You still have an opportunity to visit
the Scott Center at Carroll Community College and study the Stay Gold,
Portraiture by Tyler Farinholt.
Stay Gold explores themes of masculinity, anxiety,
isolation and identity. This body of work focuses on the faces of young black
males, Tyler said. Gold add a richness to the portraits and a feel of
optimism for the future.
Tyler Farinholt |
I also attended several events Tyler curated during
the past several years. One especially impressed me. It was a Jeffrey Kent
exhibit, held at the Frederick Douglass Isaac Myers Maritime Park Museum.
You can read what I wrote about that exhibit in See or Hear, Write or Preach
at josobservations.blogspot.com, posted on 3/7/2013. His exhibit focused more
on the past, such as slavery, black culture and equal rights.
Both visual artists used
their creative instincts to communicate - to share experiences, thoughts and
dreams with others. Tyler and Jeffrey Kent both communicate some of the black
experience through their art. Writers do the same with words. Both arts require
creativity, looking at the world the way it was, is and could be. Both try to
stir emotions and create discussion.
Tyler
is an artist, educator and curator based in Baltimore. Educated at MICA, he
teaches art to disadvantaged youth in East Baltimore as a member of MICA’s
Office of Community Engagement.
He is a graduate of Westminster High
School. Previously,
he worked with the education department at the Walters Art Museum He has
curated exhibitions with the Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts and
Area 405.
Betty Houck and Lona Queen viewed
Tyler's art at the opening reception.
|
Tyler also has been featured in
exhibitions at Hillyer Art Space, the Columbia Art Center, CCBC and Artspace
Herndon. He was a recipient of the 2016 Maryland State Arts Council Individual
Artist Award in Visual Arts.
You can see more of his work at www.tylerfarinholt.com.
The Carroll County Times ran a front page
story on February 18, about Tyler’s
exhibit in the Gallery in the Scott Center and that of Jinie Park’s mixed-media
exhibit, “Observations in Paint” in the college’s Babylon Great Hall. Parks
also studied at MICA, but prefers working with fabric and abstract creations.
Jessi Hardesty, curation of collections and exhibits
at the college was thrilled at the number of people who attended the opening
reception for the artists. She told me she had first seen Tyler’s business card
in a coffee shop. She was excited about the power in his portraits.
When planning the exhibit, she thought of the
difference in the approaches of the two MICA educated artists and decided their
different styles would be a good match. I agree. The exhibits are different but
both seem to ask you to study them, to think about what you see and to just
enjoy the artistry.
The exhibits at Carroll Community College, 1601
Washington Road, Westminster, Maryland are free. The exhibits will run through
March 24. You can check the college website, www.carrollcc.edu for gallery hours.
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