(c) Lyn Fenwick, Title: Fresh Yellow Squash
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This week the 2019 Kansas State Fair opens, and once again I have an entry in the Professional Artists display and competition. Last year was my first year to participate in that category, and the pastel at the top of this page was my entry. I didn't bring home a prize but I had fun entering.
In the meantime, my six portraits of characters from Willa Cather's My Antonia were selected for publication in the Willa Cather Review, Vol. 61, No. 2, Spring 2019, together with my essay describing how I searched Cather's novel for descriptions of each character to be sure that my imagined portraits were consistent with Cather's descriptions of each of the six characters. I have a dislike of illustrations done for books that do not honor the descriptions of the author whose book is being illustrated, and I did not want to commit the same disrespect by straying from Cather's descriptions. I gifted a copy of the Spring Willa Cather Review titled "After Antonia" to the Filley Art Museum in Pratt, Kansas, and I have been delighted when visitors to the museum have told me they enjoyed my portraits and essay. I am particularly pleased when they tell me it has encouraged them to read My Antonia, either for the first time or to reread it after several years. I was especially delighted to learn that Mrs. Filley is a long-time Cather fan and had received her copy of the Spring Cather Review with my portraits inside!
The success of my acceptance for publication in the Cather Review encouraged me to enter the Kansas State Fair Professional Artists Show again. Many of you who follow this blog are also fans and collectors of a water color artist with ties to Pratt, and Darren Parker has shared with me his intention to enter the State Fair Professional Artists Show with one, or possibly two, of his watercolors.
I am writing this blog before the judging for the particular purpose of letting readers know that the Professional Artists' works have been moved to a different building. You will not find the Professional Artists work nor the Plein Aire art displayed in the Oz Building as it has been in the past. (This change also moves the photography display.)
To view the art, go to Lake Talbot East/West located on 23rd Avenue, between Fort Hays Blvd. and Fort Leavenworth Blvd. For some of you with 4-Hers, you may identify the two buildings as being across from the 4-H Centennial Hall, the two buildings formerly the Boy and Girl Scout Buildings. The Professional Art will be in the former Boy Scout building and the Plein Aire (and photography) will be in the former Girl Scout building. The announcement of prizes for the Plein Aire will be at 6 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 7, and will remain on display through the remainder of the fair.
The Plein Aire competition requires artists to create their work on the fairgrounds, inspired by subjects they can view at the Fair. They must do the work only at the Fair and within the hours specified--on Friday noon to 7:30 p.m. and on Saturday 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. Visitors to the Fair are encouraged to watch for artists at work and to pause for a visit if they wish. Children in particular seem to enjoy watching and asking questions. Artists work in a variety of media, from acrylics and watercolor to pencils and pastels to paper mosaics or any other creative medium they wish. No more than two entries can be submitted for judging by any one artist, although an artist my wish to complete additional work from which to select their two entries.
Maybe I will see some of you at the Fair, and I hope you visit the new location in the former Boys and Girls Scout buildings to view the art on display.
Remember, the images can be enlarged by clicking on them. Look closely for the cat and mouse in my "Fresh Yellow Squash" pastel painting.
Remember, the images can be enlarged by clicking on them. Look closely for the cat and mouse in my "Fresh Yellow Squash" pastel painting.
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