Irmgard Geul and Skip Hill Share Art Created Out on the Ranch in Between Pastures & Skies

Nestled among mares and stallions on an acreage just outside of Pauls Valley, two artists — from different worlds but sharing a penchant for globetrotting across them — found an unexpected creative home and wellspring of inspiration.

Between Pastures & Skies: Art from the Ranch, 2014-2019 is the culmination of a vision born from the unique creative relationship and special friendship of the artists Irmgard Geul and Skip Hill, featuring select original mixed-medium works, paintings, drawings, installations, photos and videos produced by the artists over the last five years in their studios on a picturesque 120-acre horse ranch in Oklahoma. 

The exhibition debuts with an opening reception from 6 to 10 p.m. on Friday, October 11 and runs through Saturday, November 16. A closing reception takes place from 6 to 10 p.m. on Friday, November 8. Both receptions are free, open-to-the-public and coincide with the 2nd Friday Norman Art Walk taking place in Downtown Norman each month. 

The mixed-media works of international artist Irmgard Geul are best viewed as colorful aerial maps capturing, on paper and canvas, a bird’s eye view of her internal creative explorations scanning the tracts of landscape below and the unfathomable ocean of sky above.

Her paintings serve as visual diaries that document her external observations of the rolling landscape, the daily rhythm of life and the changing seasons on the horse ranch that has been her home and a source of inspiration since arriving in 1998 from her native country, The Netherlands.

Having built and established an internationally renowned equine import and export facility in the heartland of America, Geul always felt a yearning to reconnect with the creative urges from her early love for art and fine arts education in the Netherlands; her unforgettable recollections of India and her life as a graphic designer for corporate brands around the world.

Today in her light-filled studio overlooking open pastures and a wide horizon, Irmgard devotes herself full-time to fulfilling those creative urges in acrylics, ink, oil crayon, collage and photography for an audience of devoted collectors throughout the United States, The Netherlands, Germany, Sweden, Norway, Colombia and Israel.

Free of any didactic or moral intent, tortured conceptualism or social agenda beyond the politics of love, Skip Hill is a professional visual artist who creates rich, lyrical works of art that exude a graphic fragrance and a sensuous line.

Using acrylic paints, markers, inks and cut paper from a collection of source materials,Hill has produced a body of work that includes mixed-medium drawings, paintings on canvas and wood, collages on paper, and large scale interior and exterior murals.

Thematically poetic, and subtlety narrative in content, the art of Hill is a visual journey through verdant gardens featuring feminine figures, flocks of birds, exotic fauna, mesmerizing moods, rich textures and vivid colors of an imagined environment he invites his audience to explore.

Hill’s art focuses on the beauty of composition, the exuberance of process, on positive and negative space, on contrasts of mood, colors and flowing line work. Some of the most captivating parts of his mixed-media drawings are in the peripheral details sourced from Art History, elements of folk art, Tattoo-like expressive patterning, looping graphic lines, kinetic scribbling, Asian calligraphy, Pop culture and African motifs. 

In the highly productive years since returning to the U.S. from The Netherlands, Hill has created and sold hundreds of works, participated in museum group exhibitions, selected art fairs, and shown in commercial galleries. He has illustrated several award-winning children’s books including A Gift From Greensboro and On Tying A Shoe from Penny Candy Press. 

His original paintings, drawings and murals are found in public spaces and private collections throughout the United States, France, The Netherlands, Mexico, Colombia and Brazil.

Established Artists, Art Organizers Share Insight with Budding Creatives at the Public Art Bootcamp

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Get yourself in shape with Public Art Bootcamp, presented by Norman Public Arts & Oklahoma Visual Arts Coalition - OVAC. It’s an afternoon of panels, discussions and presentations free and open to all artists interested in public art opportunities.

Learn from experienced public artists and art organizers who will give insight into the process of applying, designing and installing public art, capped off with a presentation of the newest Norman Forward 1% for Art Project RFQ for Ruby Grant Park.

The bootcamp takes place from 1 to 4:30 p.m. on Saturday, September 14 at Norman Public Library East, 3051 Alameda, Norman.

