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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250827
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260502
DTSTAMP:20260403T143847
CREATED:20230816T205341Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251020T205247Z
UID:2719-1756252800-1777679999@dulmanngalleries.berea.edu
SUMMARY:All Peoples of the Earth: Selections from the Berea College Art Collection
DESCRIPTION:Housed in the Dimitrie Berea Gallery\, this ongoing exhibition includes over 100 examples of visual art and material culture that emphasize the connections and experiences that humans share across cultures\, time\, and space. Because our permanent collection is so vast (with over 16\,500 objects!)\, artworks rotate on and off view throughout the year\, so there will be something new to see with every visit you make to the Galleries. \nVisual art and material culture – the things that people design with intention\, creativity\, and technical skill – have for ages provided insight into our belief systems and social customs\, our long-held traditions and day-to-day lives\, and how we see ourselves\, and one another\, as individuals. By closely considering the items that people make\, wear\, use\, and value\, we can learn something deeper about our shared humanity. \nThe selected artworks and objects from the Berea College Art Collection on display in All Peoples of the Earth are organized not by style\, date\, or culture of origin\, but instead by categories of human experience that connect us across time and space. Viewers may notice overlaps in some areas\, instances where these thematic groupings blur. For example\, should a painting of fishing boats be placed within “Observation & Documentation” or “Labor & Leisure”? Does a vessel used in tea ceremonies fit better within “Belief & Ritual” or “Fashion & Function”? These gray areas underscore the multifaceted functions that visual art and material culture can serve\, while also reflecting and exposing the challenges inherent in curatorial work and\, by extension\, all historical inquiry. In resisting easy classification\, art challenges us to be open to the possibility of multiple interpretations\, not only about visual culture but about our world – and ourselves – more broadly. \nStorytelling & Mythmaking \nArt has always been an important conduit for telling and passing down stories. From fictional narratives and historical accounts to mythical tales and religious texts\, people have turned to visual media to bring stories to life in ways that are thought-provoking\, convincing\, and deeply moving. \nThe artworks in this section represent a wide range of storytelling methods and speak to how literature\, the written and spoken word\, and the visual arts are all intertwined. At the same time\, these objects challenge us to consider how stories from the past are continuously constructed and made over\, how familiar narratives might shift when told or illustrated in a different or unexpected way\, and how visual media contributes to our understanding of what we believe to be true about the world. \nThis slideshow requires JavaScript. \n  \nObservation & Documentation \nSince the prehistoric era\, people have been compelled to record their observations for posterity\, documenting the landscape\, themselves and others\, and their personal surroundings in ways both realistic and imaginative. Through a variety of media – from painting\, drawing\, photography\, and printmaking – this selection of artworks provides visual evidence of the human impulse to document\, to make permanent and personal\, the world around them. \nThis slideshow requires JavaScript. \nLabor & Leisure \nThe value and dignity of labor is entrenched in Berea College culture as an integral part of the College’s mission and identity\, reflected in our Great Commitments and the Labor Program. At the same time\, leisure – rest and play – is equally important to our physical wellbeing\, mental health\, and intellectual and emotional development as individuals. Labor and leisure are often intertwined in our lives and are yet another instance of the human experience in which boundaries are blurred. As the artworks and objects in this section show\, the tasks we perform and objects we use for “work” are not always that far removed from the things we make and do for “fun.” How do labor and leisure overlap in your life? \nThis slideshow requires JavaScript. \nKinship & Care \nHow do we care for one another? Do the objects we surround ourselves with play a role in our relationships? Can art and material culture reflect the deep personal connections that people share or contribute to emotional caretaking and familial practices? \nArtists and makers throughout history have used their work to express love for another person\, to document strong family and community ties\, and to craft artworks and objects that provide warmth\, nourishment\, and fulfillment to those that use them. The artworks in this section emphasize kinship\, the passing down of traditions from one generation to the next\, the shared household\, and the creation of community through common belief systems and rituals – and in doing so\, these objects have something significant to say about the ways that we seek to connect with other people. \nThis slideshow requires JavaScript. \nPattern & Abstraction \nWhat first comes to mind when you think of “pattern”? Like familiar plaid pillows on a much-loved sofa or the orderly stripes of a favorite t-shirt\, patterns can be found all around us. \nPattern is often rooted in a formula\, a structured system that repeats in predictable and satisfying ways. Abstraction\, however\, can be more fluid\, more surprising\, or even seemingly-irrational. Despite these differences\, pattern and abstraction have much in common in both art and everyday life. In viewing the abstract and patterned artworks in this section\, reconsider your first impressions. What appears like a haphazard arrangement of random shapes and colors might come into focus as a careful display of harmoniously balanced hues\, textures\, and lines; or you may find that an apparently strict pattern may in fact subvert expectations of uniform rigidity. \nThis slideshow requires JavaScript.
