ART MAUl 1995

Transcription

ART MAUl 1995
SEVENTEENTH ANNUAL JURIED EXHIBITION
ART MAUl 1995
"Occupied State" by Rik Fitch
MARCH 19.,APRIL 15, 1995
FREE ADMISSION • OPEN DAILY • CALL 244-8272 FOR HOURS
KAZUMA INTERNATIONAL GALLERY
MAUl ARTS & CULTURAL CENTER
OFF KAHULUI BEACH ROAD
You know
we've been.
Now look where-·-',.; ..,- headed.
It's a success story we're rather
proud of at Alexander & na l n"'In.
Honolulu-based
company makes good
shipping, food products
and property development,
and plays a major role in
Hawaii's economy for more
than 125 years.
Without the reliable shipping link provided hI) Matson,
Hawaii wOIlld /lot h~leveloped as it has.
C& H has eamcd a well-deseroed reputation
for high -qfl~.:...p_ro_d_
uc_
·ts_._ __
But as far as we're concerned, that's
just the opening chapter. A&B-owned
Matson Leasing Company has become
one of the top ten marine container
leasing companies in the world-with
offices in Asia, Europe and the U.S.,
and 58 depot locations worldwide.
We're always looking for ways to
improve and diversify our agribusiness
operations. Newly acquired California
and Hawaiian Sugar Company, a wellestablished refining and marketing
business, will complement A&B's
position as Hawaii's leading raw sugar
producer.
And, we are continuaiIy striving
to meet community needs. Among our
continuing endeavors is building a
variety of housing such as the Kahului
Town Terrace, an affordable rental
complex built in 1992, Kahului Ikena, a
102-unit apartment complex in Kahului
and rural homelots in Haiku.
As for the future of A&B, it's
full speed ahead ... with an operating
philosophy that remains responsive,
innovative and visionary. After all, when
your corporate motto is Imua (Onward),
that's the only way to go.
ALEXANDER 81. BALDWIN, INC.
ABllillI
A&B- H AWA II . INC.
e
1995 Alexander &: Baldwin, Inc.
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
COUNTY OF MAUl
WAILUKU. MAUl. HAWAII 96793
On behalf of the people of the County of Maui, I am pleased to extend my
sincere congratulations to all the talented artists participating in Art Maui '95.
This year marks the 17th anniversary of this premier juried art show, which
will be held for the first time at Kazuma International Gallery at the Maui Arts
and Cultural Center.
The residents and visitors of Maui County are truly fortunate to have the
opportunity to experience new and unique works of art,which have never been
displayed before. I am sure that the art works will be an inspiration to all
artists, young and old, amateurs and professionals.
I am very grateful to those who organized Art Maui '95 for their hard work
and dedication to the promotion of art in our community.
Sincerely,
~~~
Mayor, County of Maui
1
~aring in the community spirit.
'A'ohe han a nui ke alu 'ia - No task is too big
when done together by all.
Hawaiian proverb.
Hanft of Hawaii
HAWAII'S BANK
MEMBER FDIC
2
ART MAUl '95
P.O. Box 1054 Puunene, M aui , Haw aii 96 784
Aloha,
It is with great pleasure and personal satisfaction that I
welcome you to Art Maui 1995 at the Maui Arts & Cultural
Center.
Many thanks to the chairmen and volunteers of the twelve
committees who worked to create this 17th annual juried
exhibit.
The design for our catalog cover and our mini poster is by
artist Rik Fitch. It was developed from his painting "Occupied
State" which was chosen last year as our publicity image. We
thank Rik for his help and appreciate his graciousness.
I believe I speak for the Art Maui Board of Directors and the
volunteers in saying that it is our love for art and the belief in
the importance of art to the human experience that spurs our
efforts to present each years exhibit.
While Art Maui provides the opportunity for viewing art, it
is the artistic creativity abounding in Maui County that creates
the final product. We congratulate each artist whose work is
exhibited here and applaud all who submitted work for
jurying.
Sincerely:
c~
t. UPAi
ART MAUl '95 Chairperson
3
REPRESENTING MAUl ARTISTS :
We applaud
P ANDELIN. E ASATO. M BEDELL
Art Moui 195
D BENCOMO. BETIINA. S BRUNEL
S BURR. T CAMPBElL. S CON·
WAY. J . CLAR K .
Supporting the Artists 01
R
COSCI
L COURTNEY. K DAVIDSON. J.
