Welcome to UCA's new events blog!

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Celebrate the Legacy of Helen Foster Snow @ SUU (Cedar City: April 23 - 26)

SUU CELEBRATES THE LEGACY OF HELEN FOSTER SNOW
WITH A SERIES OF CULTURAL EVENTS

Southern Utah University, Cedar City, Utah: The profound influence of Utahn Helen Foster Snow in the Chinese social and political landscape of the last century will be commemorated in several events held in late April at Southern Utah University. From a musical and dance performance to an art lecture and a film screening, SUU celebrates not only Snow´s legacy but the university´s growing relationships with several Chinese cultural and educational institutions. These free events will take place on SUU´s campus April 23rd through 26th. All events are open to the public who are encouraged to attend.
The first event in the series will be a screening of the acclaimed documentary, The Hidden Battlefield, on Tuesday, April 23rd, in the Sterling Church Auditorium, located in the Sharwan Smith Center. The screening begins at 11:30am. Directed by Harrison Schaaf, this remarkable film spotlights a remote farming village in the middle of China and the villagers´ seven-year struggle to build a primary school. At the center of the conflict is Mr. An Wei, Vice President, Translation Association of China, who returns to the village, his birthplace, to spearhead the building project. After the screening there will be a Q & A session with An Wei himself. 
On Thursday, April 25th, An Wei celebrates the achievements and accomplishments of Cedar City native Helen Foster Snow in a lecture which begins at 11:30am in the Sterling Church Auditorium. His presentation is titled: Helen Foster Snow, a Bridge of Understanding and Friendship.
That evening, SUU´s Art Insights features artist Ms. Huang He (whose name translates into "Yellow River") who will be donating a portrait of hers depicting Helen Foster Snow which will highlight a memorial wall within Gerald R. Sherratt Library. This event is scheduled for Thursday, April 25th, at 7:00 in the Gilbert Great Hall, on the second floor of Hunter Conference Center.
On Friday, April 26th, faculty members and students from SUU´s College of Performing & Visual Arts join together in a celebration of Helen Foster Snow. Opus Chamber Choir will perform Chinese and American folk music, SUU´s Percussion Ensemble and dancers from the Department of Theatre Arts & Dance perform a Waist Drum Dance, staged by Kay Andersen, Chair, Theatre Arts & Dance. Musical faculty members Dr. Xun Sun, violin, and Dr. Lynn Vartan, marimba, perform a variation from Dr. Keith Bradshaw's compositions from Dream of Helen. The evening will include remarks by Dr. Sun Hua, Professor, Director of Edgar and Helen Snow Studies, Beijing University, Mr. Shu Zhang, President of People's Friendship Society, along with SUU Provost Bradley J. Cook. The performance begins at 7:30pm in the Gilbert Great Hall. Admission is free.
Shauna Mendini, Dean of SUU´s College of Performing and Visual Arts, was Co-Director of Dream of Helen, a performance piece created with the Hubei Opera and Dance Drama Theatre in summer of 2011. Dean Mendini is pleased that SUU is continuing to celebrate Helen´s memory and the continued collaboration between the university and China. "Helen Foster Snow´s impact on Chinese history in the 1930s continues to be an inspiration. These events not only celebrated Snow but showcase how her legacy deeply affected the lives of the Chinese people.  Our guests from China include musicians, visual artists and scholars who have drawn inspiration and insight from the work of this celebrated Cedar City native. In addition I am deeply grateful Provost Bradley J. Cook for his support of all these remarkable events."  
Helen Foster Snow (1907-1997) was a native of Cedar City, Utah, who was an instrumental bridge builder of U.S./China relations. Known as the mother of Chinese Industrial Cooperatives and through her efforts as a writer, she received two Nobel Peace Prize nominations and was the second American to be awarded the title of "Friendship Ambassador," the highest honor bestowed by the Chinese People´s Association for Friendship with Foreign Countries. She is considered a heroine by the Chinese people. Snow´s mother, Hannah Davis Foster, taught at the Branch Normal School now Southern Utah University.
Join SUU´s faculty, staff and students as well as our distinguished guests to celebrate the memory of Helen Foster Snow and SUU´s continued collaboration with China.
ABOUT THE COLLEGE
The Southern Utah University College of Performing and Visual Arts is comprised of nationally accredited departments of Art and Design, Music, Theatre Arts and Dance, as well as a graduate program in Arts Administration and newly created Center for Shakespeare Studies. The College offers 16 different degree areas, including liberal arts Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science degrees; professional Bachelor of Music and Bachelor of Fine Arts in art and theatre degrees; and a Master of Fine Arts in Arts Administration degree. More than 60 full- and part-time faculty and staff are engaged in teaching and mentoring over 550 majors in the College. Over 1100 students enroll each year in over 195 arts classes on the SUU campus. The College presents 100 performances, lectures, presentations, and exhibitions each year. The College´s affiliate organizations include the Braithwaite Fine Arts Gallery, American Folk Ballet, Utah Shakespeare Festival, and the SUU Ballroom Dance Company. For more information about the College of Performing and Visual Arts, contact the Office of the Dean at (435) 865-8561, or by e-mail at cpvamktg@suu.edu.

