Lynden welcomes winter with a day of outdoor art-making, scavenger hunts, tree-walks, workshops, and whatever other winter activities--ice skating, cross-country skiing, snowshoeing--the weather permits. Orchestrated by Some Fools, our highly participatory, artist-driven carnival offers something for everybody.
Happy to be joining in the fun again this year, our friends from Davey Tree Expert are offering some joy for your minds & your bellies.
Pedro's South American Food truck will be onsite from 11 am to 3 pm, selling an array of Latin American snacks, lunch items, and hot drinks.
Schedule
| 10 am – 4pm | Ask and the Way Will Be Shown with Ophelia Hix |
| 10 am – 4 pm | A Deeply Flawed Analogy: America Pastime Meets Rube Goldberg with Paul Druecke |
| 10 am – 4 pm | Held Hope with Margaret Griffin |
| 10 am – 4 pm | Davey Tree Identification and Trivia Table |
| 10 am – 4 pm | Lobby Screening: “Nature Boy” |
| 10 am – 4 pm | Reindeer Scavenger Hunt |
| 10 am – 11:45 am | Snow People Paper Dolls Workshop |
| 10 am – 11:45 am | Miniature Winter Tree Sculpture Workshop |
| 10 am – 12 pm | Chair Making Demo |
| 11 am – 12 pm | Winter Tree Walk |
| 11 am – 1 pm | Make a Kite with Sindie Ho |
| 12 pm – 1:45 pm | Mosaic Ornaments |
| 12 pm – 1:45 pm | Winter-Themed Block Print and Sticker Workshop |
| 12 pm – 2 pm | The Everyday Feminist: Inhabit Gratitude |
| 12:30 pm – 2:30 pm | Message in a Bottle |
| 1 pm – 3 pm | Edible Bird Ornament Workshop |
| 1 pm – 3 pm | Out There Series: Sound Walk, Writing, Performance |
| 2 pm – 3:45 pm | Dip Candle Making Workshop |
| 2 pm – 3:45 pm | Rice Sack Heat Bag Workshop |
| 2 pm - 4 pm | Outdoor Felting Workshop |
| 2 pm – 4 pm | Chair Making Demo |
About the Artists
Some Fools Basement is an artist-run gallery and event space in Riverwest, a place for students as well as a broader community of emerging artists to be seen and recognized. The Fools (sam, olivia, carter, aliya) aim to platform local Queer, Trans, & BIPOC artists, organizations, and activists, with the intention of opposing the chronic erasure of marginalized people’s work, talent, & experiences. Some Fools uses social media to promote open calls for its (often) thematic shows and is known to program live music during exhibitions. People coming for live music will be surprised to find visual art, and artists coming for the gallery will be surprised to find their new favorite local act.
Ophelia Hix is an artist, world builder, and hopeful future-believer. They make work that forgives, building immersive spaces of eyes that provide recognition. They’ve developed a language that runs across their work across various media: an online blog, intuitive prose and poetry performances, paintings, drawings, and sculptures.
Paul Druecke is an artist and writer working at the intersections of sculpture, poetry, and detritus. His work was included in the 2014 Whitney Biennial and anthologized in Blackwell’s Companion to Public Art. His ongoing project “America Pastime” was featured in the New York Times Five We Recommend series. He is assisted by Malachi Baer, a multimedia artist and recent graduate of the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design whose work focuses on symbolism and repetition, and Jayden Ellsworth, a found object sculptor and current MIAD senior who works with themes of environmentalism, trash, and labor.
Margaret Griffin is a Milwaukee-based sculptor who received her BFA in New Studio Practice: Fine Arts from Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design in May of 2023. Her work explores themes of the body and industry while being visually inspired by the Post-Minimalism movement. This June, Griffin was accepted into Plum Blossom Initiative's Bridge Work professional development program, a 10-month program that assists emerging artists in transitioning from an academic setting into the professional art scene. Griffin has been showing her work since 2019 in both Southeast Wisconsin and Chicagoland, as well as in St. Joseph, Missouri, at the Albrecht-Kemper Museum of Art. She is one of the co-organizers of The Grilled Cheese Grant, an annual community-funded emerging artist grant based in Milwaukee.
