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ISDay

PNWS International Sculpture Day – Participant Bios

The live stream Zoom event will include observations by leadership from Helensview School, OSA and interviews with members of Pacific Northwest Sculptors and Community Members.


Maria Wickwire began showing her sculptures in Portland, OR; created a public art piece for the city of Lake Oswego, OR; and was featured on the Emmy Award
Winning show, Oregon Art Beat, before relocating to the Skagit Valley. Each piece represents a unique journey, after which Maria is ready to move on to the next discovery. The sculptures, too, are ready to move out into the world to stand on their own and share their stories with those who encounter them. She creates from a deep place inside and only hopes her work will touch others deeply as well.

Maria Wickwire Studio

Maria Wickwire

Carole Murphy has been a generous contributor to our sculpture community, as former president of PNWS, former director of the Sculptor’s Gallery and an inclusive, collaborative sculptor and teacher. Murphy takes green medias such as recycled steel, recycled fiberclay, aerated cement and nature and creates her own elemental organic forms and ecologically sound, abstract interpretations. Murphy’s sculptures have been shown across the nation, from the Maryhill Art Museum and the Coos Bay Art Museum in Oregon, to the The Robert Paul Gallery in Burlington, Vermont, and can presently be seen in The Lawrence Gallery in McMinneville and Riversea Gallery in Astoria, Oregon.

https://carolemurphy.com/

Carol Murphy

Julian Voss-Andreae, a German sculptor based in Portland Oregon, is widely known for his striking large-scale public and private commissions often blending figurative sculpture with scientific insights into the nature of reality. His sculptures are frequently shown at international art fairs and galleries and can be found in major collections in North America, Asia, Europe, Africa, and Australia. Voss-Andreae’s work has been featured in print and broadcast media worldwide and videos of his sculpture have gone viral with tens of millions of views. Prior to his art career, Julian Voss-Andreae studied quantum physics and philosophy at the Universities of Berlin and Edinburgh and did his graduate research participating in a seminal experiment in foundational quantum physics at one of the world’s most prestigious physics research labs at the University of Vienna. His expertise in diverse fields of science and a deep passion for the mysteries of quantum physics have been a continual source of inspiration for his work.

julianvossandreae.com

Julian Voss-Andreae

Zoom Details

This event is open to the public. All attendees will need to register in advance.

Register

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the event.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Carol Murphy, ISDay, Maria Wickwire, Sunshine Dixon Author: Alisa Looney

PNWS International Sculpture Day 2021 – ‘Unrecognized’

A space for possibilities opened up when an anonymous sculptor installed a portrait of an American Pioneer on Mt. Tabor a few weeks ago. York immortalized, his story made huge and inclusive, his face deep in  reflection. The expression could be asking, “What have I been through, what have I become?” The unknown artist’s story is also left to our imagination. Opening the possibility that many sculptors (you and I) could do something like this, step onto an open stage and change the story of America.

‘York’ – Anonymous

York’s story is our story, not by claiming it or using it, but by opening up our hearts. Letting them break open to stories that have been ignored for hundreds of years.

The theme for PNWS IS Day 2021 is Unrecognized, that which has been ignored or undervalued. Many of us came to be artists because we recognized things in the world that others did not. The skillful artist reveals some of the picture, letting the viewer fill in the missing pieces. The success of that art is when a viewer recognizes part of their self in the story. This was the challenge for IS Day this year, the event would happen only if people found themselves in the theme. The following is an excerpt from the letter sent to the PNWS Membership announcing the theme and inviting participation:  

The PNWS Board will facilitate projects or meetings, but the motivation will be up to you as PNWS Members. Our group’s potential should not go unrecognized. We are diverse and resourceful, and if we come out from our studios to meet, we find a commonality that has the potential to be a community. Your reply to this invitation is vital in that effort. Let us know what you think of these ideas and what you would like to see happen.

PNWS Member, Chayo Wilson, has stepped forward, embracing the potential of IS Day 2021. She is leading the fabrication of a sculpture at the Oregon Society of Artists gallery/school. Chayo is a clay artist and a teacher, who has collaborated with several other PNWS Members. The piece she is presenting on April 24th will also include the efforts of a handful of Members, along with two new Partner/affiliates: OSA (hosting the event and providing a pedestal in their front courtyard) and Helensview High School. The relationship with Helensview is new and evolving, but the projection is that the young artists there will be empowered to find their voice through clay. This gesture echoes the installation of the York portrait on Mt Tabor and fulfills the theme, Unrecognized.

The open pedestal in front of OSA is tangible center point of PNWS IS Day 2021. It is like the pedestal on Mt Tabor where a statue of a wealthy white man was replaced by an unappreciated, black pioneer. There is possibility for our evolution as individuals and as a Member organization, that is being played out in many ways. The Board is attempting to recon with racism and other issues of equity in a Membership organization that thrives on a Peer group ethos at the same time that we are looking outward at partnering with other arts and education organizations.

We have the resources to do this all. PNWS is full of diversely talented individuals that can rapidly solve multi-dimensional challenges, when we work together. Our full potential may be unrealized, but not Unrecognized.


Event Details

Filed Under: Blog, June 2021 Newsletter Tagged With: ISDay, Mt Tabor, Unrecognized, York Author: Andy Kennedy

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Pacific Northwest Sculptors
4110 SE Hawthorne Blvd #302
Portland, OR 97214
president@pnwsculptors.org

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