Bonnie Peterson
Northern Great Lakes
Visitor Center in Ashland, WI (near Bayfield),
from September 1 - November 7
Connections: Madison Contemporary Fiber Artists
September 1, - October 31, 2016
UW Arboretum Visitors Center,
Steinhauer Trust Art Gallery
1207 Seminole Highway Madison, WI 53711-3726
https://arboretum.wisc.edu/visit/getting-here/
"Close
Reading: Sewn Works by Katherine Kuehn" is a free exhibit at the
Chazen Art Museum from now until October 16th. This is the way it's described:
"Printer Katherine Kuehn explores words with fabric as matrix and thread
as ink in this selection of recent work. She is will discuss her work on
September 22 at 5:30 with a reception afterwards."
"Stitching
History from the Holocaust" is another free exhibit taking place from
September 11-November 13
at the Ruth Davis Design Gallery at the School for
Human Ecology (formerly, Home Ec) at 1300 Linden Drive in Madison. Check the
hours, as the hours for this building vary quite a bit.
Here's the description: "Dresses and
Accessories made from original sketches by HedyStrnad who perished in the
Holocaust will be on view. Exhibit created by and on loan from the Jewish Museum
Milwaukee. Panel discussion 'The Story Behind the Exhibition' will take place
on September 11 at 1:00 with a reception afterwards."
"Quilt
Nihon http://wiquiltmuseum.com/exhibits/current-exhibits/quilt-nihon":
A display of 32 award-winning quilts from the 12tth Quilt Nihon Exhibition in
Japan, the largest international quilting contest in Japan is on exhibit August
18 through November 13, 2016 at the Wisconsin Museum of Quilts and Fiber Arts
in Cedarburg, WI. There is an admission charge of about $8, and there is said
to be considerable road construction which most GPS and Google Maps info gets
wrong: apparently, MapQuest provides reliable info around the road construction
Beading Culture: Raised Beadwork and the Oneida
Nation of Wisconsin
September 16 - November 6 James Watrous Gallery
in Overture Center for the Arts, Madison,WI
Beading Culture showcases the work of Wisconsin
Oneida artists dedicated to the survival of one of their most important
artistic traditions: Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) raised beadwork. Created in
partnership with the Oneida Nation Arts Program, the exhibition tells a
complex, layered story of cultural resilience and the role of art in defining
community.