Issuu ava2014winterclassbrochure

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11 Bank Street Lebanon, NH 03766 603.448.3117 email: [email protected] www.avagallery.org AVA Gallery and Art Center is supported in part by a grant from the New Hampshire State Council on the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts. Permit No. 86 AVA Gallery and Art Center (Alliance for the Visual Arts) is dedicated to promoting the visual arts through exhibitions and educational programs that nurture, support and challenge New England artists, and to providing art classes for children, teens and adults of all levels and abilities.AVA’s programs— including special events that foster interaction among artists, patrons of the arts and the community, and which emphasize sustainability—are dedicated to recognizing the ways in which art enriches our lives. Cover Image: Our joyous cover image, a family portrait, was painted by Rachel Banley-Bill, a participant in Art Lab, a year-round art program at AVA for adults with special needs offered in partnership with the Spe- cial Needs Support Center. © 2011 gary hall AVA GALLERY & ART CENTER WINTER 2014 • ART CLASSES & PROGRAMS

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Transcript of Issuu ava2014winterclassbrochure

Page 1: Issuu ava2014winterclassbrochure

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© 2011 gary hall

ava gallery & art center

winter 2014 • art claSSeS & PrOgraMS

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2 ava gallery and art center ▲ www.avagallery.org ▲ (603) 448-3117

Education ProgramAVA Gallery and Art Center offers a vibrant, year-round art education program for individuals of all ages, ranging in ability from novice to professional. Classes introduce participants to the creative process, teach basic drawing skills, offer students exposure to media ranging from watercolor to sculpture, and encourage the pursuit of advanced study in areas like oil painting, printmaking, and digital photography. AVA’s renowned Children’s Program—which takes place in our welcoming and well-equipped studios—offers preschool and afterschool classes, as well as unique, weeklong art camps coinciding with the vacation calendar of local schools. Creative opportunities for teens abound. AVA draws on a strong faculty composed of nationally and regionally known artists. If you haven’t taken a class at AVA before, you may be in for a surprise. You won’t be striving for grades or credits, because there aren’t any here. Instead you can expect:

the freedom to learn in your own style

engaged, supportive fellow students with a variety of perspectives

the satisfaction and challenge of defining your own goals

the opportunity to work with a dedicated, highly qualified faculty

spacious, light-filled studio settings

the pleasure of being in an award-winning “green” building, with access to exhibition galleries and special programs

Registration PolicyYou may reserve a place in class by phone (603) 448-3117, online at www.avagallery.org, e-mail ([email protected]), fax (603) 448-4827, or stop by AVA to register in person. To be officially enrolled in an AVA class, the tuition must be paid in full. Registrations are accepted in the order in which full payment is received. If requested, we can set up a payment by installation plan.

AVA members receive a significant discount on tuition. MEMbERshiP is oPEn to All.

Alliance for the Visual Arts

REgistRAtion FoRM: wintER 2014

Date

Name

Address

City State Zipcode

Phone/home

Phone/work

Email address

For Children’s ClassesAge Date of Birth

Parent or Guardian Name

Course Title(s) Course Number Tuition

$

$

$

$

Member Non–member

Yes, I would like to become a member of AVA (see below left)

Membership $

Total enclosed $

Check # or Credit Card VISA Mastercard

Account Number Expiration Date

I have read and accept the terms of AVA’s cancellation policy (see above)

Signature

become an AVA member today! Yes, I enclose $45 for an annual individual membership, which entitles me to reduced

tuition fees to all AVA classes (in addition to many other benefits). See p. 3. Yes, I enclose $65 for an annual family membership, which entitles us to reduced tuition

fees to all AVA classes (in addition to many other benefits). See p. 3. I would like to make a donation of $________ to the AVA Scholarship Fund,

to help make it possible for others to take art classes at AVA.

MAIl To: AVA Gallery and Art Center11 Bank Street, lebanon, NH 03766or fax to: (603) 448–4827

Cancellation/Refund PolicyIf a participant cancels 15 days or more before the first class, the full amount of the tuition will be refunded in the form of a check or as a credit that can be used towards another AVA class within one year of date of issue. If a participant cancels between 14 and 8 days before the first class, half the amount of tuition will be awarded as a credit that can be used towards another AVA class within one year of date of issue. If a participant cancels in 7 days or fewer before the first class, tuition will be forfeited. If, for any reason, AVA needs to cancel a class, participants will be contacted by phone and / or email as soon as the decision is made. Please be certain to provide us with your current contact information at the time of enrollment.

weather Cancellation PolicyAVA cancels classes due to bad weather in tandem with the Lebanon School District. Should a class need to be canceled, AVA will contact participants by phone and / or email as soon as the decision is made. Please be certain that you provide us with all necessary contact information when you enroll in a class. AVA also posts weather cancellations via our website and Facebook page, so please check these sites for current weather-related class information. Canceled classes will be rescheduled for the first available date—in most cases, the class will be extended by one week. If a canceled class is not rescheduled, participants will receive a refund for the cancelled portion of the course in the form of a check or as a credit that can be used towards another AVA class within one year of date of issue.

scholarshipsAVA’s scholarship program is made possible by the generosity of our supporters. Scholarships are available to individuals of all ages and abilities and are usually awarded at 50% of the cost of tuition. For information about the scholarship application process, please call AVA: (603) 448–3117 or visit www.avagallery.org. Requests must be received no later than two weeks before the start of class.

Register online for AVA Classes!our website, www.avagallery.org, continues to evolve to better serve youOn AVA’s website, you can securely enroll in classes and workshops, renew your membership or join as a new member, purchase gift certificates for friends and family and donate to our Annual Fund.

Founded in 1973, AVA (Alliance for the Visual Arts) is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization. All contributions and Scholarship Fund donations are tax deductible to the extent allowable by law. The EIN number of Community Gallery, Inc. d/b/a AVA Gallery and Art Center is 23–7394706.

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2014AVA boARd oF diRECtoRs

ChairH. Sloane Mayor, AIA

Vice ChairDana Ireland

TreasurerDale Cunningham, CPA

SecretarySheryl Trainor

MembersJonathan D. MaslandRuthie MurrayJoseph O’Donnell, MDEmily Ridgway, MDJennifer SnyderGeoffrey VittC. Stuart White, Jr., AIA

AVA stAFF

Executive DirectorBente [email protected]

Education DirectorAdam [email protected]

Capacity BuilderDebbe [email protected]

Office ManagerConstance [email protected]

Studio ManagerAlthea [email protected]

Exhibition CoordinatorMargaret E. [email protected]

BookkeeperAbigail [email protected]

CredItsPhotos: AVA faculty, staff and friends

Artwork by participants and faculty in AVA classes

Cover Image: Rachel Banley-Bill

Brochure Design and Production: Carrie Fradkin

become an AVA Member!

BANK STREET

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OL STREET

PARK STREET

Lebanon Green

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OVER STREET

AVA is located in the Carter-Kelsey building—the former H.W. Carter factory—at 11 Bank Street in Lebanon, NH, right off Colburn Park (Lebanon Green), on Route 4. It is easily accessible from Interstate 89, Exits 17, 18, or 19.

digital outreach from AVA

For Current Information on AVA’s Many Offerings, Keep in Touch Online!AVA strives to fill its Carter-Kelsey building with an ever-changing calendar of cultural events throughout the year. Special events are sometimes scheduled on short notice and, consequently, the most current details are not always found in our print publications.

Here’s how you can find up-to-the-moment details about AVA’s special events, exhibitions, classes, lectures, and more.

• First and foremost – please visit our website at www.avagallery.org whenever you have a question about our scheduled activities. We refresh the content regularly to feature current information on programs, classes, exhibitions, and special events, as well as opportunities for artists, internships, and more.

• Are you on Facebook? “Like” AVA Gallery and Art Center and have updates delivered through your news feed.

• Do you receive AVA’s eNewsletter? If not, you may sign up on the AVA website and Facebook page, or email [email protected] with “Add to eNewsletter” in the subject line. We’ll follow up.

• Have you checked AVA’s eNewsletter Archive? Accessible from the News and Events link on the www.avagallery.org homepage, find information on our programming as well as artist opportunities.

• Follow AVA on Twitter. Updates of events, classes, exhibitions and more can be yours in one sentence or less @AVAgallery.org

Keeping up with AVA is just one click away. We hope you’ll become a regular! And you can always give us a call at (603) 448-3117.

board Meetings to birthday Parties— beautiful spaces Available at 11 bank streetAVA’s LEED Gold-certified Carter-Kelsey building could be the ideal setting for your next event, offering a unique combination of local history, sustainable archi-tecture, stunning gallery spaces, and an ever-changing palate of visual arts as the backdrop to your gathering. Successful events have ranged from seated, catered affairs to creative business presentations; cocktails with colleagues to multimedia meetings. Of course, personalized birthday parties at AVA delight children and families alike.

For information on availability and cost for rentals of AVA’s galleries and stu-dios, please call (603) 448-3117.

AVA Gallery and Art Center, a nonprofit organization, provides a multitude of services to the community. In addition to our regularly scheduled classes, we also offer low-cost programs like CAOS (Community Arts Open Studio) as well as a number of unique opportunities for children, seniors, and adults with special needs. These enriching offerings are only partially funded through tuition or registration fees, so we rely on contributions, especially from our members, to raise the necessary funds to continue our creative and all-inclusive programming.

Because membership support is so important to the continued vitality of what AVA offers, we have recently expanded our annual membership benefits. If you renew your membership or join as a new member, on an Individual ($45) or Family ($65) level or if you join at a higher level, we are pleased to make the following benefits available to you:

Discounts on all AVA classes, camps and workshops

Priority registration for AVA Summer CampsOpportunity to submit artwork to AVA’s Holiday

Exhibition Discounted submission fees for AVA’s bi-annual

Summer Juried ExhibitionMembers at Family level and above receive a

CAOS punch card for 8 free admissions to family Saturday CAOS or CAOS for Toddlers

Invitations to AVA Gallery openings and special events

10% discount on custom framing at Bean’s in Hanover and Duke’s in Lebanon and discounts on framing materials at the Junction Frame Shop in White River Junction

10% discount on art supplies at Bean’s in Hanover, Duke’s in Lebanon, and Valley Art Suppliers in West Lebanon

20% discount on AVA READS! selections at the Norwich Bookstore

Discount on AVA birthday parties* North American Reciprocal Museum Program*Annual event with guest artist\lecturer**Discount on Gallery and Teaching Studio rentals**Private tour of the gallery for up to 10 people****Support AVA and your community!

*Contributing membership level ($100-$249)**Patron membership level ($250-$499)***Sponsor membership level ($500-$999)****Benefactor and above ($1,000 and above)

Thank you for being a member and for making art and AVA a part of your everyday life!

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4 ava gallery and art center ▲ www.avagallery.org ▲ (603) 448-3117

From the Executive director

Fall into winter!Dear AVA Family,

What a wonderful anniversary year we have expe-rienced here at AVA Gallery and Art Center. Unlike most with looming milestone birthdays, AVA rel-ished the idea of turning 40. Never has a 40th been welcomed with such pride and enthusiasm, and never has the party been so much fun! We enjoyed a year of celebrations, planning and giving thanks to all those wonderful folks who have helped make us who we are today. I often refer to AVA as “we,” and that doesn’t require any further explanation to anyone who has been with AVA over these four decades. AVA draws people in and creates the “we.” One thing that was abundantly clear over the last 12 months was the affirmation of the critical role that AVA plays in our community. Many of our films and receptions drew audiences in the hundreds, each face beaming with a sense of belonging. AVA truly brings people together.

