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An Exhibition of Things Called Art

May 6, 2021 By bob@hilliardgallery.com

Art exist within a diverse range of human activities that expresses and produces a visual, auditory, or performed artifacts— artworks. These works depict the artists imaginative and technical skill, and are intended to be appreciated for their beauty or emotional power. Art has been traditionally defined as the expression or application of human creative skills and imagination, typically in a visual form, producing works that express the artists inner emotions, desires, and message. A completed work of contemporary art can be used to describe any work regarded as art in the widest sense in respect to the physical form of visual art. When it comes to arts identification, there are no distinct set of values or aesthetic traits. Art is not perfection; art realistically is something that continues to progressively develop as it is seen, meaning to eagerly open all human capacities, thoughts and emotions. Art represents a unique creation that lets the observer interpret the art and the artists to portray it in whatever way they want whether the work is viewed with same perspective as the observer or not. A creation that allows for interpretation of any kind is art and can take on many various forms, but no matter the form it is a form of communication of the artist’s ideas or emotions.

Participating Artists
Marisa Bernotti
Ann Huang
Cindy Chinn
Lisa Gordillo
Meriel Stern
Ed Whitmore
Julie Corcoran
Jose D. Trejo-Maya
Nell Breyer
Alyssa Grey
Guinotte Wise
Maudegrasse
Kylen Guilbeaux
Philip Julo
Shelly Pinto
Denise Presnell
Derrick Hickman
Karen Poulsen
Joshua Heimsoth
Kailan Counahan
Karen Smith
Tanis Meyers
Patrick Luber
Sigrid Zahner
Trey Morgan
Alessio Mazzarulli
Sara Slee Brown
Jim Pearson
Claire Renaut
Morgan Johnson
Sam Dorgan
Maria Regina
Rodney Durso
Charles Emlen
Kassius Wilson
Mathew Patterson
Gary Freeman
Steven Kratka
Linda Jurkiewicz
Kara Greenwell
Chandra Beadleston
Claire Elise
Brian Mitchell
Jim Norris
Robert Sunderman
Jeffery Brooks
Cesar Ceballos
Chalda Maloff
Marietta Leis
Conner Dyer
J. Martin
Kate Padberg
Contact: Bob Swearengin
816 – 561-2956
bob@hilliardgallery.com
Gallery Hours : Tues & Sat 12 – 4, Wed-Fri 1 – 6 or by appointment

The Gallery and Kansas City are still requiring the wearing of Face Masks within businesses. We are providing sanitize stations as well and if necessary limiting entry in order to maintain social distancing measures.

May Art Exhibition — All My Relations: Phillip J. Pursel and Sydney Jane Brooke Campbell Maybrier Pursel

May 3, 2021 By

All My Relations: Phillip J. Pursel and Sydney Jane Brooke Campbell Maybrier Pursel. Father and daughter team up to for this thought-provoking exhibition. Curated by Daniela Failla

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Phillip J. Pursel

Phillip J. Pursel was born and raised in Kansas City, Missouri and is an enrolled member of The Ioway Tribe of Kansas & Nebraska – Bear Clan. Self taught, Pursel has explored many different mediums including painting, photography, printmaking, ceramics, traditional beadwork and moccasin making. He is well traveled and has explored the Southwest where he was introduced to the Pueblo & Hopi way of life. He takes imagery & inspiration from Native cultures. In addition to art, he is interested in traditional agriculture and dry farming focusing on the three sisters, corn, beans and squash. In the near future he hopes to live with and learn from the Hopi.
Most of his recent work is inspired by oral history and stories from indigenous cultures from North America.
“I found inspiration in my latest paintings from the Hopi people in Northern Arizona. Hopi means “peaceful people.” The Hopi are an ancient culture and have an oral history dating back about five thousand years. In one Hopi prophecy about guardianship, The Great Spirit makes an appearance on earth and gathers all the people on an island. He then sends four groups of people in four directions. The Great Spirit tells the people that over time I will turn you into four different colors and give you teachings. These will be known as the original teachings.” – Phillip J. Pursel
—–

Sydney Jane Brooke Campbell Maybrier Pursel

Sydney Pursel is an interdisciplinary artist specializing in interactive, socially engaged, and performance arts. Through art she explores personal identity drawing from her Indigenous and Irish Catholic roots. Some of Sydney’s projects are used to educate others about food politics, assimilation, language loss, appropriation, and history in addition to projects amongst her own community focusing on language acquisition, culture, and art.
Pursel’s work has been shown at public parks, universities, galleries, and alternative spaces in Columbia, MO; Fort Collins, CO; Fulton, MO; Harpers Ferry, IA; Iowa City, IA; Kansas City, MO; Laramie, WY; Lawrence, KS; New York, NY; San Francisco, CA; Santa Fe, NM; Seattle, WA; Sheridan, WY; Toronto, ON; Ucross, WY; Vermillion, SD; and White Cloud, KS. Sydney received her MFA in Expanded Media at the University of Kansas and her BFA in Painting from the University of Missouri. She was the first recipient of the Ucross Fellowship for Native American Visual Artists, received the Harpo Foundation Fellowship for Native American Artists at the Vermont Studio Center, and was selected for the Indigenous Arts Initiative Residency program through the Kansas Creative Arts Industries Commission and the University of Kansas.

