PAST EVENTS
Cat Collage Workshop
Saturday, October 26 2024, 10AM to Noon
Cost: $50 for one or $75 for two
Kolaj Institute is all about collage, collage, collage. But when Taylor Swift signed her endorsement of Kamala Harris as “Childless Cat Lady” we were reminded just how much we like cats. (I mean, we did put a cat collage by Matt McCarthy on the cover of Kolaj #37.) With Taylor Swift coming to New Orleans for three concerts, we thought it would be fun to host a Cat Collage Workshop in honor of Meredith Grey, Olivia Benson and Benjamin Button (her cats).
We invite you to join us at Kolaj Institute Gallery for a morning of collaging with cats. All supplies are provided. Kolaj Institute has a variety of supplies, including magazines, books, ephemera, substrates, X-acto knives, and of course, scissors and glue. Attendees are welcome to bring their own materials or projects to work on. Donations of materials are always appreciated.
For those new to collage, we will provide instruction to get started. Participants will leave the workshop with an 10″x8″ collage they can take home with them.
This workshop is for ages 12 and up, but those under 18 must be accompanied by an adult
Open Studio with Kolaj Institute Artist-in-Residence Nate Hester
Saturday, 5 October 2024, 2-4PM
Cost: Free, limited space
During his Solo Residency, North Carolina-based artist Nate Hester will create two large-scale (64×44″) works on paper for the Tokyo International Art Fair. The artist’s trans-disciplinary work (drawings, projected animations, textiles, ceramics, immersive installations of household ephemera, tags, and interactive encounters) explores the charming if disquieting incongruities of the places, communities and bodies to which we all yearn to belong. He will use New Orleans as his inspiration for the work, writing that the city is the “confluence of many natural, political, historic, cultural and ethnic influences.” He will also use his time at Kolaj Institute to investigate the technique of bas-relief paper pulp sculpting.
On Saturday, October 5, 2024, 2-4PM, the public is invited to visit Kolaj Institute Gallery to meet the artist and see how the artwork is progressing. Calling the event “What the Shuck? Volume 2: Gallery Talk, Interpretive Dance, Spoken Word Storytelling & Community Snack”, Nate Hester offers four new monumental, street style works on paper produced during his 2-week residency at the Kolaj Institute alongside ancestral movements and spoken memories by Madera Rogers-Henry and a communal meal of oysters on the half shell on the balcony to follow. The collective meditation will focus on how “bodies” are “crafted” to function in spaces of both oppression and liberation. Can we all dance together?
Learn more about Nate Hester’s Solo Residency https://kolajinstitute.org/solo-residencies/
Kolaj Institute at NOMA’s Fall Festival
Saturday, September 28, 2024, 10AM-4PM | New Orleans Museum of Art Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden
In celebration of twenty years of the Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden, the New Orleans Museum of Art is hosting an outdoor festival for all ages. This free event will include guided tours of the beautiful highlights of the Besthoff Sculpture Garden, art activities, live music, and more. Food trucks and pop-up restaurants will sell a variety of cuisines. At the festival, visit Kolaj Institute’s table and peruse our publications, learn about workshops for the community and our artist development program, and explore current and upcoming exhibitions. The Mystic Krewe of Scissors & Glue, New Orleans’ collage collective, will be hosting a collage making table. Join us for this one-time event to celebrate this important moment in the museum’s history. This event is free and open to the public.
Advanced Wound Healing Techniques
Bywater Second Saturday Gallery Walk: Saturday, September 14th, 6-9PM | Kolaj Institute Gallery
Made in the months leading up to the artist’s 40th birthday, “Advanced Wound Healing Techniques” is a collection of collage made with personal photographs that were destroyed in a series of fires that took place when artist Robbie Morgan was 24 years old. In the intervening sixteen years, the artist carted around these photographs, moving them from home to home, storing them, occasionally reflecting on them. The collages speak to trauma, destruction, memory and how, as we age, we make sense of things. During Second Saturday, Morgan will be available to answer questions. The exhibition will be on view from through October 6th, 2024. The gallery is open Thursday through Saturday from Noon to 6PM and by appointment.
Fans & Blankets: Finding Healing and Rest Through Collage
Thursday, 29 August 2024, 6-8 PM
Cost: Free, limited space
How do we heal? How do we find comfort? How do we rest? During this two-hour collage workshop, hosted by Montclair, New Jersey-based artist gwen charles and Brooklyn, New York-artist Colleen Coleman as part of their joint residency at Kolaj Institute, participants will make collage and explore ideas of healing and rest. In Part One, charles’ will draw on her current practice of creating artwork around the theme of comfort after an intense period of caretaking. Participants will be invited to collage and draw images related to comfort and as a way to process their own personal narratives. She wrote, “The bed, the ultimate symbol of comfort and rest, is used as a base for writings and images, to create a dream of a positive future and reframe the past in this creative, healing practice.” In Part Two, Coleman will introduce the fascinating world of chakras and creative expression. Using a parafiction central to the artists work, “you’ll be introduced to the seven chakra energies through the lens of seven time-traveling aliens, each embodying the qualities of a specific chakra.” Participants will be invited to select a chakra that resonates with them and make a collage on a hand fan as a means of exploring its healing potential. Participants will leave the workshop with collages they make and a heart full of ideas about healing and rest.
