KCC students to showcase video art May 9 at Brownstone

KCC art students hang paintings during a recent workshop.

KCC art students hang paintings during a recent workshop.

Students in the Introduction to Video Art class at Kellogg Community College will showcase their final projects from 5 to 7 p.m. May 9 at Brownstone Coffee House, 18½ W. Michigan Ave., in Battle Creek.

The showcase, which will include documentary, creative and abstract video productions, is a culmination of a semester’s worth of work by students from various backgrounds and skill levels. In the class, students have explored the technical aspects and creativity involved in making and editing video art. For purposes of the May 9 showcase, students were encouraged to be as experimental or traditional as they desired.

For more information, contact class instructor Heather Stratton at heather@heatherstratton.com.

For more news about Kellogg Community College, view our latest press releases online at www.kellogg.edu/daily/category/press-releases.

KCC announces winners of Student Art Show awards

Joan Wetherill won the Best of Show Award for this untitled inkjet print, a digital photograph.

Joan Wetherill won the Best of Show Award for this untitled inkjet print, a digital photograph.

More than two dozen student artists were recognized with awards during a ceremony April 21 honoring the top participants in  Kellogg Community College’s Student Art Show.

Ninety-two student artists entered 151 works of art in the annual show, which also serves as a competition for Kimiko Petersen Fine Art Awards totaling $1,000, in addition to scholarships and other awards. Petersen Awards included Best of Media and Honorable Mention awards spread across 10 media categories in addition to a single Best of Show Award and a single Instructor Recognition Award.

The award-winning artists and their entries, as judged by local artist and retired art instructor Craig Bishop, are as follows:

The Best of Show Award went to Joan Wetherill for an untitled pigmented inkjet print (a digital photograph) and the Instructor Recognition Award went to Elizabeth Stafford for “Untitled #3,” also a pigmented inkjet print (digital photograph).

Best of Media awards went to Nathan Vaccaro (ceramics), Thomas Graham (drawing), Dia Massey (2D mixed media), Paul Edwards (sculpture and 3D mixed media), Taylor McCoy (black and white photography), Pam Sikora (digital media), Elizabeth Cook (printmaking/alternative photography print processes) and Stephen Richmond (animation/video). No Best of Media awards were given for the painting or graphic design categories.

Honorable Mention awards went to Sheila Virgil (ceramics); Morgan Paul and Kathy Seifert (drawing); Kelly McNees and Megan Ward (2D mixed media); Joseph McIntosh (sculpture and 3D mixed media); Paul Edwards (black and white photography); Renee Elkins, Linda Helton and James Schoder (digital media); Kenzi Rombaugh (printmaking/alternative photography print processes); Brittany Kellogg (graphic design); and Matthew Dillinger (animation/video). No Honorable Mention awards were given for the painting category.

Additionally, Elizabeth Cook was awarded the $1,000 Bryan R. Thomas Memorial Scholarship, Paul Edwards was awarded the $1,000 Battle Creek Society of Artists Scholarship and Taylor Yost was awarded the $250 Graphic Design Department Scholarship. The scholarship recipients were selected by committees comprised of KCC faculty and staff.

Other awards included the Art League Award of Excellence, awarded to Taylor Yost; the Arts and Communication Outstanding Achievement in Arts Award, awarded to Chelsea Staines; and the Binda Excellence in Art Award, awarded to Craig Noaeill. Mosaic Entry Recognition Awards – recognizing outstanding art submitted to the Mosaic, KCC’s literary journal – were awarded to Tabatha McLendon and Dave Zender.

KCC’s Student Art Show will remain on display free and open to the public through May 1 in the Eleanor R. & Robert A. DeVries Gallery in the college’s Davidson Visual and Performing Arts Center, located on campus at 450 North Ave. in Battle Creek. Gallery hours are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.

For more news about Kellogg Community College, view our latest press releases online at www.kellogg.edu/daily/category/press-releases.

Entries for KCC’s annual Student Art Show due April 10

Previous Student Art Show entries, clockwise from the left, Emily Cameron’s “Human Nature,” an entry from Brian Noell, and Kathryn Barnes’ “Nested Eggs.”

Previous Student Art Show entries, clockwise from the left, Emily Cameron’s “Human Nature,” an entry from Brian Noell, and Kathryn Barnes’ “Nested Eggs.”

Kellogg Community College is seeking entries from student artists who would like to see their work displayed as part of the college’s annual Student Art Show.

