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art in the ALBANY PUBLIC LIBRARY


Marnie Ernst Zoa's work now on display upstairs at the Main Library through December.

 

   

Cheetah by Marnie Ernst Zoa

 

Jack Rabbit by Marnie Ernst Zoa

Yellow Flower by Marnie Ernst Zoa

  

Photographs by Denise Bruchman on display in the downstairs galleries at the Main Library through November.

Mike Leckie stands beside his "Young Lady with the Book that has no end."

"I have been to Carrara, Italy twice and have sent home fourteen tons of marble. I have a huge marble yard of blocks in front of my studio. I also have marble from California, Colorado, Utah, Maine, South America and Africa. I believe that I am a teacher, that I am extremely kind and humanistic at my core level. I think that shows up in my work. Anybody who looks at my work feels what I have put into it. They come away with a sense of kindness and humanism. I truly believe that people are kinder to one another after being exposed to my work.

Marble takes a very high level of both mental and physical attention. If you're not at that level physically, you can't carve. And if your attitude isn't at a high enough level, you're going to break the piece. So to be "on" the whole time you're carving…I like that. It pulls stuff out of me that's very important."

To learn more about Mike: http://www.mikeleckie.com/

Watch Oregon Art Beat episode: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJ5XiIRIJn


All That is Oregon

Judi Mintzer's impressive 6' X !8' mural gracing the Library foyer adds a wonderful welcome to the Library and to the world that opens to those who 'travel' through books. "All That is Oregon" captures the history of our community and the blessings of our surroundings. Recognize the mountain? The lighthouse? Have you seen that bridge before? Explore your Library; explore your community.

The Children's Room

The nuns did not teach art in the Catholic schools Cheryl French attended in Seattle, so she never knew she had any artistic talent until she was in her 30s.French, 51, of Albany is respected enough now in her field that the Albany Arts Commission asked her to paint bright-colored panels or boxes to place around three columns in the Children’s Room at the new Albany Public Library

A new metal sculpture was placed Wednesday outside the downtown Albany library. Its various elements are meant to represent children's learning by reading books.
Next time you go by Albany’s downtown library you will see something new: a titanium and stainless steel sculpture nestled in a newly created courtyard.
Kings Valley sculptors Raymond Hunter and Czarina Gupton, father and daughter, created the 9-foot tall piece.
The piece is meant to commemorate the work of school teachers and makes references to a child’s education. The sculpture features renditions of books and building blocks, two cornerstones of early childhood education. A dinosaur perched on the blocks recalls children’s toys and the Earth’s prehistoric past. A titanium globe expresses people’s boundless horizons. The roots of a white oak, a tree indigenous to the mid-valley, spill over the educational components of the sculpture, uniting the worlds of nature and human intellect. A radiant sun tops the piece and is meant to be a companion to the sunflower on top of a sculpture in the park at First Avenue and Lyon Street. Hunter also made that sun. The whole thing is called “Zeki,” which Boock says is “reminiscent of childhood endearments and nicknames while it pays tribute to Semir Zeki, a world leader in neuroesthetics, the science that studies the neural basis of creativity and artistic appreciation.”
The sculpture can be enjoyed on many levels, in Boock’s view: It is at once fun and deeply reflective, he said. Hunter and Gupton used shimmering on the sculpture so as the light changes, the color varies from a pinkish red to a bluish green. The sun’s color goes from the bluish green to a gold color. “Our end goal is to spread joy,” Hunter said.

a gift of the Wanita Robb Sculptural Trust and the Albany Arts Commission

 

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M-W 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
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"Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested."
- Francis Bacon