FOR
CALENDAR EDITORS: TWICE WARMED:
TRADITIONAL TO ART QUILTS - A WORKSHOP BY MONA COVINGTON
COLOR
& ANIMAL COMMUNICATION BY DR. JACQUALINE GRANT
WHAT: Mona
Covington is giving a workshop on the history of quilting and how it has
influenced our society. Dr. Jacqualine
Grant, Director of SUU´s Frehner Museum of Natural History, has created a
remarkable correlation between the quilts and color in the animal kingdom.
WHO: Southern Utah University, Braithwaite
Fine Arts Gallery, Cedar City, UT
WHEN: October 13, 2012
TIME: Color
& Animal Communication: 10-11am
Twice
Warmed: Traditional to Art Quilts: 1-3pm
WHERE: Braithwaite
Fine Arts Gallery, Braithwaite Building, Lower Level, Southern
Utah University, Cedar City, UT
TICKETS: Free Admission
INFO: For more information call (435)
586-5432 or visit the gallery website at www.suu.edu/pva/artgallery
SUU´S
BRAITHWAITE FINE ARTS GALLERY
MONA
COVINGTON PRESENTS WORKSHOP AS PART OF "EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN" SERIES
OCTOBER
13, 2012
Southern Utah
University, Cedar City, Utah: Quilting has offered opportunities for people to stitch together fascinating
histories around the world. Mona
Covington will present a workshop about quilting´s influences on society,
titled Twice Warmed: Traditional to Art
Quilts on Saturday October 13, 2012 from 1:00-3:00pm in SUU´s Braithwaite Fine Arts Gallery. The workshop, which is free, is part of the Saturday program
series for the Everything In Between: Art Quilts, Fabric Collage, and Embroidery
exhibition at the Gallery. In addition, starting at 10am, there will a
family friendly presentation on Color
and Animal Communication at the Gallery by Dr. Jacqualine Grant.
As a quilter, collector, and teacher, Mona Covington served as the Cedar
Chest Quilters´ Guild President for two years and on the Utah State Quilt Guild
board as a region representative for two years. She completed her appraisal
training in May of 2005 through the Appraisal Program of the American Quilt
Society. Covington currently maintains
a library of relevant books pertaining to quilt history, pattern and textile
research and appraisal information, and her personal collection includes quilts
and tops dating from 1880 to the present.
Dr.
Jacqualine Grant, Director of SUU´s Garth
and Jerri Frehner Museum of Natural History, has created a remarkable
correlation between the quilts on exhibit in the Braithwaite Gallery and color
in the animal kingdom. Her presentation, Color
and Animal Communication, will use the color combinations in the quilts to
explore how animals use color in their world to communicate and camouflage.
These workshops are part of the Saturday program series of SUU´s Everything
in Between exhibition at the Braithwaite Fine Arts Gallery, which is made
possible through the generous support of the Friends of the Braithwaite Fine Arts Gallery and a sponsorship
provided by the Cedar Chest Quilters. For more information
about these events, please visit the gallery website at www.edu/pva/artgallery
beginning in mid-September.
The Friends
of the Braithwaite Fine Arts Gallery is a non-profit group
established in 1977, just one year after the Gallery was opened on the Southern
Utah University campus. For nearly 35 years the Friends have helped
enrich lives through their sponsorship of world-class exhibitions and
outstanding arts education programs. Each year Friends'-supported exhibitions attract legions of art lovers from
throughout the intermountain west. In Focus: National Geographic Greatest
Portraits exhibition saw a record number of attendees from throughout the
region. Other Friends' supported exhibitions seen in recent years at the
Braithwaite supported by the Friends
include Francisco Goya: Los Caprichos, Chihuly Baskets, Soviet Era Art: 1917-1991 and Jim
Jones: Recent Paintings. All of these exhibitions were free to the general
public.
Spend
a Saturday at SUU´s Braithwaite Fine Arts Gallery and learn more about quilting
and the color in the animal kingdom. For more
information about these events, please visit the
gallery website at www.edu/pva/artgallery beginning in mid-September.
No comments:
Post a Comment