BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:icalendar-ruby
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
X-WR-CALNAME:"Inner Worlds\, Outer Space\, and the Ocean" - LaVerne Krause 
 Gallery 
X-WR-TIMEZONE:Pacific Time (US & Canada)
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260609T152113Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52798497502045
DTSTART:20260504T160000Z
DTEND:20260505T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:A BFA Thesis show by Elle Bisheimer (Arabella)\, Nell DeLigio-S
 piess\, Tessa Liebman\, and Harper Pearce-Mitchell\n\nElle Bisheimer (Arab
 ella) is an interdisciplinary autistic and queer artist primarily focused 
 in fiber. Their work incorporates post-consumer waste fabrics\, found obje
 cts\, and secondhand craft materials to create sensorially-engaging fiber 
 and sculpture works. Arabella’s practice and works incorporate craft and
  fashion techniques such as weaving\, dyeing\, sewing\, and embroidery alo
 ngside industrial processes such as welding and moldmaking. They use these
  techniques and objects to reflect on material history and futurality\, as
  well as the various ways that objects\, textures\, and colors are codifie
 d into our personal value systems. \n\nNell DeLigio-Spiess made these work
 s to honor survival and strength\, to remember love\, care\, and belonging
 \, and to express her gratitude for the natural world. \n\nTessa Liebman a
 ttempts to make explicit the things that are by no means unfamiliar\, just
  unfamiliar in our attention to them. She paints from images that depict d
 omestic spaces and the human posturing of body language. Both subjects tha
 t glide around our attentions seamlessly. Understandings emerge without us
  having to try. The way we hold ourselves\, the way the night sky looks fr
 om a kitchen window\, the way light shines through leaves. These small per
 manences surround all of us\, and connect us in the way that we all\, with
 out trying\, are often blind to the same things.\n\n"Harper Pearce-Mitchel
 l explores the chest as a site of adornment and space to feature queer and
  transgender bodies\, specifically using the chest as a site to represent 
 the ideals of a trans masculine person's chest and the feelings of what it
  is to be transmasculine in a body that no longer feels like yours. While 
 also combining these ideas with his take on coral forms to showcase transg
 ender and queer bodies as natural and normal. Utilizing the fluidity of so
 ft corals to converse with the fluidity of queer identities."
GEO:44.047367;-123.07431
LOCATION:Lawrence Hall\, LaVerne Krause Gallery
SUMMARY:"Inner Worlds\, Outer Space\, and the Ocean" - LaVerne Krause Galle
 ry 
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/inner-worlds-outer-space-a
 nd-the-ocean-laverne-krause-gallery
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Academic
CATEGORIES:Free
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260609T152113Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52798497504094
DTSTART:20260505T160000Z
DTEND:20260506T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:A BFA Thesis show by Elle Bisheimer (Arabella)\, Nell DeLigio-S
 piess\, Tessa Liebman\, and Harper Pearce-Mitchell\n\nElle Bisheimer (Arab
 ella) is an interdisciplinary autistic and queer artist primarily focused 
 in fiber. Their work incorporates post-consumer waste fabrics\, found obje
 cts\, and secondhand craft materials to create sensorially-engaging fiber 
 and sculpture works. Arabella’s practice and works incorporate craft and
  fashion techniques such as weaving\, dyeing\, sewing\, and embroidery alo
 ngside industrial processes such as welding and moldmaking. They use these
  techniques and objects to reflect on material history and futurality\, as
  well as the various ways that objects\, textures\, and colors are codifie
 d into our personal value systems. \n\nNell DeLigio-Spiess made these work
 s to honor survival and strength\, to remember love\, care\, and belonging
 \, and to express her gratitude for the natural world. \n\nTessa Liebman a
 ttempts to make explicit the things that are by no means unfamiliar\, just
  unfamiliar in our attention to them. She paints from images that depict d
 omestic spaces and the human posturing of body language. Both subjects tha
 t glide around our attentions seamlessly. Understandings emerge without us
  having to try. The way we hold ourselves\, the way the night sky looks fr
 om a kitchen window\, the way light shines through leaves. These small per
 manences surround all of us\, and connect us in the way that we all\, with
 out trying\, are often blind to the same things.\n\n"Harper Pearce-Mitchel
 l explores the chest as a site of adornment and space to feature queer and
  transgender bodies\, specifically using the chest as a site to represent 
 the ideals of a trans masculine person's chest and the feelings of what it
  is to be transmasculine in a body that no longer feels like yours. While 
 also combining these ideas with his take on coral forms to showcase transg
 ender and queer bodies as natural and normal. Utilizing the fluidity of so
 ft corals to converse with the fluidity of queer identities."
