+ All Categories
Home > Documents > 7266_Tallgrassbeachbrochure_21_AP

7266_Tallgrassbeachbrochure_21_AP

Date post: 30-Mar-2016
Category:
Upload: k-state
View: 212 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art Kansas State University 14th and Anderson Manhattan, KS 785-532-7718 [email protected] beach.k-state.edu Contact us Gallery hours Parking - THE WASHINGTON POST Free tour and art project program for grades K-2 available January 17 – May 30, 2012. Tours focus on prairie animals and the tallgrass biome. Bus grants available on request. Free, next to building beach.k-state.edu/calendar/109/artsmart-classes Free
Popular Tags:
2
Contact us Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art Kansas State University 14th and Anderson Manhattan, KS 785-532-7718 [email protected] beach.k-state.edu Discover what it’s like to live on the Kansas prairie — as an animal. See life as a mammal, reptile, bird and more with “Tallgrass TV: Sam Easterson’s Tribute to the Konza Prairie” at Kansas State University’s Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art. The exhibition celebrates 40 years of research and teaching at the university’s Konza Prairie Biological Station. In this art, we ride shotgun to all kinds of beasts. - THE WASHINGTON POST Gallery hours Mon: Closed Tues-Sat: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sun: Noon-5 p.m. Admission Free Parking Free, next to building ARTSmart Classes for Children Monthly art classes with prairie themes for ages 1 to 12. Details at: beach.k-state.edu/calendar/109/artsmart-classes School teachers Free tour and art project program for grades K-2 available January 17 – May 30, 2012. Tours focus on prairie animals and the tallgrass biome. Bus grants available on request.
Transcript

Contact usMarianna Kistler Beach Museum of ArtKansas State University14th and AndersonManhattan, KS

[email protected]

Discover what it’s like to live on the Kansas prairie — as an animal. See life as a mammal, reptile, bird and more with “Tallgrass TV: Sam Easterson’s Tribute to the Konza Prairie” at Kansas State University’s Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art. The exhibition celebrates 40 years of research and teaching at the university’s Konza Prairie Biological Station.

In this art, we ride shotgun to all kinds of beasts.- THE WASHINGTON POST

Gallery hoursMon: ClosedTues-Sat: 10 a.m.-5 p.m.Sun: Noon-5 p.m.

AdmissionFree

ParkingFree, next to building

In this art, we ride shotgun to all kinds of In this art, we ride shotgun to all kinds of

ARTSmart Classes for ChildrenMonthly art classes with prairie themes for ages 1 to 12. Details at:beach.k-state.edu/calendar/109/artsmart-classes

School teachersFree tour and art project program for grades K-2 available January 17 – May 30, 2012. Tours focus on prairie animals and the tallgrass biome. Bus grants available on request.

I started collecting other people’s work because I thought it was important to identify that there are a lot of people doing this type of work: capturing remotely-sensed wildlife imagery. All the work collected by me is catalogued digitally on hard drives. I hope to make this work available for display to the public via my new museum.

- SAM EASTERSON

The artist Noted video naturalist Sam Easterson captures photos and videos of wildlife to understand how animals view the world. Easterson’s work has been featured on the Discovery Channel, Sundance Channel and Animal Planet.

The exhibition“Tallgrass TV” features video and photos that detail life as an animal of the Konza Prairie. The exhibition also includes taxidermy displays of a quail, fungi and Luna moth.

ConnectDisplays will be paired with QR codes. Scan the codes using a smartphone to learn more.

Viewers used to the sort of nature films you might see on the Discovery Channel might be a little surprised by Easterson’s offerings, which are not action-packed recordings of survival of the fittest, but somewhat more pastoral, presenting what might be a typical moment in an animal’s life.

- THE ROANOKE (VA.) TIMES

Sam Easterson has refined the art of the critter cam. Sam Easterson has refined the art of the

- NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO

I came up with the concept of using cameras to give an animal’s perspective when I was in graduate school at the University of Minnesota. In my landscape architecture studies, I learned how sheep were sometimes used to mow Central Park and wondered what it would be like to see from their pastoral perspective.

- SAM EASTERSON

Viewers used to the sort of nature films you Viewers used to the sort of nature films you

I came up with the concept of using cameras I came up with the concept of using cameras

I started collecting other people’s work because I started collecting other people’s work because