Schedule:
1:00 pm - Welcome
Norman Public Arts Board Member, Gary Kramer

1:15 pm - How to Find and Submit to Public Art Projects
Norman Arts Council Public Art Manager, Debby Williams

2:00 pm - What to Expect as a Finalist and a Commissioned Artist
Oklahoma artists Denise Duong and Matt Goad

3:00 pm - What Could Possibly Go Wrong??
Oklahoma artists Beatriz Mayorca and Rick Sinnett

4:00 pm - Norman Forward 1% for Art Project RFQ: Ruby Grant Park
Park Designer, Joe Howell and Debby Williams

Trip to France, Chicago Conference Made Possible for Two Oklahoma Artists Through O. Gail Poole Memorial Travel Fund

Oklahoma artists Beatriz Mayorca and Eric Piper will have their travels to Chicago and France, respectively, to further their artistic practices funded in part through the Norman Arts Council-administered O. Gail Poole Memorial Travel Fund. 

The award began in 2014 as a means to honor the late Norman painter O. Gail Poole, a longtime proponent of seeing the world to inform artists and their artistic pursuits and careers. Since 2014, Oklahoma artists Marwin Begaye, Douglas Shaw Elder, Sarah Engel-Barnett, Skip Hill, Debby Kaspari, Mayumi Kiefer, Solomon Mahlatini, Liz Roth, Craig Swan and Holly Wilson have been able to travel to conferences, retreats and journeys of inspiration across the world because of awards from the fund, spreading Oklahoma’s creativity to others in the process. 

Benches by Beatriz Mayorca

Benches by Beatriz Mayorca

This year’s Oklahoma Artist award was presented to Beatriz Mayorca. Mayorca is a Venezuelan-born artist and interior designer has lived in Oklahoma City since 2005. She graduated with a degree in Social Communication from the Central University of Venezuela, but her passion for the arts and design made her seek a Bachelor's of Fine Arts from the University of Central Oklahoma. 

As an individual studio artist, she has obtained many awards and recognition for outstanding development, such as her recent 2017-Artist Invitational Award granted for Downtown OKC Partnership (DOKC), giving her the opportunity to create functional-public artistic pieces installed in the heart of Downtown OKC. Additionally, she has been awarded the Most Outstanding Hispanic Artist 2014 Award and 2016 AHAS Awards in Wood Category from the Academy of Handmade - LA California. Beatriz is also a member of Oklahoma City's Pre-Qualified Artist Pool 2017-2020 in Mosaic Art, Functional Art, and 3D Art categories.

Mayorca will use the award to attend an assortment of educational lectures offered at the Sculpture Objects Functional Art and Design (SOFA) Fair this fall in Chicago, IL. SOFA combines her personal balance between form and function and interest in melding sculpture and functional artistic-pieces through hands-on demonstrations, lectures, networking with likeminded artists from across the globe and a wellspring of inspiration in the form of new perspectives and techniques.

Mirror Image by Eric Piper

Mirror Image by Eric Piper

This year’s Norman Artist Awards was presented to Eric Piper. Piper is a multidisciplinary artist with a focus on social interaction. Piper’s artwork digs for common symbols and psychological narrative in the human experience in effort to bridge the ever-evolving barriers between social classes and cultures. The physical works are shared as an act of performance. Exhibitions and happenings are experimental research, learning new ways to connect artists and audiences together through artwork.

After graduating with a BFA in Sculpture/Printmaking from The University of Oklahoma in 2013, Piper operated a DIY gallery/venue/studio space for two years bringing hundreds of local, national, and global artists and bands together in Norman between 2014 and 2016. This energy was redirected into co-founding the non-profit art space Resonator Institute in 2016 through 2018.  

Currently, Piper operates under Oscillator, an experimental, fine-art silk screen press and performance collective. They work collaboratively with a variety of entities to host art festivals, happenings, lectures, exhibitions and workshops.

Piper’s award helped offset some of the costs of a trip to France where he engaged in a number of collaborations and journeys for inspiration. He underwent a collaborative project with old studio-mate Gaetan Larant and Good Morning Toulouse (a local university radio station) to broadcast a series of strange storytelling and soundscape radio dramas in Toulouse, France. 

He then journeyed to Friche la Belle de Mai, a 45,000 square meter experimental cultural center housing 70 arts & culture organizations, workshops, skateparks and exhibition spaces.

Finally, he visited printmaking collective Le Dernier Cri, with plans to create an exhibition for display in Norman at a later date. Piper also plans to showcase the work created with Larant in a form of exhibition and digital release locally, as well. 

The O. Gail Poole Memorial Travel Fund will open up for applications for artists seeking a travel award again in Spring 2020.  

Painters Ellen Moershel, Michael Fischerkeller Debut Solo Exhibitions at MAINSITE

MAINSITE Contemporary Arts hosts two solo exhibitions from from artists and painters Ellen Moershel and Michael Fischerkeller from Friday, August 9 through Friday, September 13. 

