February 28, 2012

ARTicles, Issue 10


ARTicles, Issue 10, is now available. Find your copy at the Center for the Arts and the Wignall Museum of Contemporary Art or view it online at http://www.chaffeyarticles.com/ (links for all issues are at upper-right corner of page).

In this issue:
  • Breaking Bread at the Wignall Museum by Sheila Taylor
  • Heading Out: David Alekhuogie by Minh Vo
  • The “Dirt” about Cynde Miller by Timothy Haerens
  • Pacific Standard Time Shines on Southern California by Katelyn Cochran
  • Project ARTstART Brings Art to Claremont School System by Katelyn Cochran

    ARTicles is a student-driven publication of the Chaffey College Center for the Arts. It is published twice each semester by a consortium of students with a passion for arts, entertainment and culture. The content reflects a diverse sample of the cultural life at the college. ARTicles is generously supported by the Chaffey College Marketing Department.
  • February 5, 2012

    Eat My Heart Out

    Eat My Heart Out: The Monstrous Side of Love, Opening Reception Friday, February 10, 2012 at 5:30-8:00pm in the Center for the Arts Student Gallery (CAA Lobby)

    February 4, 2012

    Review: PermaDirty

    Inland Empire Weekly review of the new Claremont Packing House artspace, PermaDirty, owned and curated by Chaffey College art professor Cynde Miller.
    Kicking off its inaugural group show, “This is the Dirt,” on Friday, PermaDirty offers an eclectic exhibition of work from IE residents that include installation, video performance, sculpture, painting, ceramics and illustration. Seeking to make the art process more open and inclusive of spectators, Miller decided that PermaDirty would be both a gallery and studio space, open to members of the public who wish to view art in action. Drawing from her experiences as an artist and art professor at Chaffey College, she was also determined to make that space accessible and free of commercial art-world pressures—a living, breathing creative arena in which artists and performers may display their work without the need to jump through endless red tape hoops.
    Read the complete review here.