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26 Sunday / April 26, 2015

Exhibits at the IU Art Museum

12:00 pm to 05:00 pm
IU Art Museum, 1133 E. 7th Street
http://www.artmuseum.iu.edu

Hours: Tuesday – Saturday: 10:00 – 5:00 p.m. Sunday: Noon – 5:00 p.m.

New in the Galleries:

Onya LaTour: Pioneering Modern Art in Indiana
Continuing through May 10, 2015
Gallery of the Art of the Western World, Doris Steinmetz Kellett Endowed Gallery of Twentieth-Century Art, first floor
In 1941 Onya LaTour opened the Indiana Museum of Modern Art near Nashville, Indiana, creating a stir in local art circles. Two works from her personal collection are featured in this installation presented in conjunction with Onya LaTour on view at the Indianapolis Museum of Art this fall, to which the IU Art Museum loaned four pieces.

WWI War Bond Posters
Continuing through May 24, 2015
During World War I, mass-produced color posters encouraged enlistment, helped raise capital for the war effort, and solidified public opinion against the enemy. Two vintage posters for war bonds, one American and one French, are featured: although both depict a German soldier, they have very different styles and impacts.

Nature’s Small Wonders: Photographs by Ansel Adams
Continuing through May 24, 2015
America’s most famous nature photographer, Adams was also an ardent conservationist who served on the board of directors for the Sierra Club for thirty-seven years and was active in the Wilderness Society. He used his dramatic black-and-white photographs to encourage the preservation of America’s natural wonders, particularly those found in the U.S. National Parks.

This installation is on view from January 13 through May 24, 2015, in the Gallery of the Art of the Western World, Doris Steinmetz Kellett Endowed Gallery of Twentieth-Century Art. It is presented in conjunction with the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Sycamore Land Trust, whose mission is to protect the beautiful natural and agricultural landscape of southern Indiana.

Finding Atget
Continueing though May 24, 2015
French photographer Eugène Atget’s imagery mixed a nineteenth-century aesthetic with a modern sensibility, garnering him admiration and respect from the young Berenice Abbott, who became his champion. This installation features a vintage print by Atget and several later prints from his original negatives.

Women behind the Camera
Continuing through May 24, 2015
The world of professional photography in the early- to mid-twentieth century was largely a men’s club, but a small group of talented women paved the way for future generations of female “lensmen.” Portraits by three of these pioneers—Imogen Cunningham, Berenice Abbott, and Toni Frissell—are featured.

Pop Textiles
Continuing through May 24, 2015
Textiles designed by Pop artists Roy Lichtenstein, Richard Lindner, and Claes Oldenburg are featured. These bold and inventive compositions on fabric blur the boundaries between fine art, craft, and industrial production.

Robert Salmon: Romantic Painter
Continuing through May 24, 2015
Two paintings by Robert Salmon help elucidate the artist’s foundation in English Romanticism, which continued to inform his painting after his move to Boston in 1828.

Focalpoint: Fantastic African Hats: Power, Passage, and Protection
Continuing through May 24, 2015
These twelve richly embellished African hats celebrate the prestige of their owners, evoke complex histories of trade and commerce, and provide protection from harm. Organized by Brittany Sheldon, graduate assistant for the arts of Africa, the South Pacific, and the Americas.

Exhibits

26 Sunday / April 26, 2015

Campfire Cooking Series, Baking Bread

01:30 pm
Paynetown State Recreation Area - 4850 S. State Road 446
http://bit.ly/campcookapr2015

• Program fee is $20 per person. (Property Entrance Fee waived for participants.)
• Limited to 10 people. Restricted to ages 16 and up.
• Preregistration is required by April 23.
• Sign up at http://bit.ly/campcookapr2015

Baking fresh bread on the campfire is probably easier than you think! Workshop participants will learn about different techniques for making campfire-breads and then prepare and bake several different kinds. There will also be a demonstration on baking yeast (artisanal) bread in a cast-iron dutch oven. Everyone takes home a set of recipes and a variety of fresh-baked breads. 2 hours 30 minutes

Eat and Drink / Outdoors

26 Sunday / April 26, 2015

IU Cinema: Whatever Comes Next

06:30 pm to 07:40 pm
IU Cinema: 1213 East 7th Street, Bloomington, IN 47406
http://www.cinema.indiana.edu/whatever-comes-next

What do life and the making of a work of art have in common? The film portrays the American artist Annemarie Mahler-Ettinger, born in Vienna in 1926, and a resident of Bloomington, Indiana since 1957. It is an intimate conversation with herself and her dog that unfolds in front of the camera, with autobiographical lifescapes and a beautiful original score by Olav Lervik. (2K DCP presentation)

Films

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