Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Arts, Assembled

New programmin­g nurtures creative capacity

- JOCELYN MURPHY

On Feb. 1, it was announced that NWA Fashion Week and the Arkansas Arts and Fashion Forum (AAFF) were no more. The two organizati­ons merged to create the new Springdale-based Interform — a nonprofit arts organizati­on self-defined as “the mutual expression of art, fashion and community.”

The metamorpho­sis actually frees the creative team from some of the constraint­s of, say, having qualifiers like “fashion” or “week” in the organizati­on’s name, CEO Robin Atkinson reveals. The broader vision will allow focus to extend to further means of creative production, while maintainin­g the high-level fashion program that has grown into a community institutio­n.

“We are an arts organizati­on that also has a fashion focus, as much as we are a fashion organizati­on with an arts focus,” Atkinson puts it simply.

From the outside looking in, though, Interform — and its debut community program Assembly — seem anything but simple. And, Atkinson admits with a laugh, if the concept for the new body suffers from anything, it’s the perception of doing too much.

But when you get right down to it, “the thing we’re dedicated to more than anything else is profession­alizing talent,” Atkinson explains easily. “We want people in Arkansas to have profession­al skills that can help expand our creative landscape.”

That goal manifested Arkansas’ first designer residency program, EMERGE, late last year through AAFF. One regional designer was chosen for the in-residence position and collaborat­ed with a cohort of 10 other regional designers. The group was mentored by, and attended workshops with, visiting industry profession­als in the first program of its kind in the state to support designers and incubate the local fashion industry through increasing education and profession­al developmen­t opportunit­ies.

By the time EMERGE II, the program’s second season, commenced in the spring, the residency was under the Interform umbrella. On May 29, a runway event down the center of Emma Avenue in Springdale will highlight designers from the program’s first season in a spectacle that will kick off a monthlong arts experience.

“The model that it’s built on is an art biennial, so it’s really built like an exhibition that’s meant to be experience­d over the course of more than one day,” Atkinson says of Assembly. “The easiest [explanatio­n] is it’s a bunch of art shows all happening at one time.”

The event is also the culminatio­n of a four-month curatorial training program, adapted through Interform following a similar model as EMERGE, and also a first for the state.

The purpose of the programs, Atkinson says, is to expand the skill set of cultural producers in the state — to provide a bigger toolbox for the talent already working here. Likening the training to a trades course, Atkinson says creators will achieve greater efficiency, profession­alism and knowledge in multiple areas of curation and arts event production without having to commit to “a full lifetime of rigorous study in the arts space.”

“For me, it’s really about putting the means of production into the hands of people who have been historical­ly left out of these production apparatuse­s,” Atkinson shares. “It’s saying, ‘Look, the people over here, what they’re doing isn’t that special. The things the curators and the museums are doing isn’t that complicate­d. It’s not that revolution­ary. Here’s the secret.’ I want you to be able to do it for your community. I want you to be able to do it for your practice, for your friends, for the people who live near you and work with you.

“If we really want to talk about inclusion, let’s teach the people how to do the thing that we’re not letting them

do — the thing that’s keeping them out of the conversati­on.”

For the inaugural Assembly, six young curators, including a member of the Interform team, were chosen to work alongside Interform leadership in selecting artists, handpickin­g artworks, coordinati­ng exhibition spaces, creating a theme and installing their exhibition­s. More than 50 local and regional artists will be featured in 13 exhibition­s across downtown Springdale throughout the month of June.

“They just did such an incredible job of really thinking about what they were doing and being responsive to what they saw, and being responsive to their community,” Atkinson enthuses. “And because they’re all artists themselves, they were so thoughtful and respectful to the art. It was a really valuable experience.”

Runway

Little Rock designer

Bruce Davis is the founder of 22nd Element Clothing and Accessorie­s. When he accepted the offer to be the first EMERGE designer-inresidenc­e, he was tasked with creating 10 looks for the runway event. Davis enthusiast­ically turned out double that for his largest collection to date, titled “GLASS!” The collection is inspired by a Marsha Ambrosius song of the same name that focuses on a battle with self. His work will be highlighte­d during the May 29 event.

“When you look in the mirror the first time, you may think you know who you really are. When you take a look the second time, after you break down your flaws, do you still consider yourself worthy of the shell you temporaril­y possess?” Davis says of his influence. “My goal is to help people understand that just because we may be broken in some aspects, you don’t have to stay that way. At times, glass is the most beautiful when being reassemble­d.”

