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Report on ACWC “Business Training for Artists”

Tuesday, May 8th, 2012

Report on ACWC “Business Training for Artists”

Newfane, April 25, 7:00-8:30 PM

A group of 15 or so gathered to hear the experience of Windham County artists who participated in the Vermont Arts Council (VAC) “Breaking into Business” workshop in February and to discuss how to provide better business training for artists in our area.  See list of attendees with emails.

Greg Worden, VAC board member and Arts Council of Windham County (ACWC) president introduced the panel and guided the conversation.  Four of the seven Windham County participants in the VAC workshop were present and talked about their experience. Windham County artisans Brad Dinwiddie, Antoinette Lane, Ellie Roden, Heather Bartels-Hallenbeck, Marilyn Buhlmann, Alyssa Morar and Dianne Yelton were selected for the VAC workshop.

The workshop was two days: the first focused on business organization and practices and the second on marketing strategies and tools.  There was a follow up session a month later to review progress and provide training on Grant Writing, specifically $500 VAC implementation grants available to workshop participants based on written Business or Marketing plans.  Several Windham County participants won grants.  Leadership was provided by two trainers from the UMass Arts Extension Service www.artsextensionservice.org and was considered by all to be excellent: organized, fast paced, responsive, relevant. A book “The Artist in Business” was provided to all participants.

The 22 participants were selected through an application process and represented a range of experience and perspective.

The content of the workshop was mostly review and reminder of basics for most participants, and the real value was in seeing oneself as an artist in the context of peers and business potential.  There were many small group working sessions and this peer perspective and support was most valued.  The workshop helped all take themselves and their art more seriously and develop focused action steps specific to their goals, abilities, and business needs.

Reflections:

The words Marketing and Accountability reoccurred in the reports.

The UMass Arts Extension Service is a resource Windham County should learn how to use.

Peer support; providing inspiration, contacts, experience, and accountability; seems key and can be provided locally.

There are a lot of resources available and a list for area artists might be helpful.

Nettie Lane

Sheryll Fletcher

Ellie Roden

Alyssa Morar

2012 Student Art Month Performances

Wednesday, March 7th, 2012

March is Student Art Month in Windham County and the Arts Council of Windham County is again organizing shows and events that will spotlight the great art coming from our young people, and the teachers and school infrastructures that help young artists to blossom.

Visual arts exhibits continue all month  at Through The Music Gallery, 2 Elliot Street; Vermont Artisan Designs Gallery 2, 106 Main Street; Brooks Memorial Library; and at other locations around the county

Following is a listing of student performances this next week to which the public is welcome:

March 2-4: NEYT presents  Robin Hood -  directed by Peter Gould
New England Youth Theatre
Flat Street, Brattleboro

March 3: 7:30 Poetry Slam at the Boys & Girls Club
17 Flat Street, Brattleboro
rickybratt@gmail.com

March 7: The Oak Grove Drama Club presents The Twelve Months
an Italian, Czech, Russian folktale, Directed by Andy Davis
9:30 am     1:30 pm     6:30 pm
Oak Grove School Auditorium
There is no charge for these performances.  Fifteen students in grades 4-6 have been rehearsing this play as an after school project.  The public is welcome.  Call the school at 254-3740 if you wish to attend a daytime performance.  The evening performance is especially for parents and the community.  Please join us!

March 10: 2:00-4:00 Student Poetry Reading,
Village Square Books, 32 the Square, Bellows Falls
info@villagesquarebooks.com

March 10 and 11: “Hip Hop Classic” Gymnastic Competition
Woodman’s Athletics in Brattleboro

March 16: 7:00 Student Poetry Reading
Village Square Books, 32 the Square, Bellows Falls
info@villagesquarebooks.com

March 22: Windham Orchestra Concerto Competition Winner Performance
Latchis Theatre,  9:30 am
www.windhamorchestra.org
Brattleboro Music Center, 802-257-4523

March 23, 24: Phantom of the Opera
Bellows Falls Union High School will present Phantom of the Opera
Friday March 23rd 7:00 pm
Saturday March 24th 2:00pm and 7:00pm
Tickets are $5.

