Archive for August, 2014

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Day 3: Summit on Arts Ed

August 5, 2014

Another worthwhile day at the Summit provided by the Maine Arts Assessment Initiative – a program of the Maine Arts Commission

Day 3 started off with an amazing presentation by Maine Arts Assessment Initiative (MAAI) teacher leader and Lisbon Art Teacher, Pam Ouellette. The topic was Literacy and the Arts but Pam made it clear from the beginning that her teaching incorporates the literacy in a very clear pathway. It isn’t about how the arts enhance literacy but how literacy enhances the arts. During Pam’s graduate program at Boston University Pam studied Creativity and Literacy and immediately formulated a way to incorporate her learning and best practices on the topic in her high school classroom. Even though Pam teaches Visual Arts she is able to easily adopt her practices for all the arts disciplines.

Nancy Salmon worked with the Teaching Artists during the Summit

Nancy Salmon worked with the Teaching Artists during the Summit

The Summit participants worked on their Individual Action Plans (and team plans) to further their ideas for implementation in their schools/districts. During the afternoon they participated in the All Share Showcase presenting their ideas to the Summit participants. Each participant received numerous comments to help them proceed. The afternoon included MAAI Teacher Leader stories and some amazing door prizes!

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Wells School district team, Chris Milliken, Middle School and Vanessa White-Capelluti, High School art teachers

Lisa saw this idea on Pinterest. The chairs are about 6 inches tall.

Lisa saw this idea on Pinterest. The chairs are about 6 inches tall.

 

Participants gave the food high marks! As my dad used to say "if anyone went away hungry, its their own darn fault!"

Participants gave the food high marks! As my dad used to say “if anyone went away hungry, its their own darn fault!”

Photos taken by Kevin Facer, Roger Fuller, and Argy Nestor

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Day 2: Summit on Arts Ed

August 4, 2014

Another worthwhile day at the Summit provided by the Maine Arts Assessment Initiative – a program of the Maine Arts Commission

LisaThe Day 2 schedule at the Summit on Arts Education at USM, Portland allowed participants the opportunity to attend sessions on technology, integration, advocacy, and sessions with like-grade level and discipline on Proficiency and the Student-centered classroom.

In addition, throughout the morning participants had the chance to learn more about teaching artists, arts organizations and higher education.

Representatives from the following arts organizations and institutions participated: From the Bow Seat, Lesley University, Lincoln Street Center and Northland Village Foundation, Maine Department of Education, Maine Art Education Association, Maine Music Educators Association, Maine College of Art, New England Institute for Teacher Education, Portland Ovations, Portland Museum of Art, Portland Symphony Orchestra, UMaine Music Ed Department, and UMaine Art Ed Department.

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Rose Kue, Director of Education & Community Engagement, Portland Symphony Orchestra

Teams and individuals started work on an Individual (or team) Action Plan so they could hit the ground running when returning to their schools/districts. The Phase 5 Maine Arts Assessment Initiative (MAAI) Teacher Leader’s Individual Action Plans focus on the workshops they plan to provide during the 2014-15 school year.

Maine Art Education Association secretary and MAAI teacher leader, Lisa Ingraham, provided the “chair” template so teachers could use their creativity to contribute to the wall of chairs. Lisa and her colleague Jim Small from Madison School District are seen in this post in front of the growing wall of chairs.

It was the second day of the Summit on Arts Education filled with high quality professional development. The 90 participants went away having learned a great deal, and with new questions about their understanding of teaching, learning, and assessment in arts education.

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Participants “movin” with teaching artist, Stephanie McGary

 

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Jeff Poulin, Arts Education Program Coordinator from the Americans for the Arts located in Washington, D.C. provided information on Arts Advocacy

Photos taken by Kevin Facer, Roger Fuller, and Argy Nestor

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Gee’s Bend Quilts

August 3, 2014

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Exhibition: now through August 30, 2014

Contact:
Christine Macchi, Executive Director
Maine Fiberarts, 13 Main Street, Topsham, ME 04086
207-721-0678,      fiberarts@gwi.net        http://www.mainefiberarts.org

GEE’S BEND QUILTS ON VIEW AT MAINE FIBERARTS

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“Do It Your Way: Gee’s Bend Quilts and Quilters in Maine” is an exhibition on view now through August 30 at Maine Fiberarts, 13 Main Street, Topsham. The exhibition includes twelve large quilts created by the quilters of Gee’s Bend, Alabama—a group that has been quilting since the sixties and who became famous for their freeform and original style. The New York Times once hailed these quilts as “some of the most miraculous works of modern art America has produced.”

