Witnessing the Creative Process at Buffalo Arts Studio

Buffalo Arts Studio, located on the fifth floor of bustling Tri-Main Center on Main Street (the main entrance is on Halbert Street around the corner) near the city’s Parkside neighborhood, is a pillar of the city’s art scene. With dozens of resident artists, an extensive education program, and a year-round exhibition schedule, BAS is a place for fine art lovers. 

Visiting Tri-Main Center is a treat for the senses. Colorful flowers bloom in heavy planters by the entrance, people are always buzzing about the massive lobby in this former industrial space (Tri-Main is a reference to Trico windshield wipers, which were once manufactured here), and the scents of delicious fare waft from The Lunchbox restaurant and Landies Candies.

Founded in 1991, BAS began with the vision of a local artist, Joanna Angie, who created a communal and safe environment for artists of all genres. Gradually BAS expanded into the 20,000 square feet it fills today. Open five days a week (BAS is closed on Sundays and Mondays) anyone may visit the galleries, gift shop and resident artist studios. 

BAS studio artists are a diverse mix of established artists and those beginning their artistic practice. To become a studio artist means an application, interview with resident artists, and proof of an active studio practice. It’s acceptable – and part of the mission – for visitors to witness the creative process and to ask artists questions. 

“Studio visits are on the casual side, and you can have privacy if you need it, no one will intrude,” says Julia Bottoms, an artist who makes figurative portraits. “Our studios are open in the sense that it allows people to see what goes into producing art. Society sometimes creates the idea that art just makes itself; when people see artists in their studios they see the amount of actual work we put into pieces — you can see the  progression of a piece from week to week, and how hard we work to make it come to life. It allows young artists and students to get an idea of what it means to be an artist.”

Julia Bottoms at BAS / Photo: Buffalo Arts Studio

“I’m in my studio four or five days a week for a few hours each time,” says Muhammad Zaman, who’s known for calligraphic work on paper and canvas. “It’s really nice to have a studio at BAS. When you have a home studio you can get bored but at BAS there are people always around – other artists, and visitors. You can engage with them, and they can learn about your work. We get all types of people visiting, some are high school students, some are college students, and there are also artists visiting from different places. They’ll admire the work and have questions about your artistic process.”

Muhammad Zaman at his studio at BAS / Photo: Nancy J. Parisi

Adult art classes abound (and fill up quickly): offerings may be found on the BAS website. Clay classes are popular, learning how to throw pieces on a wheel, but classes may reflect the practice and focus of a resident artist. BAS’s Jump Start Program is one of the most vital youth arts educational opportunities within the city, with approximately 40 high school students aged 13-18 selected for this yearlong program that meets weekly on Saturdays. 

“Every two years we have The Jump Start exhibit, open to current participants as well as past cohorts,” says BAS Director of Visual Arts Shirley Verrico. Additionally, there is the annual Studio Artist Show and Sale, always held in December in time for holiday gift-giving. BAS is also renowned for their annual fundraisers; huge social events drawing a large art-buying, people-watching, and drink-sipping crowd in the BAS galleries, studios, and classrooms.

Buffalo Arts Studio visitors will have an artful respite with an array of work to see and experience – all within the welcoming micro-community in the Tri-Main hive of creativity, activism, and commerce. 


Buffalo Arts Studio
2495 Main Street, Suite 500, Buffalo, NY
buffaloartsstudio.org

The post Witnessing the Creative Process at Buffalo Arts Studio appeared first on Visit Buffalo Niagara.

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BREAKING: California Republican Congressman Quits the GOP, Effective Immediately

Republican Congressman Kevin Kiley of California has announced he is ditching the GOP, instead becoming an independent "effective immediately."

The post BREAKING: California Republican Congressman Quits the GOP, Effective Immediately first appeared on Mediaite.

Trump has massively misjudged the American people — and it could be his downfall



U.S. missiles and bombs have so far caused at least 1,168 civilian deaths in Iran, including 188 schoolchildren. Seven American service members have perished.

A direct line connects this violence with the U.S. government’s violence over the past year against people in Minneapolis, Chicago, and other American cities. And with the violence at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021.

Behind it all is the vicious bully now occupying the Oval Office.

If you’re feeling angry, you’re not alone. I see it in your comments. I’m struck by how you are fighting back against this tyranny, nonetheless.

Sue Fraser Frankewicz, age 80, suggests we connect with the nearest Indivisible group “and get outside — march or witness or go to meetings with similarly disgusted smart people like yourself. Get yourself a button-maker and then find some great sentiments and make them into buttons and give them away.” She says such activities give her energy and hope and she’s “not giving up the fight!”

Martin asks us to “help vulnerable and needy people in our communities, who are now more vulnerable than ever.”

Jonni says she finds it useful to “focus on the consequences for the midterms” and know that “every evil thing this administration does has the silver lining of creating a blue wave. Each of us can make a contribution to end this regime.”

Klare K wants so many of us to march and protest on March 28 — the next No Kings Day — that “Trump’s head will explode.”

Jane, who describes herself as disabled and practically housebound, says she “keeps calling, texting, and emailing” her congressional representatives. And although they don’t respond, she “won’t give up on this battle to save our country.”

Others of you are protecting immigrants in your community from ICE.

You’re helping people get to polling places in special elections.

You’re organizing and mobilizing the grassroots of America.

I take great comfort from your courage and tenacity — turning your anger into positive action, fighting against the loathsome sociopath and his dreadful regime.

I’ll continue to support you in every way I can.

We will get through these dark days. In fact, I believe we’ll be stronger for having gone through them. We’ll have a sharper sense of what we value, and why.

Hopefully, we’ll also understand how we arrived at this cataclysm, how America got so badly off track that we allowed a dictator to take over this nation. And we’ll make necessary changes so it never happens again.

Polls show most Americans are now firmly against Trump. Most of us don’t want this war. Most of us reject his brutal immigration dragnet. Most of us are against his usurping powers that belong to Congress and the people. Most of us are appalled by his corruption, self-dealing, and brazen ignorance.

We will continue to resist, with ever more resolve. We will continue to protest and march, in even greater numbers. Our voices will grow even louder.

And when the darkness lifts, we will rebuild.

We’ll get big money out of our politics. We’ll tax concentrated wealth and use the proceeds for affordable child care, elder care, and universal health care. We’ll have a living wage. We’ll bust up monopolies and strengthen unions. We’ll seek to restore America’s moral authority in the world.

We will honor those who stood up to this tyranny. And we will hold accountable those who have enabled it, who have broken the law, trod on our Constitution, and made themselves rich while causing needless suffering.

In all these ways, my friends, we will prevail.

  • Robert Reich is an emeritus professor of public policy at Berkeley and former secretary of labor. His writings can be found at https://robertreich.substack.com/. His new memoir, Coming Up Short, can be found wherever you buy books. You can also support local bookstores nationally by ordering the book at bookshop.org