While we do our best to ensure the accuracy of our listings, events may be postponed or cancelled without notice. Please confirm with the organizer before making any plans.
Thanks for helping us keep our content updated and accurate. Please let us know what is incorrect and be as specific as possible. We may reach out to you via email if we need more information.
Your Email*
* - Required Fields
Submit
Thanks!
Error report has been sent successfully.
We will review your submission and make any necessary updates.
Skip the Line!
Need to add or update events regularly?
If you're a band, promotor, venue, or artist representative,
Consider becoming one of our verified users!
- speed up the creation process
- Add multiple events and artist at once
- Skip the holding period and publish automatically
Complete our quick form to become a Verified User.
Join us for a gallery walk with Denise Schanz. Learn about the artist and her sculpting techniques. The event will take place in Gallery 110 North. Please Pre-Register for a free ticket by calling the Plymouth Arts Center Office by July 26. Complimentary appetizers, cash bar.
**About the Artist: Denise M. Schanz** is a sculptor, working in stone, wood, steel, iron and bronze. She studied Architecture and Urban Planning, which led her in the direction of sculpture. During her formative years, Schanz traveled to Cuba, Russia, Australia, Europe, Hawaii and Sri Lanka where she experienced sacred lands, spaces of churches and temples, thus enriching and informing the content of her work. In Schanz’s own words, “I am a carver of stone and wood and cast in iron and bronze. My work is the result of intrinsic listening and researching the anatomy of the ear bone structures, decoding, interpreting and connecting to something larger than life.“ When searching for blocks of stone or discarded live edge wood to carve, the process is reciprocal: As she “finds” the stone or wood, it ”finds” her. “This is when the dialog and the dance begins”. A form will emerge, evolve, pull itself out of its cocooned block of stone or wood. “The pace is meditative, quiet, inquisitive and trusting. I am stretching the stone as I would imagine the sounds of bells or singing bowls tapering off to the distance. A reverence between myself and the form has changed places. I am the form and the form becomes me!”