What's Up - Your guide to what's happening in Fayetteville, AR this week!
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funds public art works, he says. Hoehn says Hatch and Manos' work was selected for its support of the PAAC principals, which include fostering diversity and inclusion, and promoting awareness of the city's culture and history. It was also selected because the community can experience the work in person and learn more about it online, he says. Visitors can scan a QR code that takes them to videos of the poem being read in English, Spanish and Hmong. "The collaboration involved to create this piece was inspiring," Hoehn says. A visual artist and a poet Hatch is a multidisciplinary artist who works in the mediums of sculpture, performance art and installation art, she says. She earned an undergraduate degree in architecture from Wellesley College in Massachusetts and a her Master of Fine Arts in spatial studies from the University of California-Santa Barbara. Her work explores the female body's relationship to the built environment, notions of artificiality and power structures, her biography states. Manos is a folk singer-songwriter and sixth-generation Arkansan, according to her biography. She graduated from Siloam Springs High School in 1997, earned an undergraduate degree in English from John Brown University and a Master of Fine Arts in creative writing from the University of Arkansas. Her work explores connections to kin, land and lore, according to her biography. Both Manos and Hatch received the Artists 360 award in 2019 from the Mid-America Arts Alliance and Walton Family Foundation. The two women met during a breakout session and connected. "I think we both appreciate each other and each other's work," Manos says. "I needed her expertise as a visual artist, and hopefully my poem adds something to her visual art." Finding layers of meaning "Guide These, My Hands" has multiple layers of meaning for Hatch and Manos, from the magenta color, which evokes the flower of the wild burdock plant, known for its medicinal properties, to the contrast between the steel structure and the soft ruffles. Manos wrote "Foothills Healer" in 2013 and says the poem is about women having compassion for their community, noting that women are often on the frontlines of caring for people who are sick or helping those in need. Even though the poem was written and the project was proposed before the covid-19 pandemic, it is especially relevant now, she says, because of what people have experienced over the past year and the way the poem honors nurses who are using their hands daily. The creation of the installation, which involved a large number of women, also speaks to the theme of women coming together for their community, she adds. Hatch, who is especially interested in women's narratives, started her research for the project at the Shiloh Museum of Ozark History, where she learned about the petticoat government in Winslow. In 1925, just five years after the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was adopted giving women the right to vote, Winslow elected a female mayor and town council, according to the Encyclopedia of Arkansas. Even though the term "petticoat government" was probably derisive, Hatch was interested in re-imagining it into something empowering, focusing on the soft and empathetic power of women. She used the idea as a jumping off point for her creativity, which led to the ruffles, she says. The sculpture also has connections to the local land, Hatch says. The shape of the structure is reminiscent of the small sheds that can be seen dotting rural Benton County, and the ruffles are similar to the vines that often drape them, she says. The sculpture plays on the juxtaposition between the hard surfaces of the metal architecture, which is often found in public spaces, and the softness of the fabric, Hatch says. It will also move in response to a visitor's touch or the breeze, symbolizing women's responsiveness to their communities, Manos says. Visitors are encouraged to touch the fabric and go inside the gabled structure, where they can be enveloped in the poem and have a visceral connection with the labor of the women's hands, Manos and Hatch agree. "We are wanting to honor the women of Northwest Arkansas for their compassion and resiliency in that they bend in response to the needs of their community but they don't break," Manos says. MARCH 21-27, 2021 WHAT'S UP! 9 FEATURE (Courtesy Photo) Twenty-two women from Northwest Arkan- sas volunteered to embroider the poem onto 126 yards of fabric, including: • Michelle Baker • Meredith Bergstrom • Keely Brice • Diana Cascante • Chelsea Carskaddon • Maria Conroy • Charlotte Darling • Tabbitha Easley • Nicole Hansen • Kristin Johnson • Alice Kelly • Rebecca Kelly • Kirsten Mason • Tara Norwood • Anna Peterson • Jocelyn Peterson • Steph Piston • Trisha Posey • Loretta Radeke • Karen Sasine • Rikki Skopp • Bethany Smith