Washington Pavilion

Recent Acquistion and other artsy-fartsy news

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I had the winning silent auction bid on this piece from Arts Night and picked it up today. Not sure how I am going to display it yet. I might just punch a hole in the wall and stick it in there. About the artist below;

Josh Johnson
Delayed Actions

mixed media, 2009

I was born and raised in the lakes region of Minnesota. After high school I attended the University of North Dakota in Grand Forks, where I earned my Bachelor of Fine Art degree with a concentration in sculpture. I am currently a Master of Fine Art candidate in sculpture at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln and was previously enrolled in the Master of Fine Art sculpture program at the University of South Dakota in Vermillion.

Recently, my thoughts have been dwelling on things internal. Not vital organs, cellular structures, or even emotions, but things that are difficult to put your finger on for very long. Things like the lump in the pit of your stomach or the itch in your mind that turns sleep into a game. These sensations are far more interesting to me than the circumstances that may create them. With these thoughts in mind, I approach my studio research not intending to give form to these unnamed sensations, only to let them influence my formal considerations. I reference visible forms and blur their identities, causing them to flicker between something recognizable and something unknown.

I also heard from a fellow artist today that she is looking into a possible conflict of interest (again) when it comes to Arts Night. As I posted about last year the Pavilion (supposedly) changed there conflict of interest policy to include Board Members, excluding them from exhibiting or profiting from the Pavilion while they sat on the board. According to the Arts Night brochure, one of the Board of Trustees had a piece of his (boring nature) photography in the exhibit (we can about guess who the knucklehead is). Like I said, she is investigating. Not sure if the policy hasn’t been implemented, if there was a typo in the brochure, or as I suspect the arrogant ***** just doesn’t give a rat’s ass and put a piece in anyway.

We’ll see.

I also see SculptureYawn is going up again this Saturday. As you can see the event will be just as boring as usual;

From turtles, dogs and rabbits, to human forms, whimsical creations and abstract sculptures, there’s a broad variety in this year’s show.

Dogs!? They never have dogs! I can’t wait. My art boner is so huge right now!

I also see the bullshit propaganda knob is turned to full volume;

The nonprofit event uses no tax dollars.

Really? So now the organization is just flat out lying to the public? Not only are TAX DOLLARS used to maintain the sites, and provide mounts, tax dollars are also used for liability insurance and according to SW’s own website;

The City of Sioux Falls contributes $25,000 annually to purchase the People’s Choice Award sculpture and quartzite and concrete pedestals for the sculptures.

No tax dollars are used, except around $50,000 . .  . ahem.

BLAME THE ECONOMY! BLAME THE ECONOMY!

But according to Dave Munson, Eugene Rowenhorst and the LA Times the recession hasn’t hit Sioux Falls yet, so you can’t blame the economy.

Despite the effort, the Pavilion still might see a $216,000 deficit when numbers are finalized in June, said Gary Wood, the Pavilion’s president and chief executive officer, during a report to the City Council this week.

“If the downturn had occurred in June, it would have given us more time to adapt,” Wood said. “When it started occurring in September and October, we didn’t really have time, so we had to take more drastic action.”

No worries Gary, Vernon Brown has got your back (Quen Be De must have not been available for comment).

“He is not asking the city taxpayers to make up the deficit and is making adjustments within his own budget,” Brown said.

Because it’s not like we hand them over a cool $1.3 million of taxpayer dollars every year or do expensive maintenance to the city owned building (cough, cough, million dollar windows, cough cough) that is not in their budget but hidden in the city’s CIP budget.

For 2008, she (finance director) said the negative $216,000 in the operating fund is relative, based on how you look at the numbers.

 

“When you add up all of our funds, like the permanent collection fund, the endowment fund, special project fund and others, we had an increase in net assets last year of $27,000,” Hathaway said. “Everyone wants to focus on our operating fund instead of the big picture of everything we do.”

Because, unlike actual businesses we count toilet paper rolls as assets and substract that from our deficit (really they do).

While the Husby Performing Arts Center’s Great Hall shows usually make money, the Kirby Science and Discovery Center has run a deficit in past years.

‘In past years’? Try every year. I have often said they should close the Science Center, expand the gift shop, get more movies at the Cinedome and rent the space for special events. It has been bleeding since the place has opened – time to dress the wound.

It almost makes you wonder if they want it to lose money every year? Think about it. If the Pavilion started ‘making money’ they wouldn’t have an excuse to come to the city every year and ask for a subsidy.

The Pavilion, lost money, again, imagine that

calculator

One tool you WILL NOT see in the Pavilion’s accounting office

It still puzzles me that a place that charges admission (except for Visual arts center) that after ten years, almost $40 million in building fees spent and over $10 million in operating subsidies from the entertainment tax, they can’t AT LEAST breakeven?

The Pavilion lost $216,000 in 2008. Wood gave preliminary figures to the city council Monday and told members the economy drastically affected the Pavilion’s operating budget.

“Starting in September we noticed, as I think we all did in our own budgets, we witnessed a pretty dramatic downturn in activity in business contributions, individual contributions and in patronage,” Wood said.

I would think with a new director and all, you wouldn’t use the same excuse every year (the only thing the Pavilion has been consistent on. And Councilor Jamison thinks we are ‘leaking money’ because we don’t have a new Event Center?! Wait until we build it! We will see lots of leaking.

As a director of another non-profit said to me anonymously a few years ago, “The Pavilion obviously has a budgeting and personnel  expenditure issue.”

Yah Think?!

South DaCola art club w/Rodin

rodin20thinker

The best part about the Rodin exhibit at the Pavilion? It’s FREE!

Auguste Rodin’s “The Thinker” is one of 62 of the French sculptor’s works that will be on display May 9 through Aug. 1. Art exhibits of this magnitude are rare in the state, and area students, artists and others celebrated the announcement Tuesday.

This is pretty exciting, even if these pieces are merely casts. I had a chance to see some of Rodin’s work in Atlanta a few years back, cool stuff.

Before the renowned European sculptor died in 1917 he donated his estate to the French government, as well as the right to produce original casts of his sculptures posthumously. On exhibit at the Pavilion’s Visual Arts Center will be castings from his original work.

Gawd, wouldn’t it be great if Sioux Falls had a cast of a sculpture by a great artist . . .

david

Washington Pavilion’s Arts Night decided to take everyone’s donation this year

Surprise, Surprise. After fighting with me about how assanine it was to reject an arts donation, it seems someone at the Visual Arts Center fricking woke up and came up with a great idea on how to accept all artistic donations;

  Arts Night Silent Auction, New this year is a silent auction of original artwork. Exhibition runs March 20 through April 29, 2009, with final bidding to take place during Arts Night on May 1, 2009. The Silent Auction gallery is adjoining the main gallery and bids on artworks can be submitted at the Visual Arts Center reception desk.

I also heard that the artists have a choice whether to receive a percentage of the purchase price or tickets to the live auction, another suggestion I made yearrrrrrsssss ago.

So I wonder who is taking credit for all of these changes?