Showing posts with label Erika Mock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Erika Mock. Show all posts

Friday, October 20, 2017

Quick Preview of Tonight's Show @ Goin' Postal, Plus a Peek at KM's "Chance" at the Tweed

Last night was a busy arts night in the Twin Ports, at least for those who tried to catch Chance (Kathy McTavish's new exhibit) at the Tweed and simultaneously needed to get ready for the Goin' Postal 2017 Fall Art Show tonight. In the interest of giving "Chance" the suitable coverage it deserves, I will save my notes and most of the photos for another post soon.

The lights were on late last night as Andrew & Becky Perfetti and friends busied themselves with hanging tonight's show at 816 Tower Avenue in Superior. A shipping store by day, it's also an art gallery (salon style), music studio and creative space for a range of other interests.

The Fall Art Show will be from 6 to 9 with an afterparty down the street at Top Hat Tavern (the current iteration of the former Cove) with a special appearance by Laura Velvet and the Bookhouse Boys and (rumor has it) live painting by Dusty Keliin.

There will be some wonderful new images by John Heino, always a treat.
There will be art of all stripes, plus friends of the arts, old and new. Three new contributors to this year's who are Adam McCauley, Eric Dubnicka and Elizabeth Kuth. Others who have produced and brought new work for tonight include Glenn Blaszkiewicz, Becky Perfetti, Andrew Perfetti, Tal Lindblad, Marcie Crain, Dusty Keliin, John Heino, Ed Newman, John Dromeshauser aka Johnny Mudd, Ash Marnich, Richard Rosvall, Tara Stone, Kerry Gauthier, and Cully Williams.

Will you join us?

Detail from one of three abstract paintings by Elizabeth Kuth.
Another gem.

HERE ARE SOME IMAGES FROM LAST NIGHT AT THE TWEED

Entrance to the Gallery.

Jonathan Thunder, an emerging Native artist gaining national attention.
Christine Strom (L) of Tweed staff with textile artist Erika Mock.
FWIW, Erika Mock makes wearable art and is having a special Live four-day show online at her Etsy store here. Type in the code YES17 to receive Free Shipping during the four days of this sale. Check it out. Original Christmas gift ideas or just a little color for yourself to get you through some drab winter days.

Meantime, art goes on all around you. And yes, I do hope you can make it to our Goin' Postal Fall Art Show tonight. (And don't forget 2-5 at the Joseph Nease Gallery tomorrow.) And... 

Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Almost Wordless Wednesday: More Art from Bayfront Park

Osogbo: Prince of Art
If you ever need Cash, contact Kristi Abbott
Yesterday I wrote about Bob Dylan's Dreams. Are you following yours?





Every home should have a Husby mug or bowl. We do.

There was something for everyone.
Hope you found what you were looking for.
* * * *

Meantime, here's a reminder that tomorrow, early evening, there is a Pop Up Shop & Open Studio event that is being called THINKING STONES // CONNECTING THREADS. Details HERE on Facebook. Kristina creates sensory sculptural work and paintings. Erika produces free-spirited eco-wearables.

Make the most of your day! It will be gone tomorrow.

Monday, April 10, 2017

Heads Up! Erika Mock Textiles' Online Art Show Goes Live Wednesday

Erika Mock is an award-winning, outside-the-box Twin Ports-based textile artist. (See our 2013 interview here.) When I learned of her upcoming online art show I asked for details so I could share them.

Erika's Invitation

Background: It started with 2 questions: How do we honor transitions? How can my work reach out during a month I'll be moving my studio but not able to be on the road?

April is such a time of transitions. Winter into Spring (in the northern hemisphere). Easter. Mother's Day coming up. In my own creative life, I am once again moving my studio, which means I won't be on the road. So what does it look like to create an event that has access from anywhere, at anytime? Something inviting, and easy. The Online Art Show was born!

What: The Online Art Show is a special series of affordable new pieces inspired by my recent winter working on Pine Island in Florida. I began a new series there called 'Believe the Bird'.... I'm studying, watching, observing, learning from birds about energy, flight, the qualities of air.... and.... who we are as humans.

