BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:dev.svmoa.org BEGIN:VEVENT UID:673d1b3657d0f DTSTART:20180112T073000Z SEQUENCE:0 TRANSP:OPAQUE LOCATION:The Center\, Ket chum SUMMARY:FREE EVENING EXHIBITION TOUR: Art into Architecture: Frank Lloyd Wr ight\, Archie Teater and Teater’s Knoll CLASS:PUBLIC DESCRIPTION:
Enjoy a glass of\nwine as you tour the exhibition with The Center’s curators and special\ngues t\, Henry Whiting\, the current owner of the Archie Teater Studio. Idaho\n is home to just one building designed by world-renowned architect Frank\nL loyd Wright: Teater’s Knoll\, located on the edge of the Snake River.\nT eater’s Knoll also happens to be the only artist studio Wright designed\ nthat was actually built. This exhibition considers Teater’s Knoll withi n\nthe larger context of Wright’s architectural practice and philosophy. It\nfeatures architectural plans and photographs as well as a selection o f\npaintings by the artist for whom Teater’s Knoll was designed\, Archie \nTeater (1901–1978). An Idaho native\, Teater was a prolific painter wh ose\nimpressionistic landscape images and history paintings documented his \nexperience of Idaho and the American West. On view Dec 1\, 2017 – J an\n17\, 2018
Enjoy a glass of\nwine as you tour the exhibition with The Center’s curators and special\nguest\, Henry Whiting\, the current owner of the Archie Teate r Studio. Idaho\nis home to just one building designed by world-renowned a rchitect Frank\nLloyd Wright: Teater’s Knoll\, located on the edge of th e Snake River.\nTeater’s Knoll also happens to be the only artist studio Wright designed\nthat was actually built. This exhibition considers Teate r’s Knoll within\nthe larger context of Wright’s architectural practic e and philosophy. It\nfeatures architectural plans and photographs as well as a selection of\npaintings by the artist for whom Teater’s Knoll was designed\, Archie\nTeater (1901–1978). An Idaho native\, Teater was a pr olific painter whose\nimpressionistic landscape images and history paintin gs documented his\nexperience of Idaho and the American West. On view D ec 1\, 2017 – Jan\n17\, 2018
Use this\nopportunity to brush up on your figure drawing skills in a relaxed\nenvironment. All s kills welcome.
Winter Open Studio offered Weds\,\nJan 17 &\; 31 and Feb 7 &\; 21.
Look for more Open Studios in\nthe Spring: Apr 4 &\; 18 and May 2 &\; 16.
Use t his\nopportunity to brush up on your figure drawing skills in a relaxed\ne nvironment. All skills welcome.
Winter Open Studio offered Weds\,\n Jan 17 &\; 31 and Feb 7 &\; 21.
Look for more Open Studios in \nthe Spring: Apr 4 &\; 18 and May 2 &\; 16.
Tyler Ramsey is a\nmul ti-instrumentalist equally at home playing guitar\, piano\, keyboards\,\nb ass\, and percussion\, but he is best known as a talented fingerstyle\ngui tarist and singer songwriter. Early on Tyler studied country blues\nguitar ists like Mance Lipscomb and Mississippi John Hurt\, and American\nfingers tyle guitarists in the school of John Fahey and Leo Kottke. This\nmusic an d these guitarists helped to solidify his own sense of melody and\nsong fo rms. During the last year of touring with Band of Horses\, that saw\nhim a way more than at home\, Tyler moved his family from Asheville\, NC\, to a\ nfarm in the mountains of western North Carolina. Taking advantage of brie f\ntimes off the road\, he finished his 4th solo album\, which was recorde d in\nLouisville KY\, and announced his departure from the band after 10 y ears.\nThe new songs are lush and full\, and realized with help from a lis t of\nfriends old and new\, adding gorgeous vocal harmonies\, strings\, an d guitar\ncounterpoints. The new album for the morning is set to be releas ed in early\n2018 and extensive touring will carry this new music to fans across the\ncountry.
Las Migas
Fri\, Nov 3\, 2017\, 7pm
Mark O’Connor with the O’Connor Band
Sun\
, Dec\n10\, 2017\, 7pm
Tyler Ramsey
Thu\, Ja
n 18\, 2018\,\n7pm
International Guitar Night
Tue\, Feb 6\,\n2018\, 7pm
Socks in the Frying Pan
Tue\, Mar 6\,\n2018\, 7pm
Series tickets are available t o Center members starting\nat $135 and include a ticket to each show. Call to purchase the series\,\n208.726.9491 x110.