All current academic year KCC students are eligible to submit up to five entries of works produced between May 2012 and April 2013 for display in the show, and entries must be submitted at the office of the Davidson Center between 8 a.m. Monday, April 8, and 5 p.m. Wednesday, April 10.

The annual student exhibition showcases the works of current visual arts students and includes 10 media categories including ceramics, drawing, painting, 2D mixed media, sculpture and 3D mixed media, black and white photography, digital media, printmaking/alternative photography print processes, graphic design and animation/video.

Works exhibited will be judged by local artist and retired art instructor Craig Bishop and awards totaling $1,000 will be given to winners announced during an Awards Reception from 1 to 3 p.m. April 21 at the Davidson Center Auditorium. Honors in each category will include Best of Media and Honorable Mention awards in addition to a single Best of Show award and a single Instructor Recognition Award, as well as several Art League awards and door prizes.

Bishop said when judging works of art he needs to feel “a sense of struggle both with the medium and the concept.”

“I am looking for work where the idea is not always ‘in your face,’ but that has a little mystery,” Bishop said. “I am looking for work that questions my sense of what I thought I knew.”

The art will be displayed in the Eleanor R. & Robert A. DeVries Gallery in the college’s Davidson Visual and Performing Arts Center, 450 North Ave., Battle Creek, from Monday, April 15, through Wednesday, May 1. The exhibit will be free and open to the public for viewing during gallery hours, which are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.

For more information about the annual Student Art Show, contact Photography and Multimedia Program Coordinator and Gallery Director Ryan Flathau at 269-965-3931 ext. 2559 or email him at flathaur@kellogg.edu. For more information about the Arts and Communication Department at Kellogg Community College, visit www.kellogg.edu/artscomm.

For more news about Kellogg Community College, view our latest press releases online at www.kellogg.edu/daily/category/press-releases.

KCC Choral Union to present ‘I, Too, Sing America’ April 14

The Kellogg Community College Choral Union will present their annual "Singing in the Spring" concert April 14.

The Kellogg Community College Choral Union will present their annual spring concert April 14.

The Kellogg Community College Choral Union will present history, poetry, art and a lot of music during their annual “Singing in the Spring” choral concert this month.

The event – titled “I, Too, Sing America: A celebration of American music through song, poetry and jazz!” – will begin at 2:45 p.m. Sunday, April 14, at First Presbyterian Church, 111 Capital Ave. NE, Battle Creek.

Dr. Gerald Blanchard, professor of vocal music at KCC and conductor of the Choral Union, said the event is a major collaborative project that includes:

  • A welcome address delivered by Kellogg Community College President Dr. Dennis Bona
  • A pre-concert lecture on the history of American music and culture, delivered by KCC history professor Dr. Ray DeBruler
  • Poetry read by KCC English professor Dr. Elizabeth Kerlikowske
  • KCC student art exhibitions coordinated by KCC art professors Ryan Flathau and Pete Williams
  • A special appearance by the KCC Jazz Band under the direction of Tom Lockwood
  • A dessert reception following the concert, with food provided by Barista Blues Cafe

Also participating will be KCC faculty artists including Eric Campbell (trumpet), Kathy Cary (organ), Paula Krontz-Harris (piano) and Dr. Mark Wells (tenor). Retired KCC Instrumental Music Director Ed Zentera will accompany the choir in a special presentation of “The Battle Hymn of the Republic.”

“The sanctuary at First Presbyterian Church will ring out with the varied sounds of American music,” Blanchard said, “ranging from patriotic and classical to jazz and everything in between.”

The Choral Union is made up of performers from KCC’s three residential choirs, including the Kellogg Singers, the Branch County Community Chorus and the Concentus Vocal Ensemble, which together perform a major concert each year in the fall and in the spring.

For more information about vocal/choral events including Kellogg Community College singers, visit www.kellogg.edu/performart/vocal/events.html.

For more news about Kellogg Community College, view our latest press releases online at www.kellogg.edu/daily/category/press-releases.

Poet Elizabeth Kerlikowske discusses writing love poems

Elizabeth Kerlikowske

Elizabeth Kerlikowske

Kellogg Community College English professor and poet Elizabeth Kerlikowske participated in a live chat on MLive.com this afternoon on the subject of writing love poems, an appropriate topic given that Valentine’s Day is Thursday.

