background 0background 1background 2background 3

Immigration Rights and Resources for the Campus Community

Exercising Your Rights to Free Speech

Breadcrumb

Third Street Gallery archive: 2007 Exhibitions: 4 in October: Works by Alumni Artists

Third Street Gallery • -

Humboldt State University First Street Gallery is pleased to present, 4 in October: Works by Alumni Artists, on exhibit from October 6 through November 4, 2007. This exhibition continues the gallery’s mission to highlight alumni artists who have studied at Humboldt State University. Participating artists are Cija Bellis-with drawingsJulie Clark-with photography, Jeremy Hara- with paintingand Malia Landis-with ceramics.

“The alumni participating in this show have all developed to a point where they are working at a professional level as artists,” states First Street Gallery Director Jack Bentley.  “All the participants demonstrate real evidence of artistic success.  Crucial to their success, however, are the less tangible qualities they all share—a dedication and commitment to making art as a way of life and a deep engagement with their work on poetic and intellectual levels.”

“Beside the obvious accomplishment of these artists, this exhibition underscores the success of the HSU Art Department’s teaching philosophy—to impart to its students an understanding of the value of discipline, experimentation and thoughtful engagement with their art forms,” says Bentley.   Mr. Bentley also emphasized that the exhibition provides these alumni artists with the unique opportunity to show their work in a prominent local venue.

The exhibition is produced by students enrolled in Art Department’s Museum and Gallery Practices Program at Humboldt State.  The program provides practical, hands-on experience as the students design, coordinate and curate exhibits at First Street Gallery.

Art is one of the highest enrolled majors at the HSU campus. HSU’s Art Department offers classes with 25 full and part-time instructors, multiple, well equipped studio facilities and several campus showcases that enable undergraduates to enjoy an early experience of presenting their works to the public.

There will be a public reception for the alumni artists on Saturday, October 6, from 6:00 to 9:00 p.m., during Eureka Main Street’s Arts Alive program.  HSU First Street Gallery is open Tuesday through Sunday from noon to 5:00 p.m.  The gallery is located at 422 First Street in Eureka and admission is free to all. School groups are encouraged to call ahead to arrange tours For more information call 707-826-3424.

Breadcrumb

Third Street Gallery archive: 2007 Exhibitions: A Holiday Invitational Exhibition

Third Street Gallery • -

Image removed.

Humboldt State University First Street Gallery is pleased to announce "A Holiday Invitational Exhibition", which will open on December 1st and will continue through December 23rd. Featured in the show will be artwork by more than sixteen artists from California's North Coast, who work in diverse styles and mediums.
  
The participating artists will display works on paper, ceramics, sculpture, and paintings.  “We're very excited to bring together these artists, many of them HSU alumni, during this holiday season," says First Street Gallery Director Jack Bentley. "This exhibition will remind those of us who live here, how fortunate we are to live in a community that is also the home of so many wonderful artists."

Participants include: James Crawford, Nancy Frazier, Nina Groth, David Jordan, Tom Klapproth, Malia Landis, Peggy Loudon, Louis Marak, Justin Mitman, Scott North, Theresa Oats, Eric Pawloski, Stock Schleuter, Rachel Schleuter, Keith Schneider and some surprise guest artists.

Of special note, the exhibition will introduce the sculptor Eric Pawloski, who is new to the region. Mr. Pawloski is currently lecturing in the Art Department at HSU.  His life-sized sculpture of a stag, titled “Pursuing Eyes”, is prominently featured in the gallery.  The sculpture employs a conventional depiction of a deer, re-contextualized into a startling image through the use of unexpected additional sculptural elements. 

“A Holiday Invitational Exhibition” is produced by Humboldt State students. Students enrolled in the Art Museum and Gallery Practices Program participate in the daily management and planning of shows at the gallery.  The gallery provides real-life opportunities for the students to develop their gallery and museum skills, which in turn provides them with experience that will help them to enter the job market. Many students who have participated in the program have gone on to careers in museums and galleries throughout the nation. 

There will be an opening reception for the Invitational artists that will coincide with Arts Alive on Saturday December 1st from 6-9pm. For more information call (707) 826-3424.

Breadcrumb

Third Street Gallery archive: 2007 Exhibitions: Doorway to Darkness: Illustrations by Mariko Pratt

Third Street Gallery • -

Humboldt State University’s First Street Gallery is pleased to present Doorway to Darkness: Illustrations by Mariko Pratt on exhibition from August 24, 2007 through September 23, 2007.  This exhibition features original illustrations from two stories by Pratt, The Gorgon’s Smile and The Cold Curse Files.  The gallery is also showing small sculptures by Pratt, depicting some of the characters that appear in her stories.

