Current Exhibits
SEPTEMBER 5 - 29 IN BOTH GALLERIES
ND HUMAN RIGHTS ARTS FESTIVAL - BOTH GALLERIES
nd HUMAN RIGHTS ARTS FESTIVAL
in BOTH GALLERIES
The North Dakota Human Rights Film and Arts Festival’s mission is to educate, engage, and facilitate discussion around local and worldwide human rights topics. The festival was founded and is managed by The Human Family, a non-partisan 501(c)(3) based in North Dakota founded to change our communities through art.
The North Dakota Human Rights Film and Arts Festival returns for 2023. The festival opened in January 2023 in Fargo, North Dakota, at the Plains Art Museum and concludes in January 2024 in Jamestown, North Dakota, at The Arts Center. The statewide festival features a traveling art exhibition and film festival. A full calendar of events is available online. Each artist explores human rights, civil rights, or social justice issues through their respective mediums.
The 2023 North Dakota Human Rights Film and Arts Festival is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts. The festival’s public art project is supported by the Arts Midwest GIG Fund, a program of Arts Midwest that is funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, with additional contributions from the North Dakota Council on the Arts.
Institutonal support of The Human Family is provided in part by a grant from the North Dakota Council on the Arts, which receives funding from the state legislature and the National Endowment for the Arts, and The Arts Partnership, with support from the cities of Fargo, Moorhead, and West Fargo.
JULY 31 - SEPTEMBER 1 IN GALLERY I
SABRINA RAMEY - GALLERY I
Photo by Sabrina Ramey
SABRINA RAMEY
in Gallery I
MADE OF PRAIRIE
Sabrina has lived in North Dakota since she was 19 and loves exploring county backroads and prairie trails with her dogs. She enjoys matching old maps with current landmarks and researching older buildings that are still standing out on the prairie. Occasionally she can even talk her husband or son into coming along with her; they are always supportive of her passion in many other ways. The guys accept endless deliveries of large canvases in the mail and tolerate stacks of canvases and equipment in the dining room without complaint.
Sabrina’s photos have been used for a variety of projects like book covers, calendars, post cards, Christmas ornaments and even a few embroidery patterns, but she likes displaying her favorite images on large format canvases or acrylic the most. You can see a little more of her work on her Made of Prairie Facebook page.
JULY 31 - SEPTEMBER 1 IN GALLERY II
MORGAN WAGNER - GALLERY II
Tobacco Gardens at Dusk -Morgan Wagner
morgan wagner
in Gallery II
celebrating the essence
My still life and plein air oil and watercolor paintings are born from a need to develop as an artist. I choose to paint, rather than photograph, because while a photograph can do a good job of preserving a specific image and time, it can’t select for the most important details in a subject. In addition, it doesn’t allow for the time, careful scrutiny, and intention it takes to make a painting. I’ve heard love described as: “paying careful attention to.” If this is the case, when I practice painting, I am practicing love.
My work focuses on the essence of what makes my everyday subjects beautiful. I try to create an impression of light and form, simplifying shapes and distilling the subject down to its most important parts. I have a long way to go at perfecting this technique and that’s part of the fun. My practice is something I plan to pursue throughout my entire life because I believe there will always be room to grow.
Each painting was created in a single session, usually between 2 or 3 hours long. I painted the still lifes in my apartment while listening to music or podcasts, typically in my kitchen. The landscapes were painted on-site, plein air. It’s important to me that I paint what my eyes see, so they were all painted directly from life, not from a picture.
When I see them, these paintings make me hopeful that it’s worth the effort to try again and again, that daily, sustainable, practice yields the most powerful results, and that practicing for a lifetime is the only way to know just how good I can get.
JULY 3 - JULY 28 IN GALLERY I
NDCA/ND STATE PARKS ART IN THE PARKS - GALLERY I
Photo by Johnathan Campbell
