DISCOVERING ART. BUILDING COMMUNITY. HOW ONE WOMAN’S DREAM OF AN ARTS CENTER FOR ALL TOOK FLIGHT.
Is Virginia an artist? “Actually, I have a kind of complicated relationship with that word,” she says. “My mom always told me artists are weird.” As she speaks, she is pulling a small squeegee across a fine-mesh screen covered with ink to leave the imprint of a chrysanthemum on a flattened piece of clay. It’s part of a ceramics project. Virginia describes herself as a homesteader. She makes soap. Has goats and chickens. A BIG garden. She was drawn to Blackbird Arts more in the spirit of a maker than in the spirit of an artist. “I figured I could make pretty ceramic soap dishes to go with my homemade soap and sell them together,” she says. Will she one day embrace the term artist? “I might have to talk to my mom about that.”
Beside Virginia as she works is Jill, a hospice nurse, screen-printing a blue elephant onto a piece of clay. “I almost didn’t come in today,” she says. She was on call last night, she was up much of the night and was tired. But once at Blackbird, the energy of the place and her art infused her. “I’m glad I came,” she says, stepping back to admire her elephant imprint. Is she an artist? “No. I’m a nurse. Science, linear thinking, reasoning.” She puts a hand to her forehead and moves her arm to point straight out, like an arrow. “Here, I turn off that part of my brain and tap into other ideas and the people here, and I let my creativity flow.”
There are dozens more people like this making art at Blackbird Arts community art center. They make art, don’t feel right embracing the title “artist,” and yet they love the discovery that they can, in fact, make art.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der December 2017-Ausgabe von Traverse, Northern Michigan's Magazine.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der December 2017-Ausgabe von Traverse, Northern Michigan's Magazine.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
Camping With Your Dog
Bringing your dog on your next outdoor overnight excursion? Oh, yes! With a little planning, your canine companion will enjoy camping just as much as you. These Northern Michigan spots are perfectly pet-friendly.
SWEET ON THE BETSIE
JENA MATZEN AND GREGG TRAHEY WEREN’T LOOKING FOR A BIG HOME UP NORTH. BUT THEY DID WANT STYLE.
REFRESH IN BLUE AND WHITE
ASKED TO MOVE A HARBOR SPRINGS HOME FROM TRADITIONAL TO TRANSITIONAL STYLE, INTERIOR DESIGNER GEMMA PARKER BUILT ON THE FRESH, TIMELESS ALLURE OF BLUE AND WHITE.
MAKING CONNECTIONS
Explore Emmet and Cheboygan counties by foot, bike or hoof, thanks to this scenic trail.
Please, eat the violets.
The wild violets that dot our forest floors are pretty enough to eat. Go ahead—let our six simple recipes fuel your culinary imagination.
OASIS ON ELK LAKE
ARCHITECT KEN RICHMOND DESIGNS A HOME THAT CAPTURES THE CARIBBEAN COLORS OF ELK LAKE WHILE FEELING COMPLETELY ORGANIC TO THE NORTHWOODS.
LOSS AND NATURE
Leelanau's Cedar River Preserve provides peace and perspective.
GO WITH THE FLOW
Celebrating an unconventional trout opener among friends.
CHAMPION OF TREES
Archangel Ancient Tree Archive is the “most hopeful project on the planet,” says David Milarch.
DINING OUT NEAPOLITAN, BUT WITH STYLE
American House—the Siren Hall spinoff—is making darn good pizza.