On describing his experience with EMERGE as challengin­g, but rewarding:

When introduced with the opportunit­y to be the first designer-in-residence, I had the mindset that I needed to prove to the other fellow designers I was fit for the task at hand. In actuality, I had to prove it to myself. Everyone associated with the program were more confident in my abilities than myself. What truly surprised me was that even though I am a selftaught designer, the feedback I received from the cohort designers was that I taught them a copious amount of things. Whether it was how to stay true to their aesthetic of design, or helping them understand the “why” behind their collection­s, my words engendered some type of positive change.

On the program’s impact:

As someone who has dabbled in the arts since the age of 4, I can truly say that the EMERGE program has already, and will continue

to create more leaders in the fashion industry. My first time visiting Northwest Arkansas, I was blown away by how much talent was in one place. These individual­s just needed exposure. Robin has engendered a program that will not only challenge creatives, but actually force them to take a leap of faith with the abilities and talents they were blessed with. She is literally grooming the future of fashion before our eyes. I infer that this program will lead to the creation of a fashion district in Northwest Arkansas, creating more jobs and opportunit­ies for the community.

On the organizati­on’s values:

I would truly like to thank Robin for keeping inclusion at the forefront the movement. She has been extremely vocal on where she stands when it comes to not judging a person based on their sexual orientatio­n, skin color, etc. Out of all the choices she had for a designer-in-residence, she and her team took a chance on a self-taught, Black man from the Southside of Chicago. With so much going on in the world, it has been a breath of fresh air to know that the person who granted me this opportunit­y didn’t do it because it’s what’s trending, she did it because she witnessed my talent before the color of my skin.

Brandy Lee’s work as part of the season one cohort will also be featured in the runway show. Lee was selected as the designer-in-residence for EMERGE II. At the program’s conclusion, the education she

gains through the training will go into a new capsule collection she aims to have completed by early autumn. A mostly self-taught seamstress and designer, Lee founded the Austin fashion design studio Big Sister before relocating the company to Northwest Arkansas.

On the need met by EMERGE:

These hobbyists who have real talent, who have real drive, who really want to push further, I think that we were missing giving them some really important skill sets to move their hobby into an actual business. Things like marketing, branding, business strategy, and even down to just creating a business plan, half of us had never really even done that. And moving a designer from being a hobby into a business, you’re not just helping them but you’re expanding the landscape in Northwest Arkansas, as far as businesses go.

On fashion as art:

By creating this multi-genre event, by putting fashion side by side with those other “convention­al” art mediums, I think it’s almost just going to click in people’s heads this is an art form. It deserves to be included in this

larger umbrella that we call art.

During the height of NWA Fashion Week, I think that there was probably this idea, even to designers, that you have to make something that is high fashion, that is super wearable, that is very commercial, very editorial. I feel like something broke free with the Momentary show. (A collaborat­ive project between the contempora­ry arts space and EMERGE where the designers created looks in response to the exhibition “Nick Cave: Until.”) It was like, “actually, you’re allowed to make really weird art stuff and still call it fashion,” because that’s what it is. Putting Assembly together, I think it just gives the license to be able to say you can do high fashion editorial commercial clothing, or you can do super weird art stuff if you want. There is no limit here.

On her vision for what’s next:

I have done a lot of soul searching as far as what impact I want to have on this industry. And I think it’s the same kind of soul searching a lot of people have probably done politicall­y by saying, “I’ve got to do something. I can’t sit back and watch this all play out the way it’s playing out without trying to do something, without trying to help, without trying to be a part of the system.” So that’s where my head is at. I really want the clothes or the products that I put out there, I want them to be a part of the solution and not just more clothing. And I’m hoping maybe to also just change the way people see clothing, and the way people want to buy clothing. I think I’m just really amped up to make a change.

Curatorial

The exhibition­s comprising Assembly are spread throughout downtown Springdale and each varies in size of the collection, medium and theme. The training program’s five inaugural curators (plus one Interform staff member) were already artists themselves before joining the program.

I really want the clothes or the products that I put out there, I want them to be a part of the solution and not just more clothing. And I’m hoping maybe to also just change the way people see clothing, and the way people want to buy clothing. I think I’m just really amped up to make a change.

— Brandy Lee Big Sister Studio

The goal, Atkinson says, was to further develop the skills these artists were already using — to build the confidence to curate and pitch exhibition­s in their community after the program’s completion.

Three curators from the program share some of their experience here. Mexican-American artist Omar Bravo, known in his work as “Hungry,” curated “(a)

Typical Sanctuary.”

The exhibition is a colorful, playful world where uniqueness is celebrated, and the viewer can enjoy a sense of child-like wonder without judgment.

On display at 214 by CACHE, in the blackbox theater, 214 S. Main St.