Maull
','ARCH - APR'L EXHIB,T'ONS
DAVIS •
-JOYCE ClAJII( : DICKENSON. MARCH 10 - 29
_GEORGE AUAN: CAN-IERV. MARCH 18 - APRILS
-FRED KENKNIQHf • tHEO MORRISON: CANNERV, APRL 9 - 28
OPENING IIECEPTlONS ON ARST DAY OF All SHOWS: 6-9 PM
THE 'M R;) ANNUAL CELEBRA TION OF THE ARTS
THE R"Z CARLTON KAPALUA APRIL 13
DEYBRA •
• M
B H FREELAND
GEETESH
&
T DUDLEY
FREEMAN
ANUSA 11 • PRABHA
S CLARKE HAMILTON. P HAYES
N . HOKE. D LEHR • L. KASPRZYCKI
C . LARSON • L MAPES. B MARCIL
16
MAYOLETT •
_ Cf.t3:(A"ON EXH'BlTIorJ APRIL 10 - 20.
C
MEECHAN
McGEHEE. S NASH. R NELSON
IN OMURA. J OWEN. M PASCUAL
THE VILLAGE.4.AAa.._4"'_;
GALLERIES
__
, r,
.1010110_1_
L.ahcIno Ccrnery, 661-3280 -120 DIckenson Street, 661-4402
The RIIz-Calton, KapoIuo: 6I:R-1800 (ToI-fr_: 800-660(1500)
4
PETERSEN
•
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PICKENS
PIZZO • K SATTLER • S SHARP
S
Sr~ELTZER
• J
K. STERLING
VAINOWSKI. VIJAY· D WARREN
S YAMADA • S.YEE • N . YOUNG
Schedule of Events: ART MAUl '95
March 17, Friday
State Foundation on Culture and the Arts Selection
March 17, Friday
Purchase Pledge Dinner
March 18, Saturday
Artists Reception
Blessing: Father Joseph Napierkowski
Introduction: Mayor Linda Crockett Lingle
Music: Pia AIuli
March 19 - April 15
Open to the Public
10:00 am - 4:00 pm daily
Free Admission
April 3-13 Guided School Tours
Special mahalo to Pia Aluli for providing music for the artists
reception. Pia is a local entertainer from a family of entertainers.
He plays at various locations on Maui.
5
1995 PROMOTIONAL ART SELECTION
Occupied State by Rik Fitch
This year's Art Maui Promotional piece is Rik Fitch's
Occupied State. It's an oil on canvas painting, chosen from
works selected and displayed in the 1994 Art Maui
exhibition. It appears on the cover of this catalog and on the
mini-poster announcing the show that is displayed
throughout Maui.
Some people have associated this piece with Sovereignty.
Rik says, "This is only part of the issue. Perhaps it is more
about our occupation of self and how each of us is tied
together with one another. We are connected with different
parts of ourselves and with different energies which
surround us. Each of us is our own self as seen by the eyes
of the other. We are an organic self tied all together in one
great root system. We are tied together, yes intertwined, but
also, in a freer sense, not tied down."
M-A-U-I
WORKS
A DIVISION OF MAUl SPEED PRINT
70 Central Avenue, Wailuku, HI 96793
Phone: (808) 242-6634 • Fax: (808) 242-8967
6
1995 PROMOTIONAL ARTIST
RIKFITCH
Rik was in a field in Vermont
in 1988, attempting to paint a
landscape. He was becoming
very frustrated with his painting
when he began to sense a
presence standing behind him.
Looking around, there he was with a trench coat and beard.
The presence said, "Finish my
work, and I will teach you how
to paint." Fitch continued painting and, when he
looked around again, the speaker was gone. Upon
arriving home he noticed a book open to a page with a
Van Gogh sketch. Fitch honored an overwhelming
desire to put this sketch on canvas. Thus, he began
what he refers to as his "year with Van Gogh."
In 1991 Fitch moved to Maui, a move which turned
out to be good for Rik. He married Heather Mueller in
1992. She is a priest in the Episcopal Church in Keokea.
They have a new house and many good friends.
Rik enjoys painting with bright colors and lively
shapes. He loves the colors of Maui under the tropical
sun. Nothing is more delightful to Rik's ear than to
hear "Your paintings are fun."