Xarion Latimore is a Milwaukee-born and raised multidisciplinary artist who recently graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee with a BFA in Film Production.
Multimedia artist and digital illustrator Kierston Ghaznavi’s vibrantly colored articulated paper and large-scale wooden dolls depict the beauty and unique personalities of Black women today as well as Black pop culture, Afro-centric themes, natural hair, affirmations of self-love and plus size body appreciation.
Heather Eiden is a mixed media artist who specializes in ceramics. Her greatest inspiration comes from traveling and forest bathing with trees. Currently, she is working on a series of House Tiles called Trees and their Houses. The work will be exhibited at the Schlitz Audubon Nature Center summer 2024.
Lauren Newby is a professional furniture maker based in Milwaukee. She developed her admiration for design, strength of wood, and traditional craft while rebuilding a 1850s dovetail log home and studying woodworking at UW-Madison. Exploring early American craft history, she is interested in breathing new life into antique tools and methods.
Sindie Ho plays between modes of making, speaking, and shape-shifting. His current fixations are ceramics, toy-making, and Nanalan'. He is Midwest born and grown and quite stubborn about it.
Hunter Louis is an illustrator and printmaker based in Milwaukee. He received his BFA in Art and Design with an emphasis in Print and Narrative Forms from the University of Milwaukee-Wisconsin. Louis’s work establishes and explores a distinct world and characters through his humorous and melancholic illustrations.
Natalie Alicia is a Milwaukee-based artist who creates mosaics out of found objects, raw materials, and beads. With a keen eye for unique materials, Alicia has a remarkable ability to transform ordinary objects into beautiful works of art. Their artistic style is characterized by the purposeful incorporation of diverse and unconventional materials, which adds depth, light, and texture to their mosaics. Alicia's dedication to sustainability shines through their art, as they repurpose discarded items, giving them new life and meaning. By infusing their mosaics with beads and found treasures, they add a personal touch and a shimmering quality to their artwork.
The Everyday Feminist, a collaboration between Kate E. Schaffer and Melissa Dorn, grew out of studio conversations around their individual practices and a mutual frustration with marginalization expressed while enjoying a cold beer on a summer day. The Everyday Feminist labors to ensure the political, social, and economic equality of all genders by questioning the status quo, promoting generosity, and cultivating community.
Carolann Grzybowski (b. 2000, BFA, she/her) is a filmmaker, digital marketer, and events programmer residing in Milwaukee. She is the media manager and fine art photographer for David Barnett Gallery. In 2022, Carolann founded the Cactus Club Independent Film Festival at queer artist collective Cactus Club. Her film work has been screened through Film Diary NYC, Milwaukee Underground Film Festival and at independent microcinemas in the Midwest. Carolann received her degree in Film, Video, Animation and New Genres with a minor in Theatre from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee in 2022.
Ollie Scaffidi is a Milwaukee-born queer fiber artist, also known for their wearables brand @reincarnatedobjects. Ollie’s alternative sourcing of material and fiber techniques look to expand what they can share with their community. In the studio, Ollie creates hand-made items that for use around the house + beyond. They are inspired by quilt-making, organic shapes, interior design, and chaos. Much of their practice involves repurposing materials (by thrifting them or by saving them from being thrown away), as well as using what they already have at home to make functional pieces through sewing, weaving, and collaging.
Rylee Krumrei is a queer non-binary artist living in Milwaukee. Their work is textile based: finding new ways to explore 2D and 3D needle felted works of abstraction, animal figures, or playful earrings. They manipulate upcycled materials and alter vintage fragments to make garments or sculptures that carry a message of sustainability. Rylee enjoys being playful with their work and takes inspiration from children’s books and the surrounding ever-changing landscape.
