Art and the Automobile

Art and the Automobile

June 5 through June 29, 2013

Celebrating the 40th anniversary of the release of American Graffiti, the movie, the Modesto Art Museum and the Building Imagination Center are hosting Art and the Automobile. This multi-part exhibition explores cultural and artistic responses to the automobile, which has transformed life in the 20th century more significantly than any other single factor.  Inspired by the ubiquitous presence of the car, the exhibit focus upon several different aspects of cars in society, including licenses plates from all 50 states, car detail photography, and photography of cars taken between 1960 – 1970.

New digs for Building Imagination Center

New digs for Building Imagination Center

By Modesto Bee Staff Reports. July 17, 2013

The Building Imagination Center is downsizing to a smaller location in downtown Modesto but still will be heavily involved in community activities.

The center, which has hosted video production classes and art exhibitions and screened original documentaries at 1009 J St. since September, is relocating to the much smaller Gallery 909, the California State University, Stanislaus, art gallery at 909 10th St.

The center had to change locations because its $170,000 grant with ArtPlace is ending, said the center’s director, Jessica Gomula-Kruzic. ArtPlace is a collaboration of several foundations, large banks and the National Endowment for the Arts.

The center has a long slate of activities planned this year, including:

• Hosting monthly meetings of the new Filmmaker Social Club, open to professionals and enthusiasts, beginning in August. Check www.buildingimagination.com for the location and date.

• Documenting the Modesto International Architecture Festival, scheduled Sept. 14-22, by creating short films about festival events.

• Showing original films from local and other filmmakers at Gallery 909 and becoming the resident moviemakers at the State Theatre. The center is presenting its first film festival, the Imagination Fest, there Dec. 5.

• Pursuing long-term “creative placemaking” activities with the city of Modesto. A term coined by the National Endowment for the Arts, “creative placemaking” means government and private groups working together to shape the character of a town around arts and cultural activities. Some of the activities the center already has coordinated include creating mini-parks on 10th street and organizing a “chalk walk of art.”

• Extending the center’s activities into Turlock. A Turlock branch location is expected to be announced by the end of this month.

Read more here

Leather, Linen, and Lace

 

Leather, Linen, and Lace

Lace_Its_Origin_and_History_Real_ArabianLeather, Linen, and Lace explores the beauty and craft of fabric, in this case leather, linen, and all the manifestations of lace including needle, bobbin, tatting, crochet, and pulled thread in cotton, silk, linen, and synthetics. Pieces range from the early 19th to early 21st century. Most amazing is a pair of Battenberg lace gloves from the mid 1800s. At the center, at 6:30 and 7:30 pm during the Third Thursday Art Walk, April 18th, Cathy Jennison gave a short talk on the history and culture of lace.

ArtPlace interviews the Building Imagination Center about their most rewarding event

ArtPlace interviews the Building Imagination Center about their most rewarding event

The Building Imagination Center is a visual arts and media hub in downtown Modesto. Working with the Modesto Art Museum, the Center provides the community with a visual arts gallery for world class photography, sculpture, paintings, and contemporary art mediums, such as video, animations, and interactive content.

Through its Resident Filmmaker Program, the Center brings regional documentary video artists to Modesto to actively engage the community with hands-on video creation, and to provide real world experience for California State University Stanislaus film students. It is the Center’s mission to create an environment where artists can work, thrive, and feel supported by the community, and then to catalyze this growth and leverage it to benefit the local community by creating a vibrant activation of the downtown art scene.

ArtPlace spoke with Jessica Gomula-Kruzic, Director for the Building Imagination Center.

What has been your best and most rewarding event during the course of your ArtPlace grant?

One of the best events the Center has hosted has been our exhibit Modesto the Next 100 Years. This exhibit was organized by our partner, the Modesto Art Museum, and our city planning office. We literally displayed the city’s long range city growth projections and land use maps for Modesto. The city is currently in the process of planning for a new downtown rail station, which will fundamentally change the accessibility and quality of life for the residents. This exhibit gave many people who had not been a part of the public forums a chance to see the scenarios being considered and to discuss them with their peers.

