if (!window.AdButler){(function(){var s = document.createElement(“script”); s.async = true; s.type = “text/javascript”;s.src = ‘http://ab169825.adbutler-ikon.com/app.js’;var n = document.getElementsByTagName(“script”)[0]; n.parentNode.insertBefore(s, n);}());}

var AdButler = AdButler || {}; AdButler.ads = AdButler.ads || [];
var abkw = window.abkw || ”;
var plc278489 = window.plc278489 || 0;
document.write(‘‘);
AdButler.ads.push({handler: function(opt){ AdButler.register(169825, 278489, [650,211], ‘placement_278489_’+opt.place, opt); }, opt: { place: plc278489++, keywords: abkw, domain: ‘ab169825.adbutler-ikon.com’, click:’CLICK_MACRO_PLACEHOLDER’ }});

23 Tuesday / October 23, 2012

SPECIAL INSTALLATION ‘A Self to Recover: Embodying Sylvia Plath’s Ariel’

10 am to 5 pm
IU Art Museum, 1133 E. 7th Street

Gallery of the Art of the Western World, first floor
Tuesday-Saturday 10 am-5 pm
Sunday, 12 pm-5 pm
This special installation, guest-curated by Kathleen Connors, is presented in conjunction with the symposium “Sylvia Plath 2012: The October Poems,” held at IU October 23–27. Works on loan to the museum by four contemporary artists engage the themes of subjugation and liberation found in Plath’s Ariel poems of October 1962.

Education / Entertainment / Exhibits

23 Tuesday / October 23, 2012

Exhibit: The Day in Its Color: A Hoosier Photographer’s Journey through Midcentury America

09:00 am to 04:30 pm
Mathers Museum of World Cultures (416 N. Indiana Avenue)
http://www.mathers.indiana.edu

This exhibit at the Mathers Museum of World Cultures is a companion piece to the book by Eric Sandweiss, and presents a survey of Cushman’s extraordinary work, an archive of photographs that is the largest known body of early color photographs by a single photographer—14,500 in all, most shot on vivid, color-saturated Kodachrome stock. It will run until December 21.

Mathers Museum hours are:
Tuesday-Friday: 9 am-4:30 pm
Saturday-Sunday: 1-4:30 pm

Exhibits

23 Tuesday / October 23, 2012

Exhibit: 7th Annual Dia de Los Muertos Community Altar

09:00 am to 04:30 pm
Mathers Museum of World Cultures (416 N. Indiana Avenue)
http://www.facebook.com/events/488486977828421/

The Mathers Museum of World Cultures hosts the 7th Annual Dia de los Muertos Community Altar installation. This year’s altar will be curated by Rachel DiGregorio and Michael Redman with support from Wandering Turtle Art Gallery On-Line. Community members are invited to add gifts to the altar in honor of their deceased loved ones over the course of the exhibit (October 16 – November 4). During this Mexican holiday, it is customary to leave those who have preceded us in death small offerings of items they would have enjoyed during their lifetime; thus nurturing the memory of their lives and letting them know they have not been forgotten and remain a part of our lives today. Each year the Community Altar is built on the foundation of the previous years’ offerings.

Recurring daily during regular museum hours: Tue – Fri, 9 am – 4:30 pm; Sat – Sun 1 – 4:30 pm.

Exhibits

23 Tuesday / October 23, 2012

Exhibit: Wyatt LeGrand at City Hall Atrium

09:00 am to 05:00 pm
City Hall (401 N. Morton St.)
http://www.bloomington.in.gov/

This exhibit, presented by the City of Bloomington Entertainment and Arts District (BEAD), will showcase the paintings of Wyatt LeGrand in the Showers Atrium of City Hall. It is free and open to the public during regular hours (9am – 5pm, Monday through Friday). Runs until October 31.

Exhibits

23 Tuesday / October 23, 2012

October Exhibits at the Ivy Tech John Waldron Arts Center

09:00 am to 07:00 pm
Ivy Tech John Waldron Arts Center (122 S. Walnut St.)
http://www.ivytech.edu/bloomington/waldron/exhibits.html

October brings four new exhibits to the Ivy Tech John Waldron Arts Center. All exhibits are available for viewing during regular gallery hours (Mon-Fri 9 am-7 pm, Sat 9 am-5 pm).

Contemporary fabric artist Sandy Hill splashes the walls with jewel-toned swirls and flourishes. Her freestyle forms employ silky-sheen fabrics and light-catching metallic threads, making a joyous quilting tour-de-force that celebrates the colors of the rainbow.

