Fresh Coconut Milk Hair Rinse

July 6, 2013

Make a deep conditioning hair milk for all hair textures with fresh coconut meat, milk and other rich ingredients. The rinse helps with restoring color treated hair or chlorine damaged hair. Take home your pampering treatment and share it with family and friends. For more info visit www.scentsuosity.com/infopages/events.html

 

Celebrate June First Friday with Blake Street Shops & Visiting Artists

Art Eclectic

June 7th, 6pm to 10pm

This show features the work of dozens of different artists. Au Courant Magazine is hosting their first anniversary exhibit and showcasing the work of talented artists from around the Triangle. Rhonda Meyers and her students are also displaying their human and animal portraits in a show titled “Fins, Flesh, Fur and Feathers.”

BlakeStreet_RhondaMeyers_MadonnaAndChildRhonda Meyers and work by her Students

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Work by Saba Barnard in Au Courant Magazine Anniversary show

SAM_0940_slider2-1024x659 Art from Au Courant Anniversary show

Artwork hangs from June 7th until June 28th

 

Hoop & Stick – guest artist April

Hoop & Stick: On Himself

 On Display - Collage on Bookcover 2013(lo)
I’m often asked, “Why collage?” I can offer a few different explanations, ranging from that one night on mushrooms, to my frustration with wet media, or even my theory that originality is an illusion and that everything is a collage anyway. I tend to tailor my response to whomever is asking the question. Sometimes, I’ll turn one of these explanations into an artist statement or a blurb for some future manifesto – one which I’ll indulge notions of writing in my more megalomaniacal moments. While any of my reasons can suffice on their own, it is only when they are all pasted together that they provide an obvious case for me gravitating almost exclusively toward collage as an art form.

    Pasted together – see what I did there?

Recurring Nightmare - Collage on Book Cover 2012 (72)

I’m something of a generalist – of course I have more acute interests – but overall, I tend to be spread out in regards to what I choose to explore and later utilize in my art. I’ve gone from pen and ink illustration, to screen printing and hand cut stencils, to wire sculpture, to charcoal portraits, and so forth, until I finally settled on collage. My themes are just as varied, but I often settle on philosophical, social, or emotional matters. Of course, even then it is difficult for me to articulate whether I’m being didactic, suggestive, or maybe just posing a question. Sometimes I’m exploring an idea to which I don’t subscribe, but to which I’m not necessarily expressing doubt. I’ve come to decide that this is okay; after all, we love fantasy, but most of us don’t believe in magic and dragons. In this way, certain themes like teleology, existentialism, and immaterial consciousness play out like fiction; they are great storytelling devices. Put another way: if god is my magical dragon, then I’m not always interested in slaying him, as he provides a new thematic well from which I can draw context.
Angel of Decay - Collage on Mat Board 2012 (lo res)
I inwardly cringe when I’m asked about the meaning of a particular piece. Of course I could launch into an explanation of what I was thinking at the time, or what scrap x means when juxtaposed with scrap y, or even give general run-down of the theme. These are all acceptable and expected ways of approaching the question, but I hate giving those explanations. My reasoning is two-fold. Superficially, I worry about sounding pretentious, snobby, or worse—like a stereotypical head-in-the-clouds, all-talk-and-no-work bohemian poser. Underneath that, however, I would really like my work to be read differently by different people. Oh sure, I want to gently lead an individual toward a particular train of thought – and I do that through my title and iconography – but all the air is let out of my balloon as soon as I’m asked to spoon-feed my connotations. I am a firm believer in the postmodern, insofar as art and design is concerned; meaning is subjective, and often viewer-created. This is not to say that an artist can’t potentially create something that means the same thing to a large multitude of people, but often the reading of a piece of artwork or design is culturally (or sub-culturally) bound. To my knowledge, the only universal communication tools that we have as a species are numbers. Everything else has the potential to be subjectively understood. As an artist, I can choose to fight against that, or embrace it. Friends, it is far easier – and much more rewarding – to embrace ambiguity.

— Hoop & Stick

Pisces Rising

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This energetic duo will be playing at Blake Street on First Friday! And, I couldn’t be more excited. I had a chance to listen to a few of their songs yesterday- and they are awesome! Come and catch them on Friday April 5th- while you still can. I have a feeling this band is going to blow up big- and you’ll be happy you caught them when they were first starting out.

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Pisces Rising, a Gypsy Folk Duo based out of Raleigh, NC is comprised of two established singer/songwriters and poets Arielle Bryant and Austin Moss. Their sound is a remarkable blend of strong, rhythmic acoustic folk noise coupled with harmonies that will haunt your head space for days.

Pisces Rising has recently released their first collection of songs on their self titled EP, available for download on Bandcamp.com. You can get it for free or, if it pleases you, you may join the ranks of many other outstanding citizens who have chosen to “name their own price” in a communal efforts to help support this budding local sound.