Inspired by her love for the North Coast, Japanese folklore and fantasy writers like C.S. Lewis; Pratt’s fairytale-like illustrations take the reader on a twisting tale through the doorways of a magical, spirit-inhabited world, complete with mystery and humor. On entering those doorways, she writes:

Let’s suppose that instead of leaving, we decided to take a peek inside.  Let’s suppose that instead of dark, dreary rooms, we found a completely different world in which anything is possible, including magic.  Let’s suppose that this particular house is actually one in a series of gates connecting a vast sprawling multi-verse.
            
We humans like to think such things are conceptually possible, that we can venture through a seemingly ordinary doorway and have an adventure in a place far from the acknowledged framework of scientific laws.   It may sound great until you consider what might be lurking on the other side of that particular door.

Pratt was born in 1973 in Mountain View, California and raised in McKinleyville, California.  She graduated from McKinleyville High School and received her Bachelor of Arts degree from Humboldt State University in Studio Art in 1994.

A reception for the artist will be held during Arts Alive! on Saturday, September 1st.  Humboldt State University First Street Gallery is open Tuesday through Sunday from 12 to 5 p.m. and is located at 422 First Street, Eureka, California.  Admission is free.  Those planning group tours are encouraged to call ahead.  For more information call 707-826-3424.

Breadcrumb

Third Street Gallery archive: 2007 Exhibitions: Knot Now: Sculpture by Norman Sherfield

Third Street Gallery • -

Humboldt State University First Street Gallery is pleased to present, Knot Now: Sculpture by Norman Sherfield, on exhibit from January 30 through March 11, 2007. Sherfield is the winner of the 2007 North Coast Cultural Trust Victor Jacoby Award.

Knot Now, will feature small sculptures created by Sherfield who uses a basketry technique known as knotting.  With this technique, Sherfield transforms the simplicity of a single knot into complex forms, which hold a variety of textures, shapes and color patterns.

Sherfield’s forms are inspired by biological science, the automatism of surrealism and a fascination with natural biological form. The meditative and simple action of knotting allows Sherfield to fully immerse himself in the process.  With the repetitive pulse of each knot, it is as if he’s breathing life into his abstracted forms. His sculptures reference various aspects of the physical, spiritual and mythological world; engaging the curious imagination with humor and mystique. Sheffield’s merging of bright colors and earth tones in the weaving form a modern take on a traditional art form. His combination of dream imagery, instinctual and imaginative impulses; with forms of the natural world, explore the boundaries where mind and nature meet. Sherfield feels the content of his forms become complete only with the interaction of each viewer’s intellectual and spiritual contribution.

Knot Now: Sculpture by Norman Sherfield will run from January 30th through March 11th.  There will be a public reception for the artist on Saturday, February 3 from 6 pm through 9 pm.  There will be a gallery talk by the artist at First Street Gallery on Saturday, February 24th at 3 pm. Admission is free.

Breadcrumb

Third Street Gallery archive: 2007 Exhibitions: Michael Bravo Work Survey: 1966-2006

Third Street Gallery • -

As the world continuously rotates, seasons change through time. While one organism is born, another dies. In order to allow this constant rebirth of life, the seeds of life need to be planted. Plants as well as all of the creatures of nature have ability to reproduce and disperse their seed and their progeny, some across many miles. Much like the coconut drifting across the sea trying to inhabit a new island, to form future generations, Earth drifts through the cosmos like an untethered island. So what types of seeds do we as earthlings spread or receive through the galaxy? Michael Bravo’s artwork guides us through this journey of time and space, collecting, recording and creating around the human perception of this fecund Universe. A traveling man by nature, Michael Bravo takes a refreshing approach in this survey of his art, revealing his knowledge of multiple mediums of art.

Michael Bravo’s artwork is an exploration of his personal interests and discoveries throughout his life. It is an authentic reflection of his exploration into the inner workings of his subjects—the parts we don’t see—and his subjects’ interconnectivity. His personal philosophies about life are expressed throughout this body of work. Bravo is able to apply his acute sense of his subjects and has a broad intuitive ability to reinterpret their information artistically, drawing out aspects of his subjects that would otherwise remain unseen.  He feels that life is an interactive process that is always changing and it is important to understand our individual experiences. He has been exploring these ideas through painting, photography, printmaking, and sculpture.