March 24: 7:30 pm SHOWCASE OF CIRCUS
Come see Advanced Students and Professionals from the New England Center for Circus Arts in this annual spring cabaret!  Inspired by spring and new beginnings, this high flying show  features aerialists and acrobats, jugglers and more! $12 adults, $8 kids, under 2 are free.
New England Center for Circus Arts
74 Cotton Mill Hill, #300
Brattleboro, VT
www.necenterforcircusarts.org
(802) 254-9780.

March 25: Windham Orchestra Concerto Competition Winner Performance
Latchis Theatre,  3:00 pm 
www.windhamorchestra.org
Brattleboro Music Center, 802-257-4523 for ticket information

March 30: Music School Student Honors Recital
TBA
www.bmcvt.org

Why Celebrate Student Art?

Friday, March 2nd, 2012

For 32 years the Arts Council of Windham County (ACWC) has designated March as Student Art Month. Why is this important? Why should it continue? Why should you care?

Alia Fielding '14, Digitally Layered Photograph, BUHS

Alia Fielding '14, Digitally Layered Photograph, BUHS

First off, take the opportunity to experience some of the great art coming from our young people. Nothing beats your own first-hand reaction to what our kids are doing. Shows of High School work from around the county open Friday at Through The Music Gallery at the corner of Main and Elliot, and at Vermont Artisans Design Gallery 2 (upstairs). Elementary School work will be at the Brooks Library and elsewhere around town and around the county. These shows will be up for most of the month.

But student art takes many forms beyond what hangs on the wall or graces our shelves.
This year we are adding poetry in partnership with the Boys and Girls Club of Brattleboro (Poetry Slam March 3 at 7:30) and Village Square Booksellers, Bellows Falls, (open mike poetry readings March 10 at 2:00, March 16 at 7:00). We are also preparing a listing of the myriad student theater, music, and dance performances to which the public is welcome that will be published weekly in Ovation and at www.acwc.us.

It has been shown that practicing art makes good education and good citizens. But this won’t continue without public knowledge and support. So, turning the spotlight on the great art coming from our young people, and our teachers and school systems that help young artists to blossom, is a public service to help our communities invest our education dollars wisely.

Most art is about communicating something that does not fit into our intellectual frameworks. That communication is only complete when what the artist produces touches the lives of others. Student Art Month gives our young artists the opportunity to have their work connect with a wider community. This is affirming and supportive of their growing skills, and gives them an opportunity to experience the full circle of being an artist in the world.

Most important is that our young people have views of life and beauty that are indeed fresh, vibrant, and important. Experiencing what they have to show us in this ever-changing world is a gift to ourselves for richer and fuller lives. The artist in all of us will be refreshed and inspired by their work. So ACWC does this to strengthen the artist life of all of us in the county.

Why should you care? Perhaps its is best for you to see what’s going on, and then let the rest of us know.

Doug Cox, West Brattleboro
ACWC President: dcox@sover.net

Celebrating Student Art in Windham County

Friday, March 2nd, 2012

March is Student Art Month!

March is Student Art Month in Windham County and the Arts Council of Windham County is again organizing shows and events that will spotlight the great art coming from our young people, and the teachers and school infrastructures that help young artists to blossom.  The celebration has grown in this its ­­­­­32nd year .

Festivities will begin with openings of the High School visual art shows on Gallery Walk, Friday March 2. Two-dimensional art will be displayed at Through the Music Gallery, 2 Elliot Street, Brattleboro, and three-dimensional works at Vermont Artisan Designs Gallery 2, 106 Main Street, Brattleboro.  The awards ceremony will take place at 7:30 at Vermont Artisans.  Both shows will be available for viewing through March 28.

