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PAJARO VALLEY MAGAZINE | 26, 2021 AUGUST 20
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REACHING OUT “Optic Nerves” is a cyanotype and graphite piece by Janet Fine.
DELICATE TOUCH Andree LeBourveau’s serigraph print entitled “Booted Racket Tail Hummingbird.”
BY JOHANNA MILLER ATIME to SHINE
Annual show highlights Cabrillo College faculty and staff
This week, faculty and staff from Cabrillo College’s visual arts department will get their chance to shine with the opening of the school’s first art exhibit of the year.
“Adaptations: Cabrillo College Art, Photography & Art History Faculty & Staff Exhibition” will open virtually Monday via the gallery’s website.
The show will include screen printing, painting, ceramics, photography, jewelry, metalwork and more.
Program coordinator Victoria May says that the college tries to hold some type of faculty show every year. This gives teachers and staff the opportunity to display their work, but also lets students and the greater community see what these artists create outside of the classroom.
Much of the work that comes out of these types of shows can be very personal, she added, which is not something students regularly see from their instructors.
“Remember when you’re a kid, seeing your teacher outside of school, in a store or something?” May said. “And you’re like, ‘Oh, they go shopping, too?’ I think that can still happen at the college level. It’s awesome to see what your teachers practice… their style, the way they work, how they approach subject matter. That in itself can be fascinating.”
May says that while the show does not have a specific theme, she has noticed a lot of naturethemed work, including pieces on how people are concerned about or taking solace in nature, and how humans interact with it.
BIRD HOUSE Gail Ritchie’s “Making a House a Home” is a ceramic work with underglaze, glaze and prismacolor. ART JUNK A detail from Lesley Louden’s series, “Good Messes.”
BEACH DETAIL Lynda Watson’s “Play” series are made from sea shells, Marino wool, sterling silver.
“Adaptations,” as well as the gallery’s next show will be virtual. Because the initial plan from the college was to be online for the Fall 2020 semester, Cabrillo Gallery had applied for and received a grant for an extensive lighting replacement project for their facility, located on the bottom floor of the library building at the school’s Aptos campus.
“Since we were closed anyway, we thought, ‘Let’s just do this,’” May said.
When the project is complete, May, along with Gallery Director Beverly Rayner and school officials will decide on whether they should open the space for the annual “12x12” exhibit at the end of the semester.
Cabrillo Gallery’s next show, entitled “Moving Images: pause… restart” will launch Oct. 4. The online show will feature short videos and other types of moving artwork, themed around “restarting after a hiatus… and how you deal with that,” as May explained.
The show will be juried by Clark Buckner, Director of Telematic Media Arts in San Francisco. Buckner and the gallery have released a call for artists to submit; entries are limited to the first 100 works submitted.
May said the gallery is grateful to the local community for their support this past year.
For information about current and upcoming shows, artist talks and more, visit cabrillo.edu/
PAJARO VALLEY MAGAZINE | AUGUST 20 26, 2021