HOLIDAY SALE

DEC. 9TH & DEC 10th
The Goat Farm Arts Center | 1200 Foster St . | Building 8 | Studio UMR 6

SALE HOURS:
 FRI, Dec 9th | 4PM-9PM
SAT, Dec 10th | 12PM- 6PM

Visit the following TCP artists at the 2016 Goat Farm Holiday Sale! 

John Tindel, is an artist, designer, and founder of The Creative Life. An early pioneer of the Atlanta Art Scene, Tindel's work tackles social, economic and creative issues with his unique imagery, highly admired wit, and hunger for what he describes as the mega-painting.

Shanequa Gay an Atlanta native, has drawn praise and critical acclaim for her depictions of southern life and black women. Her current work, The FAIR GAME Project, is art as advocacy which challenges the unyielding violence and injustices committed in America and across the globe against the black body. Gay has exhibited her work at prestigious venues and events including the Chattanooga African American Museum, the Hammonds House Museum, the Hunter Museum of American Art, the Auburn Avenue Research Library on African American Culture and History, Emory University, Mason Murer, and the Atlanta Contemporary Art Center. Her work is among public and private collections including actor Samuel L. Jackson and the permanent collection for SCAD Hong Kong. She is a graduate of the Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) and the Art Institute of Atlanta.

Margaret Hiden is a Birmingham, Alabama native and received her B.F.A. with a concentration in photography from Birmingham-Southern College. She received her M.F.A. in photography from the Savannah College of Art and Design in Atlanta and continues to live in the city as an artist, freelance photographer and part-time professor of art at Kennesaw State University. Hiden is currently involved with WonderRoot as a 2015-2016 Walthall Fellow. Hiden has spent her summers living in Maine, working for the Maine Media Workshops as well as Bonaire, Panama and Iceland teaching through a study abroad program to high-school and college-aged students. Her work as been exhibited in multiple venues around the country, published in Robert Hirsch's Light and Lens, shown publicly on the Atlanta Beltline and discussed in multiple photographic, arts and educational platforms. Much of Hiden's practice and interests evolve from an archive of familial Kodachrome slides and the possibilities these histories present. Mining and reconstructing discarded pasts present a possibility for new narratives and significance.

NINE | TCP Annual #ARTOFCOMMUNITY Exhibition

NOV. 6TH - DEC 2ND
Armour Yards | 120 Ottley Drive

NINE showcases the aesthetic exploration of our artists as they expand their visual vernacular and continue to move towards promising creative horizons.

universal love / faith / virtue / karma / service / selflessness / destiny / purpose / intuition

NINE highlights the talent and qualities of our 2015-17 resident artists: Joe Dreher, Rachel Garceau, Meta Gary, Shanequa Gay, Margaret Hiden, Meredith Kooi, William Massey, Scott Silvey and John Tindel, with new works and selections from their tenure with The Creatives Project.

GALLERY HOURS:
MON-WED | by appointment
THU, FRI, SAT | 11AM-6PM
SUN | 12PM- 6PM

SPECIAL EVENTS:
SAT. NOV 5TH NINE VIP PREVIEW + ANNUAL BENEFIT| 6PM-10PM
SAT. NOV 12TH OPEN HOUSE | 2PM-5PM + MIX and MINGLE | 5PM-7PM OPEN HOUSE SAT.NOV 19TH ARTIST TALK | 2PM -4PM


HEARTFELT THANKS:

Margaret Hiden + Nick Madden = Have You Lived Here Long

Opening Reception | Saturday, October 8 | 6-10PM


In an exhibition featuring new works by TCP Alumnus Nick Madden and TCP resident Margaret Hiden, each artist creates in response to the question Have You Lived Here Long?, with loss being central to their interpretation.

Margaret Hiden - Hiden is attached to other’s attachments and uses multiple collections to create an installation and a series of new photographic art. Themes surrounding illness, the afterlife, childhood imagination and that which cannot been seen are presented in colorful, playful and at times, dark ways.

Nick Madden - For this show Nick Madden’s work questions whether home is a place or an idea. While in hospice care dying from Alzheimer’s Madden’s mother would want to go home one moment and think she was home the next. This confusion, unease, and longing for home charges Madden’s work with complex emotions and a touch of the absurd.

Join us for the opening reception at Kibbee Gallery | 688 Linwood Ave NE.