Color and shape have a long history with Rik. As a
self-taught stained glass craftsman, Rik made his living
doing craft fairs in the sixties and seventies. Rik's
pieces adorn many churches and homes in New
(continued on next page)
7
1995 PROMOTIONAL ARTIST
RIKFITCH
(continued from page 7)
England. Only one of Rik's stained glass window
creations exists on Maui. "Heather talked me into it,"
says Rik, "before we were married. In the romantic
stage, one can do anything! With no tools or supplies the right equipment miraculously appeared!"
The window Rik designed and created adorns St.
John's Church in Keokea. It is named the Thompson
window to commemorate the lives of Douglas and
Barbara Thompson. At its bottom are the elements of
water, vegetation and the earth. The road across the
earth leads to a mountain encircled by a lei of clouds.
Two trees are entwined like two lives and the trees
continue to grow with their greenness continuing off
into eternity. A sun and doves symbolize the
Thompsons' entrance into the land of light. There are
three doves to symbolize the faith we share in the Holy
Trinity - God the Creator, God the Redeemer and God
the Holy Spirit.
Fitch's paintings can be seen at the Coast Galleries in
Hana and Wailea. He recently completed two large
paintings which hang in Koho's Restaurant in
Ka'ahumanu Shopping Center.
8
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10
ART MAUl '95 JUROR Momi Waihee Cazimero
Momi Waihee Cazimero is
known as one of the most
respected individuals in the arts
in Hawaii today. About the jury
process, Cazimero has this to say,
"In my other life I painted cave
walls. I know that because I have
never had a home or office that
wasn't surrounded by art. Art
creates my environment and fuels
my creativity. As I create art, it recreates me.
"My experience in critiquing art began with
evaluating my own work. This undoubtedly planted
the early seeds for jurying. Jurying anything is a
reflection on oneself. It reveals who we are, discloses
our taste and preference, and measures our knowledge
and experience.
"Jurying is both an honor and a risk. So why do we
submit to jurying? Perhaps artists, through jurying,
seek standards of excellence because they recognize
creativity is the manifestation of the soul responding to
inspira tion."
The significance of Momi Waihee Cazimero's
achievements can best be seen against the back drop of
her personal history. Her dedication to the community
and her profession is inspired by her life, her values
and love for Hawaii.
She founded Graphic House, Inc. in 1972, the first
graphic design company owned by a woman in
Hawaii. She's drawn upon her Hawaiian-Okinawan(continued on page 12)
11
ART MAUl '95 JUROR Momi Waihee Cazimero
(continued from page 11)
English ancestry to create unique design statements
with images and symbols that communicate Hawaii's
rich heritage. The business scope of the company
includes advertising, signage, exhibit design, corporate
materials, logo designs and space planning. Some of
the more prominent examples of her work include the
award-winning Judiciary History Center exhibit and
the National Printing Industries of America Award for
the State Foundation of Culture and the Arts (20th
Anniversary Retrospective) catalog. She co-curated that
exhibit with Tom Klobe, University of Hawaii art
professor.
An active community leader, she is a member of the
University of Hawaii Board of Regents. She presently
serves on the boards of the Hawaii Visitors Bureau,
Aloha Festivals Inc., and several hospitals. She is past
president of the Aloha Festivals, the Bishop Museum
Association and the Hawaiian Business/Professional
Association.
In 1987, Cazimero developed the logo design and
theme statement for Ho'olako, celebrating the Year of the
Hawaiian. She also developed the logo design and
mission statement of the ' Onipa' a commission that
planned, organized and coordinated the 100th
anniversary of the observance of the overthrow of the
Hawaiian Kingdom which ended the reign of Queen
Lili'uokalani.
12
Aloha and good luck to all
participants and sponsors of
Art Maui '95
The Maui News
.. .keeps you in touch
AN INVITATION FROM ART MAUl
Please join us in supporting Art Maui. Your contribution is
tax deductible (IRS designation 501 C-3).
$5.00
$25.00
$100.00
$200.00
Active Member
Contributing Member
Patron of the Arts
Benefactor of the Arts
You can also support Art Maui by purchasing the Art Maui
posters from previous years, available for purchase at
special prices during Art Maui '95. Please check with the
gallery host for more information.
Art Maui '95 is Sponsored in Part by the Maui Arts and Cultural Center.
13
ART MAUl HISTORY
Sixteen years ago there were no juried art exhibitions on
Maui. When there was an exhibit, show entries were hung,
judged and awarded prizes with no consideration of
qualifying criteria.
In 1979, a group of Maui artists and interested persons
joined together to form an all-volunteer organization with the
one goal of presenting a juried visual art exhibition on the
Island of Maui. The group, Art Maui, held its first juried
exhibition in 1979, and quickly became the most important
annual show on the island for Maui artists.
