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Artist Reception Middle Sister Made The Inklings of Jill Levene

  • Historic Fournet Building 101 N Broadway, Croo Crookston MN USA (map)

Artist Reception July 31 7-8:30 PM

Middle Sister Made: The Inklings of Jill S Levene 

Red River Valley Artist and Printmaker

 

Exhibit is Open Through August at the

 

Historic Fournet Building

101 N Broadway Downtown Crookston

2nd Floor in the Atrium  

 

Middle Sister Made: The Inklings of Jill S. Levene, an exhibit open through August at the Fournet Building at 101 N Broadway, Downtown Crookston will be holding an artist reception. This exhibit includes 29 pieces of art in printmaking, pen and ink, fabric art, and mixed media created by Red River Valley Printmaker and Artist Jill Levene of Tabor. This is the first exhibit that the Northwest Minnesota Arts Council has hosted in this space. The reception will be July 31 from 7 to 8:30 PM. Light snacks and drinks will be served. Some art will be for sale. Everyone is encouraged to attend. This event is free.This exhibit includes 29 pieces of art in printmaking, pen and ink, fabric art, and mixed media created by Red River Valley Printmaker and Artist Jill Levene of Tabor. This is the first exhibit that the Northwest Minnesota Arts Council has hosted in this space.

NWMAC Showcase Specialist Trey Everett shared, “I first encountered Jill’s artwork at the Tettegouche State Park as our family was on vacation along the North Shore. I was immediately taken by her pen and ink skills. Jill is a versatile and accomplished artist flowing with creativity and inspiration. Her new exhibit at the Fournet Building in Crookston will pull you into another world of wonder and hope.”

Artist Jill Levene explained, “Gainfully retired from commercial graphic design, I now enjoy the freedom to integrate my world travels with natural history and the environment to create my “Inklings”—pen and ink renderings of people, non-human animals, and natural settings. In 2011, I was introduced to New England’s remarkable Folly Cove Fabric Designers of the mid-20th Century. This discovery inspired me in a new direction—block carving and printing on fabric using originally-designed, hand-carved linoleum blocks based on my Inklings. Added to this is my interest in repurposing various types of fiber-based food packaging, such as tea and gum wrappers, by incorporating fragments of these colorful containers onto the Inklings foundation. The combination of Inklings, block printing on fabric, and kitchen-based art led me to my current focus on functional art—hand-printed usable cloth pieces including dishtowels, bandanas, infant swaddles, aprons, and garden flags—anything fabric—with the goal of creating art that is both functional and perpetual, as well as beautiful and one-of-a-kind for the culinarian and collector alike:  ‘Hand-printed.  One at a time, every time.’”

Watch this video for a virtual tour of the exhibit at https://youtu.be/XB96nngkHhU or find it on our website under the exhibits tab at the top of the homepage.

For more information about this exhibit or if you are an artist interested in exhibiting a body of work with NWMAC, please contact Trey Everett at (218) 280-4917 or email NWArtsCouncil@gmail.com. Please sign up for our e-newsletter on our website home page to see the latest news and grant announcements.  Email director@NWArtsCouncil.org or call 218-745-8886 to reach our office during regular business hours.

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Traveling Art Exhibit Roseau