Exhibition Spaces
Lobby Exhibit Space:
The lobby of our Art Center serves as a welcoming space for visitors, featuring a seating area and a small retail section. This space also showcases professional works of art, with each exhibit lasting three months and features the work of one artist or the work of an art club. For artists with larger collections, we also have additional art display rails in the lower-level hallways.
Understanding that this exhibition space is a lobby rather than a traditional gallery, we are particularly interested in larger-scale colorful works that are suitable for an all-ages audience, including young children. Art should be able to hang from a traditional gallery rail system and must be equipped with a wire across the back.
At ArtsConnect, we believe that art should reflect the rich diversity of our community. We are committed to creating an inclusive environment where all artists feel empowered to share their perspectives and creativity. We particularly encourage artists of color, as well as those from traditionally underrepresented communities, to apply. We aim to elevate voices from all backgrounds and ensure our exhibits showcase artistic expression.
Exhibition dates (Subject to change)
January 15 - March 15
March 15 - May 15
May 15 - July 15
July 15 - September 30
October 1 - November 21 (FotoFocus)
November 23 - January 29
Lobby Exhibition Space:
Navy Wall: 15 ft wide, 7 ft rail height
Grey Wall: 8 ft wide, 7 foot rail height
Exhibit applications are reviewed by an independent panel of artists. Apply to be a featured artist or art group here.
View the current Main Gallery Artist HERE
Submit Your Artist work for Gallery Consideration
Artists submissions will be reviewed on a regular basis. A panel will determine which artwork is featured and when it may appear in the ArtsConnect gallery. Galleries are changed every 3 months in order to feature several professional artists in a year. All artwork must be able to be hung. (We are unable to exhibit sculpture at this time.)
The Harper Gallery
For over 50 years, nationally acclaimed artist Charley Harper called Springfield Township home, drawing inspiration from the wildlife in his backyard nestled among the trees. In 2020, as part of renovations to the ArtsConnect Art Center, we dedicated The Harper Studio to honor Charley’s enduring legacy in the community. This space, adorned with some of his most iconic works, serves as a hub of activity, where piano lessons and card games for seniors take place each week.
All pieces in our Harper collection are available for purchase. If we don’t have the print you're seeking, we can source it through our trusted distributor. For inquiries, please contact us at 513-522-2108.
Visit our retail store online which also features many Charley Harper collectables.
Charley
Harper
Charley Harper (August 4, 1922–June 10, 2007) had an alternative way of looking at nature. His serigraphs were large expanses of rich color, which gave the viewer a very different perspective on the animal kingdom. A conservationist as well as an artist, Harper revealed the unique aspects of his wildlife subjects through highly stylized geometric reduction. Harper said he was the only wildlife artist who has never been compared to Audubon
, yet his wildlife art was just as instructive—the only difference was that Harper laced his lessons with humor. Harper believed that humor made it easier to encourage changes in our attitudes and awareness of environmental concerns.
There was a rare and delightful playfulness in Harper’s artwork. There was also graphic genius. Harper said, When I look at a wildlife or nature subject, I don’t see feathers, fur, scapulars or tail coverts—none of that. I see exciting shapes, color combinations, patterns, textures, fascinating behavior and endless possibilities for making interesting pictures. I regard the picture as an ecosystem in which all the elements are interrelated, interdependent, perfectly balanced, without trimming or unutilized parts; and herein lies the lure of painting: In a world of chaos, the picture is one small rectangle in which the artist can create an ordered universe.
Reared on a West Virginia farm, Harper developed an early appreciation and love of animals as well as design. He attended West Virginia Wesleyan College and graduated from the Cincinnati Art Academy, where he also taught for many years. Gradually, Harper began to lose his interest in realism. I felt shackled by the laws of perspective and shading and decided that the constant attempt to create the illusion of three dimensions on the two-dimensional plane of the picture was limiting me as an artist. Realistic painting persuades the viewer that he is looking into space rather than at a flat surface. It denies the picture plane, which I affirm and use as an element of design. Wildlife art has been dominated by realism, but I have chosen to do it differently because I think flat, hard-edge and simple.
In his artwork, Harper imaginatively investigated the similarities between human and wild animal behaviors, but completely without anthropomorphism. I learn as much as I can about the creatures that interest me, and they all do. I observe them and find out how they interact with each other and their environments and ask myself,
What if?
Springfield Township Administrative Lobby
ArtsConnect curates the lobby of the administration building, located at 9150 Winton Road. Visitors come to the township building to file business and renovation permits, attend community meetings, talk with public officials and staff and visit the Fire Department for medical checks.
Calendar of Exhibitors
Aug 23-Oct 18, 2024 Kate Spencer
Oct 21 - Dec 13, 2024 Michael Knueven
Dec 16 - Feb 7, 2025 - James Warner
Feb 10 - April 4, 2025 - Lynda Rust
April 7 - May 30, 2025 Jen O'Connell
June 2 - July 25, 2025 - Tara Lynn Pugh
July 28 - Sept 19, 2025 - Thaddeus Williams
Sept 22-Nov 14, 2025 - Ricci Michaels
Nov 17 - Jan 9, 2025 - Linda Bittner
Jan 12 - April 6 - Charley Harper
April 6 - June 29 - ArtsConnect Art Club
June 30 - September 30
October 1 - January 8