My time at AVA, as a Board member and cer-tainly as Board Chair, has been most rewarding. I am honored to have served two full terms, as allowed under our by-laws. But the time has come to pass the torch to the next group of highly dedi-cated members, who under the leadership of newly elected Board Chair Sloane Mayor, will guide this fine organization, “us,” into a dynamic and exciting future. Onward!

William Dunn, Board Chair 2011 –2013

From the board Chair AVA wintER 20142 Registration Form: Winter 20143 Become an AVA Member!3 Digital Outreach from AVA3 Board Meetings to Birthday Parties— Beautiful Spaces Available at 11 Bank Street4 From the Executive Director4 From the Board Chair5 From the Education Director5 AVA Gift Certificates5 Support AVA’s Scholarship Fund5 Birthday Parties at AVA

6–7 AVA nEws6 Please Support AVA’s 2014 Annual Fund Drive!6 AVA Looks to the Future6 The Elizabeth Rowland Mayor Gallery: AVA’s Newly Named Exhibition Space7 AVA’s Green Building Challenge7 Leave a Legacy to AVA7 A Memorable Fall at AVA!7 Public and Private Grant Support Matters!

8–9 Exhibitions8 AVA’s Winter 2014 Exhibition Schedule9 From the Exhibition Coordinator9 6th Annual Best of the Upper Valley High School Exhibition9 AVA’s Annual Holiday Sale & Exhibition

10–11 sPECiAl PRogRAMs 10 Public Art: From Sculptures to Greeting Cards10 Dartmouth Art for Kids, Art Lab, CAOS, ART STOP!, CAOS for Toddlers and Senior Art Class10 AVA Seeks Summer Interns and Camp Assistants!11 Introducing Painting Open Studio – Now on Wednesday Nights11 Storytelling with Shadows11 Sunday Afternoon Films at AVA11 The Mudroom at AVA — A Quarterly Social Gathering 11 Flock Dance Troupe Museum Pieces III

12 silEnt AuCtion12 AVA’s 2014 Silent Auction

13–22 wintER 2014 ClAssEs And woRkshoPs FoR ChildREn, tEEns And Adults

13–14 Program Schedule at a Glance16–17 Classes for Childrens and Teens16 Children’s Afterschool Discount17 Winter Vacation Camps17 Full–Day Camp Discounts, Early Drop–off and Late Pick–up18–21 Classes and Workshops for Adults and Teens

22–23 FACulty

looking Ahead…Dear Artists, Friends and Supporters,

In a recent article in the Valley News on AVA’s signifi-cant plans for the future—including a $2.5 million capital campaign—I was quoted as saying: “You have to have an ambitious goal.” What went unsaid is that an ambitious goal is worth very little unless it is backed by a solid group of supporters.

Over the years, AVA has benefited from the generosity of a remarkable group of supporters, who has made it possible for our organization to become (and, again, I quote the Valley News) “a centerpiece of Lebanon’s art revival and of the Upper Valley’s growing arts infrastructure.” And I do not think of “support” solely in terms of financial gifts; equally important is the multitude of other ways of giving to AVA—whether as volunteers, as donors of in-kind goods or services, as artists presenting new ideas, as faculty members meeting with individual students outside of regularly scheduled classes, as staff mem-bers giving of their time beyond the call of duty, as Board members making room for AVA in their busy professional lives—the list is endless.

Speaking of AVA’s Board, the time has come (alas) to give kudos to our departing Board Chair, William Dunn, whose leadership over the past two years has been outstanding. His ability to combine financial acumen with a broad, comprehensive vision for AVA’s future—paired with his talent for communicating complex plans and ideas in the most direct and compelling way—has been instrumen-tal in moving our organization forward. We thank Bill for his exceptional service to AVA, and we are delighted that he has promised to join us as a mem-ber of future ad hoc committees.

As AVA commits itself to new, ambitious goals, we are ever thankful to our community of support-ers—those who believe in our endeavors and who give in so many ways to make our goals attainable.

With much gratitude,Bente Torjusen, Executive Director

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From the Education director

It is my pleasure to introduce AVA’s Winter 2014 Edu-cation Program. As always, we strive to provide the highest quality classes to people of all ages, abilities and creative inclinations. In the upcoming quarter, we hope you find the perfect class for your needs.

Our program for Children and Teens is com-prised of two five-week afterschool sessions, bridged by our ever popular February vacation camps. The classes provide youths with instruction in drawing, painting, sculpture, robotics, digital photography, and more. We also offer early drop-off and late pick-up options for working families as well as tuition dis-counts for students who enroll in multiple classes.

Our Adult program includes 30 classes, cover-ing both traditional and contemporary media and techniques. AVA’s faculty are all working artists—each eager to share their expertise and enthusiasm with you. Shorter one-day workshops and extended weekly sessions will let you explore creative chal-lenges large and small. Please join us, on your own or with a friend, as art experiences can enliven and enrich your life in unexpected ways!

Scholarships are available to individuals of all ages and abilities. Please let us know if we can help you with a scholarship application.

Looking forward to seeing you soon,Adam Blue, Education Director

support AVA’s scholarship FundAVA’s Scholarship Fund is available to community members of all ages and abilities. Whether making pos-sible a child’s summer art camp experience or an adult’s participation in a workshop, 100% of AVA’s Schol-arship Fund donations go directly to tuition.

AVA’s Board and staff thank everyone who has given to the Scholarship Fund, and we appeal to your continuing generosity in the coming year. Requests for scholarship support have steadily increased over the recent years, and your giving helps ensure that all deserving applicants receive support. In the last year, AVA’s Scholarship Fund awarded supplemental tuition to more than 40 participants! Your donation makes a differ-ence, as every dollar helps others realize their creative goals.

Donations to AVA’s Scholarship Fund can be made by phone: (603) 448-3117; online: www.avagallery.org; or by mail: AVA, 11 Bank Street, Lebanon, NH 03766.

AVA gift CertificatesAn AVA Gift Certificate is the perfect way

to encourage a friend, family member, or co-worker to make art a part of their life. Redeem-able for classes, camps, memberships and artwork, AVA Gift Certificates are available in any amount and offer the recipient an array of creative opportunities.

To learn more about giving this flexible and creative gift, stop by AVA’s office; give us a call at (603) 448-3117; or purchase your gift certificate online at www.avagallery.org.

birthday Parties at AVAWhat better place to have your child’s birthday party than at AVA? Our Children’s Studio and Children’s Loft provide the perfect setting for artful celebrations, designed around a theme chosen by the birthday child. An AVA instructor (“Master of Ceremonies”) will work with you in the planning stages and during the party itself, providing opportunities for the young party-goers to create fanciful works with paint, clay, fabric, collage and/or recycled materials. And—best of all—you’ll leave here on a high note, as the tidying-up is included in the “birthday-package.”

The cost is $200 for a two-hour birthday party for up to 10 children ($20 more for each additional child).

Birthday cake and other treats must be provided by the hosts. The “Master of Ceremonies” will work closely with you to make every aspect of your child’s birthday celebration a memorable one.

Birthday parties are best scheduled on Sundays throughout the year; parties for preschool chil-dren may take place on weekday mornings during the school year.

Please call AVA at (603) 448-3117 to make arrangements.

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6 ava gallery and art center ▲ www.avagallery.org ▲ (603) 448-3117

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This past September, the exhibition space that for so long has been referred to as “Gallery 3” was formally named the Elizabeth Rowland Mayor Gallery, in honor of AVA’s co-founder, Elizabeth (Lili) Mayor. It was a most timely and fitting gesture during this, our 40th anniversary year, as Lili has had a major impact on AVA, both artistically and organizationally, over these four decades.

The unveiling of the new

name plaque took place during the exhibition Four Artists—Four Decades, with Lili’s work on stunning display throughout the E.N. Wennberg Gallery and the former Gallery 3. Joining us in celebrating Lili were family, friends and fellow artists.

AVA is honored to have a gallery named for an artist who has done—and continues to do—so much for AVA, and who is so integral to the identity of our organization.

Please support AVA’s 2014 Annual Fund drive!Your fully tax-deductible donation to our Annual Fund provides us with funds that are essential for our continued ability to offer imaginative and enriching art programs—often free or low-cost—that greatly contribute to the vitality of our commu-nity.

Every donation to AVA’s Annual Fund provides invaluable support for our programs and operating budget, and we are proud of the fact that nearly 90% of all contributions directly support our art programming.

In addition to gifts received as checks or credit cards, gifts of stock are greatly appreciated. Should you wish to donate shares of stock, please contact AVA’s Executive Director, Bente Torjusen, at (603) 448-3117 or [email protected] for specific information needed to assure proper handling of such gifts.

We sincerely thank you for your generous sup-port of AVA’s 2013-2014 Annual Fund drive!

Founded in 1973, AVA (Alliance for the Visual Arts) is a 501 ( c ) ( 3 ) not-for-profit organization.

The EIN # of Community Gallery, Inc., d/b/a AVA Gallery and Art Center is: 23-7394706.

AVA looks to the FutureAVA’s 40th anniversary reception, on October 27, was a memorable culmination of an event-filled year. We honored the past, we celebrated the present, and—equally important—we unveiled new plans for AVA’s future.

These plans—many of them rooted in long-held dreams—emerged as we sought input from artists, sup-porters, former Board members and community members at-large. The plans will significantly strengthen our programming and, in the process, boost AVA’s organizational and physical capacity. The launch of a $2.5 million Capital Campaign in support of these goals was also announced.

Our recent acquisition of a contiguous property on the North side of our building—made possible by the generosity of several longtime supporters—is key to the realization of these plans. In due time, our Stone Carving Studio, now located on the first floor of our Carter-Kelsey building (facing Bank Street), will be relocated to this property. There, it will form the core of a new three-dimensional arts facility. The Stone Carving Studio will, of course, continue to be named in honor of Winkie Kelsey.

The space where the Stone Carving Studio is currently located will be transformed into a gallery dedi-cated to exhibiting a broad variety of work by artist-members. It will also offer access to flat files and digital archives. This members’ gallery will vastly increase the visibility of the artistic talent in our area, providing new opportunities to introduce the public to a broader spectrum of artists. Visually, this elongation of our Bank Street-facing exhibition spaces will lend the appearance of a splendid “gallery row.”

Simultaneously, we will proceed with plans for continued building improvements that were not accom-plished during the 2006-2007 renovation; at the same time, we will move forward with our plans for solar roof panels and other AVA Green Building Challenge initiatives (see page 7).

Last, but not least, we are establishing a reserve fund to help ensure AVA’s financial sustainability. In the coming year, we will stay in close touch with our artists, members and friends as these plans are

refined. We will also keep you in the loop as to the many ways you can contribute to the success of our plans.

