Tag Archives: Grand Rapids

Works on paper

For the next 18 days, right here, in River City, Art­Prize 2011 will dom­i­nate many of our cit­i­zens with a sense of eupho­ria that one could plot on a scale between  a rainbow-covered car­riage ride pulled by uni­corns and a con­fab facil­i­tated by the local chap­ter of ‘Art School Grad­u­ates for Truth.’

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The importance of program leadership in public Montessori education

My remarks, as writ­ten, were pre­sented  as a pub­lic com­ment made to the Grand Rapids Pub­lic Schools Board of Edu­ca­tion, Edu­ca­tion Sub­com­mit­tee, April 20, 2011:

Hello, I am Matthew Patul­ski, a GRPS Montes­sori par­ent and a mem­ber the GRPS Montes­sori Taskforce.

On behalf of the task-force par­ents, we want thank the dis­trict for exe­cut­ing the Montes­sori mar­ket­ing sur­vey. With­out scoop­ing the details, I just want to say it val­i­dates what we have known for along time: there is inter­est in Grand Rapids for a high per­form­ing, pub­lic Montes­sori High School. This inter­est tran­scends, income, race and region as long as there are Montes­sori trained staff teach­ing Montes­sori curriculum.

To do this, we must start at the top: Hire a ded­i­cated Montes­sori Prin­ci­pal or Pro­gram Director…

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The outcomes of the GRPS Montessori Taskforce

On April 11, 2011, I spoke dur­ing the pub­lic com­ment sec­tion of the Grand Rapids Pub­lic Schools (GRPS) Board of Edu­ca­tion meet­ing about the work of the GRPS Montes­sori Task­force about the pos­i­tive out­comes to date of this multi-year col­lab­o­ra­tion … Con­tinue read­ing

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ArtPrize 2009: Stumbling towards empathy

Now that Art­Prize 2009 is a fad­ing mem­ory, I can say there is more good than bad to Art­Prize (gasp).

I have many issues with Art­Prize on a func­tional level but it has the poten­tial be very good for the Visual Arts in Grand Rapids over time. Put another way: how is this not an improve­ment over hav­ing large fiber­glass painted cows, fish, birds, etc. scat­tered around down­towns across Amer­ica and call­ing that art?

The salient point of dis­cus­sion: We all must con­tin­u­ally broaden and improve the qual­ity of the work shown and the sub­tlety of the exchange between Artists and the view­ing public.

While Artists are not Doc­tors, they do share that sin­gu­lar ded­i­ca­tion and desire for pro­fes­sion­al­ism and knowl­edge found in med­i­cine and other pro­fes­sions such as the law, the sci­ences, the base­ball. How does one get the pub­lic to under­stand that premise, fend off bit­ing alle­ga­tions of elit­ism, while at the same time being respon­si­ble as artist/curators for select­ing 1/2 of the top 10?

Margo Burian, a painter friend of mine, remarked the following:

It seems like every­day, more fund­ing to the arts is being cut at both the state and fed­eral levels.My take on it is that the gen­eral pub­lic feels gen­er­ally excluded from the arts, there­fore the pow­ers that be can make cuts with­out suf­fer­ing too much backlash.If Art­Prize did some­thing well, it was get­ting peo­ple to feel included and that they were par­tic­i­pat­ing. Does that qual­ify them to judge art? It’s not my place to say, but what I do know is that many of them cared enough to get off the couch and get down to venues to look at Art.

If we as an artis­tic com­mu­nity want to have sup­port for the Arts, we have to get the greater com­mu­nity as a whole to see the value of the inclu­sion of the arts in their lives. If by allow­ing a pub­lic vote, you get the pub­lic inter­ested in the arts, we bring the com­mu­nity up as a whole. Its then, when we cre­ate an inclu­sive com­mu­nity, that we can edu­cate peo­ple as to the value of the arts and how they play a part in the qual­ity of daily life.

Peo­ple will defend some­thing they care about. As cre­ative pro­fes­sion­als we need to own Art actions, not just be pas­sive observers wait­ing for an audi­ence to saunter by. The increased traf­fic will give our local insti­tu­tions an oppor­tu­nity to show work that we will want to see that pub­lic will be inter­ested in as well.

Art­Prize was a great mem­ber­ship drive for the UICA. Also, sev­eral pieces are under nego­ti­a­tion of sale to col­lec­tors and UICA gets a cut–another win for the home team. My hunch is that the suc­cess of this year will help to shape deci­sions of who shows next year and where. UICA has set an expec­ta­tion for suc­cess (4 of the top 10). Many other works are in the top 25/50/75/100. I won­der if next year, GRAM will throw it’s doors open for 3 weeks and show work inside instead of just two walls on the exte­rior. I would not be sur­prised if the Fred­er­ick Mei­jer Gar­dens and GVSU are more involved next year as well.

Sure, you will still have the B.O.B. and other restau­rants show­ing work. Smarter artists won’t go back to the venues that make their work sub­servient to the spec­ta­cle of that venue. I felt very uncom­fort­able look­ing at art­work and some­one else’s lunch or din­ner at the same time. The Kiss­ing Booth was the excep­tion that proved the rule.

Besides the UICA/Old Fed­eral Build­ing, I can think of 5 or 6 venues of the dozens I vis­ited that are role mod­els of well pre­sented, non-institutional spaces cov­er­ing a full spec­trum of cura­to­r­ial premises: Betade­sign, Brass Works, 47 Com­merce SW, Mon­roe Com­mu­nity Church, Peaches B&B and Tan­gle­foot. The work varies in qual­ity, like much of Art­Prize, but these venues really cared about the presentation–they respected Artists. By the way, 2010 venue orga­niz­ers, you could cherry pick a great 10–12 per­son show from the right 1–3 artists found at each of these locations.