URL:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/event_cal/all-peoples-of-the-earth/
LOCATION:Dimitrie Berea Gallery
CATEGORIES:Current Exhibit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Screenshot-2025-05-07-at-9.17.23 PM.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Kentucky/Louisville:20250929T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Kentucky/Louisville:20260313T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T143847
CREATED:20250927T164424Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260318T191937Z
UID:3293-1759132800-1773421200@dulmanngalleries.berea.edu
SUMMARY:At Home with the Elliotts: A 'Fine Art Print Collection' Before Berea College
DESCRIPTION:“I have the collecting gene. There’s just no doubt about it.” – Gerald Elliott \nShelly and Gerry Elliott have been collecting prints since they married in 1960\, carefully selecting one print through a mail order catalog tied the New York-based Association of American Artists. As Gerry says\, “It just went on from there.” \nSince then\, the Elliotts have amassed a collection of hundreds of these works on paper representing an impressive array of artistic styles\, time periods\, methods\, processes\, and techniques that they have lovingly hung en masse in their home\, leaving hardly one inch of wall space bare. Shelly and Gerry have chosen to live a life surrounded by art\, by what they find to be beautiful\, curious\, and interesting. \nTo date\, the Elliotts have generously gifted over five hundred artworks from their personal collection to the Berea College Art Collection. At Home with the Elliotts: A ‘Fine Art Print Collection’ Before Berea College is inspired by the Elliotts’ lifelong adoration and pursuit of the print and their drive to intentionally create a space for themselves in this world that has enabled them to be entirely surrounded by visual art and human creativity. This exhibition recreates\, in part\, the Elliotts’ Washington\, DC\, home in such a way to encourage visitors to consider the different ways one might seek out a life in the arts. \nClick here to view more information about the artworks included in the show! \nAt Home with the Elliotts will be on view in the Masterpiece Gallery on the first floor of the Rogers-Traylor Art Building from Monday\, September 29\, 2025 through Friday\, March 13\, 2026. This exhibition is generously supported by Shelly and Gerry Elliott and the William A. and Leola Piper Boyce Art Exhibition Endowment Fund. \n\n  \nGerry Elliott – Fine Art Print Collector\, directed by Justin Skeens\, 2023\, featuring Kelsey Frady Malone\, PhD; Dante Stewart (Berea College Class of 2023); and Florence Wright (Berea College Class of 2025)
URL:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/event_cal/at-home-with-the-elliotts/
LOCATION:Masterpiece Gallery\, Berea\, KY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Past Exhibit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/Elliott_Postcard_Boosted-scaled.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260121
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260314
DTSTAMP:20260403T143847
CREATED:20260115T012324Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260318T191929Z
UID:3597-1768953600-1773446399@dulmanngalleries.berea.edu
SUMMARY:Kat Spears: Surface Lore
DESCRIPTION:Kat Spears: Surface Lore is on view in the Upper Traylor Gallery from January 21 through March 13\, 2026. Kat Spears will give an artist talk on Wednesday\, March 11\, at 5:00pm in the Upper Traylor Gallery in the Rogers-Traylor Art Building. All are welcome; no RSVP required. Kat will also lead a workshop focusing on monotype printmaking techniques on Wednesday\, March 11\, at 7:00pm. Advanced registration for this workshop is required. The workshop is free and all supplies are provided\, but space is limited. For more information\, visit our Events page. \nThe paintings in Surface Lore hide many layers of imagery gleaned from observation\, sketches\, personal photo archives\, art history\, memory and imagination. Their surfaces have been metamorphosing for the past three years\, during which time they have changed to reflect the artist’s changing preoccupations and favorite icons. The surface quality and imagery visible at last has been guided by the unexpected textures and colors that appeared in this process of layering\, painting-over\, and un-painting. \nKat Spears is an artist originally from Kentucky. Their studio practice is founded largely in an inexhaustible love for observational and figural drawing and painting. Parallel to this practice\, they engage with many modes of image-making\, as well as installation\, sculpture\, poetry\, music\, and sound. They graduated from Berea College in 2014 (Studio Art\, Art History\, Spanish)\, and completed a Masters of Fine Arts from Indiana University Bloomington in 2022. They have been teaching drawing and painting courses since 2019 and currently serve as the Visiting Professor of Painting and Drawing at Berea College.
