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Discovering The Mature Lifestyle

Bloomington Symphony Orchestra concludes 52nd season Page 4

Arts

April 16, 2015

April Issue

Robbin Gallery showcases talent of local artists BY SUE WEBBER CONTRIBUTING WRITER Painter Joan Cashin remembers how the Robbin Gallery started. After all, she was one of the founders. “Several people were showing paintings at local places and decided to look for a gallery,” Cashin said. “It was a library in those days.” She began painting as a child, Cashin said, and later always took her paints with her when she and her husband took their children camping. Though she is not currently an active member, Cashin said she still has a lot of paintings in the basement of her Brooklyn Center home. Robbin Gallery has shared the 90-yearold city-owned building close to downtown Robbinsdale with the Robbinsdale Historical Society since 1979. The building is on the National Register of Historic Places. The art gallery, operated by Hennepin Artists of Robbin Gallery, is a local nonprofit artists’ cooperative intended to bring art to the community while helping artists grow and learn to develop their skills and creativity. It celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2013. Grace Lawson of Crystal, a member for more than 30 years, calls herself a hobby artist and said she started at the gallery “just for fun,” at the suggestion of a neighbor. She works primarily in water color and does mostly landscapes. “I usually don’t sell my paintings,” Lawson said. “I have a large family, and

when relatives get married, I invite them to come to my home. I put about 10 paintings out and invite them to choose one for a wedding present.” She marvels at how the gallery, comprised completely of volunteers, “keeps going along.” “We are so fortunate to have this local gallery in Robbinsdale,” Lawson said. “We have wonderful shows. There’s a new show every month.” David Bjorquist of Robbinsdale, a black and white photographer, joined the gallery in the early 1990s. “I still do film-based photography,” Bjorquist said. “I have my own darkroom.” He began taking photos in high school and remembers buying his first 35mm camera in 1955, in the PX at Ft. Riley, Kansas. “I took picture of my children, and a lot of slides,” he said. “Now I’m taking travel photos with a digital camera. I like sharing them with family and friends.” The gallery has been “very good for me, and it keeps getting better,” Bjorquist said. “I enjoy the diversity of the artists there,” he said. “Photographers can learn from the painters and the sculptors.” A member of the gallery for 25 years, Harriet Reiss of Crystal said, “I’ve enjoyed it. The gallery has been a real part of my life.” She has done collage with fabric and paper, plus water color and pen and ink abstractions. Reiss said she first started drawing in 1987, when she was in San Francisco. She

Karen Benson of Robbinsdale, gallery director, is shown with one of her photographs (top). (Photo by Sue Webber) took a class at the University of Minnesota, went to some workshops and started working with oil. Then she got into collages. Gallery members are expected and encouraged to help set up exhibits, staff the gallery and “keep the place tidy,” Reiss said. She has enjoyed bringing in speakers and helping to set up programs and workshops with artists and museum curators. She has been the gallery’s programmer

Steve Madore of Minneapolis is a 20-year gallery member and former gallery director whose photography comes to life on canvas. His grandmother, the late Estella Filkins, was an early member of the gallery. (Photo by Sue Webber) and also editor of its newsletter. “The gallery isn’t as structured these days as it was in the ’90s,” Reiss said. At one time, the gallery did rotating traveling shows with art at libraries and city halls in the northern and western GALLERY - TO PAGE 5


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