SoHum Girls Grace the Rotunda at April Arts Alive
The SoHum Girls will grace the Rotunda with their tunes at The Morris Graves Museum of Art on Saturday, April 6th for Arts Alive. The SoHum Girls play an all-original, all-fun array of music that is as fun to listen to as it is fun to dance to! If you like swing, funk, country, rock, blues, ballads, New Orleans grooves….you’re in luck, because this band plays them all! They’ve spent the winter recording their 6th album of original songs, which will be available this summer, so this is their first gig of the season! They are looking forward to entertaining all of you, so come join the fun and celebrate music and spring!
The SoHum Girls consists of; Julie Froblom- vocals, saxophone and flute, Marla Joy- bass, Chris Manspeaker- guitar, Marcia Mendels- vocals and keys, Bill Moehnke- drums and vocals, and Brigette Marie Terry- vocals and percussion.
The SoHum Girls started in Southern Humboldt (SoHum), when Marcia and Brigette decided to start writing their own songs. It has grown to this fine group of talented performers, half from SoHum and half from Northern Humboldt, and includes 4 women and 2 men—so they are an all-Humboldt County band! And they now have more than 70 original songs, written by Marcia, Chris and Brigette, to entertain you, including some written about their love for Humboldt County. All of the band members play in various musical groups, and bring their love of all of the music they have played to their own songs—the result is music that reflects joy, variety, energy and fun!
Make sure to visit each of the galleries while you’re in the museum Saturday night too! Lay eyes on our newly installed exhibitions, Shawn Gould’s “The Art of Getting Lost” – in the Knight Gallery, Ann Savageau’s “Spirits of Protection” –in the Thonson Gallery, and “Works by the 2024 BFA cohort of Cal Poly Humboldt” –in the Anderson Gallery.
Enjoy a free night of wonderful art accompanied by the music of The SoHum Girls, at the Morris Graves Museum of Art, from 6 to 9 p.m. on Saturday, April 6th, for Arts Alive!
William Thonson Gallery
Ann Savageau
Guardians: Spirits of Protection
March 16 through April 27
Ann Savageau is a mixed-media artist and teacher whose career spans over 45 years. Her work focuses on the intersection of the natural and manmade worlds. It is in this space that she finds the most interesting issues, processes, and statements. She focuses on the natural materials and manmade detritus that are routinely discarded as worthless, combining, and transforming them into new entities that bear the marks of their origins, history and alteration. The underlying theme in Savageau’s work is the inherent worthiness of all matter and rejection of a hierarchy of values, and the urgent need to take the necessary steps to preserve our ecosystem.
Ann began creating the guardian spirits of protection series in 2018 after the death of her sole surviving child, as a way of coping with the profound loss of her three children. The project took 2 ½ years to complete; as Ann worked, she expanded the content to include protection from climate change, species extinction, the COVID pandemic, social injustice, and war. The seventeen life-size figures of animals and humans are composite beings fashioned from castoff materials, including driftwood, and found objects. The Guardians messages of loss, grief and healing are intended to inspire the viewer and it is Ann’s hope the element of community involvement will enrich and deepen the Guardians installation at the Morris Graves Museum of Art.
Knight Gallery
Shawn Gould: The Art of Getting Lost
March 30 through May 19
The Art of Getting Lost is the result of Shawn Gould’s multiple trips to the Punta Gorda Lighthouse on the remote stretch of coastal wilderness called the Lost Coast. This new body of work is due in large part to Gould receiving a Victor Thomas Jacoby Award from the Humboldt Area Foundation in 2021. It was the spark that he needed to return to a subject he began to explore decades ago. The Lost Coast Trail and Punta Gorda Lighthouse caught his interest on his first camping trip in 2002 and he has returned a number of times since. Over the years he had created a few paintings based on these trips, but inevitably got pulled away by other projects and commitments. Despite this, he always hoped to go back and continue what he had started. Who travels to an abandoned lighthouse in search of enlightenment you might ask? An artist who had to get lost to find new inspiration.
Anderson Gallery
Works by the 2024 BFA cohort of Cal Poly Humboldt
April 6 through April 27
Humboldt Arts Council and Cal Poly Humboldt’s Art + Film Department are proud to present a collection of artwork by the 2024 cohort of Bachelors of Fine Arts students.Museum Store/Permanent Collection Gallery
Visit the Museum Store for a selection of gifts and merchandise inspired by the artwork on view by Morris Graves, Glenn Berry, Melvin Schuler and Romano Gabriel. The Museum Store carries a wide selection of posters, contemporary art books, cards, exhibition catalogs, children’s books, note pads, tote bags, jewelry, scarves, felted products and artsy coffee mugs. Humboldt Arts Council Members receive a 10% discount on all merchandise in the store.
Homer Balabanis Gallery/Humboldt Artist Gallery
Venture into the Humboldt Artist Gallery in the Morris Graves Museum of Art—the perfect place to find that unique, original gift. The gallery features many exceptional Humboldt County artists currently working in our region. Designed as an artist cooperative, the gallery features local artists working in a variety of media from representational and abstract paintings, prints, jewelry, photographs, and ceramics. Members of the Humboldt Artist Gallery include Vicki Barry, Julia Bednar, Jody Bryan, Allison Busch-Lovejoy, Jim Lowry, Paul Rickard, Patricia Sundgren-Smith, Sara Starr, Kim Reid and Claudia Lima.
The Morris Graves Museum of Art, located at 636 F Street, Eureka is open to the public noon-5 p.m., Wednesday through Sunday. Admission is by donation, $5 for adults; $2 for seniors (age 65 and over), military veterans, and students with ID; children 17 and under free; Families with an EBT Card and valid ID receive free admission through the Museums for All initiative, Museum members are free. Admission is always free for everyone on the first Saturday of every month, including First Saturday Night Arts Alive!, 6-9 p.m.
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