Bravo loves to travel and loves the feeling of waking up somewhere new and not knowing where he is. For years he documented his destinations by drawing. He drew cities to record human activities and their artifacts. His precisely accurate drawings often took several trips to the same site to finish, and after one particularly cold day he decided to start photographing these places instead. His father, a photographer who used a large format camera, influenced his work greatly. Bravo began traveling to the Southwest, taking pictures. There he found empty spaces that truly fascinated him. Through photography he tries to push his energy into that space and imagines the pictures as some form of real estate. There is a physical magnetism that draws him to these places. They are spontaneous in their discovery and he often revisits the ones he likes best. The process of re-visitation is driven by the desire to understand that place and how it has changed. Bravo also goes back to learn more about himself and his own changes. His intention is to photographically record this destination in a manner, which alone would satisfy the viewer. 
  
A change that had a huge influence on Bravo’s photography was the introduction of computers. He loved the possibilities of the computer, the way they helped him improve his picture’s capabilities. For the first time he was able to print large photographs from his negatives. The image Sheep’s Head, his first large-scale print, started as three black and white negatives. They were scanned, merged into a panorama, the bands were removed and the negative space was drawn in digitally with Photoshop. Bravo then added subtle color in select areas of the landscape. The effect is timeless, vast and still. He was conscience of the resemblance between these empty spaces and lunar images, which had always intrigued him. N.A.S.A.’s images of lunar landings and exploration photos are what aided in him visualizing these photos.

Bravo has always been able to combine his personal interests and art. As a fisherman on the California North Coast’s rivers, he found himself bringing home more objects for artwork than fish, especially driftwood. As his collection of driftwood sticks grew, he started leaving the fishing pole at home so he could carry home more sticks. He paints the sticks and stacks them to make different forms.  This combination of natural forms and bright colors creates a strong contrast.  Much like Bravo’s other work, he attempts to breath life and energy in an otherwise lifeless form.

Bravo is investigating several different themes throughout his artwork. His fascination with translucent objects started when he was very young. He wanted to draw what was on the inside of objects, not just what was visible. He started with the ellipse, which is a challenging form to draw realistically. As a child he drew cars just so he could draw the ellipsis of the wheels. Later, he figured cakes were something that were ellipsis with a familiar association. Cakes, the dessert kind, gave him the freedom to paint celebratory forms that evolved from the exploration of how space works. To Bravo the cake image represents the shortness and sweetness of life. The candles are a symbol for taking chances, because “if you never light the candles, you can’t get your wish”.

The theme of translucency is expressed through his sculptures as well. Several pieces are made of clear acrylic but have the look of carved ice. Two such pieces, Amp and Juvenal are included in this exhibition.

The idea for these sculptures came from his early observation of “suicide knobs” on the steering wheels of old hot rods, He recalls one acrylic knob made of this same material, which had the look of clear, flawless glass with a three dimensional red rose suspended on the inside. He wanted to see how it was done, and use that knowledge to create art.

He began carving small pieces, experimenting with the translucency and the information that he could imbed within the sculpture. He cuts thick sheets of Lucite into various shapes and then carves them down with an industrial grinder , which adds texture and shapes the piece. The stacking and gluing of these craved slabs gives rise to their shape and volume. Since many of these pieces are hollow, they enable him to abstractly paint the interior to give them more depth and add color.

Abstract painting has allowed Bravo to address formal concerns without being influenced by image. He wants to hold visual interest by making the viewers think and try to figure it out, as there are no easy conclusions to his work. He avoids painting recognizable objects to get an image without bombarding the viewers, so they are able to draw their own conclusions. His large abstract paintings usually take six months to a year to complete.  He builds them up on paper with layers of polymer medium and acrylic paint, paints on it for a few days, and then adds another layer of polymer.  The paper becomes a thick multi-colored canvas with too many layers to count. The textured layers converse with one another enriching each other’s presence. Observing these abstract paintings from multiple vantage points is a must, in that it changes depth, space, and colors depending on one’s distance.

Bravo’s ability to successfully move through a series of steps to achieve a goal is what drew him to teaching. He was able to share his ability to physically execute a series of actions to get the desired results. He taught his students the important process of making lines and shapes without giving away the whole subject immediately. He encouraged them to get lost and then find themselves again throughout their artwork, the same way his teachers encouraged him. While attending California College of Arts and Crafts (currently called California College of Arts) in the 1960’s, he was greatly influenced by his professors Robert Bechtle and Roy DeForest. They were exciting to be around and passed along their own special way of relating to the world. Bravo learned what it means to be an artist, and also the responsibility of addressing the world through a visual language that is understood by everyone. It was at the CCAC that he started his dot series. He painted European in 1966, which is a map orientation of Europe using dots as in a stylistic motif.