Poets Kathleen McGookey and Dianne Seuss also participated in the live chat, and you can read all of the questions they were posed and their responses in the comments section of the MLive post online at http://bit.ly/VSAto1.

Some highlights from Kerlikowske’s comments:

“I write a poem each year for my wedding anniversary. This year it’s about a potato. Two years ago it was about how weird trimmed poodles look. There’s lots of different ways to talk about love.”

“Sometimes an oblique approach is best. If you’re in that spot between like and love, what do you do? You don’t want to ‘declare’ but you do want to ‘insinuate.’ Those are tricky because you end up ice-skating around the fishing hole. That situation requires restraint and the ability to read the poem from your point of view as well as the intended’s. You don’t want to get in too deep.”

“Do not feel a poem has to rhyme. Writing with the King of Rhyme forces people to say things they don’t really mean. It’s important to be honest and say what you feel with your heart and not artificially red/blue/sweet/you.”

The bottom line for those interested in writing their sweetheart a love poem this Valentine’s Day: “Be yourself and say what you feel in the language you actually use.”

To view all of Kerlikowske’s comments from the chat on MLive click through the link above. To view only Kerlikowske’s comments, click here.

KCC announces winners of 2013 Diversity Art Contest

Pictured in the attached photo, from left to right in the front row, are Linda Holderbaum, Brandi Smith, Joel Newsome and Taylor McCoy; and from left to right in the back row are pictured Brian Noell and Dia Massey.

Pictured from left to right in the front row are Linda Holderbaum, Brandi Smith, Joel Newsome and Taylor McCoy; and from left to right in the back row are pictured Brian Noell and Dia Massey.

Kellogg Community College’s 2013 Diversity Art Contest drew 51 entries from students, employees and community members, including 40 pieces of visual art, eight written entries and three submissions of audio or video art.

This year marked the third consecutive year of the competition, previously known as the Multicultural Medley Art Contest. The goal of the event is to showcase the theme of diversity.

“One of the things we like about this contest is seeing how the students respond to the prompt every year,” said Professor Elizabeth Kerlikowske, one of the contest organizers. “The entries are always surprising and varied and give the judges something to chew on.”

The contest features separately judged categories for KCC students and community members, with KCC employees included in the latter. Each category included a $400 grand prize winner and three $100 honorable mention award winners.

This year’s Diversity Art Contest winners, by category, are:

KCC STUDENT CATEGORY

  • Brian Noell, “The Medicine Man” (grand prize winner; visual art)
  • Taylor McCoy, “Diversity Despite Chaos” (visual art)
  • Dia Massey, “Fasteners” (visual art)
  • Brandi Smith, “Birds of a Feather” (visual art)

COMMUNITY CATEGORY

  • Joel Newsome, “Passing” (grand prize winner; essay)
  • Linda Holderbaum, “Window to the World” (visual art)
  • Nyle Rosenbaum, “Hats” (visual art)
  • Roland Sunkins, “One Heart, One Soul” (music/song on CD)

Artwork entered in the contest was displayed in the Eleanor R. & Robert A. DeVries Gallery in the Davidson Visual and Performing Arts Center on KCC’s North Avenue campus through Monday, Feb. 4. Contest winners were recognized during a public awards ceremony that afternoon in the gallery.

For more news about Kellogg Community College, view our latest press releases online at www.kellogg.edu/daily/category/press-releases.

KCC’s Faculty Art Exhibit to be held Feb. 11 through March 22

Above is a pigmented inkjet print by KCC photography instructor Maureen A. Mleczewski titled "Fish with Reflection."

“Fish with Reflection,” a pigmented inkjet print by KCC photography instructor Maureen A. Mleczewski.

Kellogg Community College will display art created by the college’s Arts and Communication faculty members as part of the KCC Faculty Biennial Art Exhibition Feb. 11 through March 22.

The exhibit will be free and open to the public for viewing and will be located in the Eleanor R. & Robert A. DeVries Gallery in the Davidson Visual and Performing Arts Center on KCC’s North Avenue campus. An opening reception for the exhibit will be held at the gallery from 4 to 6 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 14.

KCC art professor and DeVries Gallery coordinator Ryan Flathau said he expects the exhibit to showcase the works of approximately 10 artists representing multiple visual arts disciplines, which in the past have included painting, drawing, printmaking, sculpture, ceramics, photography, mixed-media, animation, textile and craft arts.