GEO:44.047367;-123.07431
LOCATION:Lawrence Hall\, LaVerne Krause Gallery
SUMMARY:"Inner Worlds\, Outer Space\, and the Ocean" - LaVerne Krause Galle
 ry 
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/inner-worlds-outer-space-a
 nd-the-ocean-laverne-krause-gallery
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Academic
CATEGORIES:Free
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260609T152113Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52798497505119
DTSTART:20260506T160000Z
DTEND:20260507T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:A BFA Thesis show by Elle Bisheimer (Arabella)\, Nell DeLigio-S
 piess\, Tessa Liebman\, and Harper Pearce-Mitchell\n\nElle Bisheimer (Arab
 ella) is an interdisciplinary autistic and queer artist primarily focused 
 in fiber. Their work incorporates post-consumer waste fabrics\, found obje
 cts\, and secondhand craft materials to create sensorially-engaging fiber 
 and sculpture works. Arabella’s practice and works incorporate craft and
  fashion techniques such as weaving\, dyeing\, sewing\, and embroidery alo
 ngside industrial processes such as welding and moldmaking. They use these
  techniques and objects to reflect on material history and futurality\, as
  well as the various ways that objects\, textures\, and colors are codifie
 d into our personal value systems. \n\nNell DeLigio-Spiess made these work
 s to honor survival and strength\, to remember love\, care\, and belonging
 \, and to express her gratitude for the natural world. \n\nTessa Liebman a
 ttempts to make explicit the things that are by no means unfamiliar\, just
  unfamiliar in our attention to them. She paints from images that depict d
 omestic spaces and the human posturing of body language. Both subjects tha
 t glide around our attentions seamlessly. Understandings emerge without us
  having to try. The way we hold ourselves\, the way the night sky looks fr
 om a kitchen window\, the way light shines through leaves. These small per
 manences surround all of us\, and connect us in the way that we all\, with
 out trying\, are often blind to the same things.\n\n"Harper Pearce-Mitchel
 l explores the chest as a site of adornment and space to feature queer and
  transgender bodies\, specifically using the chest as a site to represent 
 the ideals of a trans masculine person's chest and the feelings of what it
  is to be transmasculine in a body that no longer feels like yours. While 
 also combining these ideas with his take on coral forms to showcase transg
 ender and queer bodies as natural and normal. Utilizing the fluidity of so
 ft corals to converse with the fluidity of queer identities."
GEO:44.047367;-123.07431
LOCATION:Lawrence Hall\, LaVerne Krause Gallery
SUMMARY:"Inner Worlds\, Outer Space\, and the Ocean" - LaVerne Krause Galle
 ry 
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/inner-worlds-outer-space-a
 nd-the-ocean-laverne-krause-gallery
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Academic
CATEGORIES:Free
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260609T152113Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52798497508192
DTSTART:20260507T160000Z
DTEND:20260508T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:A BFA Thesis show by Elle Bisheimer (Arabella)\, Nell DeLigio-S
 piess\, Tessa Liebman\, and Harper Pearce-Mitchell\n\nElle Bisheimer (Arab
 ella) is an interdisciplinary autistic and queer artist primarily focused 
 in fiber. Their work incorporates post-consumer waste fabrics\, found obje
 cts\, and secondhand craft materials to create sensorially-engaging fiber 
 and sculpture works. Arabella’s practice and works incorporate craft and
  fashion techniques such as weaving\, dyeing\, sewing\, and embroidery alo
 ngside industrial processes such as welding and moldmaking. They use these
  techniques and objects to reflect on material history and futurality\, as
  well as the various ways that objects\, textures\, and colors are codifie
 d into our personal value systems. \n\nNell DeLigio-Spiess made these work
 s to honor survival and strength\, to remember love\, care\, and belonging
 \, and to express her gratitude for the natural world. \n\nTessa Liebman a
 ttempts to make explicit the things that are by no means unfamiliar\, just
  unfamiliar in our attention to them. She paints from images that depict d
 omestic spaces and the human posturing of body language. Both subjects tha
 t glide around our attentions seamlessly. Understandings emerge without us
  having to try. The way we hold ourselves\, the way the night sky looks fr
 om a kitchen window\, the way light shines through leaves. These small per
 manences surround all of us\, and connect us in the way that we all\, with
 out trying\, are often blind to the same things.\n\n"Harper Pearce-Mitchel
 l explores the chest as a site of adornment and space to feature queer and
  transgender bodies\, specifically using the chest as a site to represent 
 the ideals of a trans masculine person's chest and the feelings of what it
  is to be transmasculine in a body that no longer feels like yours. While 
 also combining these ideas with his take on coral forms to showcase transg
 ender and queer bodies as natural and normal. Utilizing the fluidity of so
 ft corals to converse with the fluidity of queer identities."
GEO:44.047367;-123.07431
LOCATION:Lawrence Hall\, LaVerne Krause Gallery
SUMMARY:"Inner Worlds\, Outer Space\, and the Ocean" - LaVerne Krause Galle
 ry 
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/inner-worlds-outer-space-a
 nd-the-ocean-laverne-krause-gallery
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Academic
CATEGORIES:Free
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
