Tag Archives: DOSHI Gallery

Creative Construction: Amid high hopes, the Susquehanna Art Museum debuts its much-anticipated new facility in Midtown.

Screenshot 2014-12-29 08.57.28On a chilly morning in early December, shiny new lettering sparkled in the bright sun outside, and workers toiling on the new Susquehanna Art Museum completed their final touches.

The round front desk had just been moved from the Kunkel Building, SAM’s downtown home for 10 years, and placed in the lobby, ready to receive visitors.

The atmosphere was notably relaxed, absent of anything resembling last-minute anxiety.

“We’ll be ready,” stated Laurene Buckley, SAM’s confident executive director.

At 6 p.m. on Jan. 16, the front doors will draw open to the public for the first time. All eyes are on the project, hoping that the museum will reshape the Harrisburg area’s experience of learning about, appreciating and making art—and maybe have a hand in reshaping the city, as well.

“It’s a huge catalyst for the entire city, not just the Midtown area,” said Mayor Eric Papenfuse. “It’s building on the energy that is already there but is going to see a lot of transformations next year.”

Founded in the 1970s, SAM always lived in rented or borrowed space, and Harrisburg laid claim to the dubious distinction of being one of the few state capitals without a dedicated art museum.

A $5.5 million state grant, plus $1.5 million raised by SAM, finally changed the picture. In late spring 2014, shovels hit dirt at the former Keystone Bank building at N. 3rd and Calder streets, constructed in 1916. The renovation and an addition give SAM 20,000 square feet of its very own display and operations space.

Like Papenfuse, Joshua Kesler stressed the importance of SAM’s expansion and relocation to a new, permanent home in Midtown. The developer of The Millworks nearby paused long enough in preparations for his own early 2015 opening to note that the museum’s decision in 2010 to occupy the historic Midtown bank was the encouragement he needed to buy a former warehouse and factory and convert it to restaurant, bar, art studios, gallery, music venue and beer garden.

“The art museum is a one-of-a-kind for central Pennsylvania,” Kesler said. “It’s a complete game-changer for the city and especially Midtown.”

At Home

On the day I visited, light flooded in through the bank’s tall windows, made to look historic but actually energy-efficient replacements for the originals that couldn’t withstand renovations, said Buckley.

The original vault door stood open but immobilized at the rear of the lobby, there to add a touch of history and because “there’s no way to get rid of it,” said Buckley. “We’d have to dynamite it out of here.”

The vault, made cheery with green, blue, orange and brown carpet tiles, will host weekly story time for young children and their parents. Stories will be related to SAM exhibits or other art themes, and sessions will end with art-making activities.

“This is really going to be a place where families can feel comfortable and at home,” said SAM Education Manager Tina Sell. “We’re breaking away from the idea that museums are a place where you have to behave 100 percent of the time. This is a place where you can relax and enjoy and still make some connections to artwork.”

SAM plans to be as much about creating and learning about art as displaying it. An education room will host classes, including after-school sessions for advanced students in anime manga comic-book drawing. A first-floor hallway will display works created by local artists or SAM students, or pieces related to the main exhibits.

The DOSHI Gallery, a longtime SAM partner devoted to contemporary works, will display in the lobby gallery for three months out of the year—a change that has upset some DOSHI artists and supporters. However, ongoing negotiations between SAM and DOSHI over such items as the number of shows and the jurying process “are looking pretty good,” Buckley said.

Upstairs, in SAM’s 3,500-square-foot main exhibit hall, visitors will interact with art. For the inaugural exhibit, “Pop Open: Icons of Pop Art from Niagara University,” visitors can play with old-fashioned projectors to create Lichtenstein-style comic-strip art or channel their inner Warhols and turn their shadows into live, multi-colored offset lithography.

For the following exhibit, “Everyone Can Fly: Faith Ringgold’s ‘Tar Beach’ & Regional Picture Book Illustrators,” the museum will recreate the rooftop getaway from Ringgold’s children’s classic.

“So, you’ll be able to go and lay out and daydream,” said Sell.

Outside the building, a mural by Messiah College professor Daniel Finch will grace an outside wall overlooking a sculpture garden, which will be completed by late spring. Additional ways to brighten up the exterior and streetscape are still under consideration, Buckley said.

“We haven’t quite figured out how we’re going to explode the outside with something colorful,” she said.

