63rd Annual Symposium and Exhibition
LeMoyne Center for the Visual Arts — Tallahassee
Exhibition dates June 7th – July 27th
Symposium Dates: June 7th, 8th, & 9th
Best in Show –
Florida Artist Award:
Kevin Grass — Middle School
Elizabeth Morse Genius Award:
Denis Gaston — The Observer
Ru Israels Award:
Roberta Schofield — Market
The Benjamin Award:
Cheryl Bogdanowitsch — Reader
Fonchen Lord Memorial Award:
Ron Vellucci — Autum’ns Journey
DeBarba & Dimmitt Award:
Jeffrey Baisden — Open Seating
Lee Akert Memorial Award:
Ken Austin — Geomancy IV The Challenge
Blick Art Materials Awards:
Jean Troemel — View on Villano
Mellissa Miller Nece —
Let’s Make Her into A Mermaid
Jim Swallow — Tulips on The Table
Cecily Hangen Award: Jean Troemel
Outstanding Service Awards:
Shirley Frank
Jan Miller
Award Winners
Gallery Views
Reception
LeMoyne Center for the Visual Arts
LeMoyne Center for Visual Arts
125 North Gadsden Street
Tallahassee, Florida 32301
Juror: Jaune (Quick-to-See) Smith
Born in 1940 on the Flathead Reservation in Montana to Flathead Salish, French-Cree, and Shoshone parents, Quick-to-See Smith became an artist while in her 30s and was earning a living as a painter before she completed her master of fine arts degree at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. By the mid-1970s, she had founded artists groups, curated exhibitions, and organized grassroots protests to express concern for the land and its Native people. She has developed a distinctive modernist style over the past 35 years, in a variety of techniques, Quick-to-See Smith has received international critical acclaim through more than 75 solo exhibitions and numerous international shows.
In the early 1980s Quick-to-See Smith began to create paintings that address the complexities of Native American identity, both on the personal level and as a communal experience. Since 1990, many of her works have drawn attention to specific issues affecting this community, including preservation of the environment, racial and gender stereotyping, and problems of alcoholism.
Smith’s politically-loaded subject matter ranges from cowboys and Indians to McDonald’s and consumerism, reservation life, and war. According to Quick-to-See Smith, “Everything in America is for sale including land, water, air and elections” That’s why she includes money signs in her paintings as did Andy Warhol, but she adds other iconic forms such as ancient petroglyph’s in her works to reflect both Western and Native cultures.
Juror Jaune (Quick-to-See) Smith