To be assured of an exhibition of exceptionally high quality,
the steering committee of Art Maui chose qualified jurors
respected by their peers in the state. Jurying procedures were
set by the Art Maui board of directors, insuring scrupulously
fair treatment of all artwork submitted.
To further the educational goals of Art Maui, a symposium
is offered to Maui artists each year before the show. Various
topics have been discussed including: workshops on framing,
gallery procedures, marketing art, pricing, art criticism, the
jurying process, and this year, art law.
The sixteen previous Art Maui exhibitions have all had their
own distinct flavor. And each show has received a tremendous
response from the community.
Maui itself has undergone significant changes since the
inception of Art Maui. In 1994, the magnificent Maui Arts and
Cultural Center was opened in a three-day celebration of all
the arts on Maui. This will be the first Art Maui to be exhibited
in its Kazuma International Gallery after many years at the Hui
No'eau Visual Arts Center near Makawao.
In this seventeenth year of Art Maui, the original goals of
the show remain the same: to present the highest quality of art
to the Maui community; to help the community understand
more about art; and to encourage Maui to reach for excellence
and creativity.
14
ART MAUl 1995
The Artists
and the Works
of the 17th Annual
Juried Exhibition
MARSHA AGUON
IpuHeke
ALEXIS AMERICA
Fast Forward
KAREN ANNA
Untitled
LORIK. Apo
Maluhia Kuu Aina
Kai Ho'i
SHINKO ARAKI
Leafy Shade IX
Leafy Shade X
EVAN ASATO
Before & Beyond - Blue Composition with
in Geometric Shapes
Untitled Assemblages
BILL BAGLEY
Shadows - Waiehu Beach Park
NElDA B. BANGERTER
Kula Cabbage Shack Girls
SHERRIE BARNHARD
The Demigod Maui Pulls the Island
from the Sea
GERALD BARRON
Equus
DEREK A. BENCOMO
Close Encouters #11
Holds No Flowers
MARGO BERDESHEVKY
Kaho'olawe II - Whisper
Gourd
200.
Watercolor
900.
Polaroid & Transfer Print
55.
Black and White Photography
Black and White Photography
250.
250.
Etching
Etching
620.
900.
Lines
Acrylic Polymer
Mixed Media
3,000.
500.
Oil
250.
Acrylic on Canvas
NFS
Oil
2,800.
B&W Photograph
175.
Lathe turned Ebony Wood
Lathe turned Milo Wood
1,600.
1,850.
Photograph & Poem - Image & Word 1,600.
15
(continued on page 16)
The Artists and the Works of
the 17th Annual Juried Exhibition
ART MAUl 1995
JEAN BOONE
Tulips
RANDY JAY BRAUN
Ka Lei A Na Kupuna
A Child of his Grandparents
GEORGE R. BRINNER
LokoWai
SIGRID BRUNEL
Yellow Path
Flamboyant Trees
STEPHEN BURR
Kamamaha Palms #2
The Salt Boat
TODD CAMPBELL
Ahu Pu'aa From the Mountain
to the Ocean
Untitled
DENISE CHAMPION
Makawao Morning Clouds
CYNTHIA K. CONRAD
Longings for Lurline
CARLA CROW
Waterfall
JANET DAVIS
In Search of the Kingdom Within
DAVO
Vulture's Nest
RITCH DEAN
Lilinoe (Goddess of Mists)
MARK DELANCEY
European Streets
DIANA DORENZO
A Taste of Lahaina
Hey Vinnie, Ya Got No
Squid Ink Pasta Today?
TRACY DUDLEY
Bromeliad Odyssey
Aliens
DONELWING
Breaking Chains of Undergrowth
NELSON D. FLACK
Mr. Paws Dreaming He's a Marsupial
EDDIE FLO'ITE
Makawao Town
Once Upon A Daze
Sun Up Moss Landing
Pastel
800.
B&W Photography /Hand Colored
845.
Acrylic
2,800.
Oil Pastel
Oil Pastel
850.
Pastel
Pastel
850.
900.
Norfolk Pine Bowl
Norfolk Pine Bowl
Oil on Canvas
Iris Print from Original Gouache
Acrylic on Bark Paper and Eucalyptus
400.
5,800.
3,200.
475.
1,995.
12,300.
Oil
3,200.
Serigraphy and Assemblage
2,000.
Photography
250.
Acrylic
537.