The exhibit was coordinated with a public forum on the redevelopment of downtown, which was hosted by the city. This forum gave city officials an opportunity to get feedback from many of the key constituents of downtown, such as business owners, property owners, community groups, and the public at large. Using digital clickers, attendees were able to vote on a variety of issues and see the results immediately. This forum is being followed up by the new city development committees, as well as a second public forum during the April Art Walk which will include live music, free food, etc.
This event was a unique application of our mission to create a more vibrant downtown by going outside of the art community to find visual infographics that will have a direct impact on the city’s future.

What did you learn from this event?

This event once again reinforced our appreciation of the ways outside partnerships can strengthen and add depth to our creative placemaking efforts. The exhibits and forums brought an entirely new audience into the Center, and facilitated many wonderful discussions about the future of the city. Once people had the opportunity to see the planning behind the city’s growth, they felt a new sense of ownership towards the city. Their excitement about the city’s future was palpable during the forums, with many of the attendants ready to move past the discussion phase and eager to get started making concrete changes. Changes such as the parklets that the Center helped to create across the street from us, changes like the new wall murals that local business owners have started commissioning on their buildings, or communal projects such as the Chalk Art Walk the center is hosting April 27.

– See more at: http://www.artplaceamerica.org/articles/building-imagination-in-californias-central-valley-7/#sthash.M0MBfZHG.dpuf

ArtPlace spoke with the Building Imagination Center, about advice for new grantees

ArtPlace spoke with the Building Imagination Center, about advice for new grantees

The Building Imagination Center is a visual arts and media hub in downtown Modesto. Working with the Modesto Art Museum, the Center provides the community with a visual arts gallery for world class photography, sculpture, paintings, and contemporary art mediums, such as video, animations, and interactive content.

Through its Resident Filmmaker Program, the Center brings regional documentary video artists to Modesto to actively engage the community with hands-on video creation, and to provide real world experience for California State University Stanislaus film students. It is the Center’s mission to create an environment where artists can work, thrive, and feel supported by the community, and then to catalyze this growth and leverage it to benefit the local community by creating a vibrant activation of the downtown art scene.

ArtPlace spoke with Jessica Gomula-Kruzic, Director for the Building Imagination Center.

ARTPLACE: Take a moment to think over the past year. What advice would you give to the new grantees? How would you encourage new grantees to leverage their ArtPlace grants for maximum effect?

GOMULA-KRUZIC: One of the suggestions I would give to new grantees is to be open to the visions that others can bring to your project. In most cases, they are coming to you because they share a mutual interest or have a common idea that they would like to expand upon, and with a bit of collaborative thinking, their participation can open new doors for you, as it did for us.

I would also recommend putting in the time and effort for a strong public relations campaign at the very beginning of your project, so that the community knows in advance all of the great ideas you have planned for the upcoming year. Write press releases for these events early on, and create a social media site with new content posted on a regular basis. And take lots and lots of pictures and share them widely with the community-at-large.

Most importantly, enjoy the excitement and anticipation of the year before you! You have a precious opportunity that has only been granted to a select few, to take your project to the next plateau. Enjoy every step of your journey.

Postscript: The Building Imagination Center will be opening a new Center in Turlock, CA, and our Modesto branch will become a resident of Modesto’s historic State Theater – an opportunity that would have never happened without the support from ArtPlace. And we are very excited that our partner, the Modesto Art Museum, is among the new round of grantees. They have a plethora of community art events and awareness planned for the coming year, and we plan to be right there to help them.
We at the Center would like to thank ArtPlace for enabling us to launch the Building Imagination Center, and the Modesto Art Museum for hosting a wide range of community events that certainly helped our project to reach a broad audience.

Most of all, we would like to thank all of the various community groups that stepped forward and became involved in supporting our events and in expanding our scope of activities; groups such as the City of Modesto Downtown planning committee, the Modesto International Architecture Festival, and the local volunteer organization, LOVE Modesto, to name a few.

