LSU College of Art & Design launches Open Experimental Studio
LSU College of Art & Design launchesOpen Experimental Studio with 2 resident artists in Glassell Gallery
LSU College of Art & Design will host two resident artists from late May to late June 2024 in the LSU Glassell Gallery, located in downtown Baton Rouge in the Shaw Center for the Arts.LSU School of Artceramic artist Richard Boehnkeand painter, photographer, and musicianKimberly Meadowlarkwill set up open studios in the gallery kicking off their residency May 25th.Both artists will spend three days a week in Glassell Gallery making their own work and inviting visitors to make with them over the next month.
The Open Experimental Studio seeks not only to activate the gallery but to activate creative expression.It offers visitors the opportunity to experiment with artmaking, community building, and contributing their work to the experimental space.The Open Experimental Studio values process over product, experience over outcome, and communing over consuming.It seeks to create a supportive, open space for playful expression through artmaking that is open and welcoming to all.
In addition to the artists' studios, the gallery will offer open studio space for visitors to create, scheduled workshops, and three community-created projects that will be facilitated by the artists over their month-long residency.The individual and joint workshops will include music, sound, and writing alongside painting, sculpting, and drawing.The Open Experimental Studio will host an opening event with both artists Saturday, May 25, from 2–5 p.m.to begin the community-based projects.More sessions will be added and a culminating event to share the collective project work is scheduled for the evening of Friday, June 14 from 6-8 p.m.All Open Experimental Studio hours, workshops, and events are free and open to all.
Sculpt, draw, and paint in our open studio and co-create a community mural and sculpture with our resident artists Tuesday–Sunday from May 25–June 14.
May 25, 2–5 p.m.Open Experimental Studio Kick Off
Paint, sculpt, and draw with our resident artists Painter Kim Meadowlark and ceramic artist Richard Boehnke as we kick off our four-week open experimental studio residencies.Free and open to all.
Saturday, June 1, 1–2:30 p.m.– Hand build a Cup with Richard Boehnke
Learn how to hand build a cup with clay resident artist Richard from 1-2:30 or just drop by any time from 12-5 p.m.to play and build with clay.Help us create our community clay
sculpture.Free and open to all
Sunday, June 2, 12–5 p.m.Free First Sunday: Handbuilding and Painting Sessions
12–1 p.m.– Open Studio Play: sculpt, paint, and draw with us!
1–2 p.m.– Hand build a Tray with Richard Boehnke
2–3 p.m.– Open Studio Play: sculpt, paint, and draw with us!
3–4 p.m.– Painting Session with Kim Meadowlark
4–5 p.m.– Open Studio Play: sculpt, paint, and draw with us!
Free and open to all!
Thursday, June 6, 6–8 p.m.Synesthetic Slowdown
Join both our resident artists in a meditative exploration of synesthesia as they disintegrate forms and integrate sound with color, clay, and words.Free for all.This program is geared toward those 18+.
Sunday, June 9, 2–4 p.m.Painting with Kim Meadowlark
Experiment with Kim's integration of expressive writing and painting on your own canvas from 2–4 p.m.
Friday, June 14, 6–8 p.m.- Closing Reception
Celebrate the end of our open studio and check out the community sculpture and mural you created alongside friends, family, and our resident artists.Free and open to all.
Using the plasticity of clay, Boehnke plays with line and gesture to make pieces that imply attitude and movement.He aims to create work that invites the viewer to imagine the pieces motion, drawing inspiration from how he sees people moving through the world.He has a deep interest in the interplay between craft, play, and value–challenging how an audience can engage with the work, sometimes inviting its destruction.
Boehnke is an MFA candidate at LSU School of Art and a business professional living in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.He has worked in the United States, Vietnam, India, and the Netherlands, working across science and engineering, and he strives to connect that experience to his ceramic work and teaching philosophy.
Meadowlark is a Baton Rouge-based artist centering her work around a neurological experience, synesthesia—involuntary perceptions that cross over between senses.This has led to her combining her musical abilities and love of sound to create a tangible art form.Meadowlark primarily works with acrylic on canvas!however, she includes strikes of multiple mediums through each piece.For the better part of a decade, Meadowlark's work has been recognized for its fluidity, vivid tones, and emotive characteristics.Her recent body of work embraces the techniques learned over a ten-year period, with a redefined elusiveness of geometric blocking.While not a student of formal training within university or further education sectors, her keen eye and passion for detail have allowed Meadowlark to create a name within the Baton Rouge community and beyond.