February 17th, 2010
Artist party on Feb. 25th 6 pm-8pm



October 27th, 2009
Jeffery Peeno was born and raised in Northern Kentucky. Early in his schooling Jeffery was diagnosed with a learning disability that made it difficult for him to focus. In high school jeffery discovered art. It was his love of art that gave him the confidence to improve himself in all areas of learning. He attended film school at Temple University where he also continued his study of fine arts. He currently teaches art in Northern Kentucky and hopes that other students with problems in the classroom will find success through art. He has a wife named Alison, who he dedicates this show to, and a son named Jasper.

August 2nd, 2009
Mike Maydak is the creator and illustrator of 1782: The Year of Blood, a comic book about the pioneer and Native American history of the Ohio valley region of that year. Mike was a recipient of the Al Smith Individual Artist Fellowship Award from the KAC in 2007. He currently resides in the northern reaches of Kentucky where he teaches art, paints and hastily works on his next graphic novel.


July 9th, 2009
Donald Crank
Mute
Bio:
I grew up in Pakistan as a missionary kid from the age of four to the age of thirteen, when my family found the region too unsafe for Americans and returned to the United States. Since then I have had to grapple with the implications of being a stranger in an equally strange land.
But that’s not quite what my art is about. In fact, talking about art is one of those things that people try to do, and so often fail to do, however good at it they believe they are. While that will not stop me from forging on anyway, I would like to suggest that the most important aspect of art or literature, music or good race-car driving is the ineffable part.
Look at it this way: a good artist who tries too hard to produce good art is like an excellent plastic surgeon who intentionally finds the most beautiful woman in the world, and then tries to fix her face.
My art is a war on motifs and a war on the side of motifs. In other words, the act of self expression, when it goes wrong, is overly patterned.Since motifs are obstinate and obdurate, the best way to confront them is simply to accept their existence. If you struggle against them, you will invariably produce them in another way. Now I work in a Surrealist mode, so when I talk about motifs, I hope that I am talking about deep-rooted psychological facts. And since it is me myself that is creating my art (expressing myself as I cannot not do) this seems true.
What I meant about the pitfalls of talking about art is just that. Talking about it is just talking about the stereotyped part. And if there is a human soul, that human soul is not going to conform to any sort of pattern. It will be an enormous thing, disturbing or astounding: it will be completely beyond the patterns. That’s what I’m trying arrive at through my drawings.