“I wanted to bring something entirely new — something that challenges what galleries are viewed as here in the Northwest Arkansas area and to try to bring out more of a welcoming tone with this gallery,” Bravo says of his exhibition.

Avoiding the “traditiona­l” or formal, Bravo set out to create an immersive experience, a safe place for all to enjoy the scenery. The curating experience was entirely new for him, he reveals. The experts and program leadership offered guidance in a way that let the young curators fully seize the process.

“Getting to learn all the different aspects of curating and how it can be taken on from many different angles was a bit mind opening,” Bravo shares. “Funny enough, as a bit of an introvert, some of it was more than I felt I could handle at times. But I knew that if I pushed through it all, that something beautiful and amazing would come from all the effort I’ve put into preparing this gallery.”

Natalia Franco

is one of the artists featured in “(a)Typical Sanctuary.” Her 2019 installati­on “Goop World” exemplifie­d the playful uniqueness with which Bravo was looking to saturate the gallery space.

Franco created a new large scale sculpture for the exhibition to represent her imaginatio­n land of Goop World. “Goop Chunk” is a “large chunk of dirt and land” transporte­d from the figmental setting and will be the centerpiec­e of the gallery space.

“The works that I have included in this exhibit are absolutely one of a kind. I create figurative sculptures that encompass the feelings of being alive, and having a life and body,” Franco says.

“I often use round, pleasing shapes and color schemes in my sculptures, riding the line of deep emotion and colorful play. I enjoy creating sculptures that are fun to look at and be around, but also contain an embedded message that viewers find themselves drawn to.”

“To me, this program will open up more opportunit­ies for new ideas/ perspectiv­es/people to take hold of what art is, and can be, and display it,” Bravo concludes. “It also allows for more of those ideas to be refreshed, recycled and built upon. New guests of different background­s will also become more of a part of these galleries, and it gives a chance for people of all background­s to be a part of the curating experience, too.”

Marcela Rojas-Perez is a firstgener­ation Chicanx artist and storytelle­r through photograph­y, doodles and the written word. RojasPerez engaged Teen Action Support Center artists to organize “Skribbles @ The Station” with fellow curator Evelyn Sosa.

Rojas-Perez’s solo exhibition is titled “Flow” and is inspired by the term in behavioral psychology for the state at which a person reaches greatest satisfacti­on. Flow experience­s occur when there is balance between the challenge of an activity and the skill one possesses in performing it.

On display at 214 by CACHE, in the main gallery, 214 S. Main St.

“I learned a lot about what goes into the curation process and was taken aback by how accessible it could be to creatives in the community if they were given the chance to participat­e,” Rojas-Perez says of the program. “This was a space that I previously thought I had no business getting into because I didn’t go to school for it. I realized, very quickly, that the skills needed to complete a project like this were taught to me in other jobs or experience­s and that doesn’t make me, or anyone else, less deserving or unqualifie­d to be a part of this.”

That level of accessibil­ity is what’s sorely needed in the Northwest Arkansas arts community, they asserts.

“Even off the top of my head, I can think of so many people in my community that could pull something like this off if they just had the opportunit­y to do so,” Rojas-Perez demonstrat­es.

“The people that come to mind are creatives with great work ethic that haven’t had the opportunit­y to go to art school, usually due to how expensive and time consuming it is. For my community, I hope it leads to more creative programs with this kind of framework. For myself, I hope it leads to more opportunit­ies as an artist.” Filmmaker and storytelli­ng strategist

Jess Whalen used the lens of the female experience to explore identity, relationsh­ips, social issues and worldview in the exhibition “Her.” The exhibition engages the senses of sight, sound and smell in works all created by women, to mine the depths of the often intensely empathetic, visceral life experience­s

from the female perspectiv­e.

On display at Perrodin Supply Co. 126 N. Shiloh St.

“I think the program’s focus on letting artists curate and showcase other artists helped facilitate a collaborat­ive community,” Whalen says, noting the educationa­l, geographic, monetary and philosophi­c barriers that can often limit the masses’ accessibil­ity to art.

“Also, focusing only on local artists was a really important part of this program. As amazing as all of the art experience­s can be, the focus in formal institutio­ns can be more on bringing in touring pieces or really well-known artists on a national or global scale. This program’s mission to look inward to the community and stay locally focused gives artists a platform that would feel impossible in most other contexts.”

That accessibil­ity seems to have extended to the curators themselves, as well. Seeing the breadth of diversity that surfaced in the artist open call showed Whalen that no matter how artists might struggle with feeling that the community is too full, this is a place for anyone and everyone willing to show up for themselves, she says.

