Turner Center hosts gallery opening

Published 3:00 pm Friday, January 6, 2023

Work from the Regional Artists Community exhibit.

VALDOSTA — The Annette Howell Turner Center for the Arts will hold its first opening reception of the year, 5-7 p.m. Monday, Jan. 9, at 527 N. Patterson St.

The center will feature the 16th Annual DrawProject, the Fourth Annual Regional Artists Community Exhibit and Sheila Goloborotko’s “Many Resilient Things,” a collection of sculpture, printmaking and installation art works, center representatives said in a statement.

Admission is free.

Artworks donated by area artists to the DrawProject fundraiser are auctioned at this annual event to support art scholarships at Valdosta State University. An online auction platform will be used for bidding and paired with a physical exhibition at the Turner Center.

For more information and to see continually updated information for the bidding process and links, visit valdosta.edu/colleges/arts/art/draw-project.php.

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The Regional Artists Community provides opportunities for artists to show and sell their works of art. The Fourth Annual RAC exhibit is just one of the places this is made possible. The 2023 exhibit will feature 30 regional artists, each of whom will be showcasing two pieces.

To learn more about the opportunities provided to RAC members or to join the community, visit turnercenter.org/regional-artist-community-rac/.

“Many Resilient Things” by Goloborotko will feature three-dimensional works of art with a focus on sculpture, printmaking and installation art. The artist is an associate professor of printmaking at the University of North Florida and has her own studio in Jacksonville, Fla.

In a statement about her upcoming exhibit, Goloborotko said, “I gather forms I have made in the past, augment them and rearrange them — and in the process, find new meanings. … When grouped together as they are here, they start to tell a story, but one that is not epic or strives to impress; rather, to my eyes, all these objects hold space for the discarded, the abandoned and the lost.”

She added, “Over the last couple of years, I have had time to ruminate on humans as a species and how we rebuild after a crisis. Even throughout all the difficult predicaments, I came to the conclusion that, ultimately, we are resilient more than we are broken. Nature, too, wants to persist — no matter what we do to her. Exploring such complexities with commonplace materials, during a time when all of us feel broken, has convinced me that all is not lost.”

All exhibits will remain open in the galleries and on the Turner Center website through Wednesday, Feb. 22.

For more information, call (229) 247-2787 or visit turnercenter.org. Patrons who need special assistance may contact the center to make arrangements.