Posts Tagged ‘UMVA’

h1

Invitation to Write

May 2, 2024

UMVA Journal

This is an opportunity for visual art educators and/or teaching artists to share your ideas, methods of teaching, student work samples and message about teaching. Please consider writing for the Summer 2024 Maine Arts Journal: The Sketchbook Issue.

CONSIDERATIONS

What ways do you include sketching into student assignments or as a stand alone assignment? How do you and your students occupy the blank pages of sketchbooks: images, words, scribbles and doodles, quotes and references. Include examples that reveal the many purposes for which you use sketchbooks as a teacher: observation, reflection, remembering, documenting and recording inspirations, communication, planning, assessing accomplishments, or collecting successes and challenges, dreaming about future art works.

As an uncensored private site, the sketchbook is essential to the creative process. It also gives a remarkably vivid entry into an artist’s world, process, and practice. Consider sharing your students artwork, pages from their sketchbooks, ideas they’ve expressed, moments in time. How does the sketchbook contribute to your student’s work?

CONTACT ARGY

If interested in contributing to the summer issue for the educators column called Insight/Incite please email me at meartsed@gmail.com and I will send you the guidelines. Thanks for considering!

h1

Maine Arts Journal: UMVA Quarterly

April 3, 2024

Thought provoking 2024 spring journal

The Union of Maine Visual Artists (UMVA) publish the Maine Arts Journal online four times a year. The Maine Arts Journal provides a plethora of incredible essays by and about artists, interviews, UMVA member submissions, poetry, UMVA updates about its current projects, local chapter, and more.

In this issue of the Maine Arts Journal, contributors think about The Unconscious, the Unknown, the Unsaid. The education column of the journal is called Insight/Incite and veteran Boothbay Region High School art teacher Manon Lewis has contributed to this edition of the Maine Arts Journal. Read her piece called Synergy of the Unconscious, the Conscious, and the Creative Process along with all of the other fabulous pieces at THIS LINK.

Subscribe to the journal at no cost at THIS LINK. The Journal is dependent on UMVA membership dues. Please consider becoming a member at THIS LINK. The theme for the SUMMER 2024 Maine Arts Journal is The Artist’s Sketchbook. Details for submitting are at THIS LINK.  Feel free to email me at meartsed@gmail.com if you have questions.

h1

The Maine Arts Journal

January 31, 2024

It’s all about play

The winter 2024 issue of the Maine Arts Journal is all about PLAY! It celebrates the 100th anniversary of the birth of Surrealism and the pieces included penned by Maine artists, writers, and educators elaborate on how vital play is to the human experience. Maine poet Betsy Sholl writes,

“(M)aging art and allowing art to make us is perhaps one of the most serious and necessary kinds of play.”

I am continuing impressed by the tent of the UMVA Maine Arts Journal. Some of you are familiar with writers who have contributed including of dear friend from days gone by at Haystack Mountain School of Crafts Stuart Kestenbaum, Gibson Fay-LeBlanc, Susan Webster, Carl Little, and Maine Art Education President Cory Bucknam. You can read Cory’s piece and all the others by CLICKING HERE. You can subscribe at no cost at THIS LINK.

Student work of Cory Bucknam, fall 2023, white earthenware and tempera

The cover design is by Charlie Hewitt, neon sculptures inside NeoKraft sign shop in Lewiston.

UMVA is an amazing organization, please consider becoming a member. The journal alone is worth the price of membership. You can join at THIS LINK.

Perhaps you’d like to consider writing for the journal. If so, please email me at meartsed@gmail.com and I’d be glad to communicate with the details.

h1

Maine Arts Journal

October 3, 2023

UMVA Quarterly

They’ve done it again! Today the Union of Maine Visual Arts (UMVA) journal was published and it is jam packed with amazing articles; something for everyone! The fall issue, Materiality has a variety of thought provoking articles written by artists, writers, and educators.

