Tom Thumb Gallery

The Tom Thumb Annual Floating Art Exhibition, founded in 1998, by Jimmy Kuehnle and Kjell Hahn[1] is a student run alternative exhibition opportunity located in Kirksville, Missouri. It is one of two alternative exhibition opportunities from the gallery at Truman State University. The second is Gallery 1/33.[2]

History

The Tom Thumb Annual Floating Art Exhibition was founded to provide exhibition opportunities for students and artists at Truman State University and Kirksville. It rose out of a frustration with Truman State Gallery's Student Juried Exhibition and the lack of student exhibition opportunists outside the BFA shows and the then annual Student Show. Kuehnle and Kjell did not like the standards and restrictions placed on them by the University. They decided to begin their own alternative space.[3] In 1998, they cleared out Kjell's apartment and held an open art submission.[4] The following three years the shows were held there. It then moved to a renovated home located at 603 First Street for the next two years. Since it has been held at various locations including the former Aquadome,[5] the old One World Store,[6] the Kirksville Arts Association[1] and the Washington School.[7] Local people call it a "floating exhibition" because of these yearly venue changes.[8] The Tom Thumb Annual Floating Art Exhibition does not reject submissions of any kind and usually features a guest speaker and other forms of entertainment. One such novelty is called, "Improve the Art" and consists of a poor artwork provided by the gallery. Guests are then invited to "improve" the artwork with various art supplies ranging from oil pastels to spray paint.[9]

Exhibitions

Significance in local culture

The rotating arts festival has been featured in Missouri tourism brochures.[8] The Tom Thumb Annual Floating Art Exhibition is viewed by the student body as a positive creative outlet to be proud of and as an alternative to destructive outbursts such as graffiti.[29][30] A college blogger has critically noted that the phrasing "Floating Art Exhibition" may be misleading, since the gallery is not restricted to art that may be suspended in air or bobbing in some body of water.[31]

References

  1. 1 2 Gonzalez, Jackie. "Gallery Endorses Student Art," Truman State University Index. 2007-04-05
  2. "Introducing Gallery 1/33, Truman’s Newest, Most Innovative Art Exhibition Space", Truman Today. 2008-04-01
  3. 1 2 Vuagniaux, Brie (2010-04-01). "Local Tradition Blasts Into the New Decade" (PDF). the monitor. Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  4. 1 2 Dandino, Andy (1998-09-22). "Alternative gallery celebrates art". The Monitor. Kirksville.
  5. Dowell, Jesse Collin. "Artists Haven in Financial Peril," Truman State University Index. 2003-03-06
  6. 1 2 "News in Brief," Truman State University Index. 2004-04-08.
  7. Burk, Nikki. "Curious Collection | Former school houses natural history museum, hosts floating art exhibit," Truman State University Index. 2006-11-09.
  8. 1 2 Cho, Ester. "Music and culture Missouri style often off beat, off the beaten path," Columbia Missourian. 2007-05-10
  9. "A (partially) oral history of Tom Thumb". A (partially) oral history of Tom Thumb. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
  10. Schulz, Rachel (19 September 2000). "Student-produced Tom Thumb Annual Floating Art Exhibition displays artwork". The Monitor. Kirksville.
  11. Schulz, Rachel (3 October 2000). "Tom Thumb Gallery improves campus artwork". The Monitor. Kirksville.
  12. Killam, Sarah (1 March 2001). "The art of 'chaos and fun'". Truman State University Index. Kirksville. p. 1.
  13. Baker, Aaron; Cameron Moore (30 October 2001). "Tom Thumb lets students, professors show art, break stuff". The Monitor. Kirksville.
  14. "Notes," Truman Today. February 12, 2002.
  15. Delgado, Andrés (6 March 2002). "Aquadome hosts art gallery". The Monitor. Kirksville.
  16. 1 2 3 4 Kamvar, Zhian (28 April 2008). "Art for All at Tom Thumb XII". The Monitor. Kirksville.
  17. "Notes," Truman Today. April 13, 2004.
  18. Gonzalez, Jackie (2007-04-05). "Gallery endorses student art" (PDF). Truman State University Index. p. 11. Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  19. Hansen, Julia (3 April 2008). "Gadfly, Monitor add literary appeal". Truman State University Index. Kirksville.
  20. Sissom, Allison; Carmen Doyon; Joyce Wong. "Tom Thumb XIII 2009 I Facebook". Facebook. Retrieved 2010-04-04.
  21. Barbosa, Kathleen (2010-04-05). "Art show accepts all" (PDF). Truman State University Index. p. 11. Retrieved 2016-11-19.
  22. "News in brief: April 11," Truman State University Index. 2013-04-11. p. 2. Accessed 2016-09-21.
  23. "Hello from Tom Thumb XVII!," Tom Thumb Art Exhibition. March 10, 2013. Accessed Aug 14, 2013.
  24. "Married for a Cause". KTRM News. 2013-04-24.
  25. McNett, Jared (2014-04-14). "Not Another Tom Thumb XVIII (Saturday Night)". All Fresh Sounds. Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  26. Sotraidis, Chris (2015-05-01). "THE SPECTRE OF ENGELLIANISM: HOW TSU IS BENEFITTING FROM A PROTO-MARXIAN COMMUNIST MINDSET IN 2015 Never Mind the Bollocks: Here's a Review of Tom Thumb XIX". the monitor. p. 16. Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  27. "Tom Thumb Art Exhibition: Photos from Tom Thumb XIX". Tom Thumb Art Exhibition. 2015-04-26. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
  28. Benitez, Carol (2016-04-15). "Event of the Week: Tom Thumb Art Festival". Detours Magazine. Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  29. McDermott, Brenna (9 April 2009). "Campus graffiti proves to be little more than nuisance". Truman State University Index. Kirksville.
  30. Grant, Andrew (28 April 2005). "Criticisms drown out the good things our students accomplish". Truman State University Index. Kirksville.
  31. "Modest Inspiration". Filmingo Productions Blog. blogspot.com. Retrieved April 3, 2008.

External links

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