Thank you,
Jessica Gomula-Kruzic, Director of the Building Imagination Center

Samsara, by Nicole Zvarik and Bill Wolter

Samsara, by Nicole Zvarik and Bill Wolter

Premiered 7 pm. Thursday, April 18, 2013

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_dEHdwj6ho&w=320&h=240&rel=0]

Nicole Zvarik, Co-founder of Deep Root Dance Collective, is an independent choreographer and performance artist in the San Francisco Bay Area.  She has an MFA in Choreography from Mills College, where she studied with Molissa Fenley, Kathleen McClintock, Sonia Delwaide-Nichols, and Anne Westwick. Originally from the East Coast, Nicole received her Bachelor’s degree in Dance and Sociology from Wilson College. She has danced with Chambersburg Ballet Theatre, performed and choreographed for Wilson’s Modern Dance Ensemble including performing for Italia Dance Festival in Cesena, Italy. She has taught dance on the East and West Coast including summer intensives at Amherst College and is currently the Dance Department Head at Bayside STEM Academy. Nicole’s choreography has been presented throughout the Bay Area through various events including at the Culture Catch Salon: Macworld Expo, ArtSFest’s Spectra Ball, Yelp Holiday Party at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, and Oakland Museum .  She is a collaborator with DOUBLE VISION and is currently producing her own work throughout the Bay Area.

 

Bill Wolter is a composer, multimedia artist, sound engineer and musician, focused on electric guitar. His music hovers around experimental rock, jazz, noise, new music, and all areas in between. Bill performs or collaborates frequently throughout the San Francisco Bay Area with a wide range of musicians and artists. He plays guitar in Bay Area bands Slydini, Innerear Brigade, Tribalgenes, and as a hired gun in other ensembles and bands (SF Sound, Moe!kestra, jobbing bands, etc.). Bill also creates audio/visual live performance instruments, working in a mixture of intermedia, performance art, theatre, and installation. He frequently works with Oakland multimedia group Double Vision and has been commissioned to do original scores for local dancer Amy Lewis and Alyssa Lee’s group A dance company.

Bill has worked for almost five years as the music lab coordinator at Diablo Valley College, and also serves as a part–time faculty member in the music department teaching digital audio. Bill also has a solid background in professional audio production and education. Most recently, Bill is diligently working for Activision on the music, sound, and game design for the next version of the wildly popular Guitar Hero video game.

 

3 Hearts and Wonderwall

3 Hearts and Wonderwall

This exhibit is made up of two huge independent installations: 3 Hearts by Wisconsin artist Lisa Marie Barber and Wonderwall by Modesto resident Deborah Barr Brayman. 3 Hearts is a massive arrangement of ceramic pieces on the wall and floor. The human figures are life size within a collection of objects in a shrine like arrangement. Wonderwall makes use of hundreds of painted glass lenses that sprawl across the wall and hang from the ceiling. Painted and sculptured human figures complete the arrangement. The two installations are sensually stimulating, playing with color and light, and are delights for the eye.

ArtPlace interviews the Building Imagination Center about the sustainability of its work

ArtPlace interviews the Building Imagination Center about the sustainability of its work

 The Building Imagination Center is a visual arts and media hub in downtown Modesto. Working with the Modesto Art Museum, the Center provides the community with a visual arts gallery for world class photography, sculpture, paintings, and contemporary art mediums, such as video, animations, and interactive content.

Through its Resident Filmmaker Program, the Center brings regional documentary video artists to Modesto to actively engage the community with hands-on video creation, and to provide real world experience for California State University Stanislaus film students. It is the Center’s mission to create an environment where artists can work, thrive, and feel supported by the community, and then to catalyze this growth and leverage it to benefit the local community by creating a vibrant activation of the downtown art scene.

ArtPlace spoke with Jessica Gomula-Kruzic, Director for the Building Imagination Center, about the next moves for the Center.

ARTPLACE: How will the work that you’ve begun be sustained after your ArtPlace grant ends?

GOMULA-KRUZIC: Unfortunately, without the outside funding, we will not be able to afford to remain in our current location. However, while we will not be physically located in Modesto, our work and involvement with the Modesto community will continue and move forward through the projects we have begun here, such as continuing to offer film screenings, specifically for Modesto’s Third Thursday art walks. Additionally, we will be making more pedestrian friendly enhancements to the downtown corridor, such as our short-term ‘parklets’, with permanent improvements to the walkability of the sidewalk through the use of shade, lighting, and art.