Professional Artist Residency\nProgram—Every performer in the 2017–2018 Performing Arts S eries will be\nworking in local schools as a part of The Center’s ongoin g commitment to\narts education. The Professional Artist Residency Program is supported by\nScott Miley &\; Jane Rosen and\, in part\, with funds for International\nGuitar Night and Socks in the Frying Pan provided by t he Western States\nArts Federation (WESTAF)\, the Idaho Commission on the Arts and the National\nEndowment for the Arts\, and all of our members\, d onors and our annual Wine\nAuction participants.
Tyler Ramsey is a\nmulti-instrumentalist equally at home playing guitar\, piano \, keyboards\,\nbass\, and percussion\, but he is best known as a talented fingerstyle\nguitarist and singer songwriter. Early on Tyler studied coun try blues\nguitarists like Mance Lipscomb and Mississippi John Hurt\, and American\nfingerstyle guitarists in the school of John Fahey and Leo Kottk e. This\nmusic and these guitarists helped to solidify his own sense of me lody and\nsong forms. During the last year of touring with Band of Horses\ , that saw\nhim away more than at home\, Tyler moved his family from Ashev ille\, NC\, to a\nfarm in the mountains of western North Carolina. Taking advantage of brief\ntimes off the road\, he finished his 4th solo album\, which was recorded in\nLouisville KY\, and announced his departure from th e band after 10 years.\nThe new songs are lush and full\, and realized wit h help from a list of\nfriends old and new\, adding gorgeous vocal harmoni es\, strings\, and guitar\ncounterpoints. The new album for the morning is set to be released in early\n2018 and extensive touring will carry this n ew music to fans across the\ncountry.
Las Migas
Fri\, Nov
3\, 2017\, 7pm
Mark O’Connor with the O’Connor Band
Sun\, Dec\n10\, 2017\, 7pm
Tyler Ramsey
Thu\, Jan 18\, 2018\,\n7pm
International Guitar Ni
ght
Tue\, Feb 6\,\n2018\, 7pm
Socks in the F
rying Pan
Tue\, Mar 6\,\n2018\, 7pm
Series ticket s are available to Center members starting\nat $135 and include a ticket t o each show. Call to purchase the series\,\n208.726.9491 x110.
Pr ofessional Artist Residency\nProgram—Every performer in the 2017–2018 Performing Arts Series will be\nworking in local schools as a part of The Center’s ongoing commitment to\narts education. The Professional Artist Residency Program is supported by\nScott Miley &\; Jane Rosen and\, in part\, with funds for International\nGuitar Night and Socks in the Frying Pan provided by the Western States\nArts Federation (WESTAF)\, the Idaho C ommission on the Arts and the National\nEndowment for the Arts\, and all o f our members\, donors and our annual Wine\nAuction participants.
For years\, Sonia\nWar shawski (89) has been an inspirational public speaker at schools and\npris ons\, where her stories of surviving the Holocaust as a teenager have\nins pired countless people who once felt their own traumas would leave them\nb roken forever. But when Sonia is served an eviction notice for her iconic\ ntailor shop (in a dead mall)\, she's confronted with an agonizing decisio n:\neither open up a new shop\, or retire. Ironically\, Sonia’s shop is the\nlast open business in an otherwise desolate Kansas City mall\, but it \ncontains enough color and liveliness to make up for the entire empty\nco mplex. For a woman who admits she stays busy “to keep the dark parts\naw ay”\, facing retirement dredges up fears she’d long forgot she had\,\n and her horrific past resurfaces. BIG SONIA explores what it means to be a\nsurvivor and how intergenerational trauma affects families and\ngenera tions. Will you let your trauma define you? Or will your past make\nyou s tronger?
Note: There will be two screenings of Big\nSonia a t 4:30pm and 7pm on Thursday\, Jan 25\, 2018
\nPart of The Center's BIG IDEA project This Land Is Whose\nLand?
