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Crossroads Arts District

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KC Comic Creators Meet & Greet

May 30, 2024 By crossroadscomics@yahoo.com

Crossroads Comics and Art

1830 Charlotte St. KCMO, 64108

Event time: June 7, 2024 4pm-8pm (store is open 11am-8pm)

Facebook event link:

https://facebook.com/events/s/first-friday-comic-artists-mee/438389332239247/

Meet artists that make comics and more! Kansas City is full of incredible artistic talent, and so much of it is in the comic creator world. Some of the best KC has to offer are getting together at Crossroads Comics and Art to show you what that’s all about. 

Our June First Friday guests will be: Buster Moody, Baldemar Rivas and Jim Mahfood (Food One). All of them are working on current and/or upcoming titles and have a lot of previous work, as well. 

You may have met them at Planet Comicon or other shows, or maybe you missed them because you can’t get to EVERYTHING, so here’s your chance. 

They will be hanging out in the animation gallery so you can come and say Hey!, have something signed, buy some of their art and/or comics, and hang out for a bit! These are people working hard to make art happen for all of us to enjoy and they’re all super freaking cool. 

We will be posting more details about the individual artists soon, so be sure to check back for more info, or in the meantime, you can look them up!

Outside of a con, you don’t normally get so many artists all at once, so we’re really excited to offer this unique opportunity. 

We will also have some great sales and specials in-store for comics, animation art and jewelry, including bringing back the “blind box pick”- there are still some GEMS in there. We look forward to seeing everyone. 

About us:

We at Crossroads Comics and Art are so excited to be a part of the Crossroads Arts District and the Crossroads Community Association (KCCrossroads.org).

In addition to our retail store and animation gallery (check out our socials and sites for all the details!), we are artists, too. We are all about supporting art in many forms and also focusing on local/ regional artists and the artists we personally know and love. We are so fortunate to live that dream and to share it with all of you.

Inspiration Point: Sparks of Art

May 29, 2024 By casey@thestudiosinc.org

Studios Inc is happy to announce its annual collaborative exhibition Inspiration Point: Sparks of Art in partnership with MINDDRIVE. Studios Inc will host an opening reception on June 28, 2024 from 5 – 8 pm and will host a First Friday reception on July 5th, 2024 from 5 – 8 pm.

MINDDRIVE is a project-based experiential learning program that serves students from around the Kansas City Metro. Inspiration Point: Sparks of Art will feature works from students participating in the organization’s Welding Art Studio program. Mentors participate along with students to design and create metal fabricated pieces that showcase their creativity and technical skills. Using metal scraps and recycled materials, they innovate and experiment to transform discarded items into unique and functional works of art.

Launched to serve mid-career artists, Studios Inc is Kansas City’s only nonprofit arts organization offering pivotal three-year residencies to mid-career artists who are poised to significantly expand their careers. Studios Inc offers a unique immersion experience for resident artists, who use their studio and exhibition space to produce and exhibit work, network and learn from one another, and attract and cultivate relationships with art patrons, collectors, and arts professionals.

Inspiration Point: Sparks of Art will be on view through August 10. Exhibition hours are Wednesday thru Friday 10am-4pm and Saturday 12 – 4pm

“Energy and Transformation 2024”, by Pedro Trueba

May 28, 2024 By julie_c@kccrossroads.org

The Consulate of Mexico has the honor of inviting you to the opening of the painting exhibition “Energy and Transformation 2024”, by Pedro Trueba (biography attached), which will take place on June 7, with the presence of the artist. Free and open to the public.

Pedro Trueba is a reference in the contemporary Mexican artistic scene, known for his work in the
fields of painting and muralism. His work is characterized by a deep exploration of cultural and social themes, using techniques and styles that blend traditional elements with modern and avant-
garde approaches.

Trueba has participated in numerous exhibitions both in Mexico and abroad, contributing to the
consolidation of his reputation as an artist of international relevance. His works have been exhibited
in New York, Paris, Barcelona, and Mexico City, among others. He is the creator of the dome of the
Benito Coquet Auditorium in Mexico City and has been awarded by the prestigious organization
ArtTour International in 2019.

