By Dylan Keenan

Come see Hannon Library’s newest art exhibit, a collection of original paintings by Kate Burrow.KBurrowPainting1

KBurrowPainting2Kate Burrow is an Ashland artist that has a distinct style within her painting techniques as well as the canvases she chooses to use. She primarily works with either oil or acrylic paint on scraps of uniquely aged wood, which she usually finds around town. The paintings themselves are portraits of either people she has known, seen, or observed, or of people she envisions one day meeting. Burrow compliments these portraits with bright, vibrant colors that draw the viewer in to understand the character that is being portrayed.

KBurrowPainting3KBurrowPainting5Kate Burrow’s paintings will be on display in the third floor gallery through the July. Visitors can view the exhibit anytime during library business hours.

Photography by F. W. McWhorter

By Alex Mesadieu

comm202Last week, Hannon Library had the bittersweet task of saying goodbye to ten of our student employees—Steven Beatty, Emily Borman, Hannah Gogulski, Mariah Gonzales, Kelsie Lawson, Edward Pay, Haley Petty, Cristian Ramirez, Elizabeth Williams, and Kaiwen Zhang, who have all graduated from SOU.

Student workers play a major role in how the library operates. WithHappy Grad over 16 departments and just 28 non-student employees, student workers are essential to making the library run seven days a week. In exchange for their dedicated service, Hannon Library gives university students unique opportunities for developing skills outside of the classroom experience. Library student workers receive practical training in office management, computing, event planning, customer service, tutoring, and many more skills that are essential for graduates entering the work force.

The staff at Hannon Library wish nothing but success for all of our graduating students. Congratulations class of 2015!

The SOU Gamelan Degung Leuwi Asih – “Beloved Valley” Gamelan – directed by Barb Barasa will offer a free outdoor concert on Thursday, May 28, from noon to 1:00 p.m. at the Library Plaza in front of the Southern Oregon University Hannon Library.

GamelanPhotoThe ensemble will perform traditional gamelan degung music plus a piece by 20th century composer Lou Harrison featuring SOU student Abraham Murillo, French horn, and the premieres of pieces written for the ensemble by two local composers who are also members of the ensemble: “Song for Spring” by I’lana Cotton, featuring Arlene Tayloe, violin; and “Dewi Sri” by Scott Miller. The SOU gamelan musicians are SOU students and community members.

The term “gamelan” refers to both the instruments and the people who perform on them. The instruments are a set of Indonesian chimes, drums and gongs. Each area of Indonesia has a distinct tuning system and style of playing. SOU’s gamelan ensemble plays music of the Sundanese people, an ethnic group that inhabits a small corner of the island of Java. Sundanese gamelan is tuned in a five tone scale.

Gamelan is an ancient form of music which originated on the islands of Indonesia. Traditional gamelan music is cyclic in form and ranges in spirit from meditative and mellow to very energetic. It has influenced western composers like Claude Debussy, John Cage, Steve Reich, Philip Glass, and Mickey Hart.

The performance is FREE and all ages are welcome! Bring your lunch and join us for this popular event.

For more information about Gamelan Leuwi Asih, see the website:
www.sou.edu/music/gamelan.html
or contact Dale Vidmar
vidmar@sou.edu
541-552-6842

By Alex Mesadieu

Last week Hannon Library hosted the triannual Long Night Against Procrastination. Librarians stayed up until midnight helping students with their projects, serving up snacks, holding workshops, and even playing board games and doing yoga with students.

Throughout the night, students and faculty captured the night’s activities on Instagram. Here are some of the best pictures from the night:

#soulongnight     #lnap     #librariansdontjudge

IMG_1138 IMG_1147 IMG_1149 IMG_1153 IMG_1157 IMG_1161 IMG_1173 IMG_1191

by Alex Mesadieu

In many cities the first Friday of the month is no different than the second, third, or fourth; this is not the case for Ashland, Oregon. Here, the first Friday of the month is cause for a citywide celebration of the arts. First Friday Art Walks have become a tradition in Ashland, with galleries, schools, and businesses opening their doors to art-goers of all sorts.

Hannon Library first started hosting Art Walks to showcase artwork and performances created by SOU students. Since May is the month of the Southern Oregon Arts & Research conference — and Hannon Library plays a key role in organizing SOAR — Hannon Library is going big this weekend.

On May 1st, from 6-8 PM, the library will host a First Friday ArtWalk featuring exhibitions from the 2015 SOAR conference. Exhibitions include works from locally renowned artist Amanda Denbeck and McNair Scholar Angela West, a performance from harp player Ella Kunkel, and more:

10 Years, 9 Months, 3 Weeks, and 5 DaysDenbeckImage
Multi-media by Amanda Denbeck
An introduction to the topic of modern day atrocities in an educational environment. It is not only a critical analysis of commercialism of diamonds but it is also a discussion about genocide, specifically in relation to the Sierra Leone Civil War.

Grey Area
Installation by Andres Rivero
A combination of different ‘methods’ that essentially recreates the art done by portrait artists. A computer system will automatically record a person’s portrait, retaining their features, creating a portrait image which is then done in marker watercolor on paper by a different robotic display.

Talcum PowderJim Rock Historic Can Collection
Photography by Hannon Library Digital Projects
Images of historic cans assembled by Jim Rock over his career as an archaeologist with the U.S. Forest Service. He compiled information and provided typologies and dating techniques that have enabled archaeologists and historians to better interpret historical archaeological sites.

PURE ENERGY
Sculpture by Joy Sters
An exhibition focused on the PURE ENERGY that was infused through the plaster during its creation. The PURE ENERGY was harnessed from the bottom of the sculpture and directed into the plaster and twisted up to the top into a point where it exits. PURE ENERGY is the art and technique of arranging energy and vibration in such a way that if one were to place their hand or body part or anything above it, it will be infused with the PURE ENERGY that has been directed to that area.

Danger Games
Video games by Tyler Jasper
A collection of four video games programmed and produced by the artist during his time at SOU.

So whether you want to sit in the infamous mosaic rotunda and listen to soothing harp music, look at tin displays of history, or be informed of the struggles of the people of Sierra Leon through a young artist and historian’s work… Hannon Library has you covered.

 

SOAR First Friday Flyer