July 6, 1978 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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July 6, 1978 |
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RTSPLAN volunteer Betty Bell heads community forum
'rogram, a number of Masoq grassroots of Mason County: its excellent material has come out Included in the ideas offered and more space for learning it. group, too. "Where should you
',aunty artists and persons
in the arts met with
&RTSPLAN volunteer Betty Bell
for a community forum to
determine the needs of the arts
arts comnnmity and appreciators
of the arts.
"I'm a little disappointed
with the number turning out,"
admitled Mrs. Bell, herself a
of the meeting. And a large area
of the county had
representation."
Brainstorming to identify the
needs and problems of the arts
i ¸¸¸>: < "' ;:
COMMUNITY MEMBERS involved in the arts in Mason County mull local
needs during ARTSPLAN meeting June 29.
eterans hold convention
The 25th annual convention wife Bessie.
the Veterans of World War 1 One hundred eighty-two
at Richland from June 18 sisters and 112 buddies registered
June 21 was attended for the meeting, which opened
Shelton members AI R. Sunday with a memorial,
ewald and wife Lela, following which the board of
Page, Ed Wetmoreand administration of both the
sic Club ends season
Perfect weather for the
tluck picnic in tile yard of
&lice Palmer brought the year s
to a close for Shelton"
Club June 27.
FI Guests from Olympia were
elen Fletcher, newly elected
state president of Washington
State Federation of Music Clubs,
and Alice Colyar, state secretary
tal set
Sunday
On Sunday the Olympic
Division of Humanities in
with the Olympic
Association will present
talented young Bremerton
Lisa Davis, in a recital of
flute music. Kevin
of Seattle will be her
aCCompanist.
The program to begin at 2
. in the Choral Room of the
Building will be sponsored
the Division of Humanities as
art of the annual Arts and
Festival on the Olympic
campus.
No admission fee will be
tharged The public is invited to
attend this recital of music by
Opin, Franck, Schumann and
aOrne.
!
ool board
II meet
The regular meeting of the
M. Knight School Board
'be held Monday, July 10 at
p.m. at the school.
and' Northwest District national
coordinator.
Officers of Shelton Music
Club were installed by Past
Presidents Alice Palmer, Opal
Shimek, Lillian Norvold and May
Winiecki. Those serving for
1978-79 are Lou Cowles,
president; Rachel Wagner,
vice-president; Pauline Barrom,
secretary; and Edna Webber,
treasurer. A board meeting will
be called by prcsidem Cowlcs in
August.
Interesting reports of the state
convention were given by Rachel
Wagner, Alice Palmer and Lou
Cowles. Mrs. Fletcher and Mrs.
Colyar contributed to the reports
and gave a resume of coming
plans for the state federation.
At the convention tea June
17 hostessed by the Shelton
Club, a musical interlude was
provided by Marguerite Johnson,
who sang folk songs,
accompanying herself on the
dulcimer. She also gave the
history of this American
instrument and the songs she
sang.
The concert program in the
evening was held in St. Martin's
Abbey Chapel and was presented
by the college department of
music.
During the coffee hour
Saturday morning Tekla Hertz
introduced Ken Fowles, a young
violinist scholarship winner of
Washington Federation in 1977,
and his accompanist, Ken
Boulton. These talented young
people played numbers by Max
Bruch and Ernest Bloch.
A general session and
installation ceremony completed
the convention.
buddies and sisters met to close
the business of the year.
Monday began with a joint
meeting of the sisters and
buddies. City representatives
including chief of police and
secretary of the Chamber of
Commerce welcomed the group
to the city.
The convention closed
Wednesday afternoon with board
of administration of both the
veterans and auxiliary meeting to
plan business for the coming
year. The 26th annual
convention will be held in
Bellingham in June of 1979.
The annual banquet for
District One will be held July 13
in Royal Forks Restaurant in
Bremerton at 12:30 p.m.
SUMJWIER
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was a need for more valid
criteria for teaching and
appreciating art. "People need to
be creative," commented
artist-teacher Maxine Asikainen
of Twanoh Falls. "Confining
someone to copying content or
style is stifling.
"In the beginning, everyone
is creative, and art is what comes
out. As children .grow up, you
have to push harder to get the
creativity."
Cydne Bennington, a
substitute teacher whose degree
is in art, agreed. "I'm a little
disappointed in the arts program
in the junior and senior high,"
Ellinore Gosser
Tile whole town would benefit
by a greater exposure to art."
"Or involvement with it,"
added Ellinore Gasser of the
Pickering Llomemakers, whose
own involvement includes
needlework and quilting.
Involvement is the keynote
to the formation of a statewide
comprehensive plan to develop a
policy offering support of and
access to the arts for all citizens.
Tile ARTSPLAN community
meetings, expressing local
viewpoint and articulating unique
cultural needs of each area, are
the third part of a seven-phase
program under the direction of
Louis R. Guzzo, Governor Dixy
Lee Ray's director of cultural
affairs, and project director
Nancy Meier.
There was agreement aniong
the participants that more
exposure to the fine and
performing arts was needed for
school-age youngsters. Several
attenders agreed that arlists need
a higher profile in the
communities where they are.
"If yo.u're not part of an
organization, you're rather on
your own," mused potter Mary
Ingersoll, who with her husband
Keith Ingersoll, also a potter,
works in the Agate area.
Definition of arts and public
Cydne Bennington
draw the line between arts and
crafts: can you.., or should
you?" queried Sheiton Art Club
member Virginia Eskridge.
A place to show art work
was frequently mentioned.
Several of the attenders from the
North Mason area, including Mrs.
Asikainen, painter Dorothy
Baker of Allyn, and
painter-exhibitor Molly Bates of
Victor, remarked on the fact
that the Belfair Post Office has
long been a showplace for a
revolving series of local artists to
display their work.
Hannah Dehler, South Shore
reporter for the Huckleberry
Herald, conmrented on the need
for more such facilities.
And later, as the participants
worked to prioritize their
concerns, the two groups came
to somewhat similar conclusions.
Keith Ingersoll recorded the
thoughts of one.half the
attenders: a need for "greater
use of parks and public buildings
for art and performing art
activities such as concerts,
festivals and plays."
The other table of grassroots
representatives collated their
results as a need for a
"designated place to display
and/or perfom the arts."
Remaining time was spent
determining possible advantages,
disadvantages, obstacles, and
ways and means of implementing
the filling of such needs.
The information gathered at
the meeting will be added to
that of some 75 other such
forums conducted through June
and July around the state and
used to determine state policy
toward the encouragement of the
arts.
In addition, the ten
participants found in the
exchange of ideas some mutual
strengths and needs, and
produced a body of information
valuable for the local
community.
The remaining question:
where was everybody else?
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I hursday, July 6, 1978 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Page 7
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