The dots also relate to of Bravo's fascination with seeds and their importance. During a trip to a Pacific island, he was walking along a beach and saw thousands of seeds washed ashore. They were from several different places around the world, and had all ended up there. While some people may think this was a pure coincidence of nature, Bravo saw it as nature's plan. He began thinking about these tiny origins of life all traveling long distances to achieve their destiny and reproduce. He was able to visualize this same concept in the cosmos, and began painting seeds and star patterns as one. He employs images of the night sky as the backdrop for his dot images; Bravo has conceptualized multiple pictures of forms in space. Just as these tiny bits of genetic information travel on the waves, earth is a ball of genetic information floating in space. The idea that something as vast as our universe is so similar to the tiniest of seeds helps put Bravo’s connections into perspective.

Michael Bravo has a personal and exciting way of viewing the world. As  art fans, we are lucky enough to be invited into his world, to catch a glimpse of his perspective through his art. Bravo feels as if the knowledge passed by his professors has been granted to him for a reason. This reason being, so that he can pass on this knowledge of life and love for art on to future generations. His knowledge of self is reflective through his work. This artistic insight has evolved through years of experience and personal development. Bravo’s ideas expand above and beyond both time and space to a place where the imagination can be free and to run wild. The most important piece of information which he share’s is the concept of connectivity. In life the seed is usually the beginning for all and all organisms over time will return to the earth. Bravo’s ability to capture and express these concepts through various mediums is a trip through the familiar in to the unknown.

Essay by Jacqueline Smith and David Ramirez

Breadcrumb

Third Street Gallery archive: 2007 Exhibitions: The Oaxaca-Humboldt Print Exchange

Third Street Gallery • -

Humboldt State University First Street Gallery is pleased to present The Oaxaca Humboldt Print Exchange from April 7 through May 20, 2007.  Featured artists include Shinzaburo Takeda and his students from la Universidad Autónoma Benito Juárez de Oaxaca  (UABJO), in México; as well as Professor Sarah Whorf and her students from Humboldt State University (HSU). Humboldt State University and UABJO participate in a number of intercollegiate exchange programs.

This cultural exchange between the two universities and their respective communities features a wide variety of printmaking processes and themes; with a special emphasis on the theme of the Nahual, a traditional belief, indigenous to the Oaxacan region.

Breadcrumb

Third Street Gallery archive: 2007 Exhibitions: The Vanishing Point: Paintings and Photographs by Erin Whitman

Third Street Gallery • -

Humboldt State University’s First Street Gallery is pleased to present The Vanishing PointPaintings by Erin Whitman on exhibition from August 24, 2007 through November 4, 2007.  This exhibition features paintings and photographs from Whitman’s series, The Vanishing Point.

At the core of this exhibition, are four paintings, which were previously part of a complex installation composed of paintings, tableaux and three-dimensional objects. Using herself as a model, each painting depicts the artist in multiple poses occupying a dizzying, maze-like architectural setting—a brick labyrinth of rooms, alleys and courtyards set in a winter’s landscape. Her imagery is reminiscent of the dreamlike settings for Jean Cocteau’s “La Belle et la bête”, or Lewis Carroll’s,  “Alice in Wonderland”. Her intention is to create a compound self-portrait, the permutations of her psyche and memories registered in the twisting architecture of her art. Through these multiple depictions of herself, Whitman achieves a self-portrait, decidedly unique, and outside of normal pictorial conventions.

Whitman was born and raised in San Diego, California and came to HSU in 1997 to pursue her undergraduate degree.  She graduated in 2003 with a double major in Studio Art and Art History.  Whitman then attended the Cranbrook Academy of Art near Detroit, Michigan and in 2006 received her Master of Fine Arts in painting.  She returned to HSU in January of this year to teach painting and drawing as a lecturer in the Art Department.

A reception for the artist will be held during Arts Alive! on Saturday, September 1st.  Humboldt State University First Street Gallery is open Tuesday through Sunday from 12 to 5 p.m. and is located at 422 First Street, Eureka, California.  Admission is free.  Those planning group tours are encouraged to call ahead. For more information call 707-826-3424.

Breadcrumb

Third Street Gallery archive: 2007 Exhibitions: Young Alumni 2007: Works by Recent HSU Graduates

Third Street Gallery • -

Humboldt State University First Street Gallery is pleased to present, Young Alumni 2007: Works by Recent HSU Graduates, on exhibit from July 5 through August 5, 2007. The exhibition is billed by First Street Gallery as a clear demonstration of the excellent career preparation that Humboldt State University offers its Art Majors.

Art is one of the highest enrolled majors at the HSU campus. HSU’s Art Department offers classes with 25 full and part-time instructors, multiple, well equipped studio facilities and several campus showcases that enable undergraduates to enjoy an early experience of presenting their works to the public.  Additionally, students enrolled in the Art Department’s Museum and Gallery Practices Program gain practical, hands-on experience as they design, coordinate and curate exhibits at First Street Gallery.

