RIDGE ART
21
Harrison Street
Oak Park, IL 60304

ridgeart@comcast.net
708-848-4062             888-269-0693
 
Gallery hours:  Thursday & Friday, noon - 6 p.m.
Saturday, noon - 5 p.m.
Sunday, 1 - 5 p.m.
 

OCTOBER  2009
Issue: 15

A Kanga Party on Safari

We are hosting a kanga party to promote eco-safari excursions to Tanzania in East Africa on Friday, October 16, 6-9 pm and Saturday, October 17, noon-5 pm.  Pat House of Vanishing Worlds LLC-Safari Tracks will demonstrate how to wrap and use kanga cloths. They will also be offered for sale.

Kanga Cloth

The kanga is a rectangle of pure cotton cloth with a border all around it, printed in bold designs and bright colors. They are worn by both men and women. Men generally wear them around the house and to sleep in, women wear them everywhere, and babies are virtually born into them and are usually carried in a soft sling of kanga cloth. The designs vary from purely decorative patterns to commemorative ones honoring a person or an event. Most will have a motto in Swahili.

The story of Vanishing Worlds LLC - Safari Tracks begins over 25 years ago when Pat House took her first trip to Tanzania. At that time expatriates owned all the safari companies and nearly all the skilled and managerial jobs were also controlled by foreigners. This was when Pat met Andrew Uronu. Andrew had studied to be a naturalist but could not make an adequate living working the safari jobs that were available to native Tanzanians.

Pat had made several trips to East Africa with a variety of guides and companies. Then through arrangements made by Tanzanian friends, she went on a safari organized and led by Andrew. Pat, an experienced traveler, immediately noted the differences. He had superior tracking skills, an excellent knowledge of his country's history, real sensitivity to fellow Tanzanians and excellent attention to detail.  The lodges he suggested complimented the natural world with understated luxury. 

With Pat's initial financial backing, tour bookings and encouragement, Andrew's safari company became the first to be owned and operated by a native Tanzanian. Wildlife tourism is one of the most important and lucrative businesses in Tanzania. Andrew takes great pride in the wildlife heritage of Tanzania and views it as a natural resource.  Like Andrew many Tanzanians study to be naturalists or complete courses to perform jobs in the tourism profession. However, many businesses are still led by outsiders using local drivers as their eyes and ears but leaving the higher paying jobs to expatriates employed by large companies based in other countries. Thanks to Andrew's hard work and perseverance, Vanishing Worlds-Safari Tracks has been operating as a business for 15 years.

Kanga Ladies

Please join us either Friday evening, October 16,or Saturday afternoon, October 17, for an interesting demonstration on wearing and using kanga cloths and for more information about eco-safari excursions in Tanzania. Bring your friends.

WORKING PAPERS: Mixed media in paper

By three artists

September 11, 2009 - December 27, 2009


            Ridge Art is very proud to present "Working Papers," a group show of three artists working in paper. This show is a nice segue from our summer show which featured papier mâché pieces by children from Art Creation Foundation for Children in Jacmel, Haiti. We didn't want to call the pieces in this show "adult papier mâché" - first, because of the inevitable misinterpretation of "adult" as being pornographic, and secondly, because the three artists have produced work that is much more than papier mâché.

            Janice Elkins uses newsprint on canvas in the WD40same way she uses acrylic paint on canvas, as painterly gestures to create interesting lines and shapes that abstractly convey her feelings about the human condition. The abstract nature of the pieces expands the artist's personal sensory expression to include the sensory experience of the viewer rather than circumscribing that experience by making the work representational. At the same time, she still places the work in the traditional confines of the canvas.

  WD40          Levoy Exil, on the other hand, has created a series of papier mâché masks that are paintings outside the traditional confines of the canvas. He makes his canvases by folding and pasting corrugated boxes and then painting in the faces of the Vodou loa (spirits) whose origins are the human WD40ancestral spirits who inhabit the blue-green watery world of those who have come and gone before us. His work is both whimsical and profound.

            Ronald Mevs has created evocative and WD40nonrepresentational sculpture using the traditional papier mâché techniques practiced in his hometown of Jacmel during the preparations for Carnival. The two larger pieces suggests African shields but ironically shields made of paper, twigs and raffia. The two smaller pieces are similarly evocative - seedpods, pollen, microscopic entities blown way up. The earthy colors of the work root it firmly in the natural world.

            Ms. Elkins is one of Oak Park's most highly regarded artists and teachers. She is also the owner of Gallery Pink on Harrison Street in the Oak Park Arts District. Mr. Exil is one of the best known living Haitian painters. He is one of the so-called "cinque soleils" (five suns) from the San Soleil schoolof visionary artists. Mr. Mevs is also Haitian and a highly versatile artist who is a master of many media including print making and acrylic paintings on canvas. His papier mâché pieces reference the tradition of papier mâché in Jacmel, a small colonial city known for its carnivals.

In This Issue
KANGA PARTY
WORKING PAPERS



WANTED
 
We are looking for paintings by a Jacmel artist named Fersen Joseph who has now passed away. Please contact us if you have anything by this artist and are willing to sell.



Ridge Art