In the end, advo­cacy, edu­ca­tion and most of all, empa­thy will improve the con­ver­sa­tion and the qual­ity of the work. The pub­lic will develop a more informed opin­ion to com­pli­ment an intu­itive one about Art and Artists. Artists will gain much in speak­ing to this newer audi­ence, but it will take some time. Ask­ing ques­tions and lis­ten­ing may be the bet­ter action for now. Both sides will gar­ner respect from each other. There is a big­ger agenda in play that goes beyond just look­ing at Art. It will prob­a­bly take 3 of these before you can effec­tively cri­tique its impact to the larger schema of the Art World.

Last Sat­ur­day, on the last day, two days after all of the win­ners were announced, there were thou­sands of peo­ple out in the streets of GR sim­ply because they wanted to see the work. Some were artists, 20-somethings, the usual sus­pects. But also moms and dads tak­ing their kids around down­town. I had great con­ver­sa­tions, I lis­tened. A typ­i­cal story: ‘We wanted to see the top 10 and then got sidetracked.’

Side­tracked: it’s a start. Thank you.

Orginal Post: http://patulski.is/t/432 http://patulski.is/t/432

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ArtPrize v. Festival: Is there a difference?

Festival of the Arts

Last night while walk­ing through The Old Fed­eral Build­ing, Fes­ti­val of the Arts came up in con­ver­sa­tion. For those not from River City, it’s our annual 3 day event fea­tur­ing the best local Art, Music, Film and food in the West Michi­gan 7 county region. The first Fes­ti­val began in 1969, the year we installed Le Grande Vitesse. The icon at left was cre­ated by Calder for that event. A line has been drawn from 1969 to now. After this first week of Art­Prize is there an inter­sec­tion of intent?

From the Fes­ti­val website:

Always held the first full week­end in June in down­town Grand Rapids, Fes­ti­val of the Arts is a com­mu­nity cel­e­bra­tion fea­tur­ing arts, enter­tain­ment, food and fun activ­i­ties for the entire fam­ily. All per­for­mances, exhibits and activ­i­ties are free, thanks to gen­er­ous dona­tions by local orga­ni­za­tions, com­pa­nies and individuals.

Now Art­Prize:

At Art­Prize, any artist—from estab­lished to emerging—has the chance to show work. Any vis­i­tor can vote. The vote will decide who wins the largest art prize in the world. We also took the unusual step to allow peo­ple in the city to open a venue and choose the artists to show in their space. There is not one offi­cial cura­tor or jury for the competition.

On the face of they sound very dif­fer­ent. But are they?

This past week, crowds in the 10′s of thou­sands walked biked, bussed and trol­lied through­out the 3 square mile Art­Prize dis­trict to look at art, eat food, take in the day. This past June, 10′s of Thou­sands of peo­ple walked around down­town to look at art, Lis­ten to music, eat food, take in the day.

Art­Prize has a $250K people’s choice award. Festival’s is only $500. Both events had over a thou­sand entries. Both get peo­ple talk­ing about Art.

The selec­tion process of Fes­ti­val is more rig­or­ous on the one hand with only a third of its entries being cho­sen for the exhibit. Although very local in fla­vor, the over­all qual­ity offers a decent sense of the ‘best of the region’ by those peo­ple who love to make work be they are paid or not.

What I saw this past week in Art­Prize, was that the bad are very bad and the good are very good. Of the very good works cre­ated else­where, they help expand the local sense of what is Art. I also saw that many local artists can hold their own against national work.The sad part is much of it is rarely seen locally, except in the clas­sic gallery set­ting. Will the Art­Prize pub­lic con­tinue to step out for that after next week? They say it is part of their mis­sion to pro­mote an ongo­ing dia­logue about Art. We shall see.

When I was a boy, my fam­ily would go to Fes­ti­val and I would always go to the Visual Arts and Film com­pe­ti­tions first. I spent hours walk­ing the halls of art and espe­cially watch­ing short films. Often return­ing many times; amazed that some­one I might know could make a movie and show it to other peo­ple. Now as an adult, I work as a cre­ative pro­fes­sional, I write, I sup­port the cre­ative endeav­ors of my wife and two boys. I can draw a line from Fes­ti­val to now. Will my sons be able to say that about Art­Prize? We shall see.

A lot of the local Art pro­fes­sion­als like to grum­ble about the cal­iber of work in Fes­ti­val. Same goes for Art­Prize. I don’t dis­agree. I have real issues with both but I still go, fam­ily in tow and find value in both. If you are going to live here and make here, then step up and own Fes­ti­val, own Art­Prize, own this town. Don’t sing pub­lic virtues of Art­Prize and grum­ble in the com­fort of friends. If you don’t like some­thing point it out, offer a solu­tion. Also make sure to give praise when it’s due.

The gen­eral pub­lic often remarks they don’t always under­stand Mod­ern Art. Or they may say ‘I could do that.’ And that clas­sic: ‘Art is in the eye of the beholder.’ Not good enough. There are some great works out there but you please, do your home­work. Crack a book, rent a video, google an artist, attend some of the great lec­tures that UICA, ActiveSite and other venues are host­ing this week and next. Own your vote by being informed.

Tomor­row night, Fri­day 10/2, UICA is host­ing a dis­cus­sion on the Art­Prize Top 10. 7–9 PM. Come out and step up.

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