“The alumni participating in this show have all developed to a point where they are working at a professional level as artists,” states First Street Gallery Director Jack Bentley.  “All 16 participants demonstrate real evidence of artistic success.  Crucial to their success, however, are the less tangible qualities they all share—a dedication and commitment to making art as a way of life and a deep engagement with their work on poetic and intellectual levels.” 

Participating artists are: Marci Carl- ceramics: Caitlin Collings- photography; Jessica D’Avanza – photography; Britta Gudmunson - photography,; Tom Harley – painting; Patrick Hillman – photography; Jamie Loomis – painting; Elizabeth Perez – painting; Heather McFadin – metalsmith/jewelry; Justin Mitman – ceramic sculpture; Avery Palmer – ceramic sculpture; Fernando Ramirez – painting; Bryan Schoneman – sculpture; Victoria Viramontes – painting; Tara Weidenhammer – printmaking and painting; andBrian Woida – sculpture.

Breadcrumb

Third Street Gallery archive: 2008 Exhibitions: 3-D Art by HSU Student and Alumni Metalsmiths, Jewelers and Sculptors

Third Street Gallery • -

Image removed.

Humboldt State University First Street Gallery is pleased to present,  d  d  D 
3-D Art by HSU Alumni Metalsmiths, Jewelers and Sculptors
opening on October 3rd.

“The alumni participating in this show have all developed to a point where they are working at a professional level as artists,” states First Street Gallery Director Jack Bentley.  “The 6 participants demonstrate real evidence of artistic success.  Crucial to their success, however, are the less tangible qualities they all share—a dedication and commitment to making art as a way of life and a deep engagement with their work on poetic and intellectual levels.”

Participating artists are:
Erin House – metalsmithing and jewelry 
Anthony Johnson – sculpture
Brianna Kochick – metalsmithing and jewelry, 
Sierra Pahl – sculpture, 
Lia Sharp – jewelry, 
and Jon Lyn McCallum – sculpture.

The exhibition is billed by First Street Gallery as a clear demonstration of the excellent career preparation that Humboldt State University offers its Art Majors.

Art is one of the highest enrolled majors at the HSU campus. HSU’s Art Department offers classes with 25 full and part-time instructors, multiple, well equipped studio facilities and several campus showcases that enable undergraduates to enjoy an early experience of presenting their works to the public.  Additionally, students enrolled in the Art Department’s Museum and Gallery Practices Program gain practical, hands-on experience as they design, coordinate and curate exhibits at First Street Gallery.

3-D Art by HSU Student and Alumni Metalsmiths, Jewelers and Sculptorswill be on exhibition from October 3 through November 2.  A reception for the artists will be held on Saturday October 4th during Eureka’s monthly Arts Alive program.  HSU First Street Gallery is open Tuesday through Sunday from 12noon to 5 p.m. and is located at 422 First Street, Eureka, California.  Admission is free.  Those planning group tours are encouraged to call ahead.  For more information call 707-826-3424.

Breadcrumb

Third Street Gallery archive: 2008 Exhibitions: A Regional Holiday Invitational Exhibition

Third Street Gallery • -

Image removed.

Humboldt State University First Street Gallery is pleased to present A Regional Holiday Invitational Exhibition , which will officially open on December 2nd and will continue through December 23rd. Featured in the show will be artwork by five artists from California's North Coast, who work in diverse styles and mediums.
  
The participating artists will display photographs, works on paper, ceramics, sculpture, and paintings.  “We're very excited to bring together these artists, many of them HSU alumni, during this holiday season," says First Street Gallery Director Jack Bentley. "This exhibition will remind those of us who live here, how fortunate we are to live in a community that is also the home of so many wonderful artists."

Of special note, the exhibition will introduce the fine art photography of Kellie Jo Brown. Brown, who is the staff photographer in Humboldt State’s Marketing and Communications Department, breaks away from the editorial-style photography for which she is widely recognized to display her more personal work.  Using an unconventional approach, she makes the photographs of still life and landscape subjects using long exposures through a pinhole camera to create sensuous photographs that revel in color. 

A Regional Holiday Invitational Exhibition is produced by Humboldt State students. Students enrolled in the Art Museum and Gallery Practices Program participate in the daily management and planning of shows at the gallery.  The gallery provides real-life opportunities for the students to develop their gallery and museum skills, which in turn provides them with experience that will help them to enter the job market. Many students who have participated in the program have gone on to careers in museums and galleries throughout the nation. 

Subscribe to