Sunday, April 22, 2018

Fantastic Wedding Memory


Karen Raidy is poised on the terrace of an historic venue adjacent to Washington University with brush in hand. She has carved a niche for herself as a portrait artist who captures moments. The work in progress is shaping up as a fantastic image that surely the couple will cherish. Norma and Carlos celebrate their wedding dinner on April 21, 2018 while the artist ponders the poetic license of a composition that will most certainly be a treasure.

Visit her website to learn more at www.weddingartlive.com  

UMSL PANEL – The Future of Marketing 2018


Marketing Club president Amber Daniels did an artful job, as moderator, including each of the eight panelists: Alison Boland (Purina), Elizbeth Ledbetter (Creative Group), Angela Marino (United Way), Nick Sylvia (Anheuser Busch), Sarah Dalton (Nolan Investment), Steve Bauer (Fleishman-Hillard), Travis Estes (Saint Louis Symphony) and Wes Morgan (Morgan Studio/East).

Questions included probes of: a good academic breakdown of traditional vs digital content; learning digital/social media skills; staying current; mobile and the next disruptor; breaking down silos between creative, PR, customer relations, development, etc; marketing as service;       leveraging influencers; and how brands earn trust. The panel is rich in diverse backgrounds/experience. They came prepared to share insights and have been well briefed by UMSL organizers from the marketing club.

The Summit Lounge in the J.C. Penney conference center was converted into a lively venue with about 100 people in the room on a Wednesday afternoon from 5:00 to 7:00 pm. (April 17, 2018). A streaming of the panel is posted for students and others to view and review. This event is part of what Professor Perry Drake defines as a mission in the College of Business to help students build personal brands, shape careers, futures, and provide access through networking opportunities, with speakers and companies.  

Saturday, April 7, 2018

Farid Rasulov at Laumeier


Coffee, Conversation, 1001 Skewers and Bird #1

Azerbaijani artist Farid Rasulov and Curator Dana Turkovic sat comfortably at one end of the Aronson Fine Arts Center to discuss Farid’s 1,001 Skewers (in the gallery space) and the artist’s Bird #1 abstract installation (outdoors in the Northern Grove) at Laumeier Sculpture Park. Dana has an easy interview style that allows the artist many opportunities to embellish his motivation for creating the composition of 1,001 skewers. Farid draws attention to 75 skewers arranged on one wall and the invitation to add a sort of social media conversation. He notes another wall and a gallery space installation that is reminiscent of a DNA strain. He has taken advantage of the height of the wall to the west to create a tree composed entirely of skewers. The remaining wall, as one guest suggests, may have a calculated mathematical significance.
Farid is soft spoken and not at all boastful or arrogant in spite of a long list of artistic accomplishments. He represented Azerbaijan at the 53rd Venice Biennale. His work includes large scale paintings, installations, 3D graphics, animation and sculpture. Dana invited the artist to comment on his training in medicine. His response in a measured tone is a statement that an artist does not need to go to school to learn art. He adds, matter of factly, that an artist can learn a great deal from the study of medicine as he has. (This notion gets a polite laugh from patrons seated in the gallery.) A local artist employed by Kiku Obata & Company Design Consultancy defends the formal artist training. (This is a comment from an man originally from Baku, Azerbaijan himself).

Farid’s Bird #1 sculpture was inspired by a graphic representation of an abstract and angular bird design he wondered about in a carpet from his native country perhaps while working in Baku. Now he is part of this exhibition and the outdoor installation in Saint Louis which is the continuation of an exploration series of works from emerging national economies around the globe. 

Azerbaijan, the nation and former Soviet republic, is bounded by the Caspian Sea and Caucasus Mountains, which span Asia and Europe. Its capital, Baku, is famed for its medieval walled Inner City. Within the Inner City lies the Palace of the Shirvanshahs, a royal retreat dating to the 15th century, and the centuries-old stone Maiden Tower, which dominates the city skyline.