Showing posts with label Jan Engoren. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jan Engoren. Show all posts

Saturday, December 28, 2013

SunSentinel: Manatee students turn trash into teasure at BBAD


Artist Tiki Tom Bazinet, with the garbage can, teaches children how to clean up the beach and use found objects as art during a recent field trip. (submitted photo, FPG / December 27, 2013)


Traffic was backed up along Industrial Avenue on a recent Saturday as students and parents from Manatee Elementary School west of Lake Worth filed in to the Boynton Beach Arts District after a morning beachcombing for trash to recycle into eco-art.
Jennifer Robertson, kindergarten through fifth grade Discovery Lab teacher at Manatee was inspired to bring her class to the arts district after reading an article about environmental artist "Tiki Tom" Bazinet's "Trash to Treasures" exhibit last month.
Bazinet uses found objects such as hubcaps, sea glass, shells and driftwood to create eco-conscious environmental sculptures.
Along with co-teacher Jhanique Green, Robertson contacted Rolando Chang Barrero of ActivistArtistA Gallery and together they created a hands-on learning program, recycling beach trash into works of art.
"Rolando is wonderful," Robertson said. "He went above and beyond to create an opportunity for these kids to learn about real-life applications of recycling, sustaining the environment and creating art at the same time."
"Bringing the kids to experience art first hand provides an opportunity and a different conversation than I could have in the classroom."
"It's a chance for them to be inspired, learn about art and see real working artists in their studios, such as jewelry artist Renee Kemp, graffiti artist, Joey Cruz (aka Seez), and Stephanie Lee, who uses vinyl records to create new handbags."
"Tiki Tom and other artists see the potential in things and enable the kids to see these objects with a new perspective," Robertson said. "Where we might throw things in the trash, Tom sees art."
Robertson and Green divided the students into groups and local artists including Michael Kupillas, Dianett Doyle and Jackee Swinson gave demonstrations and worked with the children.
Cruz guided students' hands on the spray gun while creating graffiti art and quickly created signed caricatures of the students.
Bazinet used a glue gun to assist the students apply their found objects to a wooden manatee sculpture he created.
Combs, bottle caps, coral and almond seeds from the rain forest adorned the sculpture.
Lee, an upcycle artist, was explaining what vinyl records were and encouraging the students to be creative.
"Just use your imagination and you can make anything," she said.
Debbie Elliot, a teacher at Palm Springs Middle School accompanied her two children, Danielle, 9 and Jessica, 14, and Krista Martinelli, a writer, was there with her two children, Stella, 8, and Paul, 6.
"This is a great hands-on experience for the kids," Martinelli said. "And the whole arts district is very cool."
Student Danielle Elliot was excited to work with "Tiki Tom" in decorating the manatee and Stella Martinelli, who found turtle eggs on the beach and wants to be a filmmaker, said her favorite part was drawing Tiki Tom's sunbursts, made from recycled hubcaps, buttons and toothbrushes, in her notebook.
All the students made notebooks in which to draw and write down their inspirations.
Barrero, who put his heart and soul into his role as host said, "I was impressed by the level of participation from both parents and students. It was a joy watching the kids' excitement on the beach and in the tours of the artists' studios."
"Never before has the art district been so buzzing with the laughter and joy that only children can bring," he said.
The Boynton Beach Arts District is at 422 W. Industrial Ave. Call 786-521-1199 or emailRolandoBarrero@Mac.com.
Upcoming exhibits and events include: Sensibilities: The Photography of Ali Miranda and Cheryl Maeder and the Black and White Party at Saturday. The party is free and open to everyone.
The ArtPalmBeach kick-off celebration will be at BBAD from 6 p.m. to 1 a.m. Jan. 24. To register for the bus tour from the Palm Beach Convention Center, visit artalfrescoboyntonbeach or eventbrite.com/e/art-al-fresco-boynton-beach-arts-district-tickets-9459671131.

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Sun Sentinel on ActivistArtistA's (Un)Common Traces Exhibition



To Ecuador and back: 

Artists to unveil new vision

Thank you Jan Engoren, Sun Sentinel!


From left, Andres Ramirez, Sofia Bastidas, artistan Herlinda Gonzales, Eddison Peñfiel and Nathalie Alfonso during their trip to Ecuador. Their exhibition, (Un)Common: Traces, will be unveiled at an opening Friday at Rolando Chang Barrero's ActivistArtistA Gallery, at the Boynton Beach Arts District. (submitted photo, FPG / October 1, 2013)

October 2, 2013

What to do when you graduate college with a degree in art or art history? Well, if you're students Nathalie Alfonso, Sofia Bastidas, Andres Ramirez and Edison Peñafiel, you will create a Kickstarter campaign to raise funds to sojourn to La Factoria, an established art residency in Vilcabamba, Ecuador.
Once there, you will set out to confront undiscovered places, uncontrolled emotions, unseeing reactions and use these experiences to translate them into a new artistic vision.

That vision, (Un)Common: Traces, will be unveiled at an opening Friday at Rolando Chang Barrero's ActivistArtistA Gallery, at the Boynton Beach Arts District.

Barrero was an early supporter of the project, having a fundraiser and exhibition titled, "Paper Plane," to raise money for their trip and their Kickstarter campaign yielded $4,500 for their travels to Ecuador.
"Their works highlight the impact of four artists who journeyed toward their past; akin more to time travelers tracing their ancestral culture heritage, than to the tourist/voyeur documenting the spectacle of a different culture," he said.

Bastidas said, "As an artist, art historian and curator I find fascinating the interrelation one can develop with art while traveling, but also establishing a home, a base where all this knowledge can pass on."
With that philosophy in mind, she created a gallery space in her home called Dwelling Projects. It's a space to show the work of visual artists outside the gallery venue and focus on new and emerging artists.
"We want to dwell in new spaces, develop and create awareness in the visual arts as well as expose ourselves to new experiences," Bastidas said.
In Ecuador the four students learned to work with local artisans using local materials such as tagua seeds, which come from the Ecuadorean ivory palm and are used to make jewelry and paja toquilla, the native straw palm that is used to weave traditional Panama hats, most of which are made in Ecuador.
Ramirez, 22, calls himself a photographer, but doesn't limit himself to portraits or landscapes. Rather, he incorporates photography into video and large-scale installations.
"Photography is my medium but I combine all the tools I can into my projects," he said.
He found it inspiring to meet the local campesinos and, despite being depicted as poor, he said, "They may not have material items, but they are rich in their cultural heritage. I was so happy to be with them."
"We were exposed to their art – what we might call handicrafts – but art is a subjective term. They make beautiful bracelets and keychains with techniques that have been handed down through the generations," Ramirez said.
"I want to show that one artist can make a difference and inspire me," he wrote on his Kickstarter page, "but 10 strong, ambitious and inspiring and open artists can change a community. It is something that we need in South Florida."
"Going to Ecuador to create art and bring it back here to present to galleries as exhibitions, critiques, dialogues and workshops is only the beginning," Ramirez said.
The Dwelling Projects in (Un) Common:Traces exhibition continues through Oct. 25 with an opening reception set for 7 p.m. Friday at the ActivistArtistA Gallery, 422 W. Industrial Ave. Call 786-521-1199 or email ActivistArtistA@Gmail.com.

BBAD celebrates its second anniversary with a 
Golden Anniversary Party Weekend Oct. 11 to 13 
with a full lineup of music, art and dance.