Many of the pieces offered are 'feathers'... small affordable eco-scarves that easily drape around the neck or shoulders. How do we wear our energy? How do we lighten up, yet stay in our bodies in times of transition? Especially in this current crazy time of extremes in the world.

Feathers remind us of levity, that we have wings, that we can shift our energy with air; by breath, lighten up. That we can discern... make our choices without judgement.

Feathers, when found, are often a gift.... so there is a gift for you, too! Free shipping from Wednesday April 12 thru Midnight April 14.

Look for free-spirited eco wraps /scarves, pulse warmers, and more. Most of the pieces are created in my Duluth studio and finished in the caboose in the forest where I live, infused with peeper song, and an occasional night bird. They are filled with positive transition juju! They are waiting for you to add the rest of the story.

When and How it works:
1) Sale starts Wednesday, April 12 and goes until midnight Friday, April 14.
2) Shop here: www.etsy.com/shop/ErikaMock ..... Peruse the work in the comfort of your own time and space.
3) At checkout enter code: FLY17 to receive free shipping (continental US)*
Feel free to contact me with any questions​: erikamock@gmail.com
You can preview items for sales on Facebook: www.facebook.com/ErikaMockTextiles​

*purchases may be made after Friday April 14, but free shipping is no longer in effect.



* * * *
A Quick Plug Before Closing
It only seems right to add this addendum. If I'm going to plug one Etsy store, I may as well draw attention to my daughter's Picture Book Boutique. One-of-a-kind gifts for the wee ones. Ideal for baby showers and any other occasion where you want to make an impression.

Her blocks are very popular. It's been fun to watch her work evolve. I love all the five star reviews and the personalization.

Meantime, art goes on all around you. Get into it.

Friday, February 28, 2014

Twin Ports Gigs and Happenings As We March Toward Spring

Fiber Art by Erika Mock
Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen. ~Hebrews 11:1

Here it is the last day of February. Thirty below on my thermometer yesterday. Minus nineteen at the moment. I was about to say that based on these thermometer readings there's no evidence of spring approaching. Such a conclusion is untrue, however. Jack Frost is just doing a little magic using a bit of misdirection. If we focus too hard on the temperatures we might fail to notice that the days are getting longer. Spring really is around the corner.

Here's my "short list" of events to make note of.

Minerva Zine Party at PROVE
The Second Annual Minerva Zine Party will be tonight at the PROVE Gallery in downtown Duluth. According to their Facebook invitation the event begins at 7:00 p.m. this evening and continues till 11:00 p.m. tomorrow. Minerva is a local feminist zine co-founded by Laura Gapske. The happening will include zine art, live readings of zine poetry, a library of zines for review and music by The Social Disaster starting at 8.

Perspectives and Parallels at the Tweed
Next Tuesday the Tweed Museum is hosting a symposium and reception for Perspectives and Parallels, from 4:00-8:00 p.m. Jill Doefler, professor of American Indian Studies at UMD, will moderate the discussion featuring guest-curators and writers who have curated past Tweed exhibitions  including Mni Sota (Dyani White Hawk), Encoded (John Hitchcock), Blood Memoirs (Amber-Dawn Bear Robe), and writers Amy Lonetree and Joanna Bigfeather. Topics such as Native American Identity, voice, and historical representation will be examined. (There will be no Tweevenings in March)

Ed Newman Book Signing at the Superior Library
If you miss my book signing because you attended Perspectives and Parallels, you are excused. I would be there myself if I weren't already slated here. In 2011 TJ Lind and I formed a publishing company of sorts called N&L Publishing. We published four eBooks at Amazon.com, three volumes of short stories and my Young Adult novel The Red Scorpion. Due to our inability to get newspapers to review my eBooks and other experiences, we decided to bring these four books into print. Unremembered Histories is the first of these.

TJ will be flying back to the midwest today from his Rhode Island college and will be on hand as we make a short presentation about my writing experiences and our mutual publishing experiences. We will then be donating two books to the Superior Library. There's a surprise coming, but I can't tell you about it right now. Why? Because then it wouldn't be a surprise.