Learn more about gwen charles & Colleen Coleman’s Solo Residencies https://kolajinstitute.org/solo-residencies/
Queer Collage Workshop
Thursday, 8 August 2024, 7-9 PM
Cost: Free, limited space
Queer life is a collage of identities and experiences. As we come out, fall in love, meet friends, and make a life for ourselves, we pull fragments of self together to make a whole person. In this workshop, participants will use collage to explore queerness as they assemble an 8″x10″ collage on paper they can take home. The workshop is led by Kolaj Institute artist-in-residence and queer multimedia artist Jordan Crouch, who is working on a series of collages that will be incorporated into a zine that supports those navigating sobriety as a queer person. The workshop is free but space is limited.
Learn more about Jordan Crouch’s Solo Residency https://kolajinstitute.org/solo-residencies/
Take Me to the Water: A Baptism in Collage
Wednesday, 31 July 2024, 6-8PM
Cost: $25 per participant
This workshop is a call to spell cast through collage. This workshop’s intention is to give honor to Mother Earth and the life-giving inspiration she brings by honoring the beauty of the elements, specifically water, and more specifically, the Mississippi River. Through collage, we will engage in intentional making that explores the dominant allure that is the spirit of the water. Curated like a guided meditation, we will hear the voices of the whales, engage in witness writing, and end with a collage in process. Alexis Pauline Gumbs says, “May you taste the fresh and the saltwater of yourself and know what only you can know. May you live in the mouth of the river, meeting place of the tides, may all blessings flow through you.” We will meditate on how the creative flows through us and the power we have as artists to move information much like the river.
This workshop is led by LaVonna Varnado Brown, a multidisciplinary artist and community worker. She has developed her practice around intentional engagement to inspire action through creative expression. AfroFuturism is a cultural aesthetic that explores the intersection of art and history with intention to inspire action in the now by healing beyond trauma. In addition to curating intentional workshops, LaVonna creates works using acrylic, hand drawn form, and sculpture that speak from the experience of a Black mother creatively navigating the American landscape with a focus on healing and raising spatial awareness. Through her work she hopes to uplift the narrative of rest, joy, resistance, and wholeness.
Abstract Collage
Tuesday, 28 May 2024, 7-9PM
Cost: $25 per participant
The Lebanese-American poet, essayist, and visual artist Etel Adnan said, “Abstract art was the equivalent of poetic expression; I didn’t need to use words, but colors and lines. I didn’t need to belong to a language-oriented culture but to an open form of expression.” The freedom of abstract or non-representational art makes it an ideal way to engage with the medium of collage. In this workshop, participants will explore color, texture, and composition as they assemble an 8″x10″ abstract collage on paper they can take home.
The workshop is led by Ric Kasini Kadour, artist, writer, and Director of Kolaj Institute.
Collaging Desire
Thursday, 23 May 2024, 7-9PM
Cost: Free, RSVP Required
In the workshop, “Collaging Desire,” participants will explore the work of Brooklyn-based collagist and Kolaj Institute Artist-in-Residence Meghan Larimer and make collages exploring their own feelings of desire or in response to a piece of provided text.
While artist-in-residence at Kolaj Institute, Larimer will develop a series of artwork for a book and exhibition. Larimer’s “Hidden Desires” series explores “yearning feelings” the artist has for “people outside of my long-term relationship.” She writes, “I have used cut images of bodies along with shapes of colors and texture to create a confusing tangle of limbs, torsos, and mouths, some of which are hidden from view. In this way, I’ve pieced together different people and the desires I feel while stealing glances and scans of their faces and bodies. I hope to create erotic compositions that spark a desire for connection and exploring the sensual feelings we hide from ourselves and others.” The artworks are paired with love letters and poetic prose that explore lust, love, loss, and grief. The workshop is open to anyone (18 years and up), regardless of skill level or experience.
Larimer is a founding member of the New York Collage Ensemble, which promotes a supportive community of like-minded collage artists in New York. She has shown her work collaboratively in the US as well as France and Norway. She plastered the streets of New Orleans with wheatpaste collages as part of Kolaj Institute’s Collage as Street Art Artist Residency in June 2023.