Maine Arts Journal Fall 2023 cover (Rosamond Purcell’s studio, Somerville, MA, with a detail of Wall, mixed-media installation, photo: Veronique Plesch, May 2018).

Introduction by Veronique Plesch

For this issue we invited our contributors to reflect upon the many ways in which their work engages with the notion of materiality, considering the different stages of the creative process, starting with their choice of medium and how tools and materials interact, all the way to the tangible objects they produce. The topic proved inspiring: the responses address the centrality of the choice and handling of the medium. We read about materials’ possibilities and limitations, about how one might attempt to control them or instead submit to them (some materials seem to remain indomitable while others readily—willingly?—cooperate in allowing the artist to reach their goals). Contributors discuss the importance of tools to obtain certain desired effects, while they also marvel at the resulting unexpected and welcome surprises. The process’s dynamic nature is made clear by how often notions such as fluidity, transformation, transmutation, and metamorphosis are mentioned, suggesting that materials have an agency of their own. As we read through the issue, it becomes clear that materials are more than a driving force in the creative process: they are true partners, at once inspiring and motivating, starting point and goal.

This issue includes a piece written for the education column, Insight/Incite by Maryam Emami. Maryam is the 2023 Franklin County Teacher of the Year, has been teaching graphics and social studies at Rangeley Lakes Regional School since 1995. The article includes a variety of images that Maryam’s students have created.

If you’d like to learn more, become a member of UMVA, and support this fabulous organization you may do so at THIS LINK. UMVA hopes that you will subscribe to AND support the journal by becoming a member of the Union of Maine Visual Artists by clicking here. You can subscribe for free by clicking here.

If you’re interested in writing for the journal please contact me Argy Nestor at meartsed@gmail.com or go to THIS LINK.

Explore archived journals (from the past 10 years) at THIS LINK.  

h1

Maine Arts Journal

July 18, 2023

UMVA Quarterly

It seems to me like each issue of the Union of Maine Visual Arts (UMVA) journal is better than the one before. The summer issue, In Balance/Imbalance is no exception; filled with thoughtful and thought provoking articles.

This issue includes a piece written for the education column, Insight/Incite by Sharon Gallant, a veteran Gardiner High School Science teacher who has taken many workshops and classes on Bookmaking. Sharon is the 2023 Kennebec County Teacher of the Year and she is always seeking understanding in all facets of bookmaking. She is recognized for a teaching style that is participatory, interdisciplinary, and academically sound. She was selected for a 100 hour apprenticeship with Richard Reitz Smith to expand her bookmaking knowledge and to create a book which will be a reference tool for teachers wanting to use bookmaking in the classroom. I wrote a blog post about Sharon’s work in the classroom earlier this year at THIS LINK.

Véronique Plesch’s introduction says it best, for the summer issue of the UMVA journal:

Although each of our contributors conceives and experiences the dual notions of balance and its lack or loss in remarkably varied and personal ways, what emerges from this issue is that balance is fundamentally dynamic in nature. As a process, it is impermanent and fleeting. It is a negotiation, a dance with the entropic forces of chaos. It is a drive, a desire—perhaps even an unattainable goal. It is the pursuit of such goals, even of those that may never be fully reached, that effect profound change. Artists can contribute by spreading awareness of the imbalances that surround us. The concert of their voices motivates us and gives us the necessary strength to face the task at hand to rebalance our world. 

If you’d like to learn more, become a member of UMVA, and support this fabulous organization you may do so at THIS LINK. If you’re interested in writing for the journal please contact me at meartsed@gmail.com or go to THIS LINK.

h1

UMVA Journal

January 5, 2017

Winter 2017 Journal of Union of Maine Visual Artists

screen-shot-2017-01-01-at-6-03-14-pm

This is an amazing publication that features the work and stories of many Maine visual artists.  This is a great resource for you teachers as well as your students.