Open Fridays @ Erika Mock's Studio 
Erika Mock is opening her studio every Friday in February and March from noon till 7:00.  Mock is a textile and fiber artist whose studio is up in the far back of the Red Mug building, which houses a number of other artists including the Mud Sisters and Terry Millikan. Today is a "No Snow" day so there will be more parking available than the past few weeks. Grab a bite to eat at the Red Mug, or fresh bread at the bakery. Or find any other excuse you can to drop in and say hi. Special of the Day: 10% off wings and pulse warmers.

Playlist Growing for the Salute to the Music of Bob Dylan
Magic Marc Percansky and John Bushey of KUMD's Highway 61 Revisited will be the honorary MCs for this event. The house band looks to be all aces, consisting of Billy Hallquist, Gary Lopac, Matt Fink, Stan Kipper, Chico Perez, Lonnie Knight, Ralph Dacut. Confirmed guest artists include: Barry Thomas Goldberg, Gene LaFond, James Loney, Paul Metsa, Courtney Yasmineh and, yes, Scarlet Rivera once again. Several others are in the wings as we await confirmations.

Mark your calendar for Saturday May 17. Tickets are on sale now for this Armory Arts and Music Center fund raiser spectacular.

Meantime, life goes on all around you. Engage it.

Friday, December 27, 2013

Artist Interviews: Best of 2013 (Part 1)

From the magical world of Wendy Rouse.
I had the privilege of meeting a lot of exceedingly creative and interesting people again this year. People are endlessly fascinating, and artists especially so. Here is a list of the artists I interviewed in 2013 from January to June, most from our region but some from abroad. All of them with something to say worth sharing.

When asked if I have a favorite contemporary artist, by answer will probably always be the same: whoever's work I have most recently looked at. There are so many talented, innovative people doing such remarkable work today. It's a privilege to be associated with them.

Plein aire painter and charcoal artist Ken Marunowski

Painter Michael Soltis of Vancouver

Fiber artist and Superior arts advocate Erika Mock 

Illustrator Emily Wendlund

Multi-media artist Jacob Swanson

Vivid colorist Alison Price

Photographer/arts advocate Andrew Perfetti

Innovator and roller dame Laura Gapske

The dedicated, creative Ryan LaMahieu

Steampunk story teller Eric Horn

Painter Sarah Brokke 

The inventive Bridgett Riversmith 

Heroic painter and more, Anne Labovitz 

Renaissance-inspired painter Wendy Rouse 

Florida pastel-artist Maria Podrero

AJ Atwater and Project 30/30

Thank you for sharing yourselves here at Ennyman's Territory.


Monday, February 4, 2013

Spotlight On Fabric Artist Erika Mock

Erika Mock, far right
Erika Mock is an award winning textile artist, designer, knitter, weaver, and instructor who for the past 24 years has been exhibiting and selling her work at juried art shows across the nation. She has also been playing a vital role in the rejuvenation of the City of Superior by means of the arts, most visibly demonstrated in the Phantom Galleries Superior.

EN: How did you first become interested in the arts as a life direction?
Erika Mock: Born in Switzerland, I come from an Alpine culture where the arts were part of the everyday, integrated into school and family. Creativity was fostered. My family sang together for a time. I began playing wooden recorder at an early age. My mother would give us art assignments that explored materials and set up a kind of joyful practice.

In kindergarten I remember a whole- class project building a to-scale model of our village out of clay, paper, and wood. It was an extraordinary way to be introduced to ‘seeing’ by actually making ‘the place I lived‘ via a child’s sense of landscape and architecture.


EN: What drew you to textile art?
EM: Textiles are in my bones. A practice in fiber was seeded even before my mother taught me to knit at age 4. I cannot explain this. It just is. After graduating with a Music Therapy degree and finishing my internship in CT, I struggled for a year in the post graduation muck of job-searching and not knowing what to do. During that time I designed and knit sweaters as a meditation to find clarity. After a year, I flipped my attitude, stopped ‘looking’ for work and created it instead. I moved on to found a music therapy program in Appleton Medical Center’s Cardiac Rehab Program and almost simultaneously became co-owner of a yarn and fiber retail shop. My business partner, who I met during my sweater year, was a weaver with a BFA in textiles. We taught each other our art forms and started growing our business.