New Energy

SAM’s interactivity extends into Midtown, where museum officials hope to contribute to the neighborhood renaissance. The museum is partnering with everyone from Yellow Bird Café for food for its own café to HACC for parking. The gift shop will sell art books pulled from Midtown Scholar’s warehouse.

Midtown Scholar inventory manager and head book buyer Sarah Ludwig had just been choosing pop-art books when TheBurg called to ask why the partnership works.

“We’re hoping that art and reading go all together, especially the way books are made today, especially art books,” Ludwig said. “They’re like a piece of art themselves sometimes, so hopefully it all melds together very nicely.”

Papenfuse, who owns Midtown Scholar and is a SAM board member, said SAM’s entry into the neighborhood has “got us very, very excited at the bookstore.”

As for the two bars across the street from SAM, including one involved in a drug raid in August, they “are going to clean up their acts and go more upscale, or they’re going to have a hard time surviving with the new energy and dynamic that’s happening in Midtown. The city’s not going to tolerate illegal activities and continued drug dealing,” said Papenfuse.

Kesler said that the Millworks is conceptualizing with SAM on “how to integrate our customer base.”

“What we’re really looking for is people being able to make a day in Midtown,” he said. “Going to Midtown Scholar, going to the Broad Street Market, going to the art museum and the Millworks. We see those projects as the real keystone of rebuilding Midtown.”

Food, books, art, drink—“That sounds like a Saturday to me,” Kesler said.

New museums are springing up nationwide, at Harvard University and in New York, in Miami and in Westmoreland, Pa., reports the Association of Art Museum Directors. A 2012 University of Chicago study found that small cities joined in a cultural building boom from 1994 to 2008, although it found “no clear pattern of spillover effects (negative or positive) of specific cultural building projects on non-building local cultural organizations and the greater community.”

And while greater Harrisburg has high hopes for its shiny new museum, SAM officials are concentrating on art of the people, by the people and for the people.

“Art is for everyone,” said Sell, the education manager. “The museum is not supposed to be a place just for art students, just for art collectors. It’s for people to get to know themselves and get to know each other, hopefully, a little bit better.”

 

The Susquehanna Art Museum is located at N. 3rd and Calder streets in Harrisburg. It opens its doors to the public for 3rd in The Burg, Jan. 16, at 6 p.m., with the inaugural exhibit, “Pop Open: Icons of Pop Art from Niagara University.” More information about the museum is at www.sqart.org.

The museum’s hours are Tuesday to Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sunday 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. and Monday by appointment. General admission is $8 and $5 for teachers, seniors and veterans. Children under 12 are free.

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October News Digest

Treasurer Turmoil Continues

Harrisburg’s newly appointed treasurer stepped aside last month after the city learned that he had filed for personal bankruptcy.

City Council selected accountant Timothy East in late September to fill the post left vacant following the resignation of former city Treasurer John Campbell. East was one of six applicants deemed qualified for the office and one of four ultimately nominated by members of council.

East did not reveal the 2011 bankruptcy during his interview before council. The issue arose later when he needed to be bonded for the job. He was never sworn in.

The city now must re-start the process of selecting a city treasurer.

Campbell resigned in early September following his arrest on charges of theft from two nonprofit organizations unaffiliated with the city. The new treasurer will fill out the remainder of Campbell’s term, which runs through next year.

Note: An October news digest article about the city treasury incorrectly attributed a comment to the controller’s office, saying the office had reviewed the treasurer’s books and “found no anomalies.” To date, the controller’s review of treasury, involving questionnaires about treasury’s internal controls, has not yet been completed.

 

Arborist Position Created

Harrisburg soon will have someone looking after its trees, as City Council approved the new position of arborist.

The post, which will pay no more than $50,000 a year, including benefits, will be funded by the city’s Host Municipality Benefit Fee Fund, money that Harrisburg receives for being the host site of a regional waste facility, namely the incinerator now owned and operated by the Lancaster Solid Waste Management Authority.

The arborist will help ensure the health of the city’s extensive tree canopy. Among the arborist’s first jobs: the removal of about 200 dead trees identified in the city’s recently completed tree inventory.

In addition to hiring an arborist, City Council approved other administration priorities for the Host Fee Fund: $55,000 for a portable road salt shelter; $32,000 for liners for several leaking trash trucks; and $25,000 for charges relating to the city’s comprehensive plan.

Before the allocation, the city’s Host Fee account totaled about $400,000, according to Bill Cluck, chairman of city’s Environmental Advisory Council. The city should receive another $100,000-plus into the fund soon, said Cluck.

