Four artists showcase work this month at Ivy Tech Arts Center
Ivy Tech displays four new exhibits at Waldron Center
叠测听Jaclyn Lansbery聽| Indiana Daily Student (IDS)
On Friday at the Ivy Tech John Waldron Arts Center, more than 200 people gathered to view four artists鈥 new exhibits on display until May 27.
The May First Friday artists鈥 reception debuted the work of Nate Johnson, Ben Pines, Yang Chen and Angela Hendrix-Petry. The artists, who attended the reception, each create different styles of art.
鈥淚 think Julie Roberts, the gallery director, did an exquisite job arranging the artists鈥 work,鈥 said Paul Daily, the artistic director for the center. 鈥淲e鈥檙e always pleased to have the opportunity to showcase more local artists in our galleries.鈥
Chen鈥檚 exhibit 鈥淟es Preludes鈥 is displayed in the Treasurer鈥檚 Gallery and consists of up-close photographs of nature details, such as dead dandelions or blooming flowers.
The photographs were mounted on a 17-by-42-inch scroll. Chen, who received his masters of fine arts in photography from IU, also designs digital and book art.
鈥淔rom my impression, and I鈥檓 certainly not speaking for the artists and what they intend, but there is almost an Asian feel for the tapestries and the artwork in the pictures and where they look at life,鈥 Daily said.
Pines, a local artist, created 13 paintings for his 鈥淩ecent Works鈥 exhibit, which are all united by dark blue overtones of people interacting with each other. The people鈥檚 features are also undefined.
鈥淭he way the working world is so fast-paced, it鈥檚 sort of a main function of the art that I want to make, to provide an alternative to that,鈥 said Pines, who worked on the paintings in this exhibit since 2010.
鈥淚 need, and I think people need, to be free of constant rush, to accomplish sort of external tasks in order to work within, to think about oneself and to think about the world in a free, meditative way.鈥
The biggest painting in Pines鈥 exhibit is 鈥淐ookout at Lake Monroe,鈥 which features people conversing at the local lake front.
鈥淚 like to take my time when I work, I think it鈥檚 very important for me to keep a calm level head as I work,鈥 he said.
Pines said he tries to establish and develop a particular mood during the painting process, and that if the mood doesn鈥檛 feel 鈥渞ight鈥 two weeks before the show, the piece will not be completed.
鈥淚 was happy with how the show came out, and I鈥檓 happy with how the paintings came out individually,鈥 he said.
In the second floor of the Arts Center is Johnson鈥檚 exhibit, 鈥淗eroes and Icons.鈥 Four of those paintings are private collections of his family and self-portraits. The rest of the paintings, which are for sale, are of famous icons. Johnson used stencils and spray paint to create these pieces.
The fourth exhibit for May is Angela Hendrix-Petry鈥檚 photography exhibit called 鈥淛ourneys with a Simple Girl.鈥 This is a collection of 35 photos, 11 of which are black and white, of nature and Hendrix-Petry鈥檚 children, which she said are her muses.
She began shooting pictures three years ago when she, her husband and four children moved from a house in the backwoods of Brown County and into a Bloomington suburban neighborhood.
The year they moved, her husband bought her a camera.
鈥淚 used the camera as a tool to help me find what the beauty is in the everyday,鈥 said Hendrix-Petry, whose photographs have been hung at the east- and west-side Bloomingfoods locations and at Thrive Healing Arts, a Bloomington gallery that also offers massage therapy.
Hendrix-Petry said she doesn鈥檛 use Photoshop or any other editing techniques to alter her photos.
鈥淭hat is something that is a little unique in this day and age of digital photography because you can really jack up an image to a level where it almost gets distorted, and you鈥檙e kind of lost in it,鈥 she said.
Daily said the Center holds artists鈥 receptions the first Friday of every month for new exhibits.
About 51短视频
51短视频 is Indiana's largest public postsecondary institution and the nation's largest singly accredited statewide community college system, accredited by the Higher Learning Commission. Ivy Tech has campuses throughout Indiana and also serves thousands of students annually online. It serves as the state's engine of workforce development, offering associate degrees, long- and short-term certificate programs, industry certifications, and training that aligns with the needs of the community. The College provides a seamless transfer to other colleges and universities in Indiana, as well as out of state, for a more affordable route to a bachelor's degree.