The exhibitions debut with an opening reception from 6 to 10 p.m. on Friday, August 9 and ends with a closing reception from 6 to 10 p.m. on Friday, September 13 at MAINSITE Contemporary Art, 122 E. Main, Norman. Fischerkeller will give an artist talk on his process, ideas, techniques and inspiration at 6 p.m. on Thursday, August 8. Both receptions and the artist talk are free and open to the public. 

Primal by Ellen Moershel

Primal by Ellen Moershel

Moershel is an abstract painter who works in many mediums including gouache, acrylic and oil paint. As an admirer of the anti-form artists of the late 60s, she uses aspects of automatic drawing and abstract sculpture to create depth in her pieces while retaining ambiguity when it comes to defining background and subject. Ellen’s work uses the principles of both minimalism and maximalism by juxtaposing sumptuous amounts of bare canvas with concentrated spots of highly detailed imagery. She often examines Post-Impressionist painting techniques and Japanese Edo period work for ideas on composition.

Ellen moved to Colorado in 2015 and currently keeps a studio in Boulder. Previously, she lived in Halifax, Nova Scotia, St. Louis, Missouri and her home state, Oklahoma. She is a graduate of the University of Oklahoma where she studied Fine Art. Her work is available through Walker Fine Art in Denver, JRB Art in Oklahoma City and Visual Voice Fine Art in Nova Scotia.In addition to creating work for galleries, Ellen is a muralist and live music painter.

Glimmer of Hope (Criminal Justice Reform) by Michael Fischerkeller

Glimmer of Hope (Criminal Justice Reform) by Michael Fischerkeller

Following a meditation-induced heart opening in the Summer of 2013, Michael Fischerkeller was inspired to elucidate through art the truths of disruptive social issues of our time. Having acquired a Ph.D. in political science in 1996, Michael leverages his academic background to offer concise, often poignant compositions and accompanying narratives to provide deep understanding and coherence of complex issues. 

“Through a street art aesthetic I strive to capture a shared social conscience and offer truths of increasingly complex and significant political, economic and social issues of our time; where light shines, shadows fall, “Fischerkeller said in his artist statement. “Candor and social justice drive my creative process resulting in stark yet elegant artwork that encourages an audience to critically view their world, focus on what is habitually overlooked, face what may be uncomfortable truths, and act to improve their lives and those of others. My narratives are transcribed through acrylic spray paint – a street artist’s instrument – as the “street” is most often and most severely deprived of social justice.”

His starting point is always a black canvas, symbolic of the black light referenced in Sufi mystical prose from which the light of our universe emanates, light that seeks to overcome the darkness in our lives. Through on-going meditative practice Michael receives guidance on issues upon which he should focus and imagery to support their understanding. His artwork has been shown in dozens of juried exhibitions, nationally and internationally, with a particular emphasis on exhibitions focusing on art’s role in promoting social change. He strives to ensure that his art educates, inspires, and offers opportunities for personal healing. Michael lives and creates in the greater Washington, D.C. metropolitan area.

Norman Arts Council Now Accepting Fall 2019 Arts Education Scholarship Applications

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Scholarship Program Mission:  The Norman Arts Council Arts Education Scholarships are intended to provide Norman children with the opportunity to attend arts programming that is offered outside of schools.  

APPLICATION DEADLINE: 

For FALL 2019 Programs – Monday, August 26, 2019 @ 11:59pm CST
APPLY HERE

Note: Please read application guidelines thoroughly to ensure timely completion of all requirements!

ELIGIBILITY: The Norman Arts Council invites students in grades K-8 who live or go to school in Norman, Oklahoma to apply for a scholarship to offset the cost of an arts education experience provided by an established arts organization or educator.

APPLICATIONS: The NAC has recently restructured their scholarship criteria, so there is new information. Only Applications submitted through the on-line process will be considered for funding. Applications must be 100% completed for consideration. "I don't know" or "unsure" answers will deem an incomplete application.

SELECTION CRITERIA:  The NAC is seeking applications for scholarships from students who:

  • express a strong desire to enhance their arts education experience beyond what is offered at schools

  • demonstrate a past commitment to visual or performing arts

  • have the ability to commit to the completion of the program

  • have a financial need that prevents them from funding the tuition themselves

  • priority will be given to new applicants, low income applicants, and applicants seeking funds for visual arts programs

  • $500 is the maximum award a single student will be granted

  • Applications must be 100% completed

Applicants will not be turned down for not meeting all of the criteria. It is encouraged, however, to try to meet as many as possible and to address the criteria directly in the proposal.

Learn More & Apply