Browse
Search
2016-446-E Arts - Preservation Chapel Hill - Spring 2016 Arts Grant Agreement
OrangeCountyNC
>
Board of County Commissioners
>
Contracts and Agreements
>
General Contracts and Agreements
>
2010's
>
2016
>
2016-446-E Arts - Preservation Chapel Hill - Spring 2016 Arts Grant Agreement
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
9/9/2019 4:26:51 PM
Creation date
8/16/2016 10:04:02 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Contract
Date
8/8/2016
Contract Starting Date
7/1/2016
Contract Ending Date
6/30/2017
Contract Document Type
Grant
Amount
$1,500.00
Document Relationships
R 2016-446-E Arts - Preservation Chapel Hill - Spring 2016 Arts Grant Agreement
(Linked To)
Path:
\Board of County Commissioners\Contracts and Agreements\Contract Routing Sheets\Routing Sheets\2016
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
92
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
DocuSign Envelope ID:CF9CCDA7-654A-4636-8636-D086CDC8600C <br /> The clubs and bars frequented by students and Chapel Hill residents are being seen through <br /> different eyes, thanks to photographer Gail Goers. "Before Hours," a month-long photography <br /> show that started Sunday at the Horace Williams House, features the solo work of emerging <br /> artist Goers as she illuminates spaces often overlooked while in plain sight: the Chapel Hill <br /> entertainment circuit. The images are set in the time before the venues open their doors for the <br /> night, allowing the viewer to focus on the spaces themselves. Goers said the vibrancy of the <br /> lighting and the mood of the compositions humanize and personalize the space in a way that <br /> tells a story without using images of people. See "Before Dark"Time: Feb. 2 to Feb. 23 <br /> Location: Horace Williams House Info: gailgoers.com "I'm never really interested in <br /> photographing people, and I was just wondering about this space that's meant to hold people — <br /> what does that look like empty, and what does that mean? What is left when the people are <br /> gone?" Goers said. RELATED CONTENT N.C. general assembly gets musical JENNI <br /> CIESIELSKI 05/18/16 6:39PM Moogfest is a four-day festival coming to Durham May 19 <br /> through 22 JENNI CIESIELSKI 05/11/16 10:28PM Music department's Rock Lab jams for finals <br /> at Local 506 PEGGY MULLIN 04/26/16 9:27PM Children's book exhibit debuts at Wilson Library <br /> MADELINE RAEL 04/28/16 10:48AM Poetry springs to life this month in Chapel Hill with haiku <br /> project NICOLA MCIRVINE 04/25/16 10:04PM "I felt like a lot of stories that come up on the <br /> walls and the markings — I just felt that they were very touched spaces."Tama Hochbaum, <br /> Goers' liaison to Preservation Chapel Hill and co-chairwoman for the art committee, said the <br /> committee voted unanimously to feature Goers' pieces. "There's this sense that people have <br /> just been there or will just be there," Hochbaum said. "They are just really kind of exquisite <br /> examples of somewhat seedy places, almost — back rooms or dusty floors — but they just <br /> contain almost jewel-like colors when they're colorful. They're quite powerful."After deciding to <br /> go to graduate school for art therapy in 2005, Goers started taking prerequisite classes in the art <br /> department at UNC, during which she enrolled in an introductory photography class. From <br /> there, her passions changed and she studied photography as a student and as a darkroom <br /> assistant to UNC art professors Jeff Whetstone in 2007 and elfin o'Hara slavick from 2009 to <br /> 2011. Hochbaum said the Horace Williams show is basically Goers'first major exhibition. But <br /> there is a legacy for emerging artists to take flight after their first show at the house. "So many of <br /> our artists have gone on to really big art careers, and we're very, very proud of it — that we're <br /> there to assist local people move on in their career if they're an emerging artist," said Nerys <br /> Levy, the Preservation Chapel Hill Arts Committee co-chairwoman. "You can usually spot an <br /> emerging artist who's not going to be emerging for very long." Goers' large form photographs <br /> are printed through dye sublimation on aluminum, a relatively new technique in which the <br /> photographs are printed directly onto the metal instead of on paper or canvas. "I think the study <br /> of the clubs is a metaphor for everybody to get out and look a little more about where they are <br /> and to be a little more curious about their surroundings and to have respect for all space as a <br /> potential art space," Levy said. "One can add dignity to anything, and I think she adds dignity to <br /> these spaces to make them stand alone as spaces to be respected in their own right." <br /> arts @dailytarheel.com <br /> Read more: IIhttlp://www.da lillytairheell,coirn/airlli alle/2 11 II/4 2/IpIhoto iraIpIh showcases town... <br /> rnliglhtll lif: <br /> Quoted from The Daily Tar Heel <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.