Join us in securing a vibrant and sustainable future for AVA!

the Elizabeth Rowland Mayor gallery: AVA’s newly named Exhibition space

Special thanks go to Alanna Mayer, founder and co-owner of BQE, whose donation of time,

services, and expertise made the celebratory evening honoring Lili Mayor such a success.

www.beautyqueenevents.org

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leave a legacy to AVA

Join AVA’s Bank Street Society for Planned GivingWhile AVA’s 40th anniversary year gave us pause to think of where we have come from, it also provided the perfect occasion to think about where we are going. One thing is certain: we would like to see AVA thrive for the next forty years—and beyond!

With that in mind, we have established the Bank Street Society for individuals who make planned gifts to AVA. Planned gifts allow you to leave a legacy that will create long-lasting support for AVA and the many art programs that enrich our community. You may designate AVA as a beneficiary of your IRA, 401(k) Plan or life insurance policy, or you may include AVA in your estate plan with a bequest.

Additionally, we are pleased to announce our partnership with Vermont Community Foundation (VCF). With the expert guidance of VCF, you can help sustain AVA into the future with a variety of trust arrangements. For more information on joining the Bank Street Society or about leaving a planned gift to AVA, please contact Bente Torjusen, AVA’s Executive Director, at (603) 448-3117 or [email protected] .

AVA’s green building Challenge

A Work-in-ProgressAVA’s efforts to achieve net zero energy status, i.e., to produce as much energy with renewables as our building consumes, has been moving forward. The Jordan Institute, New Hampshire’s premier think-tank dedicated to addressing climate change in the built environment through efficiency upgrades, began guiding this process over the summer and fall. Led by Paul Leveille (who was instrumental in our achieving LEED Gold-certification in 2008), three years of our building’s most recent energy usage has been analyzed. Data loggers have been installed on electrical circuits to discover exactly where electrons are going. While these efforts are expected to pinpoint areas that can yield savings, the most important watt is the one not used: the “negawatt.” Once the total thermal and electrical loads have been optimally reduced, a solar electrical system—an essential component of our new capital campaign—will be designed, “right-sized” to the building’s needs. AVA’s planned arts facility for three-dimensional studies (see page 6) will be designed to the same high standards; unlike 11 Bank Street, it will benefit from being a new building. Simultaneously, we will continue with our “deep energy retrofit” of the Carter-Kelsey building, with particular emphasis on improving the 2nd and 3rd floors.

The Jordan Institute’s studies have been made possible by a grant to AVA from the Highfield Foundation.

Public and Private grant support Matters!AVA Gallery and Art Center has just been awarded a two-year Public Value Partnership Grant from New Hampshire State Council on the Arts (NHSCA) for fiscal years 2014 and 2015. The award letter states that the funding “is intended to benefit communi-ties in New Hampshire and improve the quality of life through the arts.” AVA was commended for presenting programs with an “impressive balance of traditional craft, fine art and new media”; we were also praised for having offerings for all ages and for providing a number of free and low-cost programs. In addition, the grant panelist noted approvingly that AVA has a strong mix of revenue streams. This important two-year operating grant—our request was fully funded—was made possible by appropria-tions from the Governor and State Legislature and a National Endowment for the Arts grant to NHSCA. We are deeply appreciative of this prestigious Public Value Partnership Grant.

AVA also recently received a generous grant from the Highfield Foundation designated for dual purposes. One portion of the grant was awarded in support of several of our art programs and initiatives for individuals with special needs; the other portion was given in recognition of our initiatives to make our building net zero, or carbon neutral, by 2017 (see “Update on the AVA Green Building Challenge” on this page).

It is with much gratitude that we acknowledge these important grants, as well as grants from other sources received during the course of the year. Funding from grants typically constitutes 12% of AVA’s annual operating budget.

A Memorable Fall at AVA!At AVA, there is no such thing as resting on one’s laurels, even if Alex Hanson of the Valley News observed that our final exhibition of the fall season, AVA Selections: Work by Twenty Artists, “might be the best yet.”

Creativity and generosity went hand in hand as all proceeds from two exceptional exhibitions—Winkie Kelsey’s show of paintings, drawings, photos, prints and sculpture in the Stone Carving Studio and Linda Roesch’s encaustics, watercolors and photos on display in the Johnson Sisters Library—were generously donated to AVA.

Special recognition of AVA co-founder Elizabeth Mayor included a stunning exhibition of her recent work as well as a celebratory evening and the naming of a gallery in her honor.

AVA’s Education program continued to flourish, with participants in classes for all ages and abilities finding creative expression in our eight teaching studios. Unique offerings abounded, including CAOS for Toddlers, ART STOP! (a weekly, free afterschool program for youth), and a Tai Chi and Visual Arts session for seniors, presented in partnership with Dartmouth Centers for Health and Aging.

Our October film series, which featured eight films, exceeded all expectations. It ranged from presentations with an international flair—including a guest appearance by Canadian filmmaker Jill Sharpe at the showing of her film on Emily Carr, Georgia O’Keeffe and Frida Kahlo—to the truly local. Who would have thought that a documentary on Lebanon-made bricks would have attracted an audience that had our building bursting at the seams? During the premiere of Stefan van Norden’s Hand of Brick: Densmore Brick Company—A Look Back, an overflow audience stood outside on chairs viewing the film through our patio windows!

This fine calendar of events was capped by AVA’s 40th anniversary reception on October 27 and the presentation of our new and exciting plans for the future (see page 6).

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8 ava gallery and art center ▲ www.avagallery.org ▲ (603) 448-3117

7 exhIbItIons AVA’s wInter 2014 exhIbItIon sChedule

through December 28, 2013

ava’S annual HOliDay Sale & exHibitiOn

AdditionAl HolidAy Hours:sundays, december 15 and 22, 12noon–4pmMonday, december 23, 11am–5pmtuesday, december 24, 11am–3pm

Closed december 25 and 26

January 17 – February 14, 2014

ricH FeDOrcHak—cOllage, aSSeMblage anD FilM

rebecca lawrence Gallery Entry

galen cHeney—tHick anD tHin

Clifford B. West Gallery

gil SculliOn—tHe late, late SHOw

E.n. Wennberg Gallery

enricO riley—recent wOrk

Elizabeth rowland Mayor Gallery

Opening Reception: Friday, January 17, 5–7pm

February 21 – March 14, 2014

tHe 6tH annual beSt OF tHe uPPer valley HigH ScHOOl exHibitiOn

Opening Reception and Awards Ceremony: Friday, February 28, 5–7pm

March 22 – 29, 2014

ava’S 2014 Silent auctiOn

PrEviEW And EArly-Bird BiddinG: saturday, March 22 through saturday, March 29, 11am–5pm thursday, March 27, 11am–7pm

Silent auctiOn Party anD Final biDS SaturDay, MarcH 29, 5:30–8:00pm

GAllery hours:Tue, Wed, Fri, Sat, 11am-5pmThurs, 11am-7pm and by appointment

All exhibitions are held in the downstairs galleries, Rebecca Lawrence Gallery Entry, Clifford B. West Gallery, E.N. Wennberg Gallery and Elizabeth Rowland Mayor Gallery, unless stated otherwise. AVA reserves the right to make changes in the exhibition schedule.AVA’s Exhibition Committee meets regularly throughout the year to review proposals for individual artist exhibitions, theme shows and other innovative uses of our beautiful gallery spaces. Artists interested in being considered for a show in any of AVA’s exhibition spaces are invited to submit a proposal to the Committee for review. If you would like more information about AVA’s Exhibition Proposal Submission Protocol, please inquire by phone, (603) 448-3117; email [email protected]; or go to our website at avagallery.org.

rich Fedorchak

Gil scullion

Galen Cheney

Enrico riley

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exhIbItIons 6

From the Exhibition CoordinatorWinter marks the arrival of several annual exhibitions on AVA’s sched-ule. Our Holiday Exhibition and Sale offers a unique opportunity for member artists to show their work in AVA’s beauti-ful galleries. This exhibition gives AVA the chance to showcase its vibrant community of artists while

offering visitors the opportunity to purchase holiday gifts and, in the process, to support local artists.

In February, AVA will focus on the talent of regional high school students with its Best of the Upper Valley High School Exhibition, which offers promising young artists the unique learning experi-ence of exhibiting artwork in a professional gallery.

The preparations for our much anticipated Silent Auction Party—an annual rite of spring that will take place on March 29—begins well into win-ter. Viewing the exhibition during the free preview and early-bird bidding period offers the chance to discover a variety of beautiful artwork and items donated by artists and the local business community for the benefit of AVA.

January brings fascinating solo exhibitions by four artists—three of them with previous ties to AVA. Galen Cheney, a former AVA faculty member who had a solo exhibition here in 2005, will be showing large-scale paintings in the Clifford B. West Gallery. Rich Fedorchak, a longtime AVA volunteer and artist, will be exhibiting collage, assemblage and film in the Rebecca Lawrence Gallery Entry. Enrico Riley, who had a stunning solo show here in 2009, will be displaying recent pastels and paintings in the newly named Elizabeth Rowland Mayor Gallery. Gil Scul-lion, of Middletown, CT, a first-time exhibitor at AVA, will be showing a mixed-media installation in the E.N. Wennberg Gallery.

So be sure to stop by this winter and see what AVA’s galleries hold!

Margaret Jacobs, Exhibition Coordinator

AVA’s Annual holiday sale & Exhibition

On Display through December 28

Additional Holiday Hours: Sundays, December 15 and 22, 12noon–4pm Monday, December 23, 11am–5pm Tuesday, December 24, 11am–3pm

Closed December 25 and 26

The 2014 High School Exhibition marks the sixth year of this vibrant community arts event. The art-works on display are nominated by high school art teachers who have selected works by students dem-onstrating a commitment to the arts. In 2013, 173 students from 19 public, private and vocational high schools participated in the High School Exhibition.

“Best of Category” Awards will be given in the following disciplines: Ceramics, Digital Arts, Draw-ing, Painting, Printmaking, Photography, Sculpture, and Wearable Art. The Vermont Institute of Natural Science (VINS) also gives an award to the student whose work has the most compelling environmental message.

This exhibition is one of AVA’s many programs that encourage regional youths to participate in the arts. AVA’s commitment to providing youths with meaningful art experiences also extends to internship opportunities that promote professional develop-ment; scholarships for AVA classes and workshops; access to AVA’s Digital Arts Media Lab; ART STOP!, a free Tuesday afterschool program for students in grades 5–8; and The Greg Hemberger Sustainable Architecture Workshop for grades 10 through 12, a weeklong summer camp for teens.

6th Annual best of the upper Valley high school Exhibition

February 21 – March 14Opening Reception and Awards Ceremony: Friday, February 28, 5:00–7:00pm

Our 2013 Holiday Exhibition will feature the work of artists long associated with AVA as well as those newly involved with our organi-zation. Works in a variety of media will be on display and available for sale in a wide range of prices. The Holiday Sale & Exhibition is a wonderful opportunity to find unique, locally made, handcrafted gifts for your friends and family. The exhibition will be replenished as the work sells, so be sure to come by often to see the display as it evolves from beginning to end!

david Westby and liz ross, owners of CoolsnowGlobes, are pictured with Josh Graber of thetford, vt. Josh won the Best in

sculpture Award sponsored by CoolsnowGlobes.