“The exhibition showcases the talents of Kellogg Community College faculty in an effort to emphasize for students and the community that these instructors are practicing artists as well as educators,” Flathau said.

The faculty exhibit will immediately follow an exhibit of student and community works entered in KCC’s third annual Diversity Art Contest, which will be displayed in the gallery through the contest awards ceremony beginning at noon Monday, Feb. 4.

For more information about the Faculty Art Exhibition, contact KCC art professor Ryan Flathau at 269-965-3931 ext. 2559 or at flathaur@kellogg.edu. Gallery hours are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mondays through Fridays.

For more news about Kellogg Community College, view our latest press releases online at www.kellogg.edu/daily/category/press-releases.

Fall 2012 edition of Mosaic is out now, free for students

The fall 2012 edition of KCC’s Mosaic consists of four mini booklets falling topically into seasons.

The fall 2012 edition of Kellogg Community College’s Mosaic Student Art and Literary Magazine was release yesterday during a reading in the C Classroom Building on KCC’s North Avenue campus.

KCC instructor Elizabeth Kerlikowske, who advises the Mosaic staff, said the current edition includes mostly poetry from about 20 writers. This fall’s edition is presented in a nontraditional format featuring four “mini Mosaics” that Kerlikowske said fall topically into seasons: “Frost,” “Rain,” “Sun” and “Wind.”

The individual booklets don’t have to be read in any particular order to get the full experience from the reading.

“I would say pick your favorite weather and go with it,” Kerlikowske said. “They are self-contained units.”

If you missed the reading Wednesday and would like your own free copies of the Mosaic magazines, they can be picked up in the English Department on the fourth floor of the C Classroom Building and will soon be available in the library, as well.

If you’d like to submit work for the spring 2013 edition of Mosaic, submissions will be accepted by the Arts and Communications Department in the Davidson Visual and Performing Arts Center through March 1, 2013.

For more information about Kellogg Community College’s Mosaic Student Art and Literary Magazine, visit www.kellogg.edu/artscomm/mosaic.

Artist Joanna Learner reflects on social issues in exhibit at KCC

Joanna Learner

There are fires burning in the newspaper read by the woman featured in Joanna Learner’s acrylic painting “The World Comes Home,” and there are flames visible on the screen of the television placed across the canvas.

These are the ways most Americans view war – removed by miles and protected by newsprint and satellite images sent from afar. But in Learner’s image, the flames also transcend these boundaries and are featured on a larger scale, viewed center stage through each pane of glass in the windows framing the clean, yellow room.

Inside the sparsely furnished space – white curtains drawn, empty chairs standing silently still while the world burns outside – is a globe, which is also on fire. Outside the walls, the domestic scene is flanked by images of soldiers.

Speaking of peace

The painting is one of a series Learner created in the early stages of the war in Iraq in the years following 9/11.

“I really felt the horror of that war in Iraq,” Learner said during a recent interview in the gallery. “I was deeply opposed to it, and I could just imagine the tragedy that was going to unfold, which has unfolded.”

A self-described naturalist who has used her art to comment on political and environmental issues since at least the 1960s, Learner has included “The World Comes Home” among the 30 or so pieces of art that make up her exhibit, “Reflections,” which is showing through Dec. 14 in the Eleanor R. & Robert A. DeVries Gallery in Kellogg Community College’s Davidson Visual and Performing Arts Center, 450 North Ave., Battle Creek.

There will be a closing reception with the artist from 4 to 6 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 6, at the gallery, which is free and open to the public.

Learner is no stranger to the awareness of war and its effects, or to using her art as a way to express her opinions on the subject; both have been a kind of lifelong attribute. Learner gestured to another acrylic painting in the exhibit, titled “Ending the Game of War,” which she said compares war to a game.

The painting is of a checkerboard hovering over a landscape; the game pieces are adorned with missiles. Below, a dove flies, casting a large shadow on the ground below. Pools of water are outlined in red, hinting perhaps at bloodshed.

Learner painted this piece in 1967 in response to what she feels was an unjust war in Vietnam.

“If you read the paper, and I read an enormous amount, you really are just depressed by the amount of violence that’s going on constantly in this world,” she said. “I have throughout my life spoken of peace.”

Detail from Learner’s “The World Comes Home.”

The natural world

Environmental issues also feature heavily in Learner’s “Reflections” exhibit, and she says these concerns – pollution, global warming, the practice of fracking to pursue natural gas – are even more critical to address because many people aren’t paying attention to them.

