To showcase the cohesion between art and poetry, the Palmer Museum of Art and its guest curators designed the exhibition âField Language: The Painting and Poetry of Warren and Jane Rohrer.â
This exhibition was temporarily closed due to maintenance issues, but it is now open to the public as of Wednesday.
Available until June 6, this special exhibition gallery displays the work of spouses Warren Rohrer, a painter, and Jane Rohrer, a poet, to depict Mennonite lifestyle in modern art, according to the Palmer.
Julia Spicher Kasdorf, an English professor at Penn State, first met the Rohrers in 1993 and decided in 2017 to explore an exhibition idea that melded both of their works.
Destination Indiana: World War I Living History
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(Published caption 10/1/97) Judging began Thursday at the World Dairy Expo, which runs through Sunday. HENRY A. KOSHOLLEK, THE CAPITAL TIMES FILE PHOTO
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Cattle shows that include judging the world s best Guernsey cows remain strong at the World Dairy Expo even though financial problems are plaguing the dairy industry. JOHN MANIACI, STATE JOURNAL ARCHIVES
2003
It s the judges being judged this time, not the cows. Intercollegiate-level cattle judges rank groups of cows as part of a judging competition at the World Dairy Expo Tuesday, September 30, 2003. the student-judges were shown cows in groups of four and were asked to rank their quality in numerical order. WSJ/Sarah B. Tews (PUBLISHED 10/2/03) Students from around the country took part in cattle-judging competitions Tuesday at the Alliant Center, ranking groups of four cows or heifers from one to four and then defending their choices in short speeches before
LunART founder and CEO Iva Ugrcic has set up plenty of virtual events this past year. But when she got a letter proposing a special art exhibition online, she knew she had to set up one more.
Natalie Pauls holds up a certificate from LunART for being its youngest donor after giving $40 of her savings to the arts nonprofit. Natalie, of Middleton, also wrote the letter that inspired the creation of a LunART Youth Art Celebration, taking place March 21 online. AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL
The letter came from 9-year-old Natalie Pauls, now a third-grader at Sunset Ridge Elementary School in Middleton. In her letter, Natalie laid out a plan to create an online show of art made by girls in grades 2-12.
âThis is the Lyndon House Arts Centerâs founding and anchor exhibit, which is an annual event 46 years in the making,â said Didi Dunphy, the program supervisor at the Lyndon House Arts Center.
This anchor exhibit is the Lyndon House Art Centerâs 46th Juried Exhibition, which will feature artwork from a range of Athens residents ages 18 and older.
âThis show usually represents people who are just starting their careers as artists, people who are well versed into their career as an artist, hobbyists, craftspeople, all kinds of people,â Dunphy said.
The selection for this yearâs exhibition was judged by guest juror Hallie Ringle. Ringle is the Hugh Kahul Curator of Contemporary Art at the Birmingham Museum of Art, where she has previously curated the Celestia Morgan: REDLINE and Barbie: Dreaming of a Female Future.
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