GAllery hours: Tue, Wed, Fri, Sat, 11am-5pm; Thurs, 11am-7pm and by appointment

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AVA’s diverse programs provide dedicated and capable high school and college students the oppor-tunity to make an essential contribution to the work we do in the community, while also gaining skills as they learn about the art world.

Camp Assistants, who are generally high school students passionate about the visual arts, work directly with faculty members to create exciting and memorable Summer Art Camps for children and teens. The application deadline is April 1.

Interns, who are generally high school seniors and college students, help in multiple ways with our education, exhibition, and community arts programs. AVA internships are designed with the unique interests of each applicant in mind — indi-viduals seeking experience in a fine art gallery, arts education and community arts programming, or arts administration would be rewarded by their time at AVA. The application deadline is April 1.

Interested individuals may download an applica-tion from our website: avagallery.org or request one by calling AVA at (603) 448-3117.

6 speCIAl proGrAms

Public Art: From sculptures to greeting Cards

This past fall, participants in Sculpture Modeling, Plaster Casting and Public Art! with Ernest Mon-tenegro rose to the challenge and, with boisterous energy, created AVA’s first-ever 3D public art project. The artists learned techniques in clay and plaster to produce a series of multiples of their original artwork, which included an assortment of gargoyles and monkeys and telephone receivers, each with its own personal message. The sculptures were then hidden throughout the PowerHouse Mall in West Lebanon, NH—the generous sponsor of this proj-ect—so that community members and mall custom-ers could find these surprise Halloween gifts! Hurray for free art in unexpected places!

In this winter’s Greeting Cards, Lino-Cut and a Public Art Project! with Josh Yunger, participants will learn techniques for creating their own series of personal greeting cards. Once a satisfying set of designs has been created and a print run has been completed using donated ink and paper, a selec-tion of the cards will be given to The Upper Valley Haven in White River Junction, VT—supporting their mission through the gift of art. Please consider joining this class (see p. 21), as you will gain new skills, like cutting blocks and pulling prints, and also have the rewarding experience of supporting two vital non-profit organizations through generative and creative acts.

On January 12, from 1 to 3pm, the first winter session of Dartmouth Art for Kids—the unique art program for children with chronic medical condi-tions—will take place. Asha Clarke, Oluwayinka Igberase and Thanapoom Boonipat, second-year stu-dents at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College, will run the program during the spring of 2014. Remaining sessions will take place on Febru-ary 2, March 2, April 13, and May 11.

Parents who wish to register their children— siblings are welcome, too!—for this free, grant-funded program should contact:

Adam DalPra, NH Partners in Health,Child and Family ServicesPO Box 5223 West Lebanon NH 03784(603) 518-4348 or email: [email protected] Art for Kids is made possible thanks

to support from The Brie Fund, in memory of Brieanna Weinstein.

Art Lab, the imaginative art program for adults with special needs, continues the 10-week winter program that runs December 4 – March 12. The Spring 2014 Art Lab will run March 19 – June 11. As previous, the morning session will meet from 9:30 to 11am and the afternoon session will meet from 3:30 to 5pm. All classes meet on Wednesdays. To register, please contact Pam Blair at Special Needs Support Center: [email protected] or (603) 448-1268. Art Lab is supported in part by a grant from the Highfield Foundation.

On Saturday, January 3, from 11am to 4pm, weekly CAOS (Community Arts Open Studio) resumes. This favorite family drop-in program takes place on most Saturdays throughout the school year (please call 603-448-3117 to check the schedule dur-ing holidays). Materials are provided, and the cost is $5 per child.

ART STOP!—the free afterschool program that encourages youths in grades 5–8 to take inspira-tion from AVA’s ongoing exhibitions to create their own drawings, paintings, and sculptures—begins again on January 14. Meeting weekly on Tuesdays from 2:30 to 5:30pm, ART STOP! is made possible through 2013 thanks to a generous grant from the Couch Family Foundation.

CAOS for Toddlers (CAT), a weekly program on Friday mornings, 9:30 to 11:30am, for children 1–4 years old, begins again on January 2. Caregivers must remain with their toddlers and are expected to help with clean-up. Materials are provided, and participation is $5 per child.

This winter, AVA’s partnership with the Grafton County Senior Citizens Center (GCSCC) will con-tinue with another session of Senior Art Class. Seniors are invited to work on art projects of their choice for $5 per class from 9am to 12noon every Friday, from January 3 – February 14. A free lunch will be provided by the GCSCC. Senior Art Class is supported in part by a grant from the Couch Family Foundation.

dartmouth Art for kids, Art lab, CAos, ARt stoP!, CAos for toddlers and senior Art Class

AVA seeks summer interns and Camp Assistants!

Application Deadline: April 1, 2014

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speCIAl proGrAms 6

introducing Painting open studio – now on wednesday nightsCommunity members have reached out to us, seek-ing access to our studios with the hopes of working on their own painting projects. We have heard your requests and are delighted to make it happen!

Painting Open Studio (see p. 20), is our new, low-cost way to work on your own self-directed artwork in AVA’s beautiful South Studio. Painters are invited to pay by the session as a walk-in or, to receive a discount on each session, by enrolling in the entire series. Previous open studio painting groups have spawned collaborations and critique groups—so please join us and see where your art and your community can take you.

storytelling with shadows

Presented at AVA in Partnership with The Hopkins Center, Dartmouth College

Wednesday, January 8, 6:30-8:30pmJoin Shadowlight’s Larry Reed, award-winning the-atre director and shadow master, to create your own unique shadow puppets and learn to perform in shadows. Ages 13+. There is a $10 participation fee.

Shadowlight Productions will be presenting Poro Oyna: The Myth of the Aynu on Friday and Saturday, January 10 & 11, at 8pm at The Hopkins Center.

Register for the January 8 workshop at AVA beginning Dec. 13 at: hop.dartmouth.edu/Online/shadowlight_productions or call The Hopkins Center Box Office at: (603) 646-2422.

the Mudroom at AVA — A Quarterly social gathering

Next Program: “Spring Fling” Thursday, March 13, 7-9pmThe Mudroom, an exciting new initiative mod-eled after NPR’s The Moth Radio Hour, kicked off this fall in AVA’s spacious galleries. This pro-gram, the brainchild of AVA Board member and physician Emily Ridgway, is designed as a social gathering for adults in the Upper Valley, offering an opportunity to meet new people, connect with friends, and to hear amazing real-life stories that might otherwise go unshared.

The first and second gatherings of this quarterly program were extraordinary—the stories were compelling and the atmosphere was lively, with good music, conversation, and refreshments before and amidst the storytelling. We thank all our storytellers for the enthusiastic sharing of their tales.

The next Mudroom will be on March 13. The evening’s theme will be brought to life as five pre-selected individuals share personal accounts of a “Spring Fling.” Please join us for a memorable evening!

If you would like to share a story, please send an email to [email protected]. Open to the public, adults only please. Refresh-ments will be available. $5 Admission.

sunday Afternoon Films at AVA

On Bricks and On Art January 19 and 26, 4:00pm FreeIn January, when the sun still sets early, we hope that you will spend a couple of Sunday afternoons at AVA. You can watch a recently made film on the history of local brickmaking, and you can enjoy a compelling documentary on the paintings of the world-famous artist Edvard Munch.

Stefan von Norden’s Hand of Brick: Densmore Brick Company—A Look Back will be shown at 4pm on January 19. It premiered at AVA to an overflow audience this past October and is now back by popular demand. Through interviews with former factory workers, the film traces the history of Leba-non’s Densmore brickyard—it closed in 1976 after more than 170 years of production—as well as the history of brickmaking. Von Norden will be present to introduce his film.

Publicity surrounding the work of the Norwe-gian artist Edvard Munch (1863-1944) has escalated considerably in the past few years, not least because of the then-record auction price fetched in 2012 for the sale of one of the four painted versions of his reverberating Scream. December 12, 2013 marks 150 years since Munch’s birth, and worldwide exhibitions throughout his anniversary year gave testament to his significance as a pioneer of modern Expressionism. The 40-minute film Edvard Munch: Paintings was produced, directed and filmed in 1968 by Clifford B. West. Through extensive use of a hand-held camera, the film focuses not only on Munch’s best-known masterpieces, including the Scream; it also offers a particular insight into works from his later years, which, until recently, have rarely been shown. The narration is based exclusively on Munch’s own writing. AVA’s Executive Director, Bente Torjusen, will give an introduction to this film, one of thirty documentaries on art and archi-tecture made by West, her late husband.

Edvard MunchBricklayers at Work on the Studio Building

oil on canvas1920

Flock dance troupe Museum Pieces III

Thursday, February 6, 6:00pm FreeA new dance performance by Flock Dance Troupe, choreographed by its founding director, Carol Lang-staff, will take place at AVA on Thursday, February 6, at 6:00pm.

Entitled Museum Pieces III, the performance builds on Museum Pieces I & II, performed at AVA in 2012 and 2013, respectively.

Of the February 6 performance, Langstaff observes: “Dance is music made visual, sculpture in motion. Dance and fine art communicate without words.”

The performance will be followed by light refreshments and the opportunity to view AVA’s cur-rent exhibitions.

For more information, visit www.flockdance.org

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6 sIlent AuCtIon

AVA’s 2014 silent Auction

Free Preview and Early-Bird BiddingMarch 22 – 29, 11am – 5pm;Thursday, March 27, 11am – 7pmSilent Auction Party and Final BidsSaturday, March 29, 5:30 – 8:00pm Admission Fee Mark your calendars now, and be sure not to miss AVA’s 2014 Silent Auction!

All the donated auction items—artwork in a variety of media and donations from the business community, ranging from furniture to gift certificates—will be available for pre-view and early-bird bidding for a week prior to the Silent Auction Party.

Admission is free during the preview period, and anyone who wishes may place early-bird bids. There is an admission fee, however, to attend the festive Silent Auction Party, when the final bidding will take place.

So stay tuned! As time draws near, specific details about AVA’s liveliest and most anticipated fundraising party will be coming your way!

