The appeal of a Pop-up WRAP is that it all happens in one day. Rather than needing to travel to drop off the work and then later come back for the workshop day, participants bring their art in the morning and display it on tables (artists furnish their own table easels). While the morning workshop is going on, the show is judged. Award winners are announced after lunch followed by the critique of the work.
This compact format makes for less travel for the artists, and in some cases enables some local groups to sponsor a WRAP who wouldn't otherwise be able to do so because they do not have an exhibit space they can tie up for more than a day.
A win-win all around, so this format has become quite popular, as evidenced by the number of exhibitors in the Cambridge Pop-up - almost as many as enter the Madison WRAP show! I liked it too - Cambridge is a bit of a hike from Mineral Point so I appreciated not having to make two trips.
Helen Klebesadel was both the show judge and the workshop presenter. Helen is a watercolor artist and a former WRAP program director at UW. For the workshop we made a book from a single sheet of paper. We then filled the pages with marks inspired by prompts such as "joy", or "fear", or "confusion." It was interesting to see how much similarity there often was in people's choices of color and/or style of marks for some of the prompts.
I entered my Haughty Lady collage and a new collage - Sharon's Rhino, loosely inspired by Durer's Rhinoceros. Haughty Lady won a State Award.
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