Calendar of Events
Thursday, January 9, 2014
Ewing Gallery of Art and Architecture: 2014 Artist in Residence Biennial
Category: Exhibitions, visual art and Free event
The Ewing Gallery is pleased to present the 2014 Artist in Residence Biennial. The 4 exhibiting artists are:
Patricia Treib, Fall 2012
Michael Berryhill, Spring 2013
EJ Hauser, Fall 2013
Jaya Howey, Spring 2014
The Artist in Residence Biennial will be on display in the Ewing Gallery from January 9 - February 6, 2014. Please join us for an opening reception on Thursday, January 9 from 7-9PM in the Ewing Gallery.
Although the resident artists present slide lectures during their stays, it is access to their works of art that is highly anticipated and valued by both the students and the faculty. Therefore, the Ewing Gallery has sponsored group exhibitions of these artists since the inception of the Artist in Residence Program in 1982. Currently held every two years, this exhibition provides a continuing dialogue between artist-teacher and student. The AIR Biennial also offers our general university and regional community an opportunity to experience a provocative and often challenging exhibition of contemporary art.
Ewing Gallery of Art & Architecture
1715 Volunteer Boulevard
Knoxville, TN 37996
865.974.3200
www.ewing-gallery.utk.edu
Lawson McGhee Library: Concerts at the Library
Category: Free event, Kids, family and Music
Thursdays at 6:30 p.m. Join us for some cool jazz and great sounds:
Jan. 9 - Will Boyd
Jan. 16 - Emily Mathis & Pamela Klicka
Jan. 23 - Jack Rentfro & the Apocaplyso Quartet
Jan. 30 - Nancy Brennan Strange
Knox County Public Library: 500 West Church Avenue, Knoxville, TN 37902. 865-215-8750, www.knoxlib.org
Jubilee Community Arts: Dare To Be Square Tennessee
Category: Dance, movement, Festivals, special events and Music
An old time calling, square dance, and music weekend party
Callers: Michael Ismerio, Bobby Fulcher, Phil Jamison, and more
Bands: The Hellgrammites and the Corn Potato String Band
Weekend Pass: $40 is the "early bird" price until December 12, after which it will be $50 - at www.KnoxTIX.com or 865-523-7521
Calling and dancing workshops all day Friday and Saturday
Evening Dances open to the public: $5-10 at the door, 7pm all three nights
The Laurel Theater is located on the corner of 16th and Laurel Avenue in the historic Fort Sanders neighborhood of Knoxville near the UT campus. For more information see http://jubileearts.org/dtbstn/ or email dtbstn@gmail.com
Bijou Theatre: Steep Canyon Rangers with special guest
Category: Music
When the time came for the Steep Canyon Rangers to record the follow-up to 2012’s Nobody Knows You, they headed north to Woodstock, NY, to Levon Helm’s famed studio with Grammy-winning producer Larry Campbell and engineer Justin Guip. While the Steep Canyon Rangers were certainly open to recording songs by other composers, or to dip into traditional material, Campbell ultimately had them record all original tunes, based both on the strength of the songs and the band’s arrangements. This seems fitting for a band whose stellar reputation is based on performing original material, and who had just won the Best Bluegrass Album Grammy Award for Nobody Knows You.
Bijou Theatre, 803 S. Gay Street, Knoxville, TN 37902. Information: 865-522-0832, www.knoxbijou.com. For tickets: 865-684-1200, 865-656-4444, www.knoxvilletickets.com
American Museum of Science and Energy: Growing up Radioactive in Oak Ridge
Category: Free event, Kids, family, Lecture, panel and Science, nature
Jan. 9 "Growing up Radioactive in Oak Ridge: My Adventures from 1951 - 1976", a slide-illustrated lecture, presented by Nick Fielder. Program speaker provided by Oak Ridge Heritage and Preservation Association. 7:00 pm in AMSE Auditorium. The public is encouraged to attend the free lecture and there is no museum admission charge for this event.
American Museum of Science & Energy, 300 S. Tulane Avenue, Oak Ridge, TN 37830. Hours: Monday-Saturday 9AM-5PM; Sunday 1-5PM. Information: 865-576-3200, www.amse.org
Jubilee Community Arts: Knoxville Square Dance
Category: Dance, movement
We're continuing our square dance series with Michael Ismerio calling and music by the Hellgrammites. Be part of Appalachian square dancing at the Laurel. No special training or equipment required — all square dances will be taught and called. Live old-time music. No taps.
$5 JCA Members & Students • $7 General Admission
Jubilee Community Arts, 1538 Laurel Ave, Knoxville, TN 37916. For information: 865-522-5851, www.jubileearts.org.
Knoxville Symphony Orchestra: Concertmaster Gabriel Lefkowitz & Friends
Category: Music
Chausson: Poeme
Saint-Saens: Introduction & Rondo Capriccioso
Faure: Piano Quartet No. 1 in C minor
with Kathryn Gawne, viola, Andy Bryenton, cello, and Kevin Class, piano
Concerts take place at Remedy Coffee, 125 W. Jackson Avenue (Old City). General admission. Limited capacity. Complimentary dessert and coffee served after each concert. Tickets and information: 865-291-3310, www.knoxvillesymphony.com
Tennessee Theater: Annie
Category: Theatre
Leapin’ Lizards! The world’s best-loved musical returns in time-honored form. Directed by original lyricist and director Martin Charnin and choreographed by Liza Gennaro, this production of ANNIE will be a brand new incarnation of the iconic original. Featuring book and score by Tony Award-winners Thomas Meehan, Charles Strouse and Martin Charnin, ANNIE includes such unforgettable songs as “It’s the Hard Knock Life,” “Easy Street,” “I Don’t Need Anything But You,” plus the eternal anthem of optimism, “Tomorrow.”