Admissions may be purchased at www.avagallery.org

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ava winter 2014 art claSSeS for children and teensClAss ClAss # FACulty AgEs dAtEs dAy And tiME tuition

SESSIon I

AVA Art Explorations I W14C01 Althea Goundrey Ages 5-8 Jan 6 – Feb 3 (no class on Jan 20) Mondays, 3:30–5:30pm Four 2-hour classes $90 /m; $115 /nm

Introduction to Acrylic Painting W14C02 John Joline Ages 9-12 Jan 6 – Feb 3 (no class on Jan 20) Mondays, 3:30–5:30pm Four 2-hour classes $90 /m; $115 /nm

Pour, Drip, Spin W14C03 Chris Orcutt Henderson Ages 5-8 Jan 8 – Feb 5 Wednesdays, 3:30–5:30pm Five 2-hour classes $110 /m; $135 /nm

Lego Robotics—Engineering Challenges W14C04 Edward Fielding Ages 9-12 Jan 8 – Feb 5 Wednesdays, 3:30–5:30pm Five 2-hour classes $135 /m; $160 /nm

Oil Painting I W14C05 Derek Bell Teens Jan 10 – Feb 7 Fridays, 3:30–5:30pm Five 2-hour classes $125 /m; $150 /nm

WIntEr VAcAtIon cAMPS

Animals in Art W14C06 Murray Ngoima Ages 5-8 Feb 17 – 21 Monday–Friday, 9:00am–12:00noon Five 3-hour classes $160 /m; $185 /nm

My Own Little World W14C07 Chris Orcutt Henderson Ages 5-8 Feb 17 – 21 Monday–Friday, 1:00–4:00pm Five 3-hour classes $160 /m; $185 /nm

Digital Photography for Kids W14C08 John Joline Ages 9-12 Feb 17 – 21 Monday–Friday, 9:00am–12:00noon Five 3-hour classes $160 /m; $185 /nm

A Garden in Winter: Drawing, Painting and Sculpture W14C09 Murray Ngoima Ages 9-12 Feb 17 – 21 Monday–Friday, 1:00–4:00pm Five 3-hour classes $160 /m; $185 /nm

Dreams and Visions W14C10 Erica Venuti Teens Feb 17 – 21 Monday–Friday, 1:00–4:00pm Five 3-hour classes $175 /m; $200 /nm

SESSIon II

AVA Art Explorations II W14C11 Althea Goundrey Ages 5-8 Feb 24–March 24 Mondays, 3:30–5:30pm Five 2-hour classes $110 /m; $135 /nm

Realistic Drawing for Kids W14C12 John Joline Ages 9-12 Feb 24–March 24 Mondays, 3:30–5:30pm Five 2-hour classes $110 /m; $135 /nm

Art for Homeschoolers W14C13 Murray Ngoima All Ages Feb 25 – March 25 Tuesdays, 9:00am–12:00noon Five 3-hour classes $160 /m; $185 /nm

Collage, Mosaic and Sculpture W14C14 Chris Orcutt Henderson Ages 5-8 Feb 26–March 26 Wednesdays, 3:30–5:30pm Five 2-hour classes $110 /m; $135 /nm

Lego Robotics—Even More Engineering Challenges W14C15 Edward Fielding Ages 9-12 Feb 26–March 26 Wednesdays, 3:30–5:30pm Five 2-hour classes $135 /m; $160 /nm

Oil Painting II W14C16 Derek Bell Teens Feb 28–March 28 Fridays, 3:30–5:30pm Five 2-hour classes $125 /m; $150 /nm

KEY CODE m = members nm = non-members

Exhibitions

AVA’s Annual Holiday Exhibition November 29 – December 28, 2013 Opening Reception, Friday, November 29, 5-7pmRich Fedorchak—Collage, Assemblage and Film January 17 – February 14, 2014 Opening Reception: Friday, January 17, 5–7pmGalen Cheney—Thick and Thin January 17 – February 14, 2014 Opening Reception: Friday, January 17, 5–7pmGil Scullion—The Late, Late Show January 17 – February 14, 2014 Opening Reception: Friday, January 17, 5–7pmEnrico Riley—Recent Work January 17 – February 14, 2014 Opening Reception: Friday, January 17, 5–7pmThe 6th Annual Best of the Upper Valley High School Exhibition February 21 – March 14, 2014 Opening Reception and Awards Ceremony: Friday, February 28, 5–7pmAVA’s 2014 Silent Auction March 22 – 29, 2014 PREVIEW AND EARLY-BIRD BIDDING: Saturday, March 22 through Saturday, March 29, 11am–5pm Thursday, March 27, 11am–7pmSilent Auction Party and Final Bids Saturday, March 29, 5:30–8:00pm Tickets available by phone: 603-448-3117 or web: www.avagallery.org

oPEn housE sAtuRdAy, dECEMbER 7, 11am – 4pm

sPECiAl PRogRAMs

Painting Open Studio Wednesdays: 6:30-9:30pm Contact AVA: (603) 448-3117

Storytelling with Shadows Wednesday, Janurary 8, 6:30-8:30pm Enroll at hop.dartmouth.edu

Flock Dance Troupe Thursday, February 6, 6pm Free Admission

Classes for Seniors Fridays, 9am-12noon, January 13 to February 14 Contact AVA: (603) 448-3117Dartmouth Art for Kids February 2, March 2, April 13 and May 11 Contact: (603) 518-4348 or email: [email protected] Lab Wednesdays 9:30-11am and 3:30-5pm. Contact Pam Blair at Special Needs Support Center (SNSC): Winter Session: Dec 4-March 12; Spring Session: March 19-June 11 [email protected] or call (603) 448-1268 ART STOP! Tuesdays 2:30-5:30pm beginning January 14 Contact AVA: (603) 448-3117CAOS (Community Arts Open Studio) for Toddlers Friday mornings, 9:30-11:30am, for children 1-4 years old, begins January 2 Contact AVA: (603) 448-3117 to check schedule; $5 per childCAOS (Community Arts Open Studio) Saturdays, from 11am-4pm, starting January 3 Contact AVA: (603) 448-3117 to check schedule; $5 per childThe Mudroom: Spring Fling Thursday, March 13, 7-9pm Contact: [email protected]; $5 admission

sundAy FilM AFtERnoons

DocumentariesHands of Brick: Densmore Brick Company—A Look Back Sunday, January 19, 4pm Free AdmissionEdvard Munch: Paintings Sunday, January 26, 4pm Free Admission

ava winter 2014 events

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ava winter 2014 claSSeS anD wOrkSHOPS for adults and teens

ClAss ClAss # FACulty dAtEs dAy And tiME tuition

cAllIgrAPhy & WrItIng

Copperplate Calligraphy W14A01 Laura Di Piazza Jan 9 – 23 Thursdays, 10:00am–12:00noon Three 2-hour classes $105 /m; $130 /nm

The Bank Street Writers Publish a Book! W14A05 Sonja Hakala Jan 18, Feb 1, Feb 15, Saturdays, 9:00am–12:00noon Five 3-hour classes $360 /m; $385 /nm

March 1, and March 29

DIgItAl Art & PhotogrAPhy

Digital Collage and Painting W14A15 Lia Rothstein Feb 1 & 2 Saturday & Sunday, 10:00am–5:00pm Two-day intensive $265 /m; $290 /nm

Fine Art and Giclée Digital Prints W14A16 Michael Cappabianca Feb 8 Saturday, 10:00am–4:00pm One-day workshop $110 /m; $135 /nm

Introduction to Photoshop Elements W14A20 Karen DePrizio Feb 25 – March 18 Tuesdays, 5:30–7:30pm Four 2-hour classes $175 /m; $200 /nm

Introduction to Digital Photography W14A29 Linda Treash March 15 & 22 Saturdays, 1:00–4:00pm Two 3-hour classes $80 /m; $105 /nm

DrAWIng

Faces: Realism to Caricature W14A02 John Joline Jan 9 – Feb 6 Thursdays, 6:00–8:30pm Five 2½-hour classes $195 /m; $220 /nm

Evening Beginning Drawing W14A08 Dan Gottsegen Jan 21 – March 11 Tuesdays, 6:00–8:30pm Eight 2½-hour classes $290 /m; $315 /nm

Evening Open Studio W14A09 Michael Yatsevitch - Monitor Jan 22 – March 12 Wednesdays, 6:00–9:00pm Eight 3-hour classes $120 /m; $145 /nm; $20 walk-in

Daytime Beginning Drawing W14A11 Michael Heffernan Jan 23 – March 20 Thursdays, 9:30am–12:00noon Eight 2½-hour classes $290 /m; $315 /nm

(no class on Feb 20)

A Study of Rembrandt’s Drawings W14A19 Patricia Killian Feb 25 – April 1 Tuesdays, 9:00am–12:00noon Six 3-hour classes $295 /m; $320 /nm

FIBEr ArtS & glASSWork

Beginning and Continuing Stained Glass W14A06 Carolyn Demers Jan 20 – Feb 17 Mondays, 5:30–8:00pm Five 2½-hour classes $185 /m; $210 /nm

Fiber Mondays: Knitting, Sewing, Embroidery and More! W14A07 Shari Boraz, Debbe Callaghan Jan 20 – March 17 Mondays, 9:00am–12:00noon Eight 3-hour classes $120 /m; $145 /nm; $20 walk-in

and Meredith Smith (no class Feb 17)

Fiber Sculpture W14A10 Meredith Smith Jan 23 – Feb 6 Thursdays, 9:00am–12:00noon Three 3-hour classes $90 /m; $115 /nm

Glass Fusing Workshop W14A13 Genevieve C. Cole Jan 25 Saturday, 10:00am–4:00pm One-day workshop $120 /m; $145 /nm

IntErDIScIPlInAry ArtS

Meditation and Art W14A14 Julie Püttgen Feb 1 & 2 Saturday & Sunday, 9:30am–4:30pm Two-day intensive $215 /m; $240 /nm

Finding Your Medium of Choice W14A21 Elizabeth D’Amico Feb 26 – April 2 Wednesdays, 9:30am–12:00noon Six 2½-hour classes $260 /m; $285 /nm

PAIntIng

Watercolor Painting W14A03 Joan Hoffmann Jan 13 – Feb 10 Mondays, 10:00am–12:30pm Five 2½-hour classes $195 /m; $220 /nm

Evening Painting Open Studio W14A04 Chris Orcutt Henderson Jan 15 – March 12 Wednesdays, 6:30–9:30pm Eight 3-hour classes $120 /m; $145 /nm; $20 walk-in

(no class on Feb 19)

Oil and Acrylic Painting W14A18 Barbra Bragg Feb 24 – March 31 Mondays, 6:00–9:00pm Six 3-hour classes $330 /m; $355 /nm

Oil Painting from the Ground Up W14A24 Murray Ngoima Feb 27 – March 27 Thursdays, 10:00am–1:00pm Five 3-hour classes $195 /m; $215 /nm

Painting the Winter Landscape in Watercolor W14A25 Robert O’Brien March 1 & 2 Saturday & Sunday, 9:30am–4:30pm Two-day workshop $190 /m; $215 /nm

Weekend Color Intensive W14A26 Dan Gottsegen March 1 & 2 Saturday & Sunday, 10:00am–5:00pm Two-day workshop $225 /m; $250 /nm

Big Fat Art: Creativity and Spontaneity! W14A27 Jane Davies March 7 Friday, 10:00am–4:30pm One-day intensive $105 /m; $130 /nm

It’s Raining, It’s Pouring: Pastel Painting Fog, W14A30 Robert Carsten March 22 Saturday, 9:30am–4:30pm One-day workshop $95 /m; $120 /nm Rain, and Mist

ProFESSIonAl DEVEloPMEnt

Photographing Your Art W14A12 Charley Freiberg Jan 24 Friday, 9:00am–1:00pm One 4-hour class $75 /m; $100 /nm

Matting and Framing for the Artist W14A28 Robin Weisburger March 8 Saturday, 1:00–5:00pm One 4-hour class $125 /m; $150 /nm

PrIntMAkIng

Greeting Cards, Lino-Cut and a Public Art Project! W14A22 Josh Yunger Feb 27 – April 3 Thursdays, 6:00–9:00pm Six 3-hour classes $150 /m; $175 /nm

SculPturE

Small-Scale Metal-Casting Techniques W14A17 Joseph Montroy Feb 8 & 9 Saturday & Sunday, 9:30am–4:30pm Two-day workshop $235 /m; $260 /nm

Portrait Sculpture in Clay W14A23 Christopher Wilson Feb 27 – March 20 Thursdays, 6:00–9:00pm Four 3-hour classes $195 /m; $220 /nm

KEY CODE m = members nm = non-members

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Winter 2014 Classes and Workshops for Children, Teens and Adults

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Winter Classes and Workshops for Children and Teens

sEssion iAVA Art Explorations iw14C01 Althea goundreyAges 5-8January 6 – February 3 (no class on January 20)Mondays, 3:30 – 5:30pmFour 2-hour classesTuition: $90 /members; $115 /non-members

AVA’s changing exhibitions bring exceptional works of art to the community. Students will explore our galleries and the other display areas in our historic building, learning about current regional artists and artworks. Inspired by what they see, participants will return to the studio to create their own art.

introduction to Acrylic Paintingw14C02 John JolineAges 9-12January 6 – February 3 (no class on January 20)Mondays, 3:30 – 5:30pmFour 2-hour classesTuition: $90 /members; $115 /non-members

Acrylic paints offer intense, saturated colors and quick drying times, making them a great medium with which to learn the process of painting. Working from both imagination and life, students will gain art skills while exploring the visual world in acrylic paint.