Elementary School art will be on view at the Brooks Memorial Library and at many other locations around Windham County

New this year are student poetry readings in partnership with Boys & Girls Club of Brattleboro and Village Square Booksellers of Bellows Falls.  Saturday, March 3 at 7:30 the Boys & Girls Club hosts a Poetry Slam at 17 Flat Street, Brattleboro.  This event will be recorded for TV broadcast. Village Square Booksellers, 32 the Square, Bellows Falls, will host poetry readings at 2:00 on Saturday, March 10, and 7:00 on Friday, March 16 as part of Bellows Falls Third Friday Arts Walk.  Young poets interested in reading should contact rickybratt@gmail.com or info@villagesquarebooks.com respectively.

Innumerable music, drama, and dance performances will take place at venues around the county.  A listing will appear weekly in the Thursday Brattleboro Reformer and will be posted on the Arts Council of Windham County web site: www.ACWC.us.  The Windham Orchestra is partnering with Student Art Month to present a program featuring a high school piano soloist, and musical reflections on student art that will be projected on the big screen.  This will take place Thursday, March 22 at 9:30 am and Sunday March 24 at 3:00 at the Latchis Theater.

Student Art Month is organized and presented by The Arts Council of Windham County (ACWC), an all-volunteer organization that has worked to strengthen the environment for artists and arts organizations in the area for 35 years.

For more information contact:

Marie Procter, Student Art Month coordinator mlp69@comcast.net, (802) 254-2115

Doug Cox, ACWC President:  dcox@sover.net (802) 257-1024

Kate Anderson receives 2011 ‘Friend of the Arts’ award

Saturday, November 26th, 2011

Doug Cox, president of the Arts Council of Windham County (ACWC), presented the ACWC’s annual “Friend of the Arts” award to Kate Anderson, ACWC Vice President, on Nov. 21 at a special gathering held at the The Works in Brattleboro, attended by more than 40 people, including many past recipients of the award.

Anderson was chosen to receive the award for her volunteer leadership in building community-wide support for the arts.

“In the relatively short time Kate has been part of the Brattleboro area arts community, she has had an immense impact and has transformed the community in many ways, “ Cox said, “Kate has empowered and inspired many others to work effectively and passionately for the arts.”

Cox added, “ Her kitchen table has been the site of much big dreaming, hard thinking, and effective mentoring.”

Among the local arts organizations Anderson has been deeply involved with, usually in significant leadership roles, are: Alliance for the Arts, Arts Campus Working Group, Arts Council of Windham County, Brattleboro Arts Initiative, (Brattleboro) Town Arts Committee, (Brattleboro) Town Plan Advisory Group, New England Center for Circus Arts, and New England Youth Theater.

Cox said, “Kate has been and will hopefully continue to be a beacon, goad, conscience, and voice of hope for the arts in Windham County.”

Past recipients of the ACWC Friend of the Arts Award include: Beverly Alberts (1997),  Mara Williams (1998), George Becker and Ric Campman (1999),  Helene Henry and Lil Farber (2000),  Don McLean (2001),  Stephen Stearns (2002), ),  Joy Wallens-Penford (2003),   Ines Zeller Bass and Eric Bass (2004), the Brattleboro Development Credit Corporation and Kurt Isaacson (2005),  Jerry Carbone and Meris Morrison (2007), Doug Cox (2008), Gail Nunziata (2009) and Marie Proctor (2010).

The mission of the Arts Council of Windham County (ACWC) is to “To strengthen the environment for artists and arts organizations in Windham County.” For more information about the Arts Council of Windham County, visit its Web site www.acwc.us.

Photo (l-r): Doug Cox (2008), Marie Procter (2010), Kate Anderson (2011), Joy Wallens-Penford (2003),  and Gail Nunziata (2009).

Brattleboro West Art presents got art?

