Natalie Broyhill, Mary Jamis, and Dr. Paula Wilkins. With a donation before April 1st, supporters can join the inaugural LEADher Circle.
To further support LEAD Girls, a silent auction fundraiser will run from March 15th until March 28th at 6:30 p.m. when the auction winners will be announced. The fundraising goal for this event – to sustain its programs such as Community LEAD, LEAD Academy, the Summer Fashion Entrepreneurship Camp, and three pilot programs that began this spring – is $50,000.
āWe are grateful for our village who are committed to girls thriving,ā said Joy Nelson Thomas, Founder and Executive Director of LEAD Girls. āWe are now halfway toward our fundraising goal. We still need additional support to help us reach our goal and allow more girls to have access to LEAD.ā
While this yearās soiree will look different from years past, the virtual celebration will bring together supporters of the organization as well as girls and their families as they celebrate their perseverance and dedication during 2020.
In addition to original artwork featured in the Silent Auction, packages will include Family Day Trips, Date Nights, Hotel Getaways, Parentsā Nights Out, a Car Care Kit, Relaxation Fun, Baby Presents Bundle, Mystery Boxes, and more.
Donations for the silent auction were donated by the following businesses and nonprofits: a/perture, AutoZone, Black Mountain Chocolate, Bookmarks, Brick Oven, Brookstown Inn, Camino Bakery, Canteen Still Life, Cyclebar, Dash Baseball, Duck Donuts, Fiddlinā Fish, Finniganās, Fleet Feet, Flourish Fitness, Greensboro Science Center, Gwen of all Trades, Hampton Inn, Harris Teeter, Hip Chics, Home Depot, Innovative Photography, Kaleideum, Kendra Scott Jewelry, Kimpton Hotel, Living Aura Living Art, Lowes Foods, Marriott, Mast General Store, McCalls, Mellow Mushroom, Mixxer, Denise Moore, Oriental Trading Company, The Porch, Pure Barre, Rack Room Shoes, Raffaldini Vineyards, Reynolda House, River Birch, RiverRun International Film Festival, Rockinā Jump, Salem Gymnastics, SHARP Cuterie Boards, Sheetz, The Sherwood, Starbucks, Sunny Shoes, Sunshine Beverages, Tanglewood, Trader Joeās, Tweetsie Railroad, Urbn Grl, Village Tavern, Winston-Salem State University, Wise Man Brewing, and Younique.
About LEAD Girls of NC
Learning Everyday Accomplishing Dreams (LEAD) Girls of NC is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to helping every girl thrive because every girl can. Founded in 2015, LEAD Girls works to create a world in which young girls become well-equipped, active leaders. LEAD programs focus specifically on the social, emotional and leadership development of at-risk middle-school girls in Winston-Salem. Since its inception, LEADās school-time and summer programs have served more than 500 girls, providing them with critical resources and skills that foster empowerment and confidence. For more information on the 5th Anniversary Soiree or to make a donation to join the LEADher Circle, please visit www.leadgirls.org/2021-soiree/
Wiley Akers calls the work in his show an expression of āI Donāt Know Mind,ā saying, āthe best art that I have created in the past came about, for the most part, because I didnāt know what I was doing. So with an empty mind and no preconceived ideas or plans I start making pencil marks without looking at the canvas.ā Upon the artist looking at the marks he determines if it wants to ābecome something.ā Akers process allows one thing to lead to another; some quickly done to repress thinking, while others taking days.
Wiley Akers has a BFA and a MEd from UNCG. He taught art to middle and high school students for 25 years. In addition to his shows at Artworks Gallery he has exhibited at ASU, WCU, UNCG, and Delurk Gallery.
Owens Daniels
Owens Daniels uses the visual arts to express his interpretation of the world, and photography to open unexplored spaces between the subject and viewer exposing them both to a world of opportunities and experiences. āDigital Protest 2020ā in a narrow sense is “Social Realism Art,” a term used for works by painters, printmakers, photographers, writers and filmmakers that aims to draw attention to socio-political, equity and social justice conditions of the working class. This work also operates as a means to critique the power structures that produce the environment and culture for these conditions.
2019 Duke Energy Grant and Z Smith Reynolds Lead Artist for the Presence Absence Project awardee, Owens Daniels is a visual artist/photographer, educator and the face behind ODP Art+Design Bold, Creative and Innovative Artwork. In addition to formal training at the U.S Army Photographic School of Cartography, Daniels has worked as a freelance photographer and served as Artist in Residences, participated in Public Art Installations, and been the recipient of grants and varied other commissions.
Barbara Rizza Mellin
Barbara Rizza MellināsāLunaria,ā showcases in black and white, the delicate beauty of the unpretentious plant, sometimes called Honesty or Money Plant. The exhibit of carborundum mezzotints is made up of two components: a wall installation of 48 6-inch-square mezzotints, as well as 16 framed mezzotint print images, each with an original haiku. As an art historian, Mellin likes to reinterpret traditional media and techniques, using less toxic materials for modern audiences.
Barbara Rizza Mellin is a printmaker, painter, and writer, who has been a member of Artworks Gallery since 2017. She is also a member of several local and national professional organizations including AAWS, AFAS, the DADA Collective, the International Mezzotint Society and Winston-Salem Writers.
The exhibit is free and open to the public.
Artworks Gallery, Inc. 564 North Trade Street, Winston-Salem, NC 27101. Gallery phone: 336-723-5890 March Gallery Hours: Friday 12-3 Saturday 11-5 Sunday 1-4 Or by appointment at shop@artworks-gallery.org
THEATRE ART GALLERIES (TAG) of High Point NC is now showing āMANNEQUIN MUSINGSāĀ in their main gallery. Open TUESDAY-FRIDAY from 12-5 PM. Masks are required. From TAG’s newsletter:
Mannequin Musings Following last yearās exceptionally well-received exhibit of Paul Tazewellās award-winning costumes (Hamilton, The Wiz), we were left with an inventory of 15 mannequins seeking new homes. The solution? We put out a Call to Artists to have them reimagined to reflect on 2020, look ahead to 2021, or just to find new life at the whim of the artist. The result is an exhibition featuring the work of 15 North Carolina artists finding new means of expressing turbulent times in original and creative ways. We will feature each of these highly personal creations in a series of emails and eventually in an online virtual exhibit. This is the fourth email in the series.
Mannequin MusingsĀ will be available for in-person viewing during regular gallery hours,Ā Tuesday-Friday, noon til 5, through the spring. We will follow all CDC protocols and masks are required.Ā Find more info at tagart.org
Artworks member Owens Daniels talks about his piece:
My photographic career started at the U.S Army Photographic School of Cartography, learning the basics of photography and photo printing. In addition to this formal training, I worked for several years as a freelance photographer and extended my photographic career by fine-turning the art of visual storytelling and developing a distinctive, decisive and intimate photojournalistic signature style which has led to various opportunities Ā that include: Artist in Residences, Public Art Installations, Grants and varied other commissions.
I use the visual arts to express my interpretation of the world, and photography to open unexplored spaces between the subject and viewer exposing them both to a world of opportunities and experiences. This objective can best be obtained with a focus on our commonalities which keeps us in the moment, and stops us from fretting about the future or regretting the past. Ā
2019 Duke Energy Grant and Z Smith Reynolds Lead Artist for the Presence Absence Project awardee Owens Daniels is a visual artist/photographer, educator and the face behind ODP Art+Design bold, creative and innovative artwork that builds bridges, promotes cultural exchanges, and artistic endeavors Ā between organizations, institutions and the diverse communities they serve.Ā