The city receives $1 for every ton of trash processed at the facility. The money then is set aside for environmental projects.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse admitted that the spending from the Host Fee Fund had been ad hoc this year. However, he said he would propose a 2015 budget that will set priorities for use of the monies going forward.

 

School Resource Officers Urged

Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse last month urged the city school district to reinstate the school resource officer program, saying it would help make the student environment safer.

The administration has drafted a proposal for rebooting the program, which was suspended several years ago by the school district for budgetary reasons. The administration’s proposal would cost about $500,000 a year, the cost borne by the district.

He made the proposal following the sexual assault last month of a student just a block away from Harrisburg High School. He reiterated it after four teenagers, including three high school students, were arrested for allegedly trying to hold up two state assemblymen on a Midtown street, an altercation that resulted in gunfire between the suspects and the lawmakers.

 

Collection Agency Hired

Harrisburg last month agreed to hire a collection agency to recover some of the back business taxes and fees owed to the city.

City Council voted unanimously to engage Pittsburgh-based eCollect Plus to collect delinquent taxes such as the business privilege tax, business license fee, mercantile tax, zoning review fee, health license fee, amusement tax and parking tax.

The company’s fee will range from 20 to 25 percent of the amount recovered. However, it must recover at least $376,000, which is 10 percent of the city’s average business and mercantile tax collections over the past three years, to receive any compensation.

eCollect specializes in tax collections for Pennsylvania municipalities. Its client list includes Chester, McKeesport and Hanover Township.

 

HMAC Gets Funding

After years of trying to secure financing, the owners of the Harrisburg Midtown Arts Center have received the funding that they believe will allow them to complete the renovation of the expansive arts space.

Michael Giblin, an HMAC principal, confirmed that he and his partners—John Traynor, Gary Bartlett and Chuck London—closed on financing that will allow them to add a restaurant, a 700-person entertainment space and a rooftop bar to the building at N. 3rd and Herr streets. The restaurant will be designed and managed by Rehoboth Beach, Del.-based Highwater Management.

HMAC opened in 2009 with a single entertainment space and bar called Stage on Herr. However, the project remained uncompleted after hitting funding snags as banks scaled back lending in the wake of the financial crisis. The facility has been on the sheriff’s sale list numerous times over the past five years, though was never publicly auctioned.

The century-old building was originally Harrisburg’s Jewish Community Center. It later housed the city’s Police Athletic League. It had sat empty for many years before Traynor, Bartlett and London bought it from the Harrisburg Redevelopment Authority in late 2007.

 

SAM Opening Set

The Susquehanna Art Museum has set Jan. 16 for the opening of its new building in Midtown Harrisburg.

SAM will debut the 20,000-square-foot facility with an exhibit titled, “Open: Icons of Pop Art from Niagara University.” The show will feature art on loan from the university’s Castellani Art Museum, including works from such seminal mid-20th century figures as Andy Warhol, Robert Indiana, Marisol and Roy Lichtenstein.

The new museum includes the original, fully renovated Keystone/Fulton bank building at N. 3rd and Calder streets, plus an addition built in the former bank parking lot. It also will feature the Doshi Gallery for Contemporary Art, a sculpture garden and a new mural by Messiah College professor Daniel Finch.

For the past several years, SAM has been without a permanent home, mounting exhibits in a gallery in the State Museum. It long exhibited in the Kunkel building downtown before that building was redeveloped.

 

Enterline Appointed Chief

Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse last month named department veteran Brian Enterline as the new chief of the city’s Fire Bureau.

Enterline had been acting chief since his appointment a year ago by former Mayor Linda Thompson. He has served for 14 years with the department.

 

Heavy Equipment Bought

Harrisburg last month purchased two pieces of heavy equipment: one for road maintenance and the other for firefighting.

City Council approved the lease/purchase of a new Case 580 SN Loader Backhoe from Mechanicsburg-based Groff Tractor and Equipment. After a trade-in of an existing backhoe, the net sales price will be $47,425, amortized over 60 months.

Council also OK’d an intergovernmental agreement to buy a 1984 Sutphen Pumper Fire Engine from Swatara Township. The used pumper will cost $3,500.