Wednesday, May 4th, 2011


This June, around the corner from the celebration of Heifer Stroll, Brattleboro-West Arts presents got art? a showcase for the remarkable work of a diverse community of artists living along the picturesque Whetstone Brook watershed. Fifteen artists will be exhibiting and selling paintings, pottery, furniture, sculpture, fabric arts and works on paper from June 3-5, 2011. The three day exhibit, at Gallery at Headroom Stages, upstairs at 17 Elliott Street, Brattleboro, Vermont offers visitors a chance to stroll amidst the artwork throughout the weekend. Gallery hours are Friday 4 pm-8:30 pm (open during Gallery Walk), Saturday from 12-8 pm, with an evening reception to meet the artists from 5-8, and Sunday from 12-5 pm. Exhibiting artists are Bobbi Angell, Josh Bernbaum, Jason Breen, Karen Kamenetzky, Naomi Lindenfeld, Steve Lloyd, Kris McDermet, Petria Mitchell, Cathy Osman, Janet Picard, Marrin Robinson, Tim Seger, Walter Slowinski, Matt Tell and Doug Trump.

The Brattleboro region is well recognized as a rich and invigorating arts community. Brattleboro-West Arts (BWA), an association of artists and craftspeople working in the villages of West Brattleboro and Marlboro has become a prominent feature of this landscape. BWA members meet monthly to share artistic visions and foster community. Eighteen members will participate in the third annual open studio tour September 24-25, 2011.

got art? will be an intimate opportunity to view and purchase new work. While there will be a great diversity of artwork on display, there is a strong theme connecting the artists and their work. Whether viewing the artwork, reading the artists’ statements, or talking directly to the individual, one feels the inherent common thread of a visceral connection to their surroundings. The sense of place is paramount. Using shapes, colors and patterns observed in the gentle valleys and rugged hills outside their studios, each artist has found a personal connection to the earth, and a profound way of expressing it as art.

Traditional meets contemporary in the endeavors of BWA artists, and functional pottery is a fine example of what is created. Several potters will be represented in the got art? exhibit. Naomi Lindenfeld’s elegant porcelain pieces showcase her intricate process of layering and carving stained clay in patterns reminiscent of the movement of water and wind. Walter Slowinski and Matt Tell fire their pottery in wood-fired kilns, a process that enriches their creations with the kiss of fire and ash that gives each piece its own story. Whether fluted bowl, bird-like pitcher, dramatic vase or free standing bird bath, the ceramic work reflects the colors and textures of the Vermont earth.

BWA artists break new ground by using materials rooted in tradition in very untraditional ways. Glass blower Josh Bernbaum juxtaposes transparent and opaque areas of glass to create stunning vases and wall sculptures, relying on his refined sense of balanced color relationships. Furniture craftsman Jason Breen’s innovative tables and desks are created from locally harvested hardwood with each piece honed to a silken luster.  Fiber artist Karen Kamenetzky uses dyed and painted cotton and silk to create patterns inspired by microscopic/cellular imagery, allowing a process of stitches to unfold into a personal and intimate view of nature. Kris McDermet artfully blends age-old techniques to create hooked and braided rugs and wall hangings that transcend the traditional. Hand-dyed wool and silk are married into exquisite designs inspired by nature and family.

Sculptor Tim Segar connects the points between sculpture and drawing. His finely crafted bent wood forms carry stitched drawings that delineate and divide planes and spaces. Cathy Osman, painter and printmaker, creates work in constant reference to the landscape outside her studio ass well as the influences of her travels. Her large scale collages suggest a microscopic world, or inversely a mapping of a geographical place. Printmaker Bobbi Angell focuses on an intimate view of plants to create intricate copper etchings enhanced by her life as gardener and work as  botanical illustrator.

Amidst all the riches, the work of  five renowned painters of BWA will be displayed to grand effect on the bright walls of Gallery at Headroom Stages.  Petria Mitchell’s dramatic and glowing oil landscapes, with her bold and expressive brush strokes, deliberately lead the viewer’s eye to travel across the canvas.  Janet Picard’s bold colors and unusual compositions mix reality and abstraction into a lively style that moves far beyond traditional landscape painting.  Marrin Robinson uses oil and mixed media to create a sense of nature and of place remembered or imagined, awash with the colors of the artist’s imagination. Steve Lloyd, influenced by his profession as architect, creates watercolor landscapes from Europe and West Brattleboro as well as abstract acrylic paintings, each with luminous  soft hues and geometric tendencies. Doug Trump, a painter of non-objective canvases for 30 years, finds an entity on its own in fixing fluid into solid, allowing him to express his connection to the world via place.