My spirit became restless working in the confines of a medical system not yet ready to embrace holistic medicine and in 1985 I relocated north to Solon Springs to pursue performing music. In the search to remake my life I attended a Minnesota Crafts Council Annual meeting in Duluth. The weaving I was doing then received enthusiastic response. They introduced me to the world of Juried Art Festivals which set in motion my current 24 year career as a professional studio artist taking the free spirited wearables I make into the everyday; showing and selling them in cities and communities across the US.

EN: Your work is so colorful. Can you explain why color is so magical?
EM: Color is the clothing of beauty. Beauty is a call to awaken. ‘Yes, you can,’ their voice says.

Working with color is alchemy. It is an intricate play of presence and absence; a dance between layers of mood and memory. Color lives only in the relationship between things; the visible and the invisible. The story reveals only when thought stops.

EN: What prompted you to take such an interest in bringing art into the community as you have done with Phantom Galleries Superior?
EM: I wanted to risk something. I wanted to explore how art and community intertwined could bring forward a deeper vitality.

I took a courageous leap into catalyzing potential at a time when synergy, willingness, and resources came to the table together. The support and partnership of the WI Arts Board over the last 5 years has been invaluable to helping create a foundation for bringing art to the community.

After moving my studio into Superior’s Trade and Commerce Marketplace, I began curating textile biennials of the regions premiere fiber artists to raise the understanding of fiber as an art form. The last in 2008, Venus…co-curated with poet Ellie Schoenfeld and artist Jo Wood, paired poets and fiber artists to work together, introduced an open source project: The Community Loom and was so successful it raised the bar on how artists were inspired to collaborate.

After doing Textile Research in Guatemala in 2007, I made a choice to put energy into this local community instead of contribute there.

As Thomas Moore stated, “We can’t begin to live a more artful life, which is the avenue to soul, if in the public life around us, and in everything we see and inhabit, art is invisible.”

EN: In what ways do you see art as an essential piece of the communities we build and live in?
EM: The arts are advocacy for the imagination.

EN: Briefly, can you summarize what most excites you about the current developments in the art scene here in Superior?
EM: Momentum. Art is on the move in Superior….. It’s visible and vibrant and it’s showing up in fantastic non-traditional spaces—the Bowling Alley, ‘Goin Postal, Engwall/Wolff’s Flower Shop, The Main Club, VIP, 4 vacant downtown storefronts, on the streets, in the Public Library, in the alleys behind businesses. And don’t forget the Trade and Commerce Marketplace, lovingly known as The Red Mug building.

Collaborations. Over and over again you find the incredible potential in a group that convenes with mindful intention to create something.

The pleasure in not knowing. There’s something authentic and juicy and relevant about working with what and who shows up. Phantom Galleries in particular is a large living sculpture in which the elements constantly change and rub against each other to activate the spirit of this community.


EdNote: Thank you for sharing here, and for all you're doing for the City of Superior.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

First Phantom Gallery Opening Nicely Attended

In Superior Thursday evening the Phantom Galleries project officially kicked off with an open house that included greeters from the Chamber of Commerce. The adventure has begun.

Erika Mock, who has a space at Art in the Alley, is one of many who have rolled up their sleeves to bring about this union of the arts community, the business community and civil government. With months of groundwork now behind, it was nice to see the doors opened for this initial launch.

The reception was held at 1410 Tower Avenue. Jeredt Runions, another Phantom Galleries artist, has a small space across the street two blocks down, and a third artist kitty-korner from there. The artists here were Ken Kollodge and his wife Kathy. He's a photographer fascinated with the interplay of light and ice. She's a painter. He calls his work "Iced Light" which has an enigmatic quiality that I liked. The Kollodge's moved to Superior six years ago after three decades in Alaska.

In a thank you note to everyone involved with Phantom Galleries, Erika wrote, "It is very exciting to see the once vacant raw space at 1410 Tower Ave become vibrant with people as well as art. Each of our locations provides a different experience. Though 1302 and 1213 Tower provide window viewing only, we hope you find many elements with which to engage in all 3 of our current installations."

Red Interactive, which John Heino and I have been assembling, will be on display in the second round of Phantom Galleries later this fall. You can follow the development of that project on Facebook. You're even invited to join.

If you missed last Thursday's Phantom experience, save the date Thursday August 25th for the next event downtown Superior. Evidently they have some surprises in store for us.

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