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			 "Endangered" 
			opens Thursday evening at the Lincoln Art Institute 
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            [August 08, 2019]   
            
			LINCOLN 
			- Logan County Arts and the Lincoln Art Institute will continue an 
			art-filled summer with their August exhibit, “Endangered”. The show 
			will debut with a reception from 5 to 8 p.m. on Thursday, August 8 
			at the Lincoln Art Institute, 112 S. McLean St.  | 
        
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			 Gallery owner Moses Pinkerton explains that the 
			“Endangered” theme can have broad interpretations. “One obvious 
			example is the danger to plants and animals caused by environmental 
			threats all over the world. However, many other things can be 
			endangered by changes in our social lives, technology or by natural 
			or manmade disasters. This doesn’t mean that the artwork will all be 
			grim, merely that the artists are addressing a wide range of 
			subjects.” Artists Allison Carter, Sharon Fak, and Pam Moriearty 
			will be celebrating natural themes. Bees have become symbols of 
			endangered nature to the artists and, as Carter points out, 
			honeybees also remind us of the advantages of cooperation when faced 
			with challenges. 
 Sculptor Jason Hoffman’s three dimensional contribution poses 
			questions about the pharmaceutical industry and the dangerous 
			products they supply that become part of the problem rather than the 
			cure. The piece was inspired by the drastic consequences of the 
			commercially driven opioid epidemic.
 
 Our lives change as they are “improved” by progress and technology, 
			leaving many aspects of life behind. Tony Shuff, Moses Pinkerton and 
			Ruth Fredricks all remind viewers of this with their photographic 
			and painted artworks.
 Though automation has made life easier, Fredricks’ 
			rendering of a treadle sewing machine recalls a time when home 
			seamstresses made all the family’s clothes.  Many women enjoyed 
			the soothing rhythm of the rocking treadle, and were glad for the 
			chance to sit down. Shuff and Pinkerton ask what is happening to 
			such familiar things as local stores or nickels and dimes as 
			commerce is dominated by chain stores and online buying.  
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In contrast to the idea that hazards should be avoided, Moriearty 
points out that sometimes we actually court danger. “Whether it’s skydiving, 
paintball, or even chess, most people are willing to enter situations with some 
risk in order to test themselves. Life can be too sheltered without a little 
challenge.” Her acrylic painting, “Checkmate in One,” recalls the tension of a 
competitive match. 
			 
 
 
 After the opening reception, the show will be available for viewing until 
September 7. For an appointment, people may call Pinkerton at 217-651-8355. Also 
available at the “Endangered” opening will be information on the September, 2019 
LCA show, a solo exhibition by Illinois watercolor artist Patrick Sheehan.
 
				 
			[Pam Moriearty] |