Summing up the pleasures that artists may take in creating their work, Trump states “seeing at the close of the day what wasn’t there before is fascinating and deeply satisfying. And maybe even associated, there is that magical interest in looking”.  In the got art? exhibit at Gallery at Headroom Stages, there is much magic and much creativity. It is well worth a stroll upstairs to meet the artists and see the artistic vision, quality craftsmanship, and rich talent on display.

For information about the exhibit and the individual artists, see www.brattleboro-west-arts.com or call (802) 257-4021.

Farm Art: An exhibit of farm-themed art by local artists

Wednesday, May 4th, 2011

Where: The Works Bakery Cafe, Main Street, Brattleboro VT

When: June 4 through June 29, 2011. Open during Gallery Walk (June 4, 5:30-8:30 p.m.) and during all regular business hours at The Works (6 a.m. to 6 p.m., 7 days a week).

Farm Art features five artists who draw inspiration from the Vermont Agricultural landscape and barnyard animals: Caryn King, Lesley Heathcote, Marjorie Sayer, Janet Picard and Paul Stone. The exhibit opens on Friday, June 3, and will be open during Gallery Walk (5:30-8:30 p.m.). It will remain open through Strolling of the Heifers Weekend and for the entire month of June 2011. All paintings are for sale, and a portion of the proceeds benefits Strolling of the Heifers.

Artists To Discuss Business Training at May Forum

Saturday, April 9th, 2011

The Arts Council of Windham County (ACWC) is sponsoring a forum, “Business Training for Artists,” on Wednesday, May 25, 2011 from 7-8:30pm at the Moore Free Library (23 West Street) in Newfane, VT.

This year, the ACWC provided scholarship funds to seven Windham County artists accepted into the two-day Vermont Arts Council (VAC) professional development workshop for artists, “Breaking into Business,” which was held in February.

Windham County artisans Brad Dinwiddie, Antoinette Lane, Ellie Roden, Heather Bartels-Hallenbeck, Marilyn Buhlmann, Alyssa Morar and Dianne Yelton were selected for the workshop. Most will be available at the Newfane session to share what they learned about business and marketing planning specifically tailored to the needs of artists.

The panel discussion is intended for artists of all disciplines (visual, performing, media, literary, crafts and traditional).   Those attending will get and share ideas on how to achieve greater success in their current or dreamed of arts business. The session will also identify needs for additional business training and services for area artists.  There is no charge for the forum.

Since 1975, the Arts Council of Windham County has worked to strengthen the environment for artists and arts organizations in Windham County.

To register for the forum, contact:

Greg Worden, President
Phone: 802-257-7044
Email: vtart@sover.net

Local arts council to study economy

Thursday, March 31st, 2011

By JAIME CONE / Reformer Staff
Thursday March 31, 2011 – PAGE ONE

BRATTLEBORO — The Arts Council of Windham County recently announced that it will partner with Americans for the Arts, a non-profit organization, to conduct a research study called Arts & Economic Prosperity IV.

Read rest of article by clicking here.

To participate in artists’ database, contact:

Greg Worden, President
Phone: 802-257-7044
Email: vtart@sover.net

You can also reach us via US mail:
Arts Council of Windham County
PO Box 6093
Brattleboro, VT 05302

Student Art Month award-winners announced

Saturday, March 26th, 2011

BRATTLEBORO — Student Art Month 2011, currently featuring two shows of high school art at
the Robert H. Gibson River Garden, 157 Main St. for two-dimensional work, and at Vermont Artisans
& Gallery 2, 106-110 Main St., for three- dimensional work, will close on March 30.

To read article from March 24, 2011 Brattleboro Reformer, click here.