 

Changing Hands

Adrian St., 2252: Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co. to E. Waters, $58,000

Adrian St., 2445: C. & T. Phillips to G. Goneste & G. Niguse, $70,000

Adrian St., 2459: M. Sopp to B. Rotta, $70,000

Barkley Lane, 2524: J. Paul to Codi Tucker, $53,200

Bellevue Rd., 2042: L. & S. Freeman to D. Miller & M. Heagy, $91,000

Brookwood St., 2610: Scottsdale Commercial Partners LP & Brickbox Enterprises Ltd. to University Park Plaza Corp., $230,000

Capital St., 1200: J. & D. Fuhrman to 8219 Ventures LLC, $70,000

Elder St., 821 & 808 S. 26th St.: GR Sponaugle & Sons Inc. to AIS Property Management LLC, $939,500

Green St., 1900: WCI Partners LP to J. Bovender & J. Van Horn, $192,500

Green St., 1938: WCI Partners LP to I. Brea to O. Sanchez, $201,000

Green St., 2133: D. Ware to M. Brown, $40,000

Hale Ave., 420: V. Ly to Luckylan Properties LLC, $30,000

Harris St., 205: Arthur A. Kusic Real Estate Investments to J. Heinly, $100,000

Herr St., 256: C. Wilson to N. Hench & R. Wetzel Jr., $125,000

Hillside Rd., 109: L. & K. York to W. Morgan Jr. & A. Winans, $254,900

Hoffman St., 3133: S. Harvey to M. Sobkowski, $62,000

Hoffman St., 3235: Harrisburg Television Inc. c/o Allbritten Communications to WHTM Acquisitions LLC & Revac Inc., $598,400

Holly St., 1823: J. Johnson to S. & D. Fenton & Exit Realty Capital Area, $56,000

Hudson St., 1152: PA Deals LLC to Amboy MAA Properties LLC, $104,000

Kensington St., 2241: F. Marsico to L. Murphy, $40,500

Kensington St., 2400: M. Eck to R. Murphy, $49,000

Lewis St., 101: R. Alexander to T. Arora, $75,000

Market St., 2048: S. St. Clair Jr. to R. Monzon & L. Trinh, $35,000

North St., 216: E. & R. Maff to R. Lamberson, $75,000

N. 2nd St., 1307: B. Winpenny to V. McCallum, $68,900

N. 2nd St., 2101: JAD Development to SMKP Properties LLC, $229,000

N. 3rd St., 1126: Cornerstone Realty Management LLC to BCG Holdings LLC & Lehman Property Management, $310,000

N. 3rd St., 1200: Cornerstone Realty Management LLC to Keuka LLC & Lehman Property Management, $575,350

N. 3rd St., 1626: C. Hoffman to C. Grilli, $119,000

N. 4th St., 1630: PA Deals LLC to M. & J. Leahy, $48,000

N. 4th St., 2032: M. Stransbaugh to A. & A. Gault, $81,000

N. 12th St., 54: D. Schubert to J. Achenbach, $44,000

N. 19th St., 43: Kirsch & Burns LLC to LMK Properties LLC, $52,669

N. Front St., 1525, Unit 202: C. Shoemaker to R. & A. Chappelka, $185,000

Reel St., 2719: J. Eby to E. Tilahun, $51,000

Reily St., 255: C. Ruegsegger & S. Kauffman to E. Harman, $139,000

S. 19th St., 901: L. Zaydon Jr. to CSP Group LLP, $285,000

S. 19th St., 1101: PA Deals LLC to Amboy MAA Properties LLC, $98,000

S. 27th St., 701: Fannie Mae to A. Brinkley, $87,900

S. Cameron St., 535: J. Strohecker to Capitol City Holdings LLC, $175,000

Susquehanna St., 1622: D. Remm & E. Goshorn to R. & G. Harris, $116,000

Wilson Parkway, 2600: A. Sias Jr. & S. Gibbs to M. Cabrera, $50,000

Harrisburg property sales for September 2014, greater than $30,000. Source: Dauphin County. Data is assumed to be accurate.

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SAM, Rising: After numerous delays, construction has begun and an opening is set for the new Susquehanna Art Museum.

Screenshot 2014-03-30 11.07.57On Jan. 16, 2015, the Susquehanna Art Museum expects to open the doors of its new museum with an appropriately named exhibit. It’s “Pop Open,” Niagara University’s sparkling collection featuring such pop art icons as Oldenburg, Rauschenberg, and—of course—Warhol.

“We’ve got a soup can,” assures SAM Executive Director Laurene Buckley.

In other words, the train that is SAM is now moving ahead at full-speed.

More than three years have passed since SAM announced it had selected a site in Midtown Harrisburg as its permanent home. However, fundraising challenges and design changes delayed construction beyond some demolition, which began last summer. In the meantime, SAM has used space in the State Museum to mount exhibits.

