The Burchfield Penney Art Center at SUNY Buffalo State in partnership with the Artists/Veterans Art Collaborative will offer a series of classes at The Center to Vets and their families to gather and explore how visual images can be used as a means of expression. Sessions run every third Thursday, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm, October 15, 2015 through March 17, 2016.
The evening begins with a tour led by docent Gina Derrico in the galleries followed art making in the studio classroom. The program is free and open to all veterans.
The partnership offers military veterans a safe, productive, healthy environment at The Center where they can network and forge new friendships while working with artists creating original works of art. Workshops will be facilitated by artists and projects completed during the visit:
October 15, 2015 - Artist: Barbara Murak – Creating an Eclectic Quilt
Working with fiber - (Exhibition visited: Art In Craft Media 2015)
November 19, 2015- Artist: Deb Stewart - Creating in Clay
Working in clay - (Exhibition visit: Fluidity In Form: Selections From The Dean Spong Collection)
December 17, 2015- Artist: Karen Lesinski – Seeing in Black and White
Designing with limited color for a BIG impact (Exhibition visited: Art In Craft Media 2015)
January 21, 2016 - Artist: John Montague – Drawing in Perspective
Using one and two-point perspective to create space (Exhibition visited: Finding Aid)
February 18, 2016 - Artist: Wendy King - Shadow Puppets
Make a shadow puppet and explore its movement in light (Exhibition visited: Through These Gates: Buffalo’s First African American Architect, John E. Brent)
March 17, 2016 - Artist: Anita Johnson - From Real to Abstract
Turning an image into an abstract painting (Exhibition visited: Finding Aid)
April 21, 2016 - Artist: Russell Ram – Collected Memories
Creating a paper collage using personal collage memories (Exhibition visited: Collected Memories)
About The Artists/Veterans Art Collaborative
More than half of the 2.6 million Americans dispatched to fight the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan struggle with physical or mental health problems stemming from their service, feel disconnected from civilian life and believe the government is failing to meet the needs of this generation’s veterans, according to a poll conducted by The Washington Post and the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Back in 2010 two neighborhood friends, artist Jackie Albarella and Iraq veteran Dan Frontera, decided to pay forward their personal experiences to help Vets cope with the tensions of coming home after deployment. With the help of Jim Becker, a Major in the US Army reserve and VA therapist, the Artists/Veterans Art Collaborative group was founded. The Collaborative’ s newly formed partnership with the Burchfield Penney served nearly 100 Vets and their families with a series of classes earlier this year.