Kellie Lehr is one of the artists featured in “Her.” Through an energizing­ly collaborat­ive process, Lehr worked with Whalen and another artist in the exhibition to actualize a bold and multilayer­ed performati­ve piece for the space.

“I also began making round paintings that come off the wall and hang from the ceiling,”

Lehr says of another of her contributi­ons.

“I like the movement and the way the viewer is encouraged to move around the paintings to see them. There is an element of time and activation involved as they can’t be fully seen simultaneo­usly.”

The flexibilit­y of the exhibition and synergisti­c effort between artists and curator was a refreshing experience, Lehr shares.

“Collaborat­ion creates community,” she offers. “Our region is rich with multi-talented, diverse artists. Interform provides a platform for interactio­n, community building and growth through the arts, and I’m very grateful to be included in the mix.”

Whalen echoes the sentiment, adding: “The fact that I’ve been able to meet so many new artists and that my creative video pieces are being shown alongside people I would consider more ‘legitimate’ than me helps me overcome those imposter syndrome feelings that can sneak in to the minds of artists/creatives. I’m going to carry the simple but impactful growth of confidence and empowermen­t with me as I continue to pursue opportunit­ies and community in the art field.”

 ??  ??
 ?? (Courtesy Photo/Granddose) ?? Little Rock designer Bruce Davis, founder of 22nd Element Clothing and Accessorie­s, was the inaugural designer-in-residence for Interform's EMERGE residency program, started in the fall. Davis received one-on-one mentorship from visiting industry profession­als, along with group workshops with the program's cohort of regional designers. Davis also shared his expertise with the cohort and participat­ed in group critiques, which were just as important to the program, Interform CEO Robin Atkinson says. “It's about bringing people from diverse background­s in to talk about one topic together, which then everybody's sort of having big ‘aha' moments from their interactio­ns with everybody else.” Interform debuts its similar curatorial training program to the community with Assembly.
(Courtesy Photo/Granddose) Little Rock designer Bruce Davis, founder of 22nd Element Clothing and Accessorie­s, was the inaugural designer-in-residence for Interform's EMERGE residency program, started in the fall. Davis received one-on-one mentorship from visiting industry profession­als, along with group workshops with the program's cohort of regional designers. Davis also shared his expertise with the cohort and participat­ed in group critiques, which were just as important to the program, Interform CEO Robin Atkinson says. “It's about bringing people from diverse background­s in to talk about one topic together, which then everybody's sort of having big ‘aha' moments from their interactio­ns with everybody else.” Interform debuts its similar curatorial training program to the community with Assembly.
 ?? (Courtesy Photo/Meredith Mashburn) ?? Designer Brandy Lee is the second designer-in-residence chosen for the EMERGE program. Having been on the design cohort for season one, her pieces featured in the runway event are a continuati­on of a winter collection created in the fall in response to the exhibition “Nick Cave: Until.” “As those pieces transferre­d from being winter to summer, they just kind of transforme­d into something different,” she says of revisiting her winter designs. “And then this whole summer vibe came into play. I got a little more creative; I let the kite string out a little bit further. They’re lots of fun, it’s lots of color, lots of pattern, and it is more along the lines of wearable art, as opposed to ‘typical’ fashion, ready to wear. It’s not ready to wear, that’s for sure.” facebook.com/shopbigsis­terstudio, @bigsisters­tudio on Instagram.
(Courtesy Photo/Meredith Mashburn) Designer Brandy Lee is the second designer-in-residence chosen for the EMERGE program. Having been on the design cohort for season one, her pieces featured in the runway event are a continuati­on of a winter collection created in the fall in response to the exhibition “Nick Cave: Until.” “As those pieces transferre­d from being winter to summer, they just kind of transforme­d into something different,” she says of revisiting her winter designs. “And then this whole summer vibe came into play. I got a little more creative; I let the kite string out a little bit further. They’re lots of fun, it’s lots of color, lots of pattern, and it is more along the lines of wearable art, as opposed to ‘typical’ fashion, ready to wear. It’s not ready to wear, that’s for sure.” facebook.com/shopbigsis­terstudio, @bigsisters­tudio on Instagram.
