PCAL Calendar
Saturday, February 7th
- Location: FAC, Corridor Gallery, 2nd Floor
- Time: All Day
January 7 – February 16; Meena Khalili and Brent Dedas: remaking language: dissection and transformation
This project is an investigation into the recontextualization of typography. Graphic Design students from Virginia State University and Studio Art students from Western Kentucky University will collaborate to construct a language of marks from an original typographic source. The exhibition will display of a series of large works on paper resulting from the construction.
- Location: Kentucky Museum - Dorothy Grider Gallery
- Time: All Day
- Location: FAC Main Gallery, 2nd Floor
- Time: All Day
January 26 – February 25; Andréa Keys Connell: Being With
This exhibition showcases the work of figurative ceramic artist Andréa Keys Connell. She states “I build my figures hollow, constantly pressing the clay from the inside outward. This constant pressure that I apply informs the figure’s shape, gesture, and description of where their internal weight is carried. This internal distortion results in a body where, at moments, signifiers of gender, age, and time are dissolved.”
- Location: Kentucky Museum - Education Room
- Time: 9:00am - 4:30pm
This Summer shoulder Bag Basket workshop taught by Beth Hester is geared to beginner to intermediate weavers. More Information
- Location: Kentucky Museum - Dorothy Grider Gallery
- Time: 2:00pm - 4:00pm
The Side by Side Exhibit is a collabation with VSA Kentucky. The opening reception is open free to the public.
- Location: Kentucky Museum
- Time: All Day
As part of WKU Year of Country and sponsored by WKU Office of International Programs, the exhibit “Ecuador Unframed: the Art of Oswaldo Guayasamín,” will travel to the Kentucky Museum in February 2015. Guayasamín’s original mural, created in the 1940s as a commission of the Ecuadorean government, depicts Ecuador’s landscapes and people, as well as the country’s hardship, poverty, violence, and social injustice. The collection is divided and organized around three ethnic themes: Indians, mestizos, and blacks. The traveling mural assembles these themes through five movable panels designed to work as a puzzle.
- Location: Kentucky Museum
- Time: All Day
As part of WKU Year of Country and sponsored by WKU Office of International Programs, the exhibit “Ecuador Unframed: the Art of Oswaldo Guayasamín,” will travel to the Kentucky Museum in February 2015. Guayasamín’s original mural, created in the 1940s as a commission of the Ecuadorean government, depicts Ecuador’s landscapes and people, as well as the country’s hardship, poverty, violence, and social injustice. The collection is divided and organized around three ethnic themes: Indians, mestizos, and blacks. The traveling mural assembles these themes through five movable panels designed to work as a puzzle.
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