Tom Rhea takes us on a painterly tour of Bloomington’s best-loved landmarks, both town and gown. An eye for detail, a heartfelt connection with his subject matter , and an uncanny ability to render light on limestone make Rhea’s watercolors a delight for locals and visitors.

Sculptor (and writer) James Alexander Thom hand-carves fallen trees to reveal their spirits as sinuous, self-referencing, and graceful.

Fascinated by pattern and the negative space between objects, Ellen Starr Lyon says her current work is about “lushness of the commonplace.” A conservator at the IU Art Museum, Lyon is especially drawn to elements of Asian art, which are often found in her still-lifes.

Exhibits

23 Tuesday / October 23, 2012

Exhibit: Joe Tilson and the News of the World

10:00 am to 05:00 pm
IU Art Museum (IU Campus, 1133 E. 7th St.)
http://www.artmuseum.iu.edu

Gallery of the Art of the Western World, Doris Steinmetz Kellett Gallery of Twentieth-Century Art, first floor. The British Pop artist Joe Tilson used tabloid journalism and news photography as the basis for many of his prints and multiples of the late 1960s. Becoming increasingly political, he saw the pictures of revolutionary leaders and current events as a means for social commentary. This installation will include several of his works from this turbulent period.

Runs until December 30. Open during regular museum hours (Tuesday – Saturday, 10 am – 5 pm, Sunday 12 pm – 5 pm.)

Exhibits

23 Tuesday / October 23, 2012

Exhibit: ‘French Printmaking in the Seventeenth Century’

10:00 am to 05:00 pm
IU Art Museum (IU Campus, 1133 E. 7th St.)
http://tinyurl.com/9jrmkox

Artists working in Paris and Lorraine during the Baroque period developed distinctive styles—which focused on the vibrancy of the line—that differed markedly from their Italian and Dutch contemporaries. The two print kiosks in the early part of the gallery feature French works by Jacques Bellange, Claude Lorrain, Jacques Callot, and Claude Mellan, whose engraving is a tour de force of printmaking that creates the face of Christ using a single line.

Exhibits

23 Tuesday / October 23, 2012

Exhibit: ‘Intimate Models: Photographs of Husbands, Wives, and Lovers’

10:00 am to 05:00 pm
IU Art Museum (IU Campus, 1133 E. 7th St.)
http://tinyurl.com/9jrmkox

This installation, running from September 11 to December 31, will focus on three photographers Julia Margaret Cameron, Edward Weston, and Harry Callahan, who used their romantic partners as their subjects. Whether portraits or nude studies, these images reveal a sensitivity that comes from the artists and sitters’ close personal relationships.

This installation is presented in conjunction it the special exhibition “A Place Aside: Artists and their Partners,” on view at the Kinsey Institute Gallery, September 28–December 20.

Exhibits

23 Tuesday / October 23, 2012

Exhibit: ‘Watershed’ and ‘Captive Landscapes’ at Pictura Gallery

11:00 am to 07:00 pm
Pictura Gallery (122 W. 6th St.)
http://www.picturagallery.com/index.htm

Pictura Gallery on the downtown Square presents two exhibits, “Watershed” by Jeff Rich and “Captive Landscapes” by Daniel Kukla, which will run through October 27. “Watershed” is a photographic study of industry and environments in rural America; “Captive Landscapes” showcases a number of artificial landscapes designed to emulate the natural world. Pictura Gallery is open Tuesday through Saturday, 11 am to 7 pm.

Exhibits

23 Tuesday / October 23, 2012

Exhibit: Buzz Spector: ‘Off the Shelf’

12:00 pm to 04:00 pm
Grunwald Gallery of Art (1201 E. 7th St.)
http://tinyurl.com/bw5cvno

The Grunwald Gallery of Art is pleased to announce Buzz Spector: “Off the Shelf”. This exhibition will be on view through Saturday, November 16, 2012. The exhibition is part of a broader discussion of the relevance and role of books and libraries in the arts and humanities. A panel discussion on October 24th “Books, Text and Information” will broach such topics as the future of the book, the importance of stacks and browsing, and forms of scholarly production and authorship. Panel members include Ron Day, Professor of Library and Information Science, Ian Meares, Visiting Assistant Professor of Ceramics, and Dawna Schuld, Assistant Professor in the Department of History of Art, and moderator Emilee Mathews, Interim Director of the Fine Arts Library.

Exhibits

Submit Your Event

Pin It on Pinterest