 ?? (Courtesy Photo/Granddose) ?? “I have always said that fashion is art. Just like a painter or sculptor, fashion designers have to embrace their individual­ity to truly understand their aesthetic of design,” Bruce Davis asserts. But, he notes, two major problems in the fashion industry are hindering social perception of fashion’s artistic value: large companies copying designs from small batch designers to mass produce, and large house names selling the idea of luxury in their clothes. “A petrifying percentage of consumers are working long hours, killing themselves, just so they can be visually and socially accepted. They care more about how much the article of clothing is, and not about how it makes them feel. Fashion is a feeling.” facebook.com/bruce.davis.921, @22ndelemen­t on Instagram.
(Courtesy Photo/Granddose) “I have always said that fashion is art. Just like a painter or sculptor, fashion designers have to embrace their individual­ity to truly understand their aesthetic of design,” Bruce Davis asserts. But, he notes, two major problems in the fashion industry are hindering social perception of fashion’s artistic value: large companies copying designs from small batch designers to mass produce, and large house names selling the idea of luxury in their clothes. “A petrifying percentage of consumers are working long hours, killing themselves, just so they can be visually and socially accepted. They care more about how much the article of clothing is, and not about how it makes them feel. Fashion is a feeling.” facebook.com/bruce.davis.921, @22ndelemen­t on Instagram.
 ?? (Courtesy Photo/Robin Atkinson) ?? Artist Marcela Rojas-Perez works on the installati­on process for a piece in the “Yes. And.…” exhibition as part of Assembly. The exhibition includes 24 artists working across the mediums of painting, installati­on, video, ceramics, photograph­y, sculpture, poetry and all of the above. “Yes. And.…” is curated by Interform CEO Robin Atkinson and is on display on the second floor of the First Security Bank at 100 W. Emma Ave. through June.
(Courtesy Photo/Robin Atkinson) Artist Marcela Rojas-Perez works on the installati­on process for a piece in the “Yes. And.…” exhibition as part of Assembly. The exhibition includes 24 artists working across the mediums of painting, installati­on, video, ceramics, photograph­y, sculpture, poetry and all of the above. “Yes. And.…” is curated by Interform CEO Robin Atkinson and is on display on the second floor of the First Security Bank at 100 W. Emma Ave. through June.
 ?? (Courtesy Photo/Omar Bravo) ?? Sculptor Natalia Franco brings to life a piece of her imaginatio­n land of Goop World with her installati­on “Goop Chunk.” The piece will be the centerpiec­e of curator Omar Bravo's playful and quirky exhibition “(a)Typical Sanctuary.”
(Courtesy Photo/Omar Bravo) Sculptor Natalia Franco brings to life a piece of her imaginatio­n land of Goop World with her installati­on “Goop Chunk.” The piece will be the centerpiec­e of curator Omar Bravo's playful and quirky exhibition “(a)Typical Sanctuary.”
 ?? (Courtesy Photo) ?? Artist Danielle Hatch takes measuremen­ts at the Perrodin Supply Co. in preparatio­n for installing her work in the “Her” exhibition. The exhibition is curated by Jess Whalen (left) and is an exploratio­n of how women process life, the world and the people around them.
(Courtesy Photo) Artist Danielle Hatch takes measuremen­ts at the Perrodin Supply Co. in preparatio­n for installing her work in the “Her” exhibition. The exhibition is curated by Jess Whalen (left) and is an exploratio­n of how women process life, the world and the people around them.
 ??  ?? Franco
Franco
 ??  ?? Whalen
Whalen
 ??  ?? Rojas-Perez
Rojas-Perez
 ??  ?? Bravo
Bravo
 ?? (Courtesy Photo/Robin Atkinson) ?? Jonathan Perrodin is another of the 24 artists showcased in Atkinson's exhibition, “Yes. And….” It is an exhibition that allows art to be only art, she explains, but perhaps also more. Often, the curator's statement says, we have asked art to perform too much, “put too much weight on the back of art to say the things we won't say.” In “Yes. And….”, artists across genres ask the viewer to consider holding two contradict­ory thoughts as true simultaneo­usly: “Allow things to be as complicate­d as they are, find the poetry in that. Allow for both joy and rage. Allow the answer to be, at least when you are in this space: ‘Yes. And….'”
(Courtesy Photo/Robin Atkinson) Jonathan Perrodin is another of the 24 artists showcased in Atkinson's exhibition, “Yes. And….” It is an exhibition that allows art to be only art, she explains, but perhaps also more. Often, the curator's statement says, we have asked art to perform too much, “put too much weight on the back of art to say the things we won't say.” In “Yes. And….”, artists across genres ask the viewer to consider holding two contradict­ory thoughts as true simultaneo­usly: “Allow things to be as complicate­d as they are, find the poetry in that. Allow for both joy and rage. Allow the answer to be, at least when you are in this space: ‘Yes. And….'”
 ?? (Courtesy Photo/Kat Wilson) ?? Lehr
(Courtesy Photo/Kat Wilson) Lehr

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