The exhibit includes a series of paintings commenting on such environmental issues. In one pair, “Fire – Air – Water – Earth I” and “Fire – Air – Water – Earth II,” these title elements are represented as an ideal in the first, which is subtitled “The Ancient Physical Universe,” and are juxtaposed with what Learner views as humanity’s exploitation of such resources in the second, which is subtitled “Destruction of the Natural World” and features imagery such as natural gas drilling sites and factory smokestacks spewing pollutants into the atmosphere.

Another painting features Mother Nature as a giant “Colossus” overtaking the landscape, while yet another features a flooded New York City, complete with a Statue of Liberty waist-deep in an ocean dotted with glaciers.

Learner said she views these pieces, as well as several landscape paintings free of political commentary – images of wetlands, a beaver pond, a stunning view of Lake Superior – as a way to call attention to the treasures we have in the natural world.

“I love to kayak and to hike, and nature is very important to me,” Learner said. “So these are in protection of what I love.”

Learner, who lives with her husband Bob on the Kalamazoo River, has spent much of her life surrounded by nature. The pair often spend time at her family’s log cabin based on 60 mountainside acres in Colorado, and recently returned from a trip to Canada, where she said she could be perfectly content settling down in the wilderness.

“I could just totally withdraw from all these other things and live happily,” she said, “but I feel that as human beings we have sort of a responsibility to speak out and kind of build awareness to the things that are going on.”

Detail from Learner’s “Global Warming — Play On.”

Awareness through art

In addition to her paintings, Learner’s exhibit also includes several photographs and pieces of ceramic art. A former art teacher with Battle Creek Public Schools, she’s a mother of two and has four granddaughters ranging in age from 11 to 23.

She said she and her three brothers were well aware of social and environmental issues growing up, and she’s trying to encourages her grandchildren to express their own ideas, positive as well as negative, through art.

It seems Learner herself hasn’t slowed much over the years. While she said her exhibit spans art created from when she was in her 30s to her 70s, many of the pieces are dated to this year. She’s been working full-time in her studio, and continues to enjoy it.

“Life is very different from when I started out,” she said. “I’m really worried that our society needs to stand up and become aware of what’s going on.”

“Reflections,” featuring art by Battle Creek artist Joanna Learner, will be on display through Dec. 14 in the Eleanor R. & Robert A. DeVries Gallery in Kellogg Community College’s Davidson Visual and Performing Arts Center, 450 North Ave., Battle Creek. Gallery hours are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mondays through Fridays.

For more information about the “Reflections” exhibit, contact Kellogg Community College art professor Ryan Flathau at 269-965-3931 ext. 2559 or at flathaur@kellogg.edu.

KCC invites artists to enter annual Diversity Art Contest

Student Justin Latimer’s painting “Interconnectivity” won the student award in a previous contest.

Kellogg Community College invites students and community members to enter the college’s third annual Diversity Art Contest, a thought-provoking collection showcasing diversity in all of its forms.

The contest, with separately judged categories for students and community members, will accept entries until 4 p.m. Jan. 25. Entries will be displayed on campus in the Davidson Gallery and winners will be announced during an awards ceremony Feb. 4. Each category will have a $400 grand prize and three $100 honorable mention awards; one of the winning images also will adorn next year’s contest T-shirt.

“The contest gives participants the opportunity to examine their beliefs and, through art, share those beliefs with others,” said Professor Elizabeth Kerlikowske, one of the contest organizers.

Past winning entries include a photograph, a book of poems and prints, a video production and a painting.

To enter, complete the Diversity Art Contest entry form at kellogg.edu/pdf/ArtContestEntryForm.pdf. Each piece, whether visual art, music, dance or written word, must be accompanied by a short statement explaining how it reflects or presents diversity.

Submission guidelines:

  • Physical art pieces smaller than 2 feet by 2 feet may be dropped off in the Academic Advising Office inside the Ohm Information Technology Center, Room 109, between Jan. 14 and Jan. 25.
  • Larger physical work, such as posters and sculptures, can be entered by email (diversity@kellogg.edu) if accompanied by a high-resolution photo of the work.
  • Written work and other submissions may be emailed to diversity@kellogg.edu.
  • Visual art, including multimedia and digital graphics, may be submitted by email or compact disc.

Questions about the contest and entry process can be directed to diversity@kellogg.edu.