Pastel
1,500.
Pastel
3,000.
Acrylic on Canvas
Acrylic on Canvas
4,600.
3,800.
Bamboo Root
Graphite Charcoal on Paper
Watercolor
Watercolor
Watercolor
16
1BO.
21,000.
8,000.
NFS
2,800.
The Artists and the Works of
the 17th Annual Juried Exhibition
ART MAUl 1995
BETTY HAY FREELAND
Mist of Hukuula
MARIAN FREEMAN
Visiting Ch..!,:s
ROBERT GILMAN
Sunset Hula
WARREN GOUVEIA
Mo'opuna Kuakahi Laua'e
MARK GRAVEN
Dumpster in Paradise
DAVID GRAVES
ADM/EV
JIM GREEN
Truckin'
TIMOTHY P. HALL
Life in Balance
KENT HATTERS LEY
Wise Men Hold Back Anger
VINCE HOGAN
Untitled
Untitled
AKIRAIHA
Void #394
Madala #295
HARVEY S. JANIS
New England Morn
Waiting for the Train
CARLETON KINKADE
We're All Bananas
Lowell Mapes II
CHRIS KOMPST
TatsuoOno
Rita Goes Hollywood
Heaven and Earth
KIP KRIEGER
Triad: Rings of Omnipotence,
Omniscience & Omnipresence
SAINT MARKO
JaneD
TERRY McDONALD
Keokea's Afternoon Light
COLLEEN MEECHAN
Earth Patterns
Maui Ranchland
JOHN O. NOBLE
Asahi Bakery
Oil
4,300.
Acrylic
1,600.
Photography
600.
Photography
200.
Pastel
1,000.
Acrylic, Press-on Letters, Varathane 10,000.
Bamboo
300.
Kiawe
12,500.
Intaglio
30,000.
Acacia Burl
Acacia Burl
950.
950.
Acrylic
Acrylic
5,400.
5,400.
Photographic Colored Print
B&W Photographic Print
Oil
Oil
175.
175.
1,300.
2,500.
Dye-Image Transfer
Silver Gelatin Print
Silver Gelatin Print
Sterling Silver
200.
200.
150.
5,000.
Beach Glass, Silver
100.
Watercolor
NFS
Acrylic
Acrylic
2,350.
1,350.
Acrylic
3,000.
17
(continued on page 18)
The Artists and the Works of
the 17th Annual Turled Exhibition
ART MAUl 1995
(continued from page 17)
WAYNE OMURA
Norfolk Pine Bowl
Untitled
LAURA OSPANIK
Pastel
Hay Day
Pastel
Heliconia
JENNIFER OWEN
Stoneware and Bamboo
Ladle
B. REA
Take (Bamboo) Bracelet
Sterling Silver
Sterling Silver
Take (Bamboo) Necklace
Sterling Silver & 14kt Gold
Dolphin Box
ERIC T. SATO
Monotype
Dreamscape
STUART SHARP
Beatnik Painting
Acrylic/Pencil
JOHN SHOEMAKER
Sound of Bone (Diptych)
Monotype
Stones Gold
Monotype
Stride
Monotype
Ja-ANNE KAHANAMOKU STERLING
Ma1an1a1ao1a
Feather
Feather
Lei AJi'i 0 Kahekili
JANE THOMPSON
Polaroid transfer
Pacifica
Polaroid transfer
Jack's Joy
1,850.
1,400.
1,400.
350.
J.
750.
1,150.
875.
275.
950.
950.
160.
NFS
1,600.
1,600.
60.
60.
VI}AI
Sea Mysteries
SANDY VITARELLI
BlackMamo
MARTIIA VOCKRODT
Steel and Stone
Ca11as
Loading Cattle Early 1900's
ARTHUR DENNIS WILLIAMS
Warrior
JAY WILSON
Mandala
Through a Looking Glass
MICHAEL WORCESTER
Rondo Regalia
SALLY W. WORCESTER
Lines of Communication
WILLIAM S. WORCESTER
Cappuccino Table Unit
Ceramic
400.
Stoneware
1,000.
Oil on Canvas
Oil on Canvas
Oil on Wood
2,000.
600.
2,000.
Monkeypod Wood
15,000.
Tapestry
Tapestry
17,000.
17,000.
Glass
600.
Handblown and Etched Glass
750.
Free Blown Glass
778.