Tennessee Theatre, 604 S. Gay Street, Knoxville, TN 37902. For information/tickets: 865-684-1200, www.tennesseetheatre.com, www.ticketmaster.com
Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church Exhibition: David Harman: Hope Machine
Category: Exhibitions, visual art and Free event
Opening reception Friday, January 10 from 6 to 7:30 p.m.; artist’s talk at 6:30 p.m.
Don’t let any earthly calamity knock your dreamer and your hoping machine. -- Woody Guthrie
When I was a kid I would ride my bike around the neighborhood. My red Dyno bike was my first vehicle and my first way of exploring the world. I could ride as far as I wanted, as long as I could find my way home. At that age, everything was important, everything had something to offer. I would revisit places over and over again. I had nothing to do except look. Everything I encountered had nothing else to do except transform into something else. I still remember specific cracks in the sidewalk, street curbs, and creek beds. I am interested in this kind of familiarity with the world, the kind of unintended familiarity that happens by default. My studio process involves a balance between seeing and making. I revisit a place until it unfolds in a new way or gains new meanings. A telephone pole shadow becomes a totem, zip, or a slit. Woodgrain begins to have eyes. A cinderblock wall, reinforced with steel bolts, starts to become sundials, buttons, or nipples.
David Anthony Harman is a native of Dallas, Texas. He is currently an MFA candidate at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.
Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church, 2931 Kingston Pike, Knoxville, TN 37919. Gallery hours: Monday-Thursday 9AM-5PM; Friday 9AM-4:30PM; Sunday 9AM-1PM. Information: 865-523-4176, www.tvuuc.org
Rose Center: Nature & Nostalgia
Category: Exhibitions, visual art and Free event
Works by Kay Murphy and Lois Crabtree Armstrong
Opening reception January 5, 2-4pm
Rose Center, 442 W Second North Street, Morristown, TN | 423-581-4330, www.RoseCenter.org
open daily 9-5
Art Market Gallery: Works by Garry Taylor and Lisa Kurtz
Category: Exhibitions, visual art, Fine Crafts and Free event
Recent works by Garry Taylor of Knoxville, a painter in both watercolor and oils, and Lisa Kurtz of Knoxville, a clay artist, will be featured in January at the Art Market Gallery in downtown Knoxville.
Lisa has been a functional potter for 36 years. After getting her Master's Degree in clay (MA) at The University of Louisville, she set up her first studio in the eclectic, artsy, Highlands neighborhood in Louisville, Ky. and named her business Highland Pottery. She has been an exhibiting member of many professional juried guilds, boards, galleries and artist associations. Her clay work has been exhibited and collected across the U.S. and is also in private collections internationally. Lisa throws and handbuilds her pieces and often combines the two methods to produce her colorful functional pottery. Her work is often very textured to emphasize the malleable qualities of clay. Most of her pieces are altered while still wet to highlight the intrinsic beauty of the clay itself. Lisa mixes up her own glazes, which adds a unique depth and quality to the work. As an artist and a maker of "handmade" objects, she strives for that human connection with the user/collector of her pottery. For more information about Lisa's work visit her website: www.LisaKurtzHighlandPottery.com
Artistic expression, whatever form it takes, is a necessity in Garry’s life for it feeds his spirit and nourishes his soul. He relishes the process of imagination assuming physical form. He studied art and dance at LSU, graduating with a BS in 1980. Upon graduation he moved to New Orleans and began an apprenticeship in a stained glass studio. That became his primary media until he moved to Knoxville in 1987. At that time he put his art aside for a while, concentrating on being a counselor in the Alcohol and Drug Recovery program at UTMCK. He did this for almost ten years, and then started experiencing a real need to return to his art. He did so, again concentrating in stained glass but beginning to explore pastels (a media not taught at LSU while he was there) which he had experimented with after graduation. He is drawn to landscape painting, both plein aire and using photographs he has taken as references. And as an extension of that, flowers are a favorite subject matter. The two painters that have most influenced the way he approaches a painting are Georgia O’Keefe and Claude Monet. He has been absent from the Art Market gallery for the past 7 years to focus on being a stay at home parent for his now 8 year old twins, Julie and Billy. His art also took a hiatus during this period. Recently he began painting again, working with oil and watercolor, both of which he hadn’t worked with since he was in college. His new work is made up of expressions in these media. He continues to be drawn to landscapes, especially scenes that have paths, roads, or water reflections in them.
A First Friday opening reception for the exhibit is planned for 5:30 to 9 p.m., Friday, January 3, with complimentary refreshments and live music by cellist Leigh Sooter.
Art Market Gallery, 422 S. Gay St, Knoxville, TN 37902. Hours: Tuesday-Saturday 11AM-6PM; Sunday 1-5PM. Information: 865-525-5265, www.artmarketgallery.net
HoLa Hora Latina: Photography Exhibition by Tom McDaniel
Category: Exhibitions, visual art and Free event
Born in Miami of a Cuban Flamenco dancer, Tom McDaniel is a self-taught photographer. Growing up, art was everywhere: in the statuary-populated gardens of his home, in the huge surrealistic mural in his bedroom and in the lush, ever-present colors of the tropics. First drawn to nature photography, Tom used an old German fixed-lens camera and light meter. One can see elements of his early work in his clear preference for discovering and highlighting the common, often overlooked beauty that surrounds us.
HoLa Hora Latina: 865-335-3358, www.holafestival.org