TLC Art Collective

TLC Art Collective Public art focused on community and environmentalism, by Tiffany Black, Leticia Bajuyo & Christine W

11/16/2023

Just like bears, many pollinators hibernate through the winter — and they may need a little help to survive until spring.

As the leaves and temperatures drop, it might be tempting to forget about your pollinator garden until spring. While it may seem like the bees have vanished for the year, they haven’t actually gone anywhere.

Although some butterfly species, most notably the monarch, are well-known for migrating vast distances when the seasons change, most pollinators prefer to stay at home and ride out the cold. So, as unlikely as it seems, you are currently surrounded by bees and butterflies — even though you can’t see them.

Help Them Survive The Cold Winter:

1. Leave the leaves: leaves and other “litter” are essential shelter for hibernating bumble bee queens and the larvae of numerous butterfly and moth species.
2. Minimize ground disturbances: Approximately 70 percent of all bee species nest in the ground —frequently in yards and garden beds.
3. Collect cavity nests before pruning perennials or disposing of garden materials: Once you’ve identified any nests, collect and place them somewhere cool and dry like your garage until spring when they can be returned to your garden
4. Check under logs and rocks before moving them: Countless invertebrate species prefer to nest/hibernate around rocks and woody debris. Make sure to check under logs and in wood piles before starting any fires.
5. Keep an eye out for “creative” nests: There are some oddities out there that will take up residence inside galls or snail shells—or even construct nests from pebbles for the winter.
6. Spread the word, leaves are not litter


Read more: https://xerces.org/2018/12/10/where-did-the-pollinators-go/

Posted  •  Everyone is talking about the new speech bubble that is installed on our grounds on the Hatch Foundation Lawn...
10/10/2023

Posted • Everyone is talking about the new speech bubble that is installed on our grounds on the Hatch Foundation Lawn!

In late July, the Museum installed the newly acquired interactive sculpture "Ernest and Ruth" by Hank Willis Thomas. Thomas is a prominent contemporary Black artist who uses photography, sculpture, and installation work to explore issues of identity, history, race, class, and popular culture.

His work has been exhibited extensively both nationally and internationally and is also in numerous public collections including The Brooklyn Museum, the Guggenheim Museum, the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and now – your very own Springfield Art Museum.

"Ernest and Ruth" – named after Thomas’ grandparents - is both a sculpture and a bench shaped like a cartoon speech bubble. It offers visitors a place to sit, to rest, and to interact with the work and with each other. It literally puts the public in public art. While seated on the bench, the viewer becomes “enclosed” in the speech bubble. The work invites dialogue about art and promotes discourse and listening. Thomas says, “When viewers occupy the piece, they are encouraged to contemplate what it means to inhabit their own speech and beliefs.”

Posted  •  Meet Jonathan Yacko and Natalie Gilliard 🙌Repost • Jonathan Yacko and Natalie Gilliard are among a growing gr...
10/09/2023

Posted • Meet Jonathan Yacko and Natalie Gilliard 🙌

Repost •

Jonathan Yacko and Natalie Gilliard are among a growing group of homeowners who are sick of lawns and made a change with their own yards.

Growing a wildflower meadow can use fewer resources, foster community relationships and help reverse the loss of insects.

Baby’s breath sprouted in 2021 and was soon followed by yellow coreopsis, orange cosmos, red poppies, purple foxgloves and blue forget-me-nots, Gilliard said. Their colorful new field also attracted songbirds and bees.

Over the next several months, they said people they’d never met started dropping by. Neighbors and strangers thanked them for planting the meadow. Many of them brought baked goods, left thank you notes and even small bouquets, Gilliard said.

Read more by tapping the link in bio.






























TLC member Tiffany Black on the front page of the Indianapolis Star🔥 We 🧡 large-scale public art!Posted  •  Front page o...
08/01/2023

TLC member Tiffany Black on the front page of the Indianapolis Star🔥 We 🧡 large-scale public art!




Posted • Front page of the Indy Star today 🌟

So excited to be painting alongside (Erik Lundorf), Alex Allen (), and Ginger and KJ Pearson (.inc) !

Thank you so much to the Indiana State Fair and / for inviting me to be part of this! 🫶

"Using local artisans to tell the story of who we are, where we’ve come from, and where we’re going, is a very important piece of our story," a spokesperson said. "Having these custom murals curated by local artists from our community and showcased in our new Indiana Farm Bureau Fall Creek Pavilion is a very exciting moment for us."



We loved Land Report Collective’s exhibition at U Indy! Two of their members gave a great artist talk at the reception, ...
02/28/2023

We loved Land Report Collective’s exhibition at U Indy! Two of their members gave a great artist talk at the reception, and we connected with some really wonderful artists, curators and educators in Indianapolis.



Pictured: Land Report Collective members Jason Brown & Leticia Bajuyo speaking about how their 6 members create works in conversation with each other about landscape, natural resources, and environmental issues!

Jason Brown () creates sculptures and installations that explore “the impact that extractive industries such as mining, oil and gas have on the ecosystems and watersheds of Appalachian landscapes…” visit jasonsheridanbrown.com for more of that!