Art Maui 1995 is sponsored in part by the Maui Arts and Cultural Center
18
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19
Maui Arts & Cultural Center
WELCOMES ART MAUl '95
Art Maui '95 makes its Maui Arts & Cultural Center
debut in the Kazuma International Gallery, the island's only
museum-quality exhibit space.
Like other world class galleries, the Kazuma International
Gallery features plain walls, an attractive hard wood floor,
humidity and temperature control system, and a
computerized security alarm system. A simple, elegant
room it was designed with a simple aesthetic so as not to
detract from the exhibitions it houses.
The gallery boasts 20-foot high ceilings with flexible track
lighting located at the base of exposed roof trusses, the same
lighting system used to illuminate works in the National
Gallery and the Holocaust Museum in Washington D.C. A
free-standing mobile panel system allows for an infinite
number of configurations for room space division and
display of works. An adjacent workshop allows for the
preparation of a new exhibit while an existing exhibit is on
display.
(continued on page 21)
20
Maui Arts & Cultural Center
(continued from page 20)
Since opening in May of last year, the Kazuma
International Gallery has been the site of innovative
community exhibits such as: Tobu: Soaring to New Heights,
featuring the work of three generations of JapaneseAmericans from Hawaii; Celebrating the Artist in Us,
showcasing selected art of Maui County students; and the
heart warming Keia Wai Ola, These Living Waters which
offered a peek into the lives of Mauians through their
treasured objects. Prestigious international exhibits such as
East European Ceramics and The Golden Tea Room & Yoshida
Prints have also attracted thousands of art-lovers to the
gallery.
The $30 million Maui Arts & Cultural Center is Hawaii's
premier visual and performance art complex. Since May
1994, The Center has been the site of over 700 events,
attracting neartly 350,000 people including more than
100,000 students.
Built by and for the community, the Maui Arts & Cultural
Center features the 1,200-seat Harold K.L. Castle Theater,
4,000-capacity Alexander & Baldwin Amphitheater, Pa Hula
(a rock-faced hula mound), Kazuma International Gallery,
administrative offices, and the Schaefer Educational
Complex with its 300-seat McCoy Studio Theater,
community courtyard, Maui Academy of Performing Arts
offices, and the soon-to-be-built 2,200 sq. ft. Weinberg
Community Hall.
The Center extends a warm aloha to Art Maui '95.
21
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FAX: (808) 661-3912
(808) 244-7515
(808) 667-6969
22
ART MAUl 1995 COMMITTEES
Artists' Reception
Katherine Paet, Chair
Guida Anderson
Leslie Brown
Polohiwa Whitford and Friends
Education
Polohiwa Whitford, Chair
Chris Cowan
Zora Durock
Sharon Eno
Warren Gouveia
Ben Kikuyama
Christina Lyons
Irene Padgett
Julie Schoenecker
Christy Vail
Tony Walholm
Kapena Whitford
Exhibit Catalogue
Bob Schoenecker, Chair
Cynthia Conrad
Sandy McGuinness
Exhibition Design (Hanging)
Marian Freeman, Chair
Pam Andelin
Alexis America
Evan Asato
Bill Bagley
Denise Champion
DougChun
Dearca Devo
(continued on page 25)
23
ART MAUl BOARD OF DIRECTORS
President:
Vice President:
Secretary:
Treasurer:
Zora Durock
Carolyn Richardson
Sue Kwon
Jennifer Brumbaugh
Debby Baldwin
Walter Bruder
Pamela Andelin Cameron
Betty Hay Freeland
Marian Freeman
Larry Gilbert
Pat Howard
Dean Johnston
Ed Keller
Ben Kikuyama
Ellen Levinsky
Barbara Mathews
Nick Natichyn
Sue Nash
Katherine Paet
Steven Songs tad
Christy Vail
Gigi Valley
Tony Walholm
Polohiwa Whitford
Nancy Young
Recording Secretary for the Board: Mary Woods
24
ART MAUl 1995 COMMITTEES
(continued from page 23)
Exhibition Design (Hanging)
(continued)
Pat Howard
Ben Kikuyama
Ellen Levinsky
Terry McDonald
Richard Nelson
Julie Schoenecker
Sharon Shigekawa
Liz Singer
Tony Walholm
Donnette-Gene Wilson
Lois Wilson
Nancy Young
Gallery Design and Setup
Dean Johnston, Chair
Alexis America
Denise Champion
Terry McDonald
Nick Matichyn
Stephanie Mathews
Sharon Shigekawa
Gallery Sitting and Sales
Carolyn Richardson, Chair
Sally Longhi, Co-chair
Debby Baldwin
Gini Baldwin
Dottee Barron
Betty Beggs
Beth Behrman
Rose Bevanda
Judy Bisgard
Emily Bott
Ilona Briley
Hilary Brown
Jennifer Brumbaugh
Eve-lynn Civerolo
Rid Conger
Denise Champion
(continued on page 27)
25
ART MAUl '95 SYMPOSIUM
"ART LAW"
Date:
Place:
Chair:
Moderator:
Panelists:
Saturday, February 25,1995 • Time: 1:00-4:00 pm
Maui Arts & Cultural Center Classroom
Cynthia Conrad
Robert Kekuna
Prof. Jay Dratler, Keith Kirschbraun
Jack Naiditch, Tom Welch, Deborah Wright
Robert Kekuna led a panel of attorneys in a discussion of
"Art Law: Law for the Artist." Subjects included the kinds
of rights an artist needs to protect his or her work,
copyrights, trademarks, licensing and patents; basic
business for artists and an expert review of intellectual
property by V.H. Professor of Law Jay Dratler.