May In Person Art Show

April 28, 2021 By Jones Gallery

Jones Gallery May Art Show Gathering.

Gallery’s Regular Hours.
Open daily 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Closed Sunday.
We have an online gallery also on our website, thanks!
https://jonesgallerykc.com/jones-online-gallery/
www.jonesgallerykc.com
Address. 1717 Walnut, KC., MO. 64108.
816 – 421-2111.

New Moves: the broadcast series

April 15, 2021 By awilson@kcballet.org

New Moves: the broadcast series has been extended an additional 6 weeks due to popular demand! All original works filmed in beautiful iconic settings throughout the greater Kansas City area, including American Jazz Museum, Charlotte Street Foundation, The Gem Theater at American Jazz Museum, National WWI Museum and Memorial, Union Station Kansas City Inc. and Kansas City Art Institute.

Each episode includes bonus features such as interviews, behind-the-scenes footage, and more. These free 20-minute episodes will be released every Thursday at 7 p.m. CDT, beginning April 15 through May 20.

Join us each week to see all-new work from choreographers Price Suddarth, Ben Needham-Wood, Yury Yanowsky and KCB Dancers Christopher Costantini, Emily Mistretta and Cameron Thomas.

Learn more at kcballet.org/kc-ballet-at-home/#newmoves

Art Exhibition | Bri Murphy + Belle-Pilar Fleming: Alt-Archives

April 6, 2021 By

Alt-Archives: Three exhibits presented by Bri Murphy & Belle-Pilar Fleming

April 2 – 30, 2021

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Video Walkthrough

Statement from the Artists:

We are so excited to share the work in these exhibits with the Bunker Center for the Arts and its viewership. The generosity of the space provided has enabled us to present each of our respective solo work, as well as debut a brand new collaborative series. Each of these three exhibits employ the use of archival and historical subject matter as both inspiration and raw material. While conceptually related in this way, each is individual in its specificity and form. Please read on about each exhibit, and thank you for your attention.

-Bri and Belle-Pilar

Q̶u̶i̶x̶o̶t̶i̶c̶, Bri Murphy & Belle-Pilar Fleming

Charity Benefit Event

What if Shirley Chisholm had won her historic bid for president in 1972? In this collaborative body of work we interrogate the notion of electability in both historical and contemporaneous contexts by recasting the victor of the 1972 presidential race. Chisholm was the first black woman elected to Congress, and the first to seek a major party nomination for the presidency. Her campaign (and general ambition) was dubbed “quixotic,” in other words, too idealistic to succeed. In reviewing the landscape of contemporary American politics it is clear that the tendency to classify marginalized candidates in this way still stands in the way of true progress.

Thus, our endeavor to communicate with an alternate past exemplifies both a space of defiance and one of dreaming. These efforts are inspired by a host of historical material, including iconic imagery of Nixon, anonymous vintage dinnerware, industrial commemorative ceramics, handmade signature quilts, and actual ephemera of Chisholm’s campaign. With this work we invite viewers to question their own assumptions about electability and the standards by which one is dubbed worthy of leadership.

100% of profits from Quixotic will be split between Black Voters Matter and the Higher Heights Leadership Fund.

Unfounded, Bri Murphy

The work in this series challenges the glorification of the Founding Fathers as they are canonized in both historical contexts and contemporary applications. Washington, Jefferson, Madison…their biographies are dotted with mentions of their wives and loyal servants; their accomplishments archived in stone, oil, and ink. Within this cultural milieu, it is easy to forget that continued reverence for historical figures such as the Founding Fathers requires a forgetting of violence and/or a complete omission of other histories. The product of a collective forgetting is a new mythology, an American mythology that proliferates stories of white fathers and sons, and the visual iconography of our country is made in their image.

The busts in this room, Unfounded: Washington and Unfounded: Jefferson, are 3D printed versions of the famous sculptures by Jean-Antoine Houdon, appropriated from digital scans found online. The democratization of information on the internet is a conduit to the past, a path to collaborations across time and space. These new iterations embody their own instability – their low-resolution echoes the degeneration of the single, hegemonic American narrative that every day continues to unravel.

Candidly – the work in this exhibition is the result of a complicated relationship to my own American identity. I hope moments of reverence shine as brightly as the criticisms – for I am proud to live in a country where I am free to love and fight for what I believe in. My practice requires me to make space for the things that cause me despair, make me the most furious, and also challenge me to find hope and pride. Thank you for sharing it with me.

Something in the Hands, Belle-Pilar Fleming 

This project examines lineage and identity formation within the spaces of queer archives, particularly as it pertains to the lives of queer women. Archives manifest in a myriad of different forms, from the personal collection to the institutional body, often holding a record of both struggle and triumph. At a time when our country is reckoning with a legacy of injustice, historic collections can shed light on the traumas of the past, reveal the persistence of human agency, and offer suggestions for a more equitable future.

Much of this work draws on source materials found in the Ohio Lesbian Archive in Cincinnati, OH, as well as the Lesbian Herstory Archive in Brooklyn, NY, and additionally includes items of my own collecting (such as photographs, and personal testimonies). These materials straddle a line between the personal and the institutional, at once anonymous and yet deeply interpersonal. The physical space of the archive itself, as well as the subjects which its materials address, are equal points of interest in my work. Viewers are invited to consider the archive as an affective space as well as one where negotiations of visibility, personal experience, and political realities are interwoven.

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