The bid now has been awarded for renovating and adding on to the former Keystone/Fulton bank branch at N. 3rd and Calder streets to create a permanent home for the capital city’s art museum. The partnership of JEM Group-Carrolton Design broke ground in mid-March. SAM will get the building on Dec. 22, and exhibits secured for some vague future point now have official opening dates.

A $7 million project seen as a major piece in the Midtown revival puzzle is taking shape. Now, say museum officials, the capital city’s dedicated art museum will rejoin the community and rededicate itself to showcasing art as a tool for entertainment, economic activity and, most importantly, education.

Buckley admits that calling SAM a “Kunstehalle”—the European term for an art exhibition museum lacking a permanent collection—might sound pretentious, so she settles on “potpourri.”

“And that’s just fine with me,” she says. “Art is broadly defined, and we intend it to be broadly defined.”

With 3,500 square feet of space in its exhibition hall, the new SAM can mix and match exhibits. Maybe a show on art furniture will augment an exhibit on past and present architecture planned in conjunction with Historic Harrisburg Association, the Art Association of Harrisburg and the American Institute of Architects.

Harrisburg needs destinations, says SAM Board Chair Jack Scott, and the new space, from Philadelphia architectural firm EwingCole, is designed to attract. In the high-ceilinged, renovated bank space that greets visitors, works from SAM’s DOSHI Gallery will line the wall. The bank vault will be a family orientation area, “maybe with storytime on Sundays,” says Buckley.

A high-tech education room will allow streaming of lessons and talks. Perhaps the café will set up tables outdoors on nice days. Students from the Channels Food Rescue Kitchen School might operate a mobile snack cart. A garden, the size of two Midtown lots, will offer please-touch sculptures and maybe a sensory garden with herbs and braille plaques.

Scott is a retired technologist who claims not to have “an art bone in my body.” But while his artist wife, Carol Scott, was vice president of the Garden State Watercolor Society in New Jersey, he helped build membership from 50 to 250 by capturing names of artists, donors, buyers and browsers in a 3,000-person database.

“The object lesson there is, you must market art,” says Scott. “It isn’t that you have to sell art, but you have to market. People have to be aware that it’s there. They need to understand its value, and they need the opportunity to make a choice to experience art.”

Art is essential to “creative expression and developing creative thinking,” says Scott. It also returns $5 to $8 in commercial value.

“It comes back in commerce. It comes back in child creativity. It comes back in freedom of expression,” he says. “Why would we not do this?”

The new building is revitalizing SAM’s mission to educate. The VanGO! bus that takes artwork to schoolchildren and events is no longer a bus but a retrofitted RV (staffers are excited—much easier to drive and cheaper to operate). “Art to Go” portfolios for teachers, with lesson plans on topics ranging from Pennsylvania artists to Georgia O’Keeffe, are newly customized and digitized.

SAM’s second exhibit will feature the works of renowned children’s book artist Faith Ringgold, with local, award-winning artist Jonathan Bean—a Publisher’s Weekly “Artist to Watch”—setting up his studio in the exhibit area.

“We’re really trying to build partnerships with as many audiences as we can, as well as bring museum education into the 21st century with lots of interactives,” says Director of Education and E-learning Andrea Glass.

Name a Midtown business or nonprofit, and SAM is probably partnering with it. Movies and Midtown Cinema. Food and Yellow Bird Café and Sayford Market. Parking and HACC.

Scott is intent on “narrowing the width of the river” that divides east and west shores, and the addition of Dave Reager, the Camp Hill attorney and a founder of Plein Air Camp Hill, to the board should help. Putting the new museum in Midtown was a risk, says Scott, but it’s the “right choice” for a Harrisburg arts corridor.

SAM expects to hire from the community and keep its doors open to the community, says Buckley. Though admission will probably be charged, at least initially, museum officials are brainstorming ways to schedule free-admission days, she says. Regular events will range from “fancy preview sit-down dinners, all the way to block parties—which we’ve already instituted—with local bands.”

The museum can also serve as a catalyst for further development in Midtown and greatly enhance its growing reputation as an arts district, says Glass.

“Being part of the community is being a cultural hub and having the community invest value in what we are doing,” she says. “It’s really about building ties with the community at all levels.”

Follow SAM’s progress, see events and learn about discussing partnerships (naming opportunities in the new building are still available) by visiting sqart.org or SAM’s Facebook page. 

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