Other attorneys discussed art contracts; dealing with
emerging issues in the computer age; State law and
galleries; investors, collectors, tax laws and donations of art.
We also learned when and why an artist should hire an
attorney.
All six panelists are practicing attorneys from Maui and
Honolulu who are experienced in art history, copyright law,
investment and art law. They fielded questions from the 60plus audience at the end of the discussion.
It was an afternoon of lively exchange and all found the
symposium educational and informative. The symposium
was free and open to all participants and the general public.
Refreshments were served.
26
ART MAUl 1995 COMMITTEES
(continued from page 25)
Gallery Sitting and Sales
(continued)
Lisa Chapel
Lauri Christine
Dotty Crouse
Karen Davidge
Linda Decker
Mary Jo Durand
Zora Durock
Jane Lewis
GirnLirn
Barbara Mathews
Kathy McCorriston
Sandy McGuinness
Pat Masurnoto
Jackie Meadows
Monica Moriyasu
Sue Nash
Carolyn Nuyen
Diana Olson
Katherine Paet
MikiPalmer
Louisa Porcelli
Shari Rabbett
Carol Reynolds
Craig Reynolds
Zoe Reith
Cathy Riley
Bob Richardson
Zariah Ricossa
Judy Robeck
Patty Rohlfing
Stephanie Sachs
MarianSuda
Jane Thompson
Sherry Thorson
Sarajean Tokunaga
Cathy Torchiana
Christy Vail
Gigi Valley
Lisa Walsh
Swati Wolf
Mary Woods
Richard Yankovic
Sydney Zimmerman
(continued on page 28)
27
ART MAUl 1995 COMMITTEES
(continued from page 27)
Jury
Debby Baldwin, Chair
George Allan
Sue Klang
Christy Vail
Mini-Poster
Cynthia Conrad, Chair
Artist: Rik Fitch
Poster Sales
Cynthia Conrad, Chair
A Special Mahalo to Christy Vail
Prospectus
Gigi Valley, Chair
A Special Maluilo to Kevin Rebelo and to wrry Gilbert, Gilbert Associates
Publicity
Gigi Valley, Chair
Deanne Nakamura
Kevin Rebelo
A Special Maluilo to wrry Gilbert, Gilbert Associates and to Alan Isbell, Maui Tribune
Purchase Pledge
Sue Kwon, Chair
Zora Durock, Co-Chair
Margaret Inouye
Peggy Sullivan
Ron Kwon
Geoff Miller
(continued on page 30)
28
~
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Fine Art Supplies • Craft Supplies • Fabric Painting
Graphics • Silk Screen Supplies • Clays & Glazes
Children's Art Supplies • Air Brushes & More!