Lindsay Pinchbeck and I wrote a piece about our travels to Malawi in July that is included in the Winter 2017 issue, Lines of Thought. To access the free journal please CLICK HERE.

If you haven’t subscribed (it’s free), do it now. Please let them know what you think. They welcome feedback and suggestions of every stripe, including your ideas and submissions for future issues. If you know any artists who would be perfect for the upcoming theme, Light in the Dark: Art As a Sane Voice in an Insane World (description can be found in the Journal), please let them know. There is info on the last page about how to order hard copies.

And if you are not already a member of the Union of Maine Visual Artists, we would welcome you joining. http://umvaonline.org. Current and archived journals can be found here:   http://umvaonline.org/index.php?page=journal

h1

Who Are They?: Schoodic Arts for All, Part 5

June 10, 2015

Ongoing programs

This blog post is part of a series called Who Are They? where information is provided for the Maine Arts Ed blog readers to learn about community organizations and institutions that provide educational opportunities in the arts. You will learn that they are partnering with other organizations and schools to extend learning opportunities, not supplant. Please consider ways in which you can collaborate to provide excellent arts education for all learners.

safa_logo_blue_greenThis is the fifth blog post of the series highlighting the work of Schoodic Arts for All located in Hammond Hall, 427 Main Street in Winter Harbor. This area is called Downeast Maine and Schoodic Arts for All is at the intersection of Hancock and Washington Counties. Schoodic Arts for All is a non-profit organization dedicated to fostering interest and involvement in the arts for all who wish to participate.

A ways Downeast there sits a peninsula filled with nature and the arts and hard working people. Schoodic Arts for All seeks to foster and to coalesce various artists and community members to develop an arts center providing year round cultural events and activities that hold value for residents of our community and to encourage participants of all ages to express themselves creatively and gain a lifelong appreciation for the arts and creative spirit. Increasingly, society is recognizing that cultural opportunities are essential to the life of the community. People need assistance to promote and organize opportunities for creative self-expression, and the community realizes the importance of recognizing the talents of their residents. There is considerable evidence that increased leisure is prompting people to look to the cultural arts for skill development, personal satisfaction, recognition, potential income and as a means for lessening stress. The arts offer a way for people to express themselves, communicate with others and develop life skills.

In addition to regularly scheduled events and workshops, there has been within the past few years a number of user generated and directed creative groups formed which have been fully supported by Schoodic Arts for All.

The information in this post provides a picture of the diverse and rich offerings that Schoodic Arts for All provides the community members.

Artists to Entrepreneurs  

Contrary to the stereotype of “starving artists” who’ve given up hope of life’s comforts, a burgeoning category of creative entrepreneurs are building wealth, creating jobs and becoming a major force in the local economy.

Artists to Entrepreneurs

The Union of Maine Visual Artists (UMVA)

This group represents visual artists statewide in all fields of endeavor and welcomes those who support contemporary artists in Maine. The UMVA is dedicated to upholding the dignity of artists, while creating positive social change through the arts. By collaborating with other cultural and political organizations, we raise awareness for significant issues while promoting an inclusive arts community in Maine. We are grassroots and we are active. We fear no art.

UMVA atlantic art glass

Variable Winds Recorder Group

This group promotes the study, practice and appreciation of the recorder. It is for everyone interested in playing, studying or listening to recorder music.

variable winds recorder group

Singing Circle

This circle is a singing community with attitude. We’re a “vocal jam-fest with heart,” a community gathering of folks who form an improvised chorus.

IMG_0128

Ukulele Club

The ukulele club is a group of friendly ukulele players who like to socialize, jam, trade music, learn from each other, eat, laugh, sing and play!

Ukulele

Painting Group

The painting group meets weekly with a flurry of painting styles, companionship and learning.

deb with paintings

If you have questions about Schoodic Arts for All please contact the Executive Director, Mary Laury at marylaury@schoodicartsforall.org.