[ETC-Discussion] Ride Companion in the News
Randall & Barb
angell2 at teamangell.com
Fri Oct 23 12:53:24 EDT 2009
Just a note that our ride companion and ETC member, Eleni Teshome, was noted
in an article (she is shown wearing her colorful sweater in write-up) in the
Seattle Times Thursday. Follow link below - we have inserted text below in
case link does not open for you.
Randall & Barb
TeamAngell
Bothell, WA
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/cgi-bin/PrintStory.pl?document_id=2010113373&zsection_id=2003960242&slug=blindart22m&date=20091022
Blind artists show their works through Friday
By Nancy Bartley
Seattle Times staff reporter
When Becky Bell shapes her pottery she expresses how she felt as a girl
walking through a Kansas cornfield with her father, or standing in a
swirling snowstorm, or feeling warm candle wax collapse in her hands.
Although as a blind woman, she can't see the art she creates; Bell draws
from a rich interior world built on life experiences. Having studied pottery
since she was young, living in France with her Army colonel father, she
wanted other blind artists to have a chance to showcase their work and
talked officials at the Washington Talking Book & Braille Library in Seattle
to host its first art show.
The show, which opened Monday and closes at 4 p.m. Friday, features the work
of 12 artists, mainly from Western Washington.
Across the nation, blind artists have been increasingly recognized over the
past three decades, thanks to the National Exhibits by Blind Artists (NEBA),
which was founded in Pennsylvania but now is an acclaimed leader in giving
blind artists from all over the United States a forum for expressing their
talent through juried shows throughout the United States and abroad. The
Seattle show, the first of its kind, is not an NEBA show, but Seattle's
blind artists can apply to be included in the traveling exhibits.
"This came together kind of quickly," said Danielle King, program manager
for the library. "It's important for patrons to showcase their work, and for
sighted people who aren't aware of the breadth of the capabilities" of the
blind.
Bell's pieces are circular, smooth, pleasantly tactile. "I like things that
feel like they come from the ocean," she said. "Close your eyes and see how
it feels."
Another artist, Jessica Thompson, displayed a wire sculpture of hands, which
she called "Homage," a tribute to her own hands and all they do for her. She
said a few years ago she was given a bucket of crayons by a hospital
therapist who told her to draw, and for the first time since childhood she
did. Since then, her art gives expression to her unsaid emotions.
Like Thompson and Bell, Eleni Teshome lives in Seattle and has art on
exhibit - complicated and colorful sweaters with perfect designs and no
missed stitches. She knits, marking the place to switch colors by measuring
sections with her fingers.
Teshome has knitted since she was a girl but it took on new meaning after
she lost her eyesight in the late 1980s.
"I'm content and totally engaged in it," Teshome said. She makes things for
herself, for others and sometimes weaves her emotions into the product, such
as the piece she calls "Journey to Jerusalem," which has holes in it to
represent the holes in the gates to Jerusalem.
The Seattle library for the blind, the only one in the state, is part of the
Washington state library system and one of 57 regional libraries for the
blind in the U.S., said Jan Walsh, the Washington state librarian."I'm not
at all surprised to see how beautiful the work is," said Walsh, who dropped
in from Olympia for the show. "We need to honor our patrons and show what
amazing work they can do."
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