Making Their Mark Four SFCC graduates who work as professional tattoo artists display recent work. Artists include: Bradley Delay, Andi Demitri, Junior and Mike Maloney. Nov. 7-Dec. 7, Mon-Fri from 8:30 am-3:30 pm.
Inked: Cyndy Wilson Print Exchange, Exhibition & Auction Over 50 prints by students, faculty, regional and national artists are on display and up for auction. All proceeds support the student art scholarship fund. April 4-14, Mon-Fri from 9 am-4 pm.
In What We See: A Printmaker's Response Art has the ability to focus the eye on something otherwise unseen — and to add brilliant perspective to public issues seen again and again. This is the kind of art that Harris R. Wiltsher II generates. As a curator and artist, Wiltsher’s background is wide-ranging. As a Bronx Recognizes Its Own (BRIO) recipient, program administrator, professor and art gallery director, Wiltsher has done it all. For his exhibit “In What We See: A Printmaker’s Response,” Wiltsher cultivated a group exhibition that highlights artwork from artists with varying backgrounds and experiences, specifically featuring the African and African American experience via print media. Our very own Spokane Falls Community College hosts Wiltsher’s captivating exhibit for a few more weeks, so don’t miss it before it departs.
Siri Stensberg: Scattered Storms When most of us picture an artwork, we probably visualize a painting or drawing on a wall, or maybe a monumental sculpture we pass by on our way to work. Recent Washington State University graduate Siri Stensberg makes that kind of art — abstract watercolor paintings, beautifully rendered drawings of the human figure, colorful teapots and other ceramic sculptures — but the work she’s showing at Spokane Falls Community College defies the usual description. Her artworks combine lighting, projection, and even sound with things on the wall, floor, or hanging from the ceiling to create an immersive experience that you can really get into, like literally.
Caitie Sellers: Scenes from an Underpass For most of us, whether by car or on foot, the view of the monumental concrete construction known as the highway underpass is something glimpsed while en route to someplace else. It’s something to be gotten through quickly, just another visual blip on our radar of forward momentum. But to Virginia-based artist Caitie Sellers, our urban landscapes inspire delicate metal jewelry, complex line drawings and mixed-media sculpture celebrating overlooked, oft-traveled yet underappreciated things like the highway overpass. Sellers is “fascinated with the hidden workings of cities — beautiful, efficient design that is hidden beneath pavement and brick,” she writes on her website. Experience Sellers’ unique perspective in this unusual exhibit that concludes Spokane Falls Community College’s 2022 exhibition calendar, with the next exhibition launching Jan. 10.