We are lucky to share one fellow artist with this collective: Leticia Bajuyo ()! Her artworks “highlight the impact of desire and the machines that create more desire.” Why does she use artificial grass? Find out at leticiabajuyo.com!






TLC together again!Posted  •  Never have I been to Arkansas and I got to drive there from Oklahoma twice this week! In a...
11/27/2022

TLC together again!

Posted •

Never have I been to Arkansas and I got to drive there from Oklahoma twice this week! In addition to many hours in the truck, I got to witness Leticia’s welding marathon, give a lecture at OU, install our bespoke “magnolia” bike rack in Russellville, and FINALLY see Tiff’s floor mural at the Little Rock Airport! 🌸🚲🎉🙌

The members of TLC Art Collective are looking forward to sharing about our practice at The University of Oklahoma’s Scho...
11/16/2022

The members of TLC Art Collective are looking forward to sharing about our practice at The University of Oklahoma’s School of Visual Arts tomorrow!

.sculpture

Posted  •  DEATH BY PLASTIC FUNERAL PROCESSION NYC 7/29/21 Photographs by   Still reeling from the pandemic and its opti...
09/15/2021

Posted • DEATH BY PLASTIC FUNERAL PROCESSION NYC 7/29/21 Photographs by Still reeling from the pandemic and its optics, namely in the form of single use masks, a glut of takeout containers, and packaging materials, I decided to perform “Death by Plastic” in my hometown of New York City as a funeral procession down Fifth Avenue.
We need to make a significant paradigm shift and be willing to change our habits - as consumers, as product and packaging designers, and as corporations. This piece came about from a feeling of helplessness (in terms of my own consumerism), but also as a way of drawing attention to the items that we think (or hope) are getting recycled and are instead being landfilled. Our planet is being smothered in plastic and unless we find solutions very soon there will no way out.

A keynote by  ?! 🤩Posted  •  REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN for the 2021 MSA sculpture conference October 20-23. “Interdiscipl...
08/07/2021

A keynote by ?! 🤩

Posted • REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN for the 2021 MSA sculpture conference October 20-23. “Interdisciplinary Sculpture” will be co-hosted by The University of Cincinnati School of Art + College of Design, Architecture, Art and Planning + Pyramid Hill Sculpture Park. Our new hybrid format will enable participants to join virtually online or in person.

Juried exhibition deadlines are rapidly approaching - July 30 for two indoor shows! Texas Sculpture Group TSG + Chicago Sculpture International CSI members are invited to participate at the reduced rates normally reserved for MSA members.

The MSA Cincinnati conference will be packed with 7 panel discussions, multiple lectures & presentations, technical demonstrations and workshops, 5 exhibition opportunities, and a much needed chance to reconnect and re-energize!

Don't miss Janet Echelman's keynote presentation at the University of Cincinnati on Thursday October 21. After day full of demos, MSA student scholarship presentations, panels discussing public art and “moving beyond the expanded field,” we will celebrate with an exhibition reception at the UC Reed Gallery.

Friday October 22 will feature speakers Jean Shin and Donald Lipski, plus the Vision 2020 grantee presentations, demos and tours at the UC 1819 Innovation Hub, and panels on digital fabrication, foundry practices, and the “politics of monuments.” Friday night will conclude with an outdoor reception and bonfire at Camp Washington community sculpture park!

Due to the ongoing mitigations required by the Covid-19 pandemic MSA plans to offer both in-person and virtual attendance to the Interdisciplinary Conference. The keynote presentation and all guest speakers will join us in Cincinnati while some of our panelists will join us virtually.

Photo credit of sculpture “Paul” by

Posted  •  REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN for both virtual and in-person participation. Start making plans to attend the 2021 ...
06/16/2021

Posted • REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN for both virtual and in-person participation. Start making plans to attend the 2021 MSA hybrid conference October 20-23. “Interdisciplinary Sculpture” will be co-hosted by The University of Cincinnati School of Art + College of Design, Architecture, Art and Planning + Pyramid Hill Sculpture Park. Our new hybrid format conference will enable participants to join virtually online or in person.

The MSA Cincinnati conference will be packed with 7 panel discussions, multiple lectures & presentations, technical demonstrations and workshops, 5 exhibition opportunities, and a much needed chance to reconnect and re-energize!

Don't miss Janet Echelman's keynote presentation at the University of Cincinnati on Thursday October 21. After day full of demos, MSA student scholarship presentations, panels discussing public art and “moving beyond the expanded field,” we will celebrate with an exhibition reception at the UC Myers Gallery.

Friday October 22 will feature speakers Jean Shin and Donald Lipski, plus the Vision 2020 grantee presentations, demos and tours at the UC 1819 Innovation Hub, and panels on digital fabrication, foundry practices, and the “politics of monuments.” Friday night will conclude with an outdoor reception and bonfire at Camp Washington community sculpture park!

Due to the ongoing mitigations required by the Covid-19 pandemic MSA plans to offer both in-person and virtual attendance to the Interdisciplinary Conference. The keynote presentation and all guest speakers will join us in Cincinnati while some of our panelists will join us virtually.
shin

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Indianapolis, IN

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