by Micah Liesenfeld
Kate Snyder. Arsenic and Old Lace inspired belt buckle. |
Imagine yourself as a child 100 years from now discovering in your grandfather's attic an old dusty chest. Rummaging through it, a small item catches your eye: a metal bracelet. You hold it in your hand and notice that each link in the chain resembles the book cover of a different fairy tale. On the inside of each cover is illustrated, in small careful detail, a scene from each story. Who created this and why? To whom was this bracelet given and who wore it? You wonder all of these things as you try it on.
Fortunately, we don't have to wonder here and now since the artist, Kate Snyder, happens to be showing this very piece in the current exhibit at Art Saint Louis, "Art Saint Louis XXVII, the Exhibition." I recently had the opportunity to catch up with her, and she indulged me an interview:
Kate Snyder. Childhood Bracelet. 2011. Enamel, Sterling Silver |
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Check out an interview with Art Saint Louis' Executive Director, Chandler Branch, in Nancy Kranzberg's Arts Interview on KDHX 88.1 FM Public Radio. Click here to listen on demand. Lend your ear(s) to the program and hear what both Chandler and Nancy have to say about Art Saint Louis, art in St. Louis, and much more!
Nancy Kranzberg is a very important part of the art community in St. Louis and is also a very special friend to Art Saint Louis. Her weekly Arts Interview on KDHX features conversations with artists, performers, and "movers & shakers" in the St. Louis area arts community. We are most grateful to have this opportunity to introduce Chandler to the St. Louis art community at-large and for a wider audience to learn more about Art Saint Louis programs & exhibitions. Our utmost gratitude to Nancy and KDHX 88.1 FM for this fabulous opportunity.
Art Saint Louis exhibition at Regional Arts Commission
November 18, 2011 — March 2, 2012
Art Saint Louis is the first organization to partner with Regional Arts Commission (RAC) in the Metro Arts Exchange, a new initiative designed to give regional artists opportunities to display their work at RAC.
For the inaugural exhibit, Art Saint Louis member artists David Dolak, Davide Prete, Megan Rieke, Mary Beth Shaw, Jacqueline Weatherly, Elizabeth M. Willey, and David M. Yates were invited to exhibit their works in RAC's second floor meeting spaces. The exhibit opened with a free reception in the RAC Gallery on Friday, November 18, 5:30-7:30 p.m. and runs through March 2 (NEW DATE), 2012.
Regional Arts Commission is located at 6128 Delmar Boulevard, St. Louis, MO 63112. Phone 314/863-5811 to make an appointment to view the exhibit.
Pictured here are works by featured artists (l to r) David M. Yates, David Dolak, Jackie Weatherly, Davide Prete, Elizabeth Willey, Mek Rieke, Mary Beth Shaw.
Art Saint Louis member Suzy Farren discusses her experience and inspiration as an artist working with mixed media.
Art Saint Louis Fall 2011 volunteer Janna Añonuevo Langholz spent some of her time at Art Saint Louis interviewing several of the artists featured in our recent “Fiber Focus 2011” exhibition. Her final interview is with David Brackett, a weaver & tapestry artist based in Lawrence, Kansas where he works as Associate Professor of Textiles in the School of Art at University of Kansas. David earned his MFA in textiles, with honors, from the University of Kansas (1990). He attended the University of Michigan (1979-1985) and studied weaving, fabric design and art history and he also holds a Bachelor in Zoology from University of Michigan (1977). David’s award-winning work has been exhibited in solo and group shows throughout the U.S. and Japan. In addition to two of his pieces being juried by Lia Cook for this year’s “Fiber Focus 2011” at Art Saint Louis, David’s work was previously exhibited at ASL in “Fiber Focus 2005” and “New Works/Nine States” (2006).
David: I took art courses while earning my bachelor’s degree. I began in Ceramics and worked for the Michigan Artrain after college, where I demonstrated pottery production to school groups around the state. I returned to school later and took a course in Weaving and Fabric Design. After working with dyes, I abandoned my ceramics studio, bought a loom, and returned to school – eventually earning my master’s degree in Textiles.
Janna: When did you begin working with Jacquard weaving?
David: I began teaching at University of Kansas in 2001. We had access to JaqCAD Master, a software package that allows for digital images to be converted into weave structures for jacquard looms. I had training for this software in North Carolina and have had designs woven at several mills over the last ten years.
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