The Unruly Art of Linda Kaye-Moses is the first exhibition of the academic year at Simon’s Rock College of Bard. The exhibit will open in the Alumni Library Atrium Gallery on August 28 through October 3.
Linda Kaye-Moses creates mixed media constructs – jewels and cases – that not only serve a function but also contain a narrative capacity. She constructs jewels within protective dwellings ("Nesting Cases"), often incorporating a poem, song or prose.
Her work has been exhibited in galleries and at juried craft shows, including the Smithsonian Craft Show, ACC Craft Fairs and The Paradise City Arts Festivals, and is included in private collections nationally and internationally.
The Paradise City Arts Festival publicity materials say this of her work: “Kaye-Moses' work emphasizes the narrative capacity of art in general, and wearable objects specifically, with a focus on mythic connections and adornment as empowering object.â€
She uses several jewelry fabrication techniques: metal clay, engraving, stamping, fold-forming, oxidation/patination, roll-printing, cold connections, block printing, assemblage and collage. All the elements of each piece relate thematically. Lapidary Journal describes the work this way: “Looking like something uncovered in an archaeological dig on another planet, Linda Kaye-Moses' jewelry makes the most of a rich sense of the past and a cutting-edge technology.â€
Her jewels have been featured in many publications: In the Picture, Framing the Visual Arts (Oxford University Press, Australia, 1996); Art Jewelry Today (Schiffer Pub., 2003); Creative Metal Clay Jewelry (Lark Books, 2003); Discovery, Fifty Years of Craft Experience at Haystack Mountain School of Crafts (University of Maine Press, 2004); Fabulous Jewelry from Found Objects (Lark Books, 2005); Tracking Trilobites, Adventures in Paleontology (University of Kentucky, 2005); Teapot Makers and Collectors (Schiffer Publishing, 2005); Craft Art International, Art Jewelry, Lapidary Journal, American Style and Niche Magazine.
The opening reception and artist’s talk will take place on Sunday, September 3, from 4 to 6 p.m. All are welcome.
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Taconic High Speaker Booted for Passing Out 'Political Material'
Staff Reports
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A guest speaker at Taconic High School was escorted out of the building after school officials said they passed around unapproved political material.
Principal Matthew Bishop sent out an email and voice message to the school community explaining some of what happened.
The event was an approved community outreach activity to write letters to veterans. The principal said the guest speaker had provided officials with the materials to be used for the activity, which were reviewed and approved.
"However, the guest speaker began distributing politically motivated materials that were not previously approved," Bishop said. "As soon as staff became aware of this, we immediately asked that guest speaker to leave. ...
"The unauthorized materials distributed today were not part of what was shared with us beforehand. This was a breach of trust and we wanted to be clear. The distribution of these materials is not endorsed by our school in any way."
Bishop did not identify who the speaker or what the unauthorized materials were. Some parents have pointed to a Turning Point USA representative and that the political material was a red wristband that says "We are Charlie Kirk."
An image posted to Facebook shows a group of male students showing off the bracelets with a woman wearing a shirt with a "Club America" logo on it. Club America is high school chapter of Turning Point, a conservative nonprofit founded Kirk.
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