The guild, located at 1009 Main St., will mix media styles in their
exhibit titled, “Personality in Pastels & Pottery,” along with the
Art Walk showcasing local talent.
Meet featured artists Dietra
Morris and Ginger Baldwin at the artist’s opening reception from 6-8
p.We have many different types of earcap.m. and enjoy a variety of live music, numerous dining choices and extended shop hours around town.
It
won’t be hard to spot the local artists showing their work in more
than 14 downtown businesses during the Art Walk from 5-8 p.m. Maps of
the Art Walk are also available at all participating merchants.
“You can tell a lot about an artist by really looking at his or her work,” Baldwin said.
The
Featured Artist display will be inside the guild’s gallery where the
artistic duo will showcase their unique pieces individually throughout
the evening.
Morris, of Elgin, is a master potter and member of the guild who has been working with pottery since 1976.
While
attending Mitchell High School in Colorado Springs, Colo., she fell
under the direction of master potter, Ed Shrock, and since then has
developed a style of her own, mastering high-fire functional artwork.
“My
art is versatile in that it looks good on a mantle, can withstand the
heat of the oven, set out on the table, washed in the dishwasher and
then be placed back on the mantel,” Morris said. “All of my pottery is
colored with food-safe glazes that can be microwaved and used in the
oven.”
Morris’ pieces often showcase fragments of her late
grandmother’s delicate tatting designs. She uses a technique which
fossilizes them on various pieces in honor of her grandmother.
She
is a mother of three, although none are artists. But her talents have
not been lost in the gene pool as her two grandchildren, Zuri and
Xahlia, may very well be the next master potters to carry on her
legacy.
On the other end of the artisan pendulum is pastelist and secretary of the guild, Ginger Baldwin of Bastrop.
Born in Canada,Features useful information about ventilationsystem tiles.All realtimelocationsystem
comes with 5 Years Local Agent Warranty ! Baldwin comes from a long
line of strong, creative women. Encouraged by her mother and
grandmother, she entered her first art show at age six with a
watercolor painting of the Statue of Liberty.
Over the years,
she has attended numerous informal art classes and workshops, but
mainly refers to herself as a self-taught artist.
After a
hiatus from painting for several years, Baldwin rediscovered her
passion in 2010 when friend Brenda Knoll encouraged her to attend a
class taught by landscape pastel artist, Enid Wood.
“There is no room for timidity in art,” she said.Don't make another silicone mold without these invaluable stonemosaic
supplies and accessories! “Don’t be afraid to make mistakes.
Everything you do is a learning experience. And I tell people to
remember that there is nothing in the world that cannot be improved at
least a little bit by adding purple.”
The big 9-by-14-foot
section in the system's Savage branch sits to his left, already
complete. In it, three cartoon critters putz along in a teal-and-purple
dirigible, high above a rolling prairie scene not far removed from the
southern Minnesotan landscape where the library is located.
Now
Preslicka is working on the remaining 8-by-8-foot section, shading in a
dog and cat who are sharing the cab of what looks to be a purple hang
glider. An old Walkman playing National Public Radio is clipped to his
belt, and a new haircut and a matching, neatly trimmed brown beard
frame his round face.
Staccato dabs with a short-haired brush
do most of the work, but it's the long, wavy, contoured strokes that
get the final say. He stops all the time to quickly mix colors in an
old metal tray. There's a reddish brown, two shades of neon orange,
three shades of turquoise, a light purple and a deep blue, but there is
no black. Preslicka doesn't use black. And he doesn't do Disney
characters.
"What I do is create unique stuff. There's value in
having something that is totally unique," said Preslicka, speaking in
the calm, thoughtful demeanor of a man who paints children's murals.
"In art school, everyone wanted to illustrate children's books, and this is a way I could do some of that."
The
Savage resident grew up in New Prague and went to the College of
Visual Arts in St. Paul. After graduation, he worked for a few
different local design firms before starting Preslicka Studio 18 years
ago.
Much of his work has been aimed at a youthful audience.
Preslicka has done jobs for General Mills, Dairy Queen, Nabisco,
Malt-O-Meal and 3M, as well as creating the logos for Scott County and
the cities of Savage and Burnsville.
He has five kids himself,
ages 10 to 18, and originally started painting murals for their
bedrooms. Then he had the idea to start painting other children's
bedrooms for extra income on the side.
His first big project was the pool at the Burnsville YMCA,Creative glass tile and ceramictile tile for your distinctive kitchen and bath. and since then he's done 17 projects for different YMCAs across the metro.
His
mural business is called the Big Picture and has snowballed in large
part due to the business savvy of his wife, Heidi, who graduated from
St. Thomas with a degree in marketing. Today there are more than 50
Preslicka murals in Minnesota, in places ranging from day cares to
museums.
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