In 2002, art collector Will Arnett recognized these quilts as important works of art and organized an exhibition which began at the Houston Museum of Fine Arts and travelled to nine major museums across the country including the Boston Museum of Fine Arts and the Whitney Museum in New York City. The quilts and the quilt makers of Gee’s Bend garnered national media attention, including articles in Newsweek, O, Smithsonian Magazine and Martha Stewart Living. In 2006 the United States Post Office issued Gee’s Bend quilt commemorative stamps.

Boykin, Alabama, the home of most of the Gee’s Bend quilters, has been described as one of the most isolated villages in the U.S. Here, undeterred by a scarcity of materials and long days working in their gardens or in the cotton fields, generations of black women have developed a unique tradition of quilting. Traditional ideas and sewing techniques are passed on, back and forth in this tightly-knit community, but the highest praise is saved for quilts that follow their own inspiration. In Gee’s Bend, quilting rules are broken. Often unable to afford new materials, the makers use pieces from feed bags, worn patches from blue jeans, and other incongruous materials together in one quilt. A seemingly quiet cotton top deviates with one shocking red flannel edge. Corduroy remnants, available for a while from an adjacent clothing factory, even polyester—nothing is wasted or forbidden. Dissimilar materials can be found side by side. If a traditional log cabin pattern is established in one-quarter of the quilt, then in the other three-quarters, that pattern is twisted to other ends, turned sideways or upside down and backwards, done in many or in one color instead of two—becoming more interesting as the rules are flaunted.
The quilts demand that the viewer, see, feel, and deal with the unpredictable.

Unlike African American “story quilts,” Gee’s Bend quilts are not narratives. They are expressive in the way that the best abstract paintings are—more like “jazz,” than “folk song.” Patterns may start from tradition, but then are improvised upon. Corners do not always abut precisely. Lines need not always be straight. Ripping has its own charms. Once stated, often a pattern is exploded, turned and run askew. If it is pieced more regularly, then colors are used contradictorily.

It is perhaps entirely natural that during the show of Gee’s Bend quilts at the Whitney Art Museum in 2003, a New York Times art critic raved. Leaping in one single move from the periphery to the center of the art world, these quilts were at home.

This exhibition marks the first time the quilts and the quilters have been north of Boston and is part of an exciting collaboration.  A second exhibition of different quilts takes place at the Penobscot Marine Museum in Searsport, August 2-September 7. Finally, Fiber College in Searsport, initiator of the events, offers classes and special programming to celebrate the women. Four of the Gee’s Bend quilters—China Pettway, Stella Mae Pettway, Revile Mosley and Lucy Mingo—will teach classes between September 2-8. The evening of September 3 has been reserved for a public New England boiled dinner and forum and gospel singing (during which two quilts will be raffled) at the Searsport Congregational Church moderated by Suzette McAvoy of the Center for Maine Contemporary Art. Tickets for the dinner are available through http://www.fibercollege.org

Since the year 2000, Maine Fiberarts has hosted exhibitions that change every two or three months. This Fall, the group will bring shows of contemporary fiber art to both the Glickman Family Library at USM in Portland, and to the galleries at Maine Fiberarts. The statewide arts nonprofit currently hosts a free online Fiber Resource Guide, Bulletin, and Folio to promote Maine’s fiber community. Visit the group in Topsham Tuesday-Friday, 10-4, Saturday, 11-2, or online at http://www.mainefiberarts.org.

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“Gee’s Bend Quilts and Quilters in Maine” is an exhibition of large, colorful, free style quilts created by the women of Gee’s Bend, Alabama. Quilts are on view at Maine Fiberarts, 13 Main Street, Topsham now through August 30 and the gallery is open Tuesday-Friday, 10-4, Saturdays, 11-2. For more information, 207-721-0678, http://www.mainefiberarts.org A second exhibition, workshops and a dinner and forum to meet four of the quilters takes place through September 8. Check the websites of Maine Fiberarts, Penobscot Marine Museum, and Fiber College for more information.

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