LOWEST PRICES IN THE STATE
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MAUl
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THE BIG ISLAND
262 KAM AVE.· HILO
Purchase Pledge Supporters
Dr. and Mrs. Bobby Baker
Rose Beyanda
Dr. and Mrs. Howard Barbarosh
Charles and Virginia DuBois
Eli Gordon
David and Shirley Hartley
Tom and Pam Hoffmeister
Bruce and Nora James
Bud and Carolyn Schaefer
Larry and Laura Schlesinger
Music by Peggy King
29
ART MAUl 1995 COMMITTEES
(continued from page 28)
Receiving
Sandi Stoner, Chair
Evan Asato
Debby Baldwin
Marcia Barnett-Lopez
Rose Bevanda
Wendy Blair
Jennifer Brumbaugh
Honey Bun Haynes
Adam Carbajal
Rici Conger
Tracey Dudley
Zora Durock
Emma Fee
Lynn Horner
Pat Howard
Dean Johnston
Ben Kikuyarna
Sue Kwon
Anne Leuteneker
Ellen Levinsky
Dianna Olson
Vincent Palmieri
Kaui Philpotts
Sharri Rabbet
Rich Richardson
Rob Spencer
Jane Thompson
Christy Vail
Tony Walholm
Symposium
Cynthia Conrad, Chair
Special Mahala to Coloriginals; Jerry L£zbb; L£znga Breen and Wiltsie; Mancini
Roland and Welch; Nick Matichyn (Maui Coffee Roasters); Walter Mybeck;
Ron Neal (Rimfire Imports); and Christy Vail
30
Special Mahalo To
George Allan
Debby Baldwin
Elizabeth Campbell
Clouds' Rest Protea Farm
Johnny Garania
Gilbert and Associates
Mike Krupnick
Jerry Labb
Ming Yuen Restaurant
Morihara Store
Dick Nelson
Darryl Orwig
Bob Schoenecker
John Vail
The Water Man
Shige Yamada
SALUTES
ALL THE TALENTED ARTISTS
ON THE ISLE OF MAUl
AND CONGRATULATES
THOSE WHO PARTICIPATE
IN ART MAUl '95
261 LALO PL. 877-6278 KAHULUI
KIHEI TOWN 879-7278 KIHEI
31
PAST ART MAUl CHAIRPERSONS
1979
1987
Janet Allan
Sandi Stoner
Cyndi McLean
1980
1988
Janet Allan
Roberta Derris
Cyndi McLean
Jennifer Brumbaugh
1981
1989
Carolyn Clark
Jennifer Brumbaugh
1982
Tonia Baney
1990
1983
Christy Vail
Debby Baldwin
Diane Haynes
1991
1984
Debby Baldwin
Christy Vail
Donnette-Gene Wilson
Jack Thompson
1985
1992
Lucretia Pladera
John Jenkins
Zora Durock
1986
1993
Sandi Stoner
Sue Kwon
Anne Leuteneker
Zora Durock
1994
Pat Howard
32
STATE FOUNDATION ON CULTURE AND THE ARTS
Each year, the State Foundation on Culture and the Arts (SFCA) organizes
an Acquisition Award Selection Committee (AASC) to visit Art Maui prior to
the opening of the show. The committee is responsible for selecting and
recommending to the SFCA board outstanding works of art that should be
acquired for the Art in Public Places Relocatable Collection. The AASC is
comprised of SFCA's board and staff and volunteer consultants who are
qualified visual art professionals. In 1989, the Art in State Buildings ww was
succeeded by the Work of Art Special Fund.
The State Foundation on Culture and the Arts was established by the
Hawaii State Legislature in 1965 as the official arts agency of the State of
Hawaii. In 1967, the State's role as patron of the arts was further
augmented by Act 298, the" Art-in-State-Buildings Law". This
legislation mandated that one percent of appropriations for the original
construction of any State building be set aside for the acquisition of
works of art. Also, the funds are used for the conservation,
transportation and exhibition of works of art.
The Art in Public Places Program of the State Foundation expends
these funds for the purchases of completed, portable works of art, and
for the commissioning of artists for works of art to be placed at specific
locations.
Works of art acquired for the State's public art collection are
displayed in state offices and buildings throughout Hawaii. These
works of art are selected for purchase from juried exhibitions, galleries
and artists' studios by Acquisition Award Selection Committees made
up of State Foundation board members, staff and qualified visual arts
consultants.
Commissions which are major works installed as an integral part of a
structure or near a building, are awarded by the SFCA board from a list
of three artists selected by Art Advisory Committees composed of the
building'S officials, architects, clientele and residents of the nearby
community.
The objectives of the Arts in Public Places Program are:
-To enhance the environmental quality of public buildings and spaces
throughout the State for the enjoyment and enrichment of the public;
-To cultivate the public'S awareness, understanding, and
appreciation of visual arts in all media, styles and techniques;
-To contribute to the development and recognition of a professional
artistic community;
-To acquire, interpret, preserve, and display works of art expressive of
the Hawaiian Islands, the multi-cultural heritages of its people, and
the various creative interests of its artists.
MING YUEN
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Lunch dai ly except Sunday: 11:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m .
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