URL:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/event_cal/kat-spears-surface-lore/
LOCATION:Upper Traylor Gallery
CATEGORIES:Past Exhibit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/DSC_0062-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260128
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260321
DTSTAMP:20260403T143847
CREATED:20260115T011802Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260329T171526Z
UID:3594-1769558400-1774051199@dulmanngalleries.berea.edu
SUMMARY:Sara Torgison: Spanned Separations
DESCRIPTION:Sara Torgison: Spanned Separations is on view in the Lower Traylor Gallery from January 28 through March 20\, 2026. Sara Torgison will give an artist talk at the exhibition’s closing reception on Friday\, March 20\, at 12:00pm in the Lower Traylor Gallery in the Rogers-Traylor Art Building. All are welcome; no RSVP required. For more information\, visit our Events page. \nIn this visiting artist exhibition\, Sara Torgison presents a collection of recent works that explore the deceptions and detachment of anthropocentric culture\, while imagining repair to our relationship with ecosystems and the more-than-human world. Animal figures play at the edges of human\, while humans merge with experimental ecologies. Each work troubles the distance between us and the animals and environments we exploit for our wellness and comfort. During an era of mass extinctions and climate collapse\, Torgison’s work complicates binary narratives by dwelling in the margins of material and symbolic corporealities of human and non-human animals. \nSara Torgison is an interdisciplinary artist with a focus in ceramics and fiber art. She received an MFA from the University of Cincinnati Department of Design\, Architecture\, Art and Planning and a BFA (ceramics) and BS (Zoology) from Cal Poly Humboldt in Arcata\, California. Her work often blends media\, extending finite and fragile surfaces to emphasize and inhabit marginal spaces. Sara is currently Visiting Ceramics Faculty at Miami University in Oxford\, Ohio\, and works as a preparator at the Weston Art Gallery in Cincinnati.
URL:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/event_cal/sara-torgison/
LOCATION:Lower Traylor Gallery
CATEGORIES:Past Exhibit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/IMG_9617-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Kentucky/Louisville:20260225T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Kentucky/Louisville:20260226T203000
DTSTAMP:20260403T143847
CREATED:20260118T165810Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260307T202446Z
UID:3604-1772038800-1772137800@dulmanngalleries.berea.edu
SUMMARY:Doris After Dark! February 25\, 2026
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a new monthly late-night programming series at the Doris Ulmann Galleries that brings creativity and community together in fun new ways! The February event lineup starts at 5:00pm with a gallery talk hosted by Director and Curator\, Dr. Kelsey Frady Malone\, highlighting Our Land\, a painting by African-American artist Charles W. White that is on loan to the Doris Ulmann Galleries for the 2025-2026 academic year. \nThe talk will be followed by a portrait painting workshop at 7:00 inspired by White’s painting. Workshop participants will explore how visual elements and stylistic choices can communicate a subject’s values and character (such as strength\, resilience\, power\, tenderness\, and empathy) and then practice those skills by creating their own self-portrait with intention and agency – showcasing the facets of themselves that they value the most. Pizza will be served between the gallery talk and the workshop\, so you can plan to hang at the Galleries all night! \nNo art expertise is required; all workshop supplies are provided. Space is limited in the workshop\, so advanced registration is required. Email malonek2@berea.edu to reserve your spot. These events are free and open to the public and guests of all ages. Doris After Dark is made possible in part by grant funding provided by The Art Bridges Foundation.