Not-for-Profits in Utah: Challenges and Opportunities @ PBTK (SLC: May 7)


Not-for-Profits in Utah: Challenges and Opportunities

Piercy Bowler Taylor & Kern CPAs

Tuesday, May 7, 2013 from 7:45 AM to 11:00 AM (MDT)

Salt Lake City, UT

 http://pbtk.eventbrite.com/#

Special Screening - Art Recession @ Utah Film Center (SLC: April 23)

Presented by the Utah Film Center

Tuesday, April 23rd  7:00p.m. City Library 210 E. 400 S. 
Presented by the Utah FIlm Center 
Art Recession 
Director Ming Lai will be in attendance for a post film Q and A. 
Film Not Rated - Runtime 59 minutes. 

Despite its huge impact, art education is often of the first programs to be cut, especially when the economy is hard hit.  Through interviews with visionary artists, art curators, and teachers, this film explores the importance of art education, showing how it teaches us to communicate, develops our critical thinking skills, helps us to learn other subjects, expresses our individualism, enriches our culture, builds our society, and ultimately conveys our humanity.

Mariah Mellus
Community Development and Events Manager
Utah Film Center
(*Formerly SLC Film Center)
122 South Main Street
Salt Lake City, UT 84101
(801) 746.7000 (o)
(801) 641-0697 (c)

NEWS: NEA announces Brookings Institution publication based on collaborative effort on the arts and economic development


Publication based on symposium co-hosted by the NEA and the Brookings Institution
For immediate release                                                           Media contact: Sally Gifford  
April 15, 2013                                                                         202-682-5606 ? giffords@arts.gov
WASHINGTON, DC - Just released by the Brookings Institution, Creative Communities: Art Works in Economic Development is a new publication based on a collaborative effort with the National Endowment for the Arts to stimulate more rigorous research on the arts and economic development. 
Urban and regional planners, elected officials, and other decisionmakers are increasingly focused on what makes places livable. Access to the arts inevitably appears high on that list, but knowledge about how culture and the arts can act as a tool of economic development is often lacking.  How do we look at the arts sector as an integrated part of local economies and not just as a source of amenities or diversions? Creative Communities uses original data produced through quantitative and qualitative research to provide a greater understanding of how art works as an engine for transforming communities.
"We all know intuitively that the arts can help strengthen communities, but we need more solid economic data and analysis to back up those claims," said NEA Acting Chairman Joan Shigekawa. Through its Office of Research & Analysis, "the NEA is honored to have partnered with the Brookings Institution in co-sponsoring a symposium and its result: a publication of new studies that measure the economic impact of the arts."  