Learn more about Meghan Larimer’s Solo Residency https://kolajinstitute.org/solo-residencies/
Uses of the Erotic
Tuesday, 21 May 2024, 6-8PM
Cost: $25 per participant
This workshop is a process by which we will raise our awareness of the erotic and its use as a source of power, healing, and self exploration. The erotic is a conduit to harness energy from a heart centered space. By engaging in collage exercises and exploring our will to intentionally create space to begin to reclaim our right to our own erotic power. We will create space to intentionally explore the use of the Erotic as power through symbols, printed image, and composition work ending with a collage in process. The power of the Erotic awakens the knowledge that satisfaction is possible. Join with intention to explore as we make, discuss, and contemplate our will to access pleasure. The title of this workshop comes from an essay by Audre Lorde which begins. “There are many kinds of power, used and unused, acknowledged or otherwise.”
LaVonna Varnado Brown is a multidisciplinary artist and community worker. She has developed her practice around intentional engagement to inspire action through creative expression. AfroFuturism is a cultural aesthetic that explores the intersection of art and history with intention to inspire action in the now by healing beyond trauma. In addition to curating intentional workshops, LaVonna creates works using acrylic, hand drawn form, and sculpture that speak from the experience of a Black mother creatively navigating the American landscape with a focus on healing and raising spatial awareness. Through her work she hopes to uplift the narrative of rest, joy, resistance, and wholeness.
Crafting Costumes With Recyclables
Thursday, April 4th, 2024, 7-9PM
Thursday, April 11th, 2024, 7-9PM
Cost: $10
Welcome to Crafting Costumes With Recyclables! Join The Recycle Challenge for a fun and creative in-person evening where you will learn how to turn recyclables into costumes. Participants will learn how to identify repurposable materials and to work with that material to make hats, dresses, sashes, jackets, and other costumes. This hands-on workshop will inspire you to see the beauty in materials that are often overlooked. Come learn new crafting techniques; make environmentally friendly art pieces; connect with other crafters; and make a positive impact on the environment. Let’s reduce waste and create something amazing together! Get ready to unleash your creativity by turning everyday recyclables into beautiful works of art.
Participants will be invited to join The Recycle Challenge Earth Day Parade & Festival that takes place 19-21 April 2024. The event is produced by The Recycle Challenge, a multinational initiative that celebrates the richness of diversity and is committed to fostering an inclusive environment that respects and values individuals of all races, ethnicities, and backgrounds. Based in New Orleans, they reach global partners from Nigeria to the Congo. The organization offers hands-on experiences that fuse cultural art with upcycling. Their crafting sessions foster creativity, teach collaboration, and leave participants with a sense of accomplishment.
Abstract Collage
Tuesday, 23 April 2024, 7-9PM
Cost: $25 per participant
The Lebanese-American poet, essayist, and visual artist Etel Adnan said, “Abstract art was the equivalent of poetic expression; I didn’t need to use words, but colors and lines. I didn’t need to belong to a language-oriented culture but to an open form of expression.” The freedom of abstract or non-representational art makes it an ideal way to engage with the medium of collage. In this workshop, participants will explore color, texture, and composition as they assemble an 8″x10″ abstract collage on paper they can take home.
The workshop is led by Ric Kasini Kadour, artist, writer, and Director of Kolaj Institute.
Nonsensical Beasts Collage Workshop
Saturday, 11 May 2024, 2-4PM
Free, RSVP Required
“My nonsensical beasts are deformed creatures—composed of various objects including wings, heads, tails, table legs, skirts, boots, and abstract shapes—that are endearing and sometimes charming,” writes Montreal-based artist-in-residence Maria Schamis Turner. “I use elements from fashion and design combined with animal or human appendages to draw the eye to a specific shape or gesture within an abstract form. I playfully encourage the viewer to confront the uncomfortable, to discover something beautiful or familiar in what could otherwise be seen as peculiar or even tragic.” In celebration of World Collage Day, the artist is hosting a collage making workshop where participants make “Nonsensical Beasts” and share made up stories about their creatures. The workshop is open to all ages. Materials provided by the Mystic Krewe of Scissors & Glue.
Learn about Maria Schamis Turner’s solo residency: https://kolajinstitute.org/solo-residencies/
On World Collage Day the gallery will be open from 10AM to 6PM. Visitors are invited to explore the exhibition, “Collage the Planet: Environmentalism in Art.”
Collage Artist Meet-Up
First Tuesday of the Month, Starting in May 2024
Cost: Free
At Kolaj Institute, we reject the myth of the solitary artist and believe that artists are better in community with one another. In that spirit we invite working artists to join us for a monthly meet-up to get feedback on work, and network with one another. Find out who’s looking for folks to exhibit, meet other working artists, and get the low-down on the skinny of what’s up and up. The event is hosted by LaVonna Varnado Brown at Kolaj Institute Gallery. RSVP is helpful but not necessary. Artists are encouraged to bring artwork to share with the group. Questions? Send an email to info@kolajinstitute.org