Running time: 93 minutes
For y ears\, Sonia\nWarshawski (89) has been an inspirational public speaker at schools and\nprisons\, where her stories of surviving the Holocaust as a t eenager have\ninspired countless people who once felt their own traumas wo uld leave them\nbroken forever. But when Sonia is served an eviction notic e for her iconic\ntailor shop (in a dead mall)\, she's confronted with an agonizing decision:\neither open up a new shop\, or retire. Ironically\, S onia’s shop is the\nlast open business in an otherwise desolate Kansas C ity mall\, but it\ncontains enough color and liveliness to make up for the entire empty\ncomplex. For a woman who admits she stays busy “to keep t he dark parts\naway”\, facing retirement dredges up fears she’d long f orgot she had\,\nand her horrific past resurfaces. BIG SONIA explores wha t it means to be a\nsurvivor and how intergenerational trauma affects fam ilies and\ngenerations. Will you let your trauma define you? Or will your past make\nyou stronger?
Note: There will be two screening s of Big\nSonia at 4:30pm and 7pm on Thursday\, Jan 25\, 2018
\nPart of The Center's BIG IDEA project This Land Is Whose\ nLand?
Running time: 93 minutes
For years\, Sonia\nWar shawski (89) has been an inspirational public speaker at schools and\npris ons\, where her stories of surviving the Holocaust as a teenager have\nins pired countless people who once felt their own traumas would leave them\nb roken forever. But when Sonia is served an eviction notice for her iconic\ ntailor shop (in a dead mall)\, she's confronted with an agonizing decisio n:\neither open up a new shop\, or retire. Ironically\, Sonia’s shop is the\nlast open business in an otherwise desolate Kansas City mall\, but it \ncontains enough color and liveliness to make up for the entire empty\nco mplex. For a woman who admits she stays busy “to keep the dark parts\naw ay”\, facing retirement dredges up fears she’d long forgot she had\,\n and her horrific past resurfaces. BIG SONIA explores what it means to be a\nsurvivor and how intergenerational trauma affects families and\ngenera tions. Will you let your trauma define you? Or will your past make\nyou s tronger?
Note: There will be two screenings of Big\nSonia a t 4:30pm and 7pm on Thursday\, Jan 25\, 2018
\nPart of The Center's BIG IDEA project This Land Is Whose\nLand?
Running time: 93 minutes
For y ears\, Sonia\nWarshawski (89) has been an inspirational public speaker at schools and\nprisons\, where her stories of surviving the Holocaust as a t eenager have\ninspired countless people who once felt their own traumas wo uld leave them\nbroken forever. But when Sonia is served an eviction notic e for her iconic\ntailor shop (in a dead mall)\, she's confronted with an agonizing decision:\neither open up a new shop\, or retire. Ironically\, S onia’s shop is the\nlast open business in an otherwise desolate Kansas C ity mall\, but it\ncontains enough color and liveliness to make up for the entire empty\ncomplex. For a woman who admits she stays busy “to keep t he dark parts\naway”\, facing retirement dredges up fears she’d long f orgot she had\,\nand her horrific past resurfaces. BIG SONIA explores wha t it means to be a\nsurvivor and how intergenerational trauma affects fam ilies and\ngenerations. Will you let your trauma define you? Or will your past make\nyou stronger?
Note: There will be two screening s of Big\nSonia at 4:30pm and 7pm on Thursday\, Jan 25\, 2018
\nPart of The Center's BIG IDEA project This Land Is Whose\ nLand?
Running time: 93 minutes
This workshop\nwill fu se the technical side of videography with the storytelling side.\nWorkshop participants will learn the camera\, how to get proper exposure\,\nwhile achieving different types of shots and angles. Once the technical\nbasics are covered student s will then learn the elements on how to tell a\nstory through cinematography.
Ben grew up in Northern California\nwhere he developed his passion for cinema and photography. Being mostly\nself-ta ught\, he has worked professionally in the industry since 2007.\nTaking a job at a local video production house shortly after graduating\nhigh schoo l\, and later moving to Texas where he held the position of Lead\nCinemato grapher at a Studio near Dallas. Ben has filmed and Directed\nseveral shor t films\, Music Videos and Promos.
He moved to the Wood\nRiver Vall ey in 2012 after visiting for the summer and consequently falling\nin love with the area and his now wife\, Lacie. He is part owner of Dark to\nLigh t Productions\, a local video production house in Hailey. He believes in\n the power of story to communicate\, connect\, and unify. He believes that\ neveryone has a story and aims to tell it with light and shadow.