Pour, drip, spinw14C03 Chris orcutt hendersonAges 5-8January 8 – February 5Wednesdays, 3:30 – 5:30pmFive 2-hour classesTuition: $110 /members; $135 /non-members

This lively painting class will reward little artists and scientists alike, as they cre-ate their own images by mixing, pouring, dripping, spinning and sponging paint in glorious combinations.

lego Robotics—Engineering Challengesw14C04 Edward FieldingAges 9-12January 8 – February 5Wednesdays, 3:30 – 5:30pmFive 2-hour classes$25 Digital Arts Media lab fee included.Tuition: $135 /members; $160 /non-members

Participants will build and program Lego Mindstorm NXT robots to perform engineering feats like hill climbing, ravine crossing and trapeze.

oil Painting iw14C05 derek bellTeensJanuary 10 – February 7Fridays, 3:30 – 5:30pmFive 2-hour classes$15 materials fee included.Tuition: $125 /members; $150 /nonmembers

This course will engage teens in the challenges of oil painting from life. Partici-pants will begin by working from still life, then move on to painting landscapes from photographs of their choice. Color, composition and other fundamentals will all be covered. Beginners welcome.

sEssion iiAVA Art Explorations iiw14C11 Althea goundreyAges 5-8February 24 – March 24Mondays, 3:30 – 5:30pmFive 2-hour classesTuition: $110 /members; $135 /non-members

AVA’s changing exhibitions bring exceptional works of art to the community. Students will explore our galleries and the other display areas in our historic building, learning about current regional artists and artworks. Inspired by what they see, participants will return to the studio to create their own art.

Realistic drawing for kidsw14C12 John JolineAges 9-12February 24 – March 24Mondays, 3:30 – 5:30pmFive 2-hour classesTuition: $110 /members; $135 /non-members

Learn proven approaches to realistic drawing, including how to accurately discern correct proportions and proper angles of line in what you see before you. Children will study the principles of perspective and methods of creating vivid and convincing shading.

Art for homeschoolersw14C13 Murray ngoimaAll AgesFebruary 25 – March 25Tuesdays, 9:00am – 12:00noonFive 3-hour classesTuition: $160 /members; $185 /non-members

This class is designed for children who are schooled at home. The needs and tal-ents of each student will be respected and serve as the impetus for individually created challenges. We will work with tempera, watercolor, and acrylic paints, as well as charcoal, pastel, crayon, pencil, pen and ink, self-hardening clay, papier-mache, fabric, and all manner of collected materials.

lego robotics—Engineering Challenges, Edward Fielding realistic drawing for Kids, John Joline

Children’s Afterschool discount

Enroll in Both January/February and February/March Sessions and Receive an Additional 20% Off TuitionGiving your child the opportunity to regularly engage in the visual arts will help them acquire creative skills while also building their confidence and self-awareness.

To facilitate this process, AVA will offer a 20% discount on tuition this winter for children enrolled in both the January/February and the February/Winter afterschool art classes.

see next page

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Collage, Mosaic and sculpturew14C14 Chris orcutt hendersonAges 5-8February 26 – March 26Wednesdays, 3:30 – 5:30pmFive 2-hour classesTuition: $110 /members; $135 /non-members

Children will receive an introduction to the history of both mosiac and collage, looking at work that ranges from Roman Antiquity through modern times. Having found inspiration in the examples shown, participants will then develop their own designs for both 2-D and 3-D projects.

lego Robotics—Even More Engineering Challengesw14C15 Edward FieldingAges 9-12February 26 – March 26Wednesdays, 3:30 – 5:30pmFive 2-hour classes$25 Digital Arts Media lab fee included.Tuition: $135 /members; $160 /non-members

Using Lego Mindstorms robots, participants in this second session will have new challenges to solve, including retrieving objects and running mazes.

oil Painting iiw14C16 derek bellTeensFebruary 28 – March 28Fridays, 3:30 – 5:30pmFive 2-hour classes$15 materials fee included.Tuition: $125 /members; $150 /nonmembers

This course will engage teens in the challenges of oil painting from life. Partici-pants will begin by working from still life, then move on to painting landscapes from photographs of their choice. Color, composition and other fundamentals will all be covered. Beginners welcome.

Animals in Artw14C06 Murray ngoimaAges 5-8February 17 – 21Monday–Friday, 9:00am–12:00noonFive 3-hour classesTuition: $160 /members; $185 /non-members

Inspired by Edward Hicks “Peaceable Kingdom” and artworks by Alexander Calder, Ruffino Tamayo and Rosa Bonheur, we will draw, paint, and sculpt to create a grand tableau of barking, bounding, bellowing and, above all, noble creatures.

My own little worldw14C07 Chris orcutt hendersonAges 5-8February 17 – 21Monday–Friday, 1:00–4:00pmFive 3-hour classesTuition: $160 /members; $185 /non-members

Come create shires, villages, towns, and sprawling metropolises! We will transform ordinary boxes into places that range from the gently rolling hills of Vermont to the towering skyscrapers of New York City. Each child will create their own world from AVA’s diverse selection of art supplies.

digital Photography for kidsw14C08 John JolineAges 9-12February 17 – 21Monday–Friday, 9:00am–12:00noonFive 3-hour classesTuition: $160 /members; $185 /non-members

Besides being tremendous fun, digital photography is a great way to enhance our visual and observational skills. In this class, we’ll concentrate on “image capture” rather than after-the-fact manipulation of the image on the computer. The beauty of both natural and human-made worlds, bathed in light and emanating luminous color, will be abundantly revealed as we pursue our craft! Participants will be using AVA’s digital cameras, acquired thanks to a generous grant from the Tane Family Fund of the Vermont Community Foundation, given in memory of Lilyan and Toby Miller.

A garden in winter: drawing, Painting and sculpturew14C09 Murray ngoimaAges 9-12February 17 – 21Monday–Friday, 1:00–4:00pmFive 3-hour classesTuition: $160 /members; $185 /non-members

While winter winds and snow still swirl outside, the centerpiece of this week of art making will be a trip to the Murdough Greenhouses at Dartmouth College. There, shedding heavy coats and boots, we will find inspiration in a trip to see plants from the tropical and desert regions of the world. For the remainder of the week, we will translate this experience into paintings and sculptures to make our own garden in winter!

oil Painting ii, derek Bell

digital Photography for Kids, John Joline

wInter VACAtIon CAmpsfebruary 17 – 21

Full-day Camp discounts, Early drop-off and late Pick-upIf your child is enrolling in both morn-ing and afternoon art camps, you will receive a $15 discount on their tuition. A supervised bring-your-own lunch hour is included.

AVA is able to accommodate working families’ schedules with early drop-off and/or late pick-up for participants in Winter Vacation Art Camps. Early drop-off (8:15am) can be added for $15. Half-day students can participate in the supervised bring-your-own lunch hour for $15. Late pick-up (5:15pm) can be added for $15.

For information about AVA’s scholarships, please email: [email protected].

Tax receipts are available for childcare deductions. To request a receipt, please email [email protected].

dreams and Visionsw14C10 Erica VenutiTeensFebruary 17 – 21Monday – Friday, 1:00 – 4:00pmFive 3-hour classes$15 materials fee included.Tuition: $175 /members; $200 /non-members

Spend the week exploring dreams, magic, and the power of creating. Paint-ing, weaving, and multi-media techniques will be used along with natural and synthetic materials as we transform a blank canvas into a personal myth, construct a mask, and weave a web of dreams.

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Calligraphy & Writing

Copperplate Calligraphyw14A01 laura di PiazzaJanuary 9 – 23Thursdays, 10:00am–12:00noonThree 2-hour classes$15 materials fee included.Tuition: $105 /members; $130 /non-members

Copperplate calligraphy is a pointed-pen hand developed in 17th-century England. We will work with an oblique pen holder, pointed pen nib, India ink and practice pads with grid and slant lines. Our initial focus will be on the amount of pressure applied to our pens to produce thick and thin strokes. We will begin practice with minuscules and later majuscules, which will be grouped according to similar letterforms. All materials will be supplied. Feel free to bring in your favorite quote and/or project ideas for practice and discussion.

newthe bank street writers Publish a book!w14A05 sonja hakalaJanuary 18, February 1, February 15, March 1, and March 29Saturdays, 9:00am–12:00noonFive 3-hour classesTuition: $360 /members; $385 /non-members

The world of book publishing is changing rapidly, with more paths to publishing than ever before; however, most authors have little idea of how publishing really works. Students in this class will have a complete hands-on, this-is-a-real-book experience that covers the full scope of publishing: from writing a new piece through publishing a class-created anthology of our work. The final session will be our own book publishing party!

Winter Classes and Workshops for Adults and Teens

Digital arts & photography

digital Collage and Paintingw14A15 lia RothsteinFebruary 1 & 2Saturday & Sunday, 10:00am–5:00pmTwo-day intensive$25 materials fee included. Class limited to 8.Tuition: $265 /members; $290 /non-members

Photoshop is a fantastic digital drawing and painting program with capabili-ties that range from drawing with pencil-like precision to painting with bold expressionistic strokes. Incorporating participants’ own photography, we will work with a variety of digital collage techniques and combine them with painting and drawing. We will explore a vast array of digital tools and brushes, working with layers, selections, blending modes, layer styles, filters, and masking. Work on the computers in AVA’s Digital Arts Media Lab or bring your own laptop with Photoshop. This class is intended for people who already have some working knowledge of Photoshop.