URL:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/event_cal/doris-after-dark-february/
LOCATION:Doris Ulmann Galleries
CATEGORIES:Past Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Doris-After-Dark-February-2026.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Kentucky/Louisville:20260311T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Kentucky/Louisville:20260311T183000
DTSTAMP:20260403T143847
CREATED:20260115T012755Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260318T191922Z
UID:3600-1773248400-1773253800@dulmanngalleries.berea.edu
SUMMARY:Artist Talk with Kat Spears
DESCRIPTION:In conjunction with their exhibition\, Surface Lore\, visiting artist Kat Spears will host an artist talk on Wednesday\, March 11\, at 5:00 in the Upper Traylor Gallery. This event is free and open to the public. A reception with refreshments and snacks will be available after the talk. No RSVP required. \nOriginally from Kentucky\, Kat Spears’ studio practice is founded largely in an inexhaustible love for observational and figural drawing and painting. Parallel to this practice\, they engage with many modes of image-making\, as well as installation\, sculpture\, poetry\, music\, and sound. They graduated from Berea College in 2014 (Studio Art\, Art History\, Spanish)\, and completed a Masters of Fine Arts from Indiana University Bloomington in 2022. They have been teaching drawing and painting courses since 2019 and currently serve as the Visiting Professor of Painting and Drawing at Berea College. \nKat Spears: Surface Lore is on view in the Upper Traylor Gallery from January 21 through March 13\, 2026.
URL:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/event_cal/artist-talk-with-kat-spears/
LOCATION:Upper Traylor Gallery
CATEGORIES:Past Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/DSC_0055-1-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Kentucky/Louisville:20260311T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Kentucky/Louisville:20260311T203000
DTSTAMP:20260403T143847
CREATED:20260307T202408Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260318T191915Z
UID:3624-1773248400-1773261000@dulmanngalleries.berea.edu
SUMMARY:Doris After Dark! March 11\, 2026
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a new monthly late-night programming series at the Doris Ulmann Galleries that brings creativity and community together in fun new ways! The March event lineup starts at 5:00pm with an artist talk hosted by Visiting Professor of Painting and Drawing\, Kat Spears\, in conjunction with their current exhibition Kat Spears: Surface Lore. \nThe talk will be followed by an experimental monotype printmaking workshop at 7:00 hosted by Prof. Spears. Use reductive (“dark field”) monotype and other alternative printing methods as a means to producing surprising images\, compositions\, and textures. Participants will make their own prints to take home\, and learn a method of DIY printmaking using everyday\, accessible materials. Pizza and snacks will be served between the gallery talk and the workshop\, so you can hang at the Galleries all night! \nNo art expertise is required; all workshop supplies are provided. Space is limited in the workshop\, so advanced registration is required. Email malonek2@berea.edu to reserve your spot. These events are free and open to the public and guests of all ages. Doris After Dark is made possible in part by grant funding provided by The Art Bridges Foundation.
URL:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/event_cal/doris-after-dark-march-11-2026/
LOCATION:Doris Ulmann Galleries
CATEGORIES:Past Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Doris-After-Dark-March-2026.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Kentucky/Louisville:20260320T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Kentucky/Louisville:20260320T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T143847
CREATED:20260131T130009Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260329T171516Z
UID:3601-1774008000-1774013400@dulmanngalleries.berea.edu
SUMMARY:Artist Talk with Sara Torgison
DESCRIPTION:In conjunction with her exhibition\, Spanned Separations\, visiting artist Sara Torgison will host an artist talk on Friday\, March 20\, at 12:00pm (noon) in the Lower Traylor Gallery. This event is free and open to the public. An opening reception with refreshments and snacks will be available after the talk. No RSVP required. \nSara Torgison is an interdisciplinary artist with a focus in ceramics and fiber art. She received an MFA from the University of Cincinnati Department of Design\, Architecture\, Art and Planning and a BFA (ceramics) and BS (Zoology) from Cal Poly Humboldt in Arcata\, California. Her work often blends media\, extending finite and fragile surfaces to emphasize and inhabit marginal spaces. Sara is currently Visiting Ceramics Faculty at Miami University in Oxford\, Ohio\, and works as a preparator at the Weston Art Gallery in Cincinnati. \nSara Torgison: Spanned Separations is on view in the Lower Traylor Gallery from January 28 through March 20\, 2026.