Program

5:00 Doors open

5:30 Welcome remarks by Consul Soileh Padilla Mayer

5:32 Conversation with the artist

5:40 Guided tour of the exhibition

6:00 Reception hosted by La Fonda El Taquito

We look forward to seeing you there!

Leah Clemons — Say A Prayer For What Has Been

May 28, 2024 By info@leedy-voulkos.com

Say A Prayer For What Has Been examines the objects and rituals used and practiced by women in the black church. Women’s bodies within these spaces are used as tools to uphold patriarchy, while flattening women’s autonomy. Although the black church provides a sacred place for freedom of expression and refuge from an at large racist American society, it can also be a suppressive environment. Expressions such as clothing are often the only ways black women, regardless of age, can exercise their autonomy. Through clothing and accessories, black women in the church can adhere to patriarchal expectations while safely letting pieces of themselves slip through.

The works in this show explore how artist Leah Clemons navigates her own relationship with religious deconstruction. Through the various sculptures presented as anthropological objects, she tells the story of her own upbringing within the church, as well as her ongoing relationship with her maternal grandmother. The process of deconstruction, which is a rejection of the beliefs one is brought up within, yields an untethered experience. This newly found assertion of independence can feel both daunting and freeing at the same time. Engaging with her grandmother’s experiences in the Southern Baptist Church, Clemons explores oppression as it exists both inside institutions that are considered safe and within the context of a society that continues to oppress.

Artist Statement 

Leah Clemons achieved her BFA in Fiber at the Kansas City Art Institute with a minor in Entrepreneurial Studies. Her work comprises multi-media installations that utilize processes such as surface design, beadwork, sewing, and papermaking. With these materials, Clemons creates anthropological objects that are referential to her Christian upbringing. Raised in an African American, Southern Baptist community, her work pulls from stories and experiences from the women of her childhood church and family. Her objects are representational artifacts of her past. They are recreations of items she associates with the women she grew up around, such as jackets, hats and jewelry, and with herself. Throughout her work, her maternal grandmother, Gloria, reoccurs. Gloria’s presence is a shorthand motif that represents the ways black women carve their autonomy while they exist in an oppressive institution. Inspired by Gloria’s eccentric style and strong-willed personality, Clemons’ examines her own disintegrating relationship between them and the women she knew as a child. These objects discuss distance and disconnection making them only an artifact of the memories shared.

Clemons analyzes the ways black women, within the church structure, are politicized through their clothing. Clothing is often the only way black Christian women can safely express themselves. Clothing is also used to divide women into degrees of moral hierarchy. Growing up, women follow a strict dress code in the sanctuary. No pants, mid length skirts, stockings, and purses that match your shoes. Older women are used as tools to set an example for younger women within the congregation. The adherence to patriarchal ideals of femininity force women to play into rigid expressions of it to administer the status quo.

Materiality is used as a vehicle to analyze her personal relationships with women she is now disconnected from, while she questions her own relationship to the religion. After moving from her church community, the artist herself began a journey of self discovery and deconstruction. To re-examine everything you have been taught, to then reconsolidate into new ways of thought is a daunting, exciting, and vulnerable experience. The artist wants the audience to examine their own relationships with others within an institution that hails over their life. Allow yourself to rethink the ways clothing, material, or your environment enmeshes you to others and to a system. Then ask yourself, where do you agree and misalign from them? The artist wants her work to remind the audience to constantly reconsider their placement within larger societal structures. How do you contend between your autonomy and your community?

Bio

Leah Clemons is a candidate for BFA in Fiber with a minor in Entrepreneurial Studies from the Kansas City Art Institute. Originally from Housto, Texas, she resides in Kansas City, Missouri. She was raised in a tightly knit African American Southern, Baptist Christian community. She attended a small church called Mount Corinth where Leah observed intimate relationships between the women within the organization including her grandmother, Gloria Jean Skief, who also attended.

