In no particular order, here are a dozen of my favorite photos from 2012.
Category Archives: Design
Sculpture Vulture: Snow
UALR Applied Design Open Studio Today
The UALR Applied Design program will hold its annual Open Studio event from 4 p.m.-7 p.m. today, Wednesday, Dec. 19.
An eclectic mix of student and faculty work will be on display. Pieces will be from such classes as furniture design and woodworking, ceramics, metalsmithing and jewelry, blacksmithing, and contemporary crafts.
In addition to the exhibit, there will be a sale of one-of-a-kind artworks, forging demonstrations, a silent auction, and a raffle.
The Applied Design program at UALR provides students opportunities to learn about and create traditional arts and crafts representative of the South Central region of the U.S., with a particular emphasis on Arkansas.
The Applied Design studio is located in University Plaza. For more information, contact the Art Department at 501.569.3182.
Art of Architecture – Artists, Architects and Community: The Public Art Equation
Jack Becker, who has a long and distinguished career in the field of public art, is scheduled to speak tonight at the Arkansas Arts Center. His talk, “Artists, Architects and Community: The Public Art Equation”, is the third in the Architecture and Design Network’s Art of Architecture lecture series, now in its ninth season.
Ark Arts Center Collector Show & Sale: Nov 30-Dec 30
Opening this Friday, the Arkansas Arts Center presents the 44th Collectors Show & Sale.
First organized in 1968 by then-Arkansas Arts Center Director and Chief Curator Townsend Wolfe, the purpose of the exhibition is to encourage local collecting, acquaint Arkansas Arts Center visitors with works from New York galleries and promote the drawing media.

Arthur B. Davies “Figure Composition” c. 1905
Through the years the exhibition has evolved to an annual tradition that brings the New York Gallery scene to Little Rock. Executive Director Todd Herman and curators select the best in drawings and contemporary craft from over 20 New York galleries.
The exhibition includes works in a variety of media that range from 18th century masterworks to contemporary pieces by emerging artists. The unique and varied selection of works allows seasoned buyers to add to their collections, while introducing potential new collectors to the field.
There will be a members reception on Thursday, November 29 from 6pm to 8pm. Memberships are available at the door.
Sculpture Vulture: Standing Red
As Thanksgiving weekend comes to a close, today’s Sculpture Vulture looks at a sculpture that was placed as a token of thanks.
In 1970, artist Tal Streeter and the Arkansas Arts Center Board of Trustees donated Streeter’s sculpture Standing Red in honor of Jeannette Edris Rockefeller. Mrs. Rockefeller had been a champion of the Arkansas Arts Center and had served as longtime chair of the Board. She had also been instrumental in the recruitment and hiring of Townsend Wolfe who would be the longtime director of the Arkansas Arts Center.
Streeter’s sculpture stands 27 feet tall and is 54 feet from one end to another. It consists of a T-shaped base and a perpendicular pedestal. It is in the Minimalist style of art. In creating it, Streeter focused on the placement of a thin red line into a setting. It was placed near the then-entrance of the Arkansas Arts Center (which still serves as the entrance for the Museum School and Children’s Theatre).
This was one of the earliest pieces of abstract art in Little Rock. A silkscreen by Streeter is also in the Arkansas Arts Center collection.
Toys Designed by Artists at Ark Arts Center

William Price – “Sheriff Rubber Ducky” (2010)
Cherry, steel, brass; 5 x 2 ½ x 5”
The Toys Designed By Artists exhibition engages museum visitors, delighting young and old alike.
In 1973, the Arkansas Arts Center initiated an exhibition of toys designed by artists. Inspired by Alexander Calder’s circus figures of the late 1920s and early 1930s, this exhibition was launched to stimulate the imagination of both children and adults and to engage them with toys of whimsy, delight and good craftsmanship.
The tradition continues this season with the 38th Toys Designed by Artists. This international juried exhibition challenges artists to take the concept of “toy” and make a personal expression – a piece of art. The wildly inventive toys selected often hearken back to the days before plastic and mass production, when all toys were handmade and, whether simple or elaborate, engaged the imagination of both maker and user.
The exhibit opened on Wednesday, November 21 and runs through January 6.



