Th is\nis a two-day workshop that will take place Sat &\; Sun\, Jan 27 &am p\; 28\,\n10am-4pm.
Teen Workshops are generously spons ored by\nJoyce Friedman.
This workshop\nwill fuse the technical side of videography with the storytellin g side.\nWorkshop participants will learn the camera\, how to get proper e xposure\,\nwhile achieving different types of shots and angles. Once the t echnical\nbasics are covered student s will then learn the elements on how to tell a\nstory through cinematography.
Ben grew up in Northern C alifornia\nwhere he developed his passion for cinema and photography. Bein g mostly\nself-taught\, he has worked professionally in the industry since 2007.\nTaking a job at a local video production house shortly after gradu ating\nhigh school\, and later moving to Texas where he held the position of Lead\nCinematographer at a Studio near Dallas. Ben has filmed and Direc ted\nseveral short films\, Music Videos and Promos.
He moved to the Wood\nRiver Valley in 2012 after visiting for the summer and consequently falling\nin love with the area and his now wife\, Lacie. He is part owner of Dark to\nLight Productions\, a local video production house in Hailey. He believes in\nthe power of story to communicate\, connect\, and unify. He believes that\neveryone has a story and aims to tell it with light and shadow.
This\nis a two-day workshop that will take place Sat &\; Sun\, Jan 27 &\; 28\,\n10am-4pm.
Teen Workshops are generously sponsored by\nJoyce Friedman.
What if being\nconfron ted by someone utterly different from you—someone you are opposed\nto\, confused by\, scared of\, someone you can’t understand—was the signal\ nthat there was a life in need of your protection? What if “otherness” \nwas the foundation for ethical action? Focusing on photography’s\nhist orical and ongoing role in constructing “others\,” Sarah Sentilles\nwi ll explore how art and theology offer resources for resisting the forms\no f observation\, capture\, and certainty encouraged by drones and other\nma chines of war\, and she will propose an ethics capable of seeing\ndifferen ce as divine.
Part of The Center's BIG IDEA This Land is\nWhose Land?
This class takes place on Tuesday\, Jan 30\, from\n5:30 -7pm at the Ketchum Innovation Center.
Sarah Sentilles is a\nwriter \, critical theorist\, scholar of religion\, and author of many books\,\ni ncluding Breaking Up with God: A Love Story. Her most recent\nboo k\, Draw Your Weapons\, was published by Random House in July\n 2017. She earned a bachelor's degree at Yale and master's and doctoral\nde grees at Harvard.
At the core of her scholarship\, writing\, and\na ctivism is a commitment to investigating the roles language\, images\, and \npractices play in oppression\, violence\, social transformation\, and ju stice\nmovements. She has taught at Pacific Northwest College of Art\, Por tland\nState University\, California State University Channel Islands\, an d\nWillamette University\, where she was the Mark and Melody Teppola\nPres idential Distinguished Visiting Professor.
What if being\nconfronted by someone utterly different from you—someone you a re opposed\nto\, confused by\, scared of\, someone you can’t understand —was the signal\nthat there was a life in need of your protection? What if “otherness”\nwas the foundation for ethical action? Focusing on pho tography’s\nhistorical and ongoing role in constructing “others\,” S arah Sentilles\nwill explore how art and theology offer resources for resi sting the forms\nof observation\, capture\, and certainty encouraged by dr ones and other\nmachines of war\, and she will propose an ethics capable o f seeing\ndifference as divine.
Part of The Center's BIG IDEA T his Land is\nWhose Land?
This class takes place on Tuesday\, J an 30\, from\n5:30-7pm at the Ketchum Innovation Center.
Sarah Sent illes is a\nwriter\, critical theorist\, scholar of religion\, and author of many books\,\nincluding Breaking Up with God: A Love Story. He r most recent\nbook\, Draw Your Weapons\, was published by Rand om House in July\n2017. She earned a bachelor's degree at Yale and master' s and doctoral\ndegrees at Harvard.
At the core of her scholarship\ , writing\, and\nactivism is a commitment to investigating the roles langu age\, images\, and\npractices play in oppression\, violence\, social trans formation\, and justice\nmovements. She has taught at Pacific Northwest Co llege of Art\, Portland\nState University\, California State University Ch annel Islands\, and\nWillamette University\, where she was the Mark and Me lody Teppola\nPresidential Distinguished Visiting Professor.