Clemons attended the Kinder High School of Performing and Visual Arts and received a YoungArts National Merit award in Visual Arts in 2020. Since then, she was a recipient of the Barbara Kuhlman Scholarship and has recently participated in Family Ties, a group show curated by KCAI BSU undergraduate students.

Linda Jurkiewicz — The Top-Half Bakery: Ode to the Prudish Mother

May 28, 2024 By info@leedy-voulkos.com

Growing up in a rigid and pious Catholic home did not leave any room for feeling comfortable with much of anything, let alone one’s body. You couldn’t like it, you were forbidden to touch it, for fear of mortal sin, and you certainly shouldn’t look at it. All information was kept under lock and key, just waiting for some unfortunate accident to happen, due to lack of knowledge.

I am drawn to female artists that explore women’s bodies in relationship to the cultural mores of their times. One of my favorites is Louise Bourgeois’ Femme Maison (Women House) series. These exemplified the realities of a mother tethered to her home with inescapable responsibilities.

In Louise Bourgeois: Drawing and Observations Lawrence Rinder states, “…the existentialists placed absurdity in a top hat and pulled out liberation. Bourgeois’s art depended on such comic-tragic paradox, the surprising ability of negative and positive to reverse”.

Now I can unashamedly have my cake — and eat it too.

Artist Statement

My name is Linda Jurkiewicz. A woman’s challenge of self-determination dominates my mind and work. I grew up on the cusp of the Second Wave of Feminism and I believed that I was on the tipping point of women getting their rights. I was sure that my generation was going to be the recipient of this new open-mindedness and fairness for women. Today, I continue to be reminded that the scale not only did not complete its tip but has reversed its course in many areas of women’s lives.

My insights are transmitted through personal narratives, mine, and others. I want the viewer to be reminded of the daily conflicts experienced by women in our culture; unequal domestic expectations, unpaid roles as caretakers, sexualization and exploitation of women and girls, and generational struggles with body image.

I explore these serious issues thoughtfully, with my own sense of humor. By using repetition in my work I symbolize the importance of continued planned action to create change in one’s life. I utilize found objects and repurposed cloth to stress that anyone can work with what they have.

Cloth itself holds human history within its tactile experience. It is omnipresent in our past and present lives, our homes, and our cultural way of remembering. By using stitch as mark-making on cloth I can tell a story with gesture and imagery to a contemporary audience. My art form honors the collective work of women and seeks to call out an essential reminder of our importance in this world and the struggles that continue to be unheard.

Bio

Linda Jurkiewicz lives in Kansas City, Missouri and began working with fiber in 2005. She credits her upbringing as a first-generation Ukrainian-Croatian for her “make-do” attitude and her delight in upcycling repurposed materials, especially “woman’s work” such as dish towels, household items, and clothing. Her consequential fiber work incorporates soft sculpture, wordplay, idiom, embroidery, wall hangings, plush form, sequential dioramas, and installations which delve into the cultural roles of women in America over the last century. She pushes viewers to reexamine these roles that are changing, to trade nostalgia for empowerment.

Jurkiewicz’s work has been shown in four solo shows in Kansas City galleries since 2022, with her most recent show, The Top-Half Bakery: Ode to the Prudish Mother at the Leedy-Voulkos Art Center. Her work has been juried into numerous exhibitions locally. Nationally, her work has been included in The Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts, Delta Triennial, Little Rock AR (2024), Woman Made Gallery 24th International Exhibit, Chicago, Illinois (2023), Intersect Art Center Blue Hour, St. Louis, MO (2023), Amarillo Museum of Art Biennial-600: Textile/Fiber, Amarillo, Texas (2019), Raw – The Exhibition at Indiana University (2018), Sacred Threads in Herndon, VA (2017 and 2019), The Blue Show at the Core New Art Space (2017) and The Engaged Object at the Foothills Art Center (2016), both in Denver, Colorado, and Welcome to My World: Mental Health Awareness through Art at the MIRI Gallery (2016), Salt Lake City, Utah. Jurkiewicz is a member of the Kansas City Artists Coalition.

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