Fine Art and giclée digital Printsw14A16 Michael CappabiancaFebruary 8Saturday, 10:00am–4:00pmone-day workshopClass limited to 8.$25 Digital Arts Media lab fee included. Materials list provided.Tuition: $110 /members; $135 /non-members

Using Photoshop Elements and AVA’s Epson r2880 archival printer, participants will transform digital files of their own art and photography into gallery-quality prints that last a lifetime. Instruction will cover file types, color management, and other practical aspects of the software.

introduction to Photoshop Elementsw14A20 karen dePrizioFebruary 25 – March 18Tuesdays, 5:30–7:30pmFour 2-hour classesClass limited to 8.$25 Digital Arts Media lab fee included. Materials list provided.Tuition: $175 /members; $200 /non-members

Photoshop Elements is a powerful tool that can turn your digital photographs into much more than snapshots. This introduction to the software will cover the basics to get you working with confidence for both print and web applications. Partici-pants will engage in group exercises as well as work on their own imagery. You can work on AVA’s computers or bring your own laptop loaded with the software.

introduction to digital Photographyw14A29 linda treashMarch 15 & 22Saturdays, 1:00–4:00pmTwo 3-hour classes$25 Digital Arts Media lab fee included. Materials list provided.Tuition: $80 /members; $105 /non-members

Get the photos you want by learning how to operate your camera with intention. Exposure controls, manual features, on-site shooting, composition, editing and file management will all be covered. Learn how your camera and lenses really work—similar to and different than your eye—so that you can be in charge.

Copperplate Calligraphy, laura di Piazza digital Collage and Painting, lia rothstein

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DraWing

Faces: Realism to Caricaturew14A02 John JolineJanuary 9 – February 6Thursdays, 6:00–8:30pmFive 2½-hour classesMaterials list provided.Tuition: $195 /members; $220 /non-members

Human heads, facial expressions, visible emotions, and their infinite variations of physical proportion have been favorite subjects for artists from time immemorial. In this class, we will learn how to draw faces and heads, with styles running the gamut from realistic to caricature. Sources of inspiration will range from political cartoons of the last three centuries to modern-day humor magazines.

Evening beginning drawingw14A08 dan gottsegenJanuary 21 – March 11Tuesdays, 6:00–8:30pmEight 2½-hour classesMaterials list provided. $40 model fee included.Tuition: $290 /members; $315 /non-members

This introduction to observational drawing focuses on line, shape, value, and spatial perception, honing our ability to see clearly as we bring the three-dimen-sional world to the two-dimensional page in satisfying and surprising ways. Think you can’t draw? Haven’t drawn in years? This is the class for you!

Evening open studiow14A09 Michael yatsevitch - MonitorJanuary 22 – March 12Wednesdays, 6:00–9:00pmEight 3-hour classesTuition: $120 /members; $145 /non-members; $20 walk-in

Weekly monitored life drawing sessions, without instruction, open to individuals of all levels of experience.

daytime beginning drawingw14A11 Michael heffernanJanuary 23 – March 20 (no class on Feb 20)Thursdays, 9:30am–12:00noonEight 2½-hour classesMaterials list provided. $40 model fee included.Tuition: $290 /members; $315 /non-members

This introduction to observational drawing focuses on line, shape, value, and spatial perception, honing our ability to see clearly as we bring the three-dimen-sional world to the two-dimensional page in satisfying and surprising ways. Think you can’t draw? Haven’t drawn in years? This is the class for you!

newA study of Rembrandt’s drawingsw14A19 Patricia killianFebruary 25 – April 1Tuesdays, 9:00am–12:00noonSix 3-hour classesMaterials list provided.Tuition: $295 /members; $320 /non-members

This close study of Rembrandt’s pen, brush, and ink drawings will have partici-pants working to achieve expressive line drawings of the human figure, animals, and the landscape. Open to all levels.

Fiber arts & glassWork

newbeginning and Continuing stained glassw14A06 Carolyn demersJanuary 20 – February 17Mondays, 5:30–8:00pmFive 2½-hour classes$30 materials fee included. Class limited to 6.Tuition: $185 /members; $210 /non-members

Participants will select, cut, foil, and solder their own stained glass pieces in this class. No experience necessary. Intermediate-level projects will be offered to continuing students.

Fiber Mondays: knitting, sewing, Embroidery and More!w14A07 shari boraz, debbe Callaghan and Meredith smithJanuary 20 – March 17 (no class February 17)Mondays, 9:00am–12:00noonEight 3-hour classesTuition: $120 /members; $145 /non-members; $20 walk-in

Participants are invited to work among other fiber arts enthusiasts on projects using knitting, sewing, embroidery techniques and more. Please bring the materi-als appropriate to the project you are developing, and explore the potential of the fiber arts!

newFiber sculpturew14A10 Meredith smithJanuary 23 – February 6Thursdays, 9:00am–12:00noonThree 3-hour classesMaterials list provided.Tuition: $90 /members; $115 /non-members

Starting with a wire armature, participants will create a poseable figure sculpture using fabric, batting, beads, yarn, thread, and any other desired materials.

A study of rembrandt’s drawings, Patricia Killian Beginning and Continuing stained Glass, Carolyn demers

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glass Fusing workshopw14A13 genevieve C. ColeJanuary 25Saturday, 10:00am–4:00pmone-day workshopClass limited to 8. $25.00 materials fee included.Tuition: $120 /members; $145 /non-members

Students will learn the basics of glass fusing using a portable glass kiln. This exciting tool reduces the firing and cooling process from up to twelve hours down to less than one hour. The focus will be on glass-cutting techniques, design, and firing schedules. Make small tiles and other beautiful objects in your first class! No experience required.

interDisCiplinary arts

newMeditation and Artw14A14 Julie PüttgenFebruary 1 & 2Saturday & Sunday, 9:30am–4:30pmTwo-day intensive$25 materials fee included.Tuition: $215 /members; $240 /non-members

This weekend workshop will explore intuitive connections between contempla-tive practice (sitting and walking meditation) and creative practice (drawing, sculpting, moving, writing). Throughout the weekend, we will alternate periods of meditation with periods of open-ended creative exploration. Work-ing individually and as a group, we will move towards “finding the deeper grain”—opening to the place of stillness and wild possibility at the heart of being fully alive and creative.

newFinding your Medium of Choicew14A21 Elizabeth d’AmicoFebruary 26 – April 2Wednesdays, 9:30am–12:00noonSix 2½-hour classes$25 materials fee included.Tuition: $260 /members; $285 /non-members

Take advantage of this opportunity to experiment with multiple visual art medi-ums to help shape your future work! You will work in a different medium each class, investigating the materials to determine how they’re similar, how they’re dissimiliar, and which is best for your personal mode of expression. Charcoal, ink, watercolor, acrylics, monotype, and collage will be covered.

painting

watercolor Paintingw14A03 Joan hoffmannJanuary 13 – February 10Mondays, 10:00am–12:30pmFive 2½-hour classes Materials list provided.Tuition: $195 /members; $220 /non-members

Explore the beauty and mystery of watercolor painting. Learn techniques to build unique colors through the layering of transparent washes, methods for creating effective compositions, and more through instructor demonstrations and class critique.

Evening Painting open studiow14A04 Chris orcutt hendersonJanuary 15 – March 12 (no class on February 19)Wednesdays, 6:30–9:30pmEight 3-hour classesTuition: $120 /members; $145 /non-members; $20 walk-in

Participants in AVA’s Evening Painting Open Studio will work on their own projects among other painting enthusiasts. An instructor will be present to offer guidance as needed.

oil and Acrylic Paintingw14A18 barbra braggFebruary 24 – March 31Mondays, 6:00–9:00pmSix 3-hour classesMaterials list provided.Tuition: $330 /members; $355 /non-members

Individual and group instruction will provide a creative opportunity for artists of all levels to explore new techniques while developing and enriching personal painting styles. We will investigate a variety of subjects, with an emphasis on the inventive manipulation of paint, as we work on “one-sitting paintings” and more sustained works.

oil Painting from the ground upw14A24 Murray ngoimaFebruary 27 – March 27Thursdays, 10:00am–1:00pmFive 3-hour classes Materials list provided.Tuition: $195 /members; $215 /non-members

“Painting in oil presents as many problems as there are artists working in this complex and challenging medium.” --Clifford B. West This course is for students beginning in the medium of oil as well as those who are interested in revisiting fundamental techniques and processes. We will discover the anatomy of a painting by engaging in each phase of the building process. We will learn about preparing the support: building stretchers, stretching and sizing the canvas, and preparing a gessoed panel. We will also learn about the materials: pigments, binders, and mediums. In addition, we will explore color: the palette, mixing, under-painting, and glazing. Students will work towards a personal means of exploration.

Painting the winter landscape in watercolorw14A25 Robert o’brienMarch 1 & 2Saturday & Sunday, 9:30am–4:30pmTwo-day workshopMaterials list provided.Tuition: $190 /members; $215 /non-members

Painters of all levels are invited to learn to render snow in all its beauty, with light and shadow, value and composition explored. Demonstrations, explanations, and hands-on assistance at each student’s easel will ensure that participants make gains in their painting. Students are encouraged to provide their own reference photos.

Painting the Winter landscape in Watercolor, robert o’BrienFiber sculpture, Meredith smith

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newweekend Color intensivew14A26 dan gottsegenMarch 1 & 2Saturday & Sunday, 10:00am–5:00pmTwo-day workshopClass limited to 8.$25 Digital Arts Media lab fee included. Materials list provided.Tuition: $225 /members; $250 /non-members

This workshop will introduce participants to the fundamentals of color theory for both light-based and pigment-based media. Color mixing, simultaneous contrast, color con-sistancy, and color harmonies will all be covered. By the end of the session, students will have explored their personal relationship to color for use in their own work.

newbig Fat Art: Creativity and spontaneity!w14A27 Jane daviesMarch 7Friday, 10:00am–4:30pmone-day intensiveMaterials list provided. $10 materials fee included.Tuition: $105 /members; $130 /non-members

Rather than a specific genre, “Big Fat Art” is a state of mind. It’s all about loos-ening up and getting past the thinking/evaluating zone and into the creative/spontaneous one, where you can be freely expressive. We start Big Fat Art with process-oriented exercises to generate loads of works-in-process, which then become playgrounds for layering paint, drawing, and collage.

newit’s Raining, it’s Pouring: Pastel Painting Fog, Rain, and Mistw14A30 Robert CarstenMarch 22Saturday, 9:30am–4:30pmone-day workshopMaterials list provided.Tuition: $95 /members; $120 /non-members

Van Gogh, Monet, and other great masters understood the inherent drama of depicting towns, gardens, and people veiled in fog, rain, and mist. Learn about the beautiful tonal effects needed to create a moisture-laden atmosphere in your work. Look forward to instructor demonstrations, personalized critique, and lots of fun! All levels welcome.

proFessional Development

Photographing your Artw14A12 Charley FreibergJanuary 24Friday, 9:00am–1:00pmone 4-hour classClass limited to 6.Tuition: $75 /members; $100 /non-members

Artists often need professional-quality photographs of their work for exhibitions, online postings, and print publications. In this workshop, you will discover how best to photograph paintings, sculptures, ceramics, woodwork, jewelry—learn-ing what equipment is needed, how to get the best from your digital camera and, possibly, a bit of Photoshop. Bring up to five pieces of your artwork to photograph, and leave with the images on a CD. Upon enrollment, please let us know the type and size of the art you intend to photograph. If you have a digital camera, please bring it along.

newMatting and Framing for the Artistw14A28 Robin weisburgerMarch 8Saturday, 1:00–5:00pmone 4-hour class$60 materials fee included.Tuition: $125 /members; $150 /non-members

