Made in Muncie Pottery offers a creative outlet for the Muncie community
By Jessica Bergfors / 5 days agoMuncie's local pottery store offers artistic opportunities for residents.
Muncie's local pottery store offers artistic opportunities for residents.
AI cannot and will not ever replace the work of a human being. Human creativity is irreplaceable.
The Cup’s patrons might take their beverage into the seating area to the tune of an indie-alternative song and like Jessica Wolfe, a 2023 graduate of Ball State University, they might notice new additions to the walls since their last visit.
The David Owsley Museum of Art hosted the Indianapolis Baroque Orchestra in tandem with their current exhibition.
The marble-enclosed Marjorie Petty Harper Sculptor Court gave way to the 21st century as the floors were lined with filled chairs to commemorate the history embedded in the walls of the David Owsley Museum of Art’s Baroque Exhibit.
Bold colors, ornate frames, dramatic subjects. All of these are characteristics of the lost era of art in the new exhibit at the David Owsley Museum of Art titled “Beyond the Medici.”
Members of the Muncie Community share how free and public art can positively contribute to a community.
Fruit jar and bottle collectors from across the country build camaraderie
An open, clean and white-walled room with a singular bench. It is quiet. The room is filled with large, heavy and enveloping abstract paintings full of intricate shapes and textures. All are black, white and gray.
Muncie has more to offer than just fast-food chains and department stores. The city has made its downtown and surrounding areas a great place to explore and try new things. While every city might have a Walmart and a Taco Bell, not every city has the following places that make Muncie what it is: home.
David Letterman visited Ball State University’s campus May 1 to present “Clear Reception,” a student-produced documentary about the Glick Center for Glass.
In the making for over three decades, David and Sarojini Johnson’s private print collection makes its debut for the spring exhibit in Ball State University’s David Owsley Museum of Art.
March 27, interim director of the Ball State University School of Art Max Shangle announces to students that stacked classes are no longer offered. In the days since, students have been pressing the school for more answers.
Ball State’s David Owsley Museum of Art embraced an anti-Valentine’s Day theme at the DOMA After Hours event Friday. The event was from 5-8 p.m., and included a variety of activities and events, such as cross stitching, fortune telling, anti-speed dating and creating ex-effigies.
Justin and Rachel Patten, two former teachers who now run their own art company, had to make tough decisions to grow their business and become licensed artists for universities and the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
The David Owsley Museum of Art (DOMA) has assembled an exhibit of recent loans and acquisitions running from Sept. 29 - Dec. 22, featuring a piece by artist and activist Diane Burko, an artist of more than 50 years.
Saturday, representatives from Ball State PBS celebrated the legacy of Bob Ross by hosting Happy Little Fest on LaFollette Field and in the nearby E.F. Ball Communication Building.
Ball State students in the Ceramics Lab work with lots of different kinds of clay, and for lots of different reasons. Two art students and a ceramics professor share their stories with the Ball State Daily News and reveal what the medium means to them.
Muncie Downtown Development Partnership hosted ArtsWalk October, where local artists, performers, food vendors and attendees transformed Walnut St. into a marketplace. Muncie YART, PrimeTrust FCU's Soup Crawl and a variety of live entertainment were all a part of said event.
As students return to Ball State’s campus, art at the Ned and Gloria Griner Art Gallery in the new exhibit, “Beginnings,” showing art from 2021 freshman students in the School of Art, welcomes them. Work from the exhibit is scheduled to be displayed from August 23-26 from 10 a.m.-4 p.m., and a reception, with refreshments, is scheduled for 4-6 p.m. August 24.