This publication stems from a first-ever collaboration between the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) and the Brookings Institution. The two organizations co-hosted the May 2012 symposium titled "The Arts, New Growth Theory, and Economic Development,? where leading economists explored theories and empirical findings about the role of arts and culture in the U.S. economy. Archived video of the symposium is available at the Brookings website.
This event is part of a new direction for NEA research: to convene more gatherings and conduct more research on the value and impact of the arts in other domains of American life, such as education, health and well-being, community livability, and economic prosperity. Another recent economic research endeavor is a landmark partnership between the NEA and the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis to develop an "Arts and Cultural Production Satellite Account" that will identify and calculate the arts and culture sector's contributions to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
Contributors to Creative Communities are:
Hasan Bakhshi (Nesta UK)
Elisa Barbour (University of California, Berkeley)
Shiri M. Breznitz (Georgia Institute of Technology)
Roland J. Kushner (Muhlenberg College)
Rex LaMore (Michigan State University)
James Lawton (Michigan State University)
Neil Lee (Nesta UK)
Richard G. Maloney (Boston University)
Ann Markusen (University of Minnesota)
Juan Mateos-Garcia (Nesta UK)
Anne Gadwa Nicodemus (Metris Arts Consulting)
Douglas S. Noonan (Indiana University?Purdue University Indianapolis)
Peter Pedroni (Williams College)
Amber Peruski (Michigan State University)
Michele Root-Bernstein (Michigan State)
Robert Root-Bernstein (Michigan State)
Eileen Roraback (Michigan State)
Michael Rushton (Indiana University)
Lauren Schmitz (New School for Social Research)
Jenny Schuetz (University of Southern California)
John Schweitzer (Michigan State)
Stephen Sheppard (Williams College)
Megan VanDyke (Michigan State)
Gregory H. Wassall (Northeastern University).
Creative Communities: Art Works in Economic Development is available at Brookings Institution Press.  For review copies, please contact Brookings Institution Press Publicity Manager Melissa McConnell atmpmcconnell@brookings.edu.
About the National Endowment for the Arts
The National Endowment for the Arts was established by Congress in 1965 as an independent agency of the federal government. To date, the NEA has awarded more than $4 billion to support artistic excellence, creativity, and innovation for the benefit of individuals and communities. The NEA extends its work through partnerships with state arts agencies, local leaders, other federal agencies, and the philanthropic sector. To join the discussion on how art works, visit the NEA at www.arts.gov.

Ms. Huang He, Chinese Painter @ SUU (Cedar City: April 25)

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: April 16, 2013

Michael French
Marketing & Public Relations Coordinator
College of Performing & Visual Arts
Southern Utah University
435-865-8667
michaelfrench@suu.edu

FOR CALENDAR EDITORS: ART INSIGHTS, MS. HUANG HE, CHINESE PAINTER
WHAT:              A specialist in the Chinese exquisite brush and heavy color painting technique, Ms. Huang He (whose names translates into "Yellow River") shares her remarkable talent and skills during Art Insights, SUU´s Department of Art and Design´s weekly lecture series.
WHO:               Art Insights, Southern Utah University, Department of Art and Design
WHEN:             Thursday, April 25, 2013
TIME:               7:00pm
WHERE:           Gilbert Great Hall, Hunter Conference Center, Southern Utah University, Cedar City, UT
TICKETS:         Phone: Arts Hotline: (435) 865-8800 or visit: www.suu.edu/arts
PRICES:           Free and the General Public is encouraged to attend.

SUU´S ART INSIGHTS TO FEATURE
CHINESE PAINTER, MS. HUANG HE
APRIL 25, 2013

Southern Utah University, Cedar City, Utah: A specialist in the Chinese exquisite brush and heavy color painting technique, Ms. Huang He (whose name translates into "Yellow River") shares her remarkable talent and skills during Art Insights, SUU´s Department of Art and Design´s weekly lecture series. Ms. Huang He appears on Thursday April 25, 2013 at 7:00pm in the Gilbert Great Hall within SUU´s Hunter Conference Center. Admission is free and the general public is encouraged to attend.
Ms. Huang He studied fine art in Capital Normal University, Academy of Art, and she continued on to receive the first Masters Degree of Fine Arts. She went to study the exquisite brush and heavy color painting with the distinguished Professor Wei Hong-yan, one of China´s most renowned arts. Ms. Huang He is a member of numerous art associations in China including: The Exquisite Brush and Heavy Color Style of Fine Arts Association of Beijing, Art Educators Association of Beijing and The Association of Meticulous Flowers and Birds Chinese Painting of Shanxi Province. Her art has been included in various prestigious fine arts exhibitions and art galleries throughout China.
During her visit to Southern Utah University, Ms. Huang He will donate a painting of hers depicting Cedar City native and Chinese heroine, Helen Foster Snow, to the Gerald R. Sherratt Library.   
Art Insights is a weekly program hosted during the fall and spring semesters by SUU´s Art and Design faculty. Students and community members meet weekly to experience presentations and discussions by visiting artists and art educators from around the nation who share their work, insights, and attend gallery openings. Admission is free, and the general public is invited to attend.
Discover the vibrant beauty in this unique Chinese painting style by attending Ms. Huang He´s Art Insights presentation. For more information on the SUU College of Performing and Visual Arts events, please call the Arts Hotline at (435) 865-8800, or visit www.suu.edu/arts.
ABOUT THE COLLEGE
The Southern Utah University College of Performing and Visual Arts is comprised of nationally accredited departments of Art and Design, Music, Theatre Arts and Dance, as well as a Center for Shakespeare Studies and a graduate program in Arts Administration. The College offers 16 different degree areas, including liberal arts Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science degrees; professional Bachelor of Music and Bachelor of Fine Arts in art and theatre degrees; and a Master of Fine Arts in Arts Administration degree. The Center for Shakespeare Studies offers a minor in Shakespeare Studies. More than 60 full- and part-time faculty and staff are engaged in teaching and mentoring over 550 majors in the College. Over 1100 students enroll each year in over 195 arts classes on the SUU campus. The College presents 100 performances, lectures, presentations, and exhibitions each year. The College´s affiliate organizations include the Braithwaite Fine Arts Gallery, American Folk Ballet, Utah Shakespeare Festival, and the SUU Ballroom Dance Company. For more information about the College of Performing and Visual Arts, contact the Office of the Dean (435) 865-8561, or by e-mail at cpvamktg@suu.edu.