We are also working with Modesto’s Downtown Hospitality group to create a ‘public art block’ outside the Center’s current location. With the full support of our city planners, several pedestals are being provided for the installation of public sculptures downtown, and plans are in the works to build an archway across the street to match others nearby, as well as to increase the number and diversity of wall murals throughout the community. Additionally, we will continue specific activities in the future, such as screening films in the public courtyard outside the Center, and working with the LOVE Modesto volunteer organization to create a Chalk Walk of Art, which we will be doing in April.

ARTPLACE: How has this work affected the work you will do beyond the grant period?

GOMULA-KRUZIC: The ArtPlace grant has enabled us to work with government agencies and with people from within other organizations that we would not have initially thought to align with, such as the Stanislaus Alliance for Arts Education, but also with the Pen Women Society and the Modesto Hotel Council. These new partnerships have expanded our reach and brought about community awareness of the visual arts through exposure to the art exhibitions and art forms previously unavailable to this region. Our resident filmmakers have helped us to create a model for working with community groups to create new documentaries with and about Modesto. This, in turn, has allowed the public to see parts of their own community that they weren’t aware of before, and a chance to contribute to creating artwork in a manner they had not been able to before. Our work with our current partner, the Modesto Art Museum, has also allowed us to bring in artists from outside the region, and the state, and has greatly enriched our programming. We are plan on continuing and building upon all of these relationships and networks in the future.

That’s how art works with the community and for the community, expanding its horizons and bringing about cultural and economic growth.

And that’s what the Building Imagination Center has helped us to achieve.

– See more at: http://www.artplaceamerica.org/articles/building-imagination-in-californias-central-valley-6/#sthash.o3nVKHta.dpuf

An Obsolete Dialog by Gina Clark

An Obsolete Dialogue by Gina Clark

Premiered on Thursday, February 23, 2013.

Created in Modesto by the Building Imagination Center’s resident filmmaker Gina Clark.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Hx-_T26t0c&w=320&h=240&rel=0]

“An 84 year old Painter will discuss the (mis)adventures of her youth; the boys in the mental institutions, dancing tables for nickels from the mob, and her own secrets toward adventure in her life – along side all of it’s absurdities.”

Gina Clark is a Visual Anthropologist working within the fields of Photography, Video, Installation & Sound, and Experiments in Linguistics.  ‘Re-inventing the ritual’ might better describe Gina’s unconventional creative process. Her recent collaborations have been alongside  Composer Robert Alan [Vitamin Wig C],  and Video artists Lindsay Laven & Aimee Goguen. She is the Founder and Creative Director of OdpoledneTV [a subsiduary of Beaubourg268, Oakland, Ca], and Co-Executive Curator for Chris Carroll’s  Periwinkle Cinema  [Los Angeles Branch].  She currently volunteers as a Photographer for Organizations such as The Children of the Night Shelter for Prostitute Children. Her latest project, Ataraxic Play ; a Documentary on Shamans and Energy Healers in the San Fernando Valley, CA; has started pre-production. Excerpts from her unpublished novel What is Natural will be on display during The Lost History of Concord,  a Publication at the Verge Gallery, University of Sydney, Australia [Curated by Concord, in February of 2013].

Industry Standard: 20th Century Industrial Design

 

dclassicunderwoodIndustry Standard: 20th Century Industrial Design

Industry Standard: 20th Century Industrial Design is a celebration of the design of everyday objects of the 20th century from cameras, to tools, to kitchen gadgets, to office equipment. The oldest object is an Underwood typewriter from 1901, and the most recent is a juicer from 1990. This particular typewriter was the most in demand piece of office equipment from 1901 to the 1930s. It was the early 20th century’s equivalent to an ipad in 2013. Among the other treasures are clocks by two of the most influential designers of the century, Kem Weber and Henry Dreyfus. All the objects demonstrate sensitivity to both beauty and function.