Frankfort students win Silver Key Awards for their art
Feb. 26, 2021
FacebookTwitterEmail
1of5
An example of Clover Roeters pottery, which won a Silver Key award in the Scholastic Art Competition. (Courtesy Photo) Show MoreShow Less
2of5
Clover Roeters glazing small dishes in Frankfort High School s ceramics lab. She won several silver key awards in the Scholastic Art Competition with her pottery. (Courtesy Photo) Show MoreShow Less
3of5
4of5
Maggie Kelley s work Alternate Realities, a series of brightly colored landscapes, won a silver key award at the Scholastic Art Competition. (Courtesy Photo) Show MoreShow Less
5of5
FRANKFORT Two young artists from Frankfort High School have won Silver Key awards for their works submitted to the Scholastic Art Competition through the Kendall College of Art and Design in Grand Rapids.
News Editorial Board selected Iman Zekri as the recipient of the 2020 Florida Bar
Journal Excellence in Writing Award for her article, “Respectfully Dissenting: How Dissenting Opinions Shape the Law and Impact Collegiality Among Judges,” which was published in the September/October 2020 issue. The article explores the historical role of dissenting opinions in the development of the law and discusses how and when judicial dissents are most valuable and appropriate.
Zekri practices family law at Henderson Franklin as an associate in their Ft. Myers office. She earned her juris doctor,
cum laude, in May 2020 from the University of Florida Levin College of Law, where she was a member of the Florida Moot Court Team and an editor for the
Giveaway dates: Jan 09 - Feb 08, 2021
Countries available: U.S.
Sue Rainsford is a fiction and arts writer based in Dublin. A graduate of Trinity College, she completed her MFA in writing and literature at Bennington College, Vermont. She is a recipient of the VAI/DCC Critical Writing Award, the Arts Council Literature Bursary Award, and a MacDowell Colony Fellowship. When it was first published, Follow Me to Ground won the Kate OâBrien Award and was longliste Sue Rainsford is a fiction and arts writer based in Dublin. A graduate of Trinity College, she completed her MFA in writing and literature at Bennington College, Vermont. She is a recipient of the VAI/DCC Critical Writing Award, the Arts Council Literature Bursary Award, and a MacDowell Colony Fellowship. When it was first published, Follow Me to Ground won the Kate OâBrien Award and was longlisted for the Desmond Elliott Award and the Republic of Consciousness Award.
The Crazy Real-Life Story Of Andy Warhol Hulton Archive/Getty Images
By William J. Wright/Dec. 29, 2020 9:38 am EDT
Controversial and enigmatic, Andy Warhol was one of the most important artists of the 20th century. Arguably, there is no other artist who so embraced and reflected the zeitgeist of the modern era. Beginning his career as a commercial artist, Warhol instinctively and consciously blurred the lines between art and commerce as well as good taste and bad.
Transfiguring product logos and celebrity images into works that both commented on the banality of consumer culture and celebrated its uniquely American qualities, Andy Warhol, with his famous, screen-printed soup cans and garish movie star portraits, redefined fine art for a generation. Through his Factory studio, he even changed the artist s role in creation, employing assistants to manufacture his works on a virtual assembly line.