Seeing and Hearing Vietnam Art Exhibit @ Utah Cultural Celebration Center (WVC: May 16 - June 26)

Seeing and Hearing Vietnam Art Exhibit

WHAT: Seeing and Hearing Vietnam art exhibit at the Utah Cultural Celebration Center
 
WHEN:
Opening Reception
May 16, 6 - 8 p.m.

Exhibit
May 16 - June 26
Monday through Thursday, 9:00 - 6:00 p.m.
Friday and Saturday by arrangement.

WHERE: Utah Cultural Celebration Center
1355 West 3100 South
WVC, UT 84119

WHO: Everyone is invited to enjoy this exhibit and opening reception free of charge.

WHY:
This Spring the Utah Cultural Celebration Center is highlighting the art and artifacts of Vietnam. Bring the family and enjoy colorful embroideries of the Vietnamese landscape, traditional clothing, exquisite lacquer panels with pearl inlay, pottery and paintings, sculpture and jade. There is something for everyone in this exhibition, a truly remarkable collection featuring over 100 items from the Valley´s Vietnamese community.
Complementing the community exhibit is What I Could Not See, a series of photographs taken by John Steele. A veteran of the Vietnam War, John´s photos feature the Vietnamese people he has met on his subsequent three visits to Vietnam. His expertly shot photographs reveal a keen eye and are moving, capturing the emotion of both the subject and the photographer.
For more information about this and other exhibits or events at the Utah Cultural Celebration Center, please call 801-965-5100 or visit www.culturalcelebration.org, `like´ us on facebook at facebook.com/CulturalCelebration or follow us on twit

Michael Christensen
Folklorist/Cultural Specialist
Utah Cultural Celebration Center
1355 West 3100 South
WVC, UT 84119
801-965-5108 Tel.
801-509-1973 Mob.
801-965-5111 Fax.
www.culturalcelebration.org
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NEWS: Public Art Opportunity (SLC: Proposals accepted through June 3)


PUBLIC ART OPPORTUNITY ANNOUNCED
FOR SALT LAKE CITY – Glendale Branch Library

The Salt Lake Art Design Board announces a call for Utah artists who are interested in submitting proposals for a public art commission at the new Glendale Branch Library located at approximately 1400 South Concord Street (1250 West) in Salt Lake City.  The Library will be complete in October 2014.

The Design Board is seeking proposals for artwork that:
- Reflects the rich history, vitality, and cultural diversity of the Glendale neighborhood.
- Incorporates both interior and exterior artistic elements.
- Enhances a visitor’s experience to the Library and grounds.

The artist’s budget for this commission is $160,000. Proposal materials are now being accepted through 5:00 p.m. , Monday, June 3, 2013.  For  the complete Request for Proposals for this project, visit www.slcdocs.com/arts/Glendale_RFP.pdf.


PRE-PROPOSAL MEETING:
Wednesday, April 24, 2013, from 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. at Architectural Nexus located at 2505 E. Parley’s Way in Salt Lake City. This meeting is an opportunity for interested applicants to meet and ask questions of the project architects, hear about the artist selection process, and to view the project color boards and most current renderings of the Library.