Mar 15, 2021
Psychodiagnostik: Edward Trover, curator of collections and exhibitions at the Swope Art Museum, on March 5 displays the booklet that he created that contains some of Hermann Rorschach’s famous inkblots for the Psychodiagnostik exhibit at the museum through May 9. Tribune-Star/Joseph C. Garza
TERRE HAUTE What might this be?
That’s a basic question asked of people taking a Rorschach inkblot test.
Tribune-Star/Joseph C. GarzaInteractive art: Swope Art Museum Curator of collections and exhibitions, Edward Trover, created a booklet with blank pages for the Psychodiagnostik exhibit that allows visitors to take notes or draw. Here, Trover displays the booklet on March 5 at the museum.
âOur mission as a woodcarving club is to promote the art of woodcarving and to teach and develop carvers,â Ray Branch, the chairman of public relations and membership for the Triad Woodcarvers, said.
The carvings will be on display at the Forsyth County Central Library at 660 W. Fifth St. in Winston-Salem through May 31.
The club
The Triad Woodcarvers is one of the fastest growing arts organization in Winston Salem and one of the fastest growing woodcarving clubs in North Carolina and South Carolina.
Branch said the clubâs membership has grown from 18 to about 100 in the past three years, adding that its membership of women grew from one to 28 during that same period.
As you emerge from a corridor of the Hickory Museum of Art to enter the current main exhibition, youâre greeted by some of the artistâs most iconic work â a red and white Campbellâs Soup can filling a large frame.
The print of âScotch Broth Soup,â by Andy Warhol, part of his âCampbellâs Soup IIâ collection, sits at the bottom of a staircase, leading visitors up into the main gallery, where 36 total Warhol works will be on display through June 6.
Before entering the gallery, a timeline on the wall of the staircase gives visitors some background on the renowned artist â his childhood illness, art education, his first works, exhibitions, milestones and untimely death.
The VALLT is a new gallery inside a former industrial building in northwest Roanoke that has a mission to give emerging artists space to shine.
The gallery has been holding private art exhibitions since September but began a more public outreach with its newest show, titled simply âThe Show,â which displays a variety of artworks and even framed poems from 20 artists. Curated by the galleryâs six co-directors, âThe Showâ is the first VALLT exhibition that was open to outside submissions.
A couple of participants, such as Catawba-based embroidery artist Simone Paterson, are familiar names in the regional art scene, but several are exhibiting for the first time.