Current Exhibits

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NOVEMBER 6 - DECEMBER 1 IN GALLERY II

COMMUNITY ABSTRACT ART SHOW - GALLERY II

ABSTRACT ART SHOW BY THE WILLISTON COMMUNITY

in GALLERY II

COME CHECK OUT THIS ALL-AGE ART SHOW AND TALENT FROM OUR COMMUNITY!

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OCTOBER 2 - NOVEMBER 3 IN GALLERY II

AMANDA EL-DWEEK - GALLERY II

AMANDA EL-DWEEK

in GALLERY II

“Garage Sale” seems like a weird title for an art show, does it not?

When I was in art school at the University of North Dakota, there was varying advice about how to curate one’s art show, specifically one’s B.F.A. Show, which was a student’s “final” in Visual Arts. One professor had a rather inimitable way of describing what not to do: “Don’t make it look like you’re having a garage sale.”

And by that he meant, do not have a hodge-podge of different styles, themes, or mediums. It should be somewhat homogenized; it should be cohesive since it’s the final summation of your work for the past four (or so) years, the pinnacle of your area of study. It should not look like ten people and their ten different styles came together to sell their possessions.

“Don’t make it look like you’re having a garage sale.”

That’s been rattling around in my mind for the last 20+ years. I understood what they meant, and I still think it is good advice. It informed my own B.F.A. show, meaning, I did the opposite of that advice.

My argument for this is: I was a kid at that time, and I spent my years there figuring out what I liked, what worked, what clicked, and what I was not good at. Meanwhile, I was making my way in the world; I was aging, learning, working, and figuring things out. So I never really had one theme. I had many.

Now that I am older, I have realized that I kind of am ten different people with ten different styles. I have many interests and I do not want to choose just one.

I want to have a garage sale. 

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OCTOBER 2 - NOVEMBER 3 IN GALLERY I

ARVIN DAVIS, JR - GALLERY I

ARVIN DAVIS, JR

in GALLERY I

Arvin Davis Jr. uses bright colors, strong brush strokes, detailed line work, and splatters, WHICHEVER technique is required to obtain work with a strong compositional and chromatic rigor; it’s a contained chaos. he is a multifaceted illustrator and fine artist. He'll collaborate with his kids, ANother artist, or work alone.  Suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, art allows him to process the emotions, traumas, and self-created pressures, thus becoming a real therapeutic path aimed at understanding himself and his feelings. Self-taught  in mixed media: watercolors, inks, graphite, fluid acrylics, and standard acrylics. 


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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.

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