URL:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/event_cal/artist-talk-with-sara-torgison/
LOCATION:Lower Traylor Gallery
CATEGORIES:Past Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Screenshot-2026-01-14-at-8.30.38-PM.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Kentucky/Louisville:20260320T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Kentucky/Louisville:20260320T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T143847
CREATED:20260309T130840Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260329T171509Z
UID:3630-1774015200-1774022400@dulmanngalleries.berea.edu
SUMMARY:Clay Critters: Ceramics Workshop with Sara Torgison
DESCRIPTION:Led by visiting artist Sara Torgison\, this immersive workshop will follow Torgison’s artist talk on Friday\, March 20\, at 2:00 in Rogers-Traylor 211. The workshop will focus on hollow building strategies for rendering animal subjects in clay. Participants will be encouraged to consider form\, structure\, and texture in ceramic surface treatments through exploration of small animal figures. The workshop will cover capturing likeness in pinch and coil techniques and honing skills in noticing and recording important details. Torgison will guide participants through planning with photo references\, initial shaping\, and forming a base structure. Participants should come prepared to make one small animal and have access to images either printed or saved on a mobile device. Beginner friendly\, some handbuilding experience is helpful. Experienced potters are welcome to bring their own tools.\n\n\n\nThe workshop is free and open to the public and guests of all ages. Space is limited! Please RSVP by emailing your name and number of attendees in your group to Dr. Kelsey Malone (malonek2@berea.edu). There is potential to make some mess\, so wear clothing you don’t mind getting a bit dirty.
URL:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/event_cal/clay-critters-ceramics-workshop-with-sara-torgison/
LOCATION:Rogers-Traylor Art Building Room 211
CATEGORIES:Past Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Torgison_WellTendedVoid-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Kentucky/Louisville:20260329T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Kentucky/Louisville:20260329T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T143847
CREATED:20260329T172412Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260329T172412Z
UID:3633-1774803600-1774810800@dulmanngalleries.berea.edu
SUMMARY:Doris After Dark! April 8\, 2026
DESCRIPTION:Join us for Doris After Dark\, a new monthly late-night programming series at the Doris Ulmann Galleries that brings creativity and community together in fun new ways! \nIn honor of the College’s All Peoples of the Earth Day\, the evening programming will begin at 5:00 with a curator-led tour of the permanent collection exhibition\, “All Peoples of the Earth: Selections from the Berea College Art Collection\,” with Dr. Kelsey Malone. Come learn more about the vast holdings of the College’s permanent art collection\, which is home to artworks and artifacts from all over the world\, made by “all peoples of the Earth.” \nFollowing the gallery tour\, Dr. Shannon Phelps will lead a yoga session in the Galleries\, encouraging connections between our minds\, bodies\, and surroundings on “All Peoples of the Earth Day.” Yoga mats\, blankets\, and water will be provided\, but participants are welcome to bring their own mats\, blocks\, water bottles\, etc. Please wear comfortable clothing that allows for stretching. This session is designed for practicers at all levels of familiarity with yoga. Space is limited! To reserve your spot in the yoga session\, email Kelsey Malone (malonek2@berea.edu) with your name and the number of guests you’re attending with. \nCome to one event or stay for both – it’s up to you! All Doris After Dark programs are free and open to the public and guests of all ages. These events are made possible with generous funding from The Art Bridges Foundation.
URL:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/event_cal/doris-after-dark-april-8-2026/
LOCATION:Doris Ulmann Galleries
CATEGORIES:Upcoming Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://dulmanngalleries.berea.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Doris-After-Dark-April-2026Website-1.png
END:VEVENT
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