Matting and framing your own artwork is both rewarding and economical. Stu-dents will learn how to choose the materials that best complement their work, as well as the pros and cons of various backings and glazings. Come with a favorite work on paper (11” x 14” or smaller) or a work on canvas or panel (16” x 20” or smaller). Each artist will take home a framed work. Upon enrollment, please indicate the medium and size of the work you plan to frame.

printmaking

greeting Cards, lino-Cut and a Public Art Project!w14A22 Josh yungerFebruary 27 – April 3Thursdays, 6:00–9:00pmSix 3-hour classesClass limited to 6.Materials list provided.Tuition: $150 /members; $175 /non-members

Learn the techniques to create an edition of greeting cards featuring your own personalized designs! In addition to a personal print run, AVA will provide materials so that a selection of your cards may be donated to benefit The Upper Valley Haven in White River Junction, VT.

sCulpture

newsmall-scale Metal-Casting techniquesw14A17 Joseph MontroyFebruary 8 & 9Saturday & Sunday, 9:30am–4:30pmTwo-day workshop$45 materials fee includedTuition: $235 /members; $260 /non-members

This workshop will focus on creating small sculptures in metal using sand casting and lost-wax casting techniques. We will also explore a number of creative ways to develop design ideas, including direct casting from natural objects.

newPortrait sculpture in Clayw14A23 Christopher wilsonFebruary 27 – March 20Thursdays, 6:00–9:00pmFour 3-hour classes$40 materials fee included. $25 model fee included.Tuition: $195 /members; $220 /non-members

Working in clay and directly observing live models, participants will develop the skills they need to capture a sculptural likeness. Techniques for rendering facial features, hair, and more will be covered.

it’s raining, it’s Pouring: Pastel Painting Fog, rain, and Mist, robert Carsten

Portrait sculpture in Clay, Christopher WilsonBig Fat Art: Creativity and spontaneity!, Jane davies

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FACultyDerek bell earned a BFA in Painting from Rhode Island School of Design. He works in sculpture, print-making and drawing. His work won first place in the 22nd Annual Congressional Art Competition and sec-ond place in the Artist’s Magazine annual competition. derekbellart.com

SHari bOraz holds a BFA in Textile Design and Art Education from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Her hand-embroidered art has been exhib-ited throughout the United States and Europe. Boraz is a juried member of the League of NH Craftsmen. sewboraz.com

barbra bragg attended RISD, SUNY and Johnson State College. She earned a BFA in Ceramics, an MFA in Painting, and studied with Clifford B. West. Bragg has been on the studio art faculties of several colleges and universities in New England and was a recipient of a “% for the Arts Grant” from the NH State Council on the Arts.

Debbe callagHan has been teaching knitting to adults and children regionally and at AVA for a number of years. Callaghan also serves as AVA’s Capacity Builder.

MicHael caPPabianca received his MFA from California College of the Arts and his BFA from Massachusetts College of Art. He has exhib-ited in both solo and group exhibitions. He lives in Cambridge and is a bibliophile. Cappabianca ex-hibited at AVA in 2011. michaelcappabianca.com

rObert carSten graduated from Rhode Island School of Design and was a scholar at Academia di Belle Arti in Carrara, Italy. He is a board and sig-nature member of the Pastel Society of America and a contributing writer to the Pastel Journal and the Artist’s Magazine. Carsten is a Master Circle artist of the International Association of Pastel Societies; his paintings and drawings have been shown in many museums and galleries, are collected worldwide, and have won many awards. robertcarsten.com

genevieve cOle earned a BFA in Glass and Ceramics from the Tyler School of Art in Philadelphia. She has worked primarily with glass, both as a glass blower in France and at Simon Pearce in Philadelphia. She teaches and creates cus-tom glass art pieces for private collectors. In 2010, she curated a major glass exhibition at AVA. funktionalglassworks.com

elizabetH D’aMicO, a graduate of Syracuse and Columbia Universities, teaches in the Visual Arts de-partment at Plymouth State University. A mixed-media artist, she shows regionally and nationally and is a signature member of the National Collage Society and an active member of the Women’s Caucus for the Arts/NH Chapter. D’Amico exhibited at AVA in 2009. elizabethdamico.com

Jane DavieS is a full-time artist working in col-lage, painting, and encaustics. In addition to her fine art, Davies licenses artwork for calendars, greeting cards, and fabrics. She is the author of four instructional art books. janedavies-collagejourneys.blogspot.com

carOlyn DeMerS is a mixed-media artist special-izing in glass. She has taught stained glass and mosaic art for over ten years in the Manchester, Concord and Kearsarge school districts, as well as at community art centers. Demers’ studio is in Bradford, VT. stainedglass.vpweb.com

karen DePriziO is a multimedia artist with a BA from American University and an MA in Media Arts from Emerson College. DePrizio has taught classes at the School of Visual Arts in NYC and at various organizations. She currently works in marketing at her design firm, Sundial Digital, in Woodstock, VT. sundialdigital.com

laura Di Piazza is a visual and conceptual artist working in a variety of media, including calligraphy, poetry and abstract art. She has worked as a profes-sional calligrapher throughout the US and abroad. Di Piazza holds an MFA in Interdisciplinary Arts from Goddard College. lauradipiazza.wordpress.com

eDwarD FielDing has been working with kids at AVA since 2010, leading robotics classes and teach-ing creative programming. imaginecreateplay.blogspot.com

cHarley Freiberg has done commercial photo shoots for clients that include IBM, Kodak, and McGraw-Hill, as well as other companies. He has been teaching and shooting for artists and craftspeo-ple for 30 years. charleyfreibergphotography.com

Dan gOttSegen has taught at the California College of the Arts and UMass Lowell. He has ex-hibited nationally, including one-person shows at the Prince Street Gallery in NYC and the Whistler House Museum in Lowell, MA. Gottsegen’s awards and fellowships include a Vermont Arts Council Individual Artist Creation Grant, the University Teaching Excellence Award at UMass Lowell, and a Ucross Foundation Residency. He has an MFA from California College of the Arts. dangottsegen.com

altHea gOunDrey studied Studio Art and Art Education at Plymouth State University, University of Southern Maine, University of New Hampshire, and the Art Institute of Boston. She holds a Master of Education from Plymouth State University and a Museum Studies Certificate from Tufts University. Goundrey has taught children’s classes at AVA since 2010.

SOnJa Hakala is the author of your Book, your Way plus five other titles. She has been a freelance writer for 25 years, working for newspapers and mag-azines as well as in the book publishing industry. In addition to writing, Hakala provides professional edi-torial and book design services for writers publishing their work through her company, Full Circle Press LLC. sonjahakala.com

MicHael HeFFernan received his MFA in Painting from The New York Academy of Art and teaches Studio Art at Plymouth State University. He has exhibited throughout the northeast, including a show at the Flowers Gallery in NYC in 2008.

cHriS Orcutt HenDerSOn, who works primarily in acrylics, attended the University of Massachusetts, Boston. Her work has been shown at galleries and colleges throughout New England, and she teaches at various Upper Valley art centers.

JOan HOFFMann, who studied at Colorado State University and Scottsdale Artists School, cel-ebrates forty years of oil and watercolor painting, teaching, and preserving the landscapes that she paints. She lectures on the History of Landscape Painting and Public Lands and was an artist-in-resi-dence in Yosemite in 2005. joanhoffmann.com ; birdingwithwatercolors.blogspot.com

JOHn JOline holds a BA in Studio Art from Dartmouth College and an MFA from the University of Pennsylvania. A specialist in cubism, he has taught Studio Art as well as Art History and Architectural Design. Joline is a longtime AVA faculty member; he had an exhibition at AVA in 2006.

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FACultyPatricia killian studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art and earned her MFA from the University of Pennsylvania. She is the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship for her painting.

MicHael D. kraatz holds a BS in Art from the University of Wisconsin and an MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design. He has been a roster art-ist with the New Hampshire State Council on the Arts for many years, completing numerous Arts in Education residencies in public schools. He works both in 2-D and 3-D and is particularly well known for his blown glass. Kraatz’s work has been shown both nationally and regionally, including at AVA. kraatzrussell.com

JOSePH MOntrOy holds an MFA from Rochester Institute of Technology. He is an active sculptor, creating and showing work throughout the eastern and central US. Montroy is an adjunct professor at the Chester College of New England; he also offers workshops at art centers across the northeast. josephmontroy.com

Murray ngOiMa is an art educator and mixed-media artist who, for many years, has taught in local schools and at AVA, where her children’s classes and camps are legendary. She has painted murals, de-signed theater sets, and taught children’s workshops in Boston, Woodstock, and Nairobi, Kenya.

rObert O’brien has worked in watercolor for 40 years. Since moving to Vermont in 1977, he has focused his work on the landscape and architecture of New England. He studied with James Whatford, Tony Couch, and the late Marshall Joyce. robertjobrien.com

Julie Püttgen holds a BA from Yale University and an MFA from Georgia State University. She works across media (painting, photography, digital animation, installation, book arts) and also curates exhibitions. Püttgen exhibited at AVA in 2012. turtlenosedsnake.com.

lia rOtHStein has BA and MFA degrees from Boston University. She has been a professional pho-tographer for over 25 years and has taught digital photography and imaging in colleges and art centers. Her photographic work is found in many private and corporate collections, including the Polaroid International Photography Collection, and has been exhibited widely. From 2009-2012, Rothstein directed the PHOTOSTOP Gallery in White River Junction, VT. liarothstein.com

MereDitH SMitH holds a BFA in Apparel Design and an MAT with a studio focus in Costume Design from the Rhode Island School of Design. She is a jur-ied member of the League of NH Craftsmen and coor-dinates AVA’s Fiber Mondays Open Studio program.

linDa treaSH is a multimedia artist with an MFA in Creative Writing; she has worked as an art photographer and performing trapeze artist. Treash teaches at the Community College of Vermont and is on the board of BarnArts Center for the Arts.

erica venuti earned her BFA in Fine Arts from Long Island University and her MA in Health Arts and Sciences from Goddard College, focusing on the transformative qualities of art. She designs expressive art programs for people of all ages through SafeArt and Goddard College. brightflower.wordpress.com

rObin weiSburger is an artist who works in both pastel and acrylic and is a founding member of the Orford Art Group. She provides profes-sional framing services at her studio in Orford, NH. Weisburger has exhibited throughout the eastern US and Canada and teaches children’s art workshops in Gros Morne National Park in Newfoundland. robinsartandframing.com

cHriStOPHer wilSOn is a portrait and figu-rative sculptor. While his primary mentor is Jerry Williams, he has also studied with Bruno Lucchesi, Richard MacDonald, Philippe Faraut, Andrew Cawrse, Milton Cramer and Lincoln Fox. Wilson’s work has been exhibited in New England and the southwest.

MicHael yatSevitcH earned his BFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore. He has been an active member of the AVA community for many years and is instrumental in AVA’s Life Drawing Open Studio.

JOSH yunger is a painter, printmaker and musi-cian. He began taking classes at AVA at age 14. In 1999, he received a BFA in Printmaking and Sound Design from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Yunger is the author of the children’s book Hippo and Monkey.

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ARt hAPPEns At AVA!