Interpetations X

The 10th Annual Arizona Art Alliance Interpretations Exhibition features artists from affiliated Arizona Art Alliance Member Arts Organizations.   The theme “Interpretations” is open to inspire all artists to interpret what they see, feel, and hear, and apply it to their artwork.

Exhibition Dates: March 2 through March 31, 2025
Location: WHAM Art Gallery |  16560 N. Dysart Rd., Surprise 85378 (623)-584-8311
Reception and Awards Ceremony: March 15, 2025 | 2:00-4:00 pm: with a special special event:

Interpretations X: Art and Music through a Humanities Lens will immediately follow the Awards Presentation at the Exhibit Reception at WHAM on Saturday, March 15 at 2:00PM. Central Arizona Flute Ensemble (CAFE Flutes) will perform five selections of music that relate to five pieces of exhibited artwork. Viewers will listen to a piece of live music while studying the related image. After each piece, two humanities facilitators with expertise in art and music will lead the audience in a conversation about their experience. Through discussion, we will build meaning, make sense, understand, create dialogue, change perspective, and offer insight about how artists and composers express their ideas, and how audiences process them.

Our life experiences and personal sensibilities influence our perceptions as viewers and listeners. This also applies to artists and composers.

Scroll down to see the artwork. Click on each to learn more about each artist.

Reception, Award Ceremony and Special Event

Interpretations X:  Art and Music Through a Humanities Lens
Saturday, March 15 at 2 PM, following the AzAA award presentations

Art and Music Through a Humanities Lens connects adults through visual art, music, and humanities by providing an innovative, multidisciplinary program as part of the reception for the Interpretations X exhibition. The event is made possible by a grant from AZ Humanities and is in the fourth year of implementation. Central Arizona Flute Ensemble (CAFE Flutes) will perform four music selections related to four pieces of artwork in the exhibition.

While studying a painting, viewers will listen to music that connects with that piece of art.  Humanities Scholars Dr. Janice Jarrett and Dr. Julie Codell will lead the audience, artists, and musicians in a conversation about their experience and the relationship between the music and the work of art.  Through discussion, they will build meaning, create dialogue, and offer historical perspectives into how artists and composers express their ideas and how audiences process them.

DR. JULIE CODELL
Humanities Scholar, Visual art

Ph.D. in Comparative Literature/Comparative Arts; an MA in Art History, an MA in English and a BA in English.
I have authored, edited and co-edited a total of 19 books and special topic journal issues, and authored 54 book chapters, 51 articles in refereed professional journals, 13 encyclopedia entries, and many book reviews and book review essays. I have taught courses in humanities, English, film and art history for over four decades.

I consider the history of art in analyzing the formal properties and images in the works of art chosen for our discussion, indicating historical sources, symbolic and philosophical meanings of images, associations with the history of color and spatial relations in the compositions, interpretive analyses of the works, and any relevant information on the images such as historic and symbolic iconographic meanings. We will discuss the centuries-long historical and philosophical relationships between art and music in several cultures, as relevant to the four selected  artworks.

JANICE JARRETT
Humanities Scholar –  Music

Masters in World Music,  Ph.D. in Ethnomusicology, an out-growth of anthropology, and similarly broad based in terms of cultures and their arts.

I maintained my involvement in scholarly studies while continuing my professional music career, my teaching, and public and private speaking in a range of venues for diverse ages and demographics. Even as a private studio voice teacher, my pedagogy incorporates multiple musicianship skills, multiple genres and multiple geographic and cultural traditions.  One of my most active public engagements has been as a scholar with the AHC Speaker’s Bureau for most of ten years with presentations on a variety of subjects related to music. I’ve long been fascinated with how music overlaps with other areas. Visual arts in particular share concepts and much vocabulary with music.

I am convinced of the value of the arts in human development, identity, and self-expression. But how can we stimulate that interchange between and connection to the arts and their benefits? We have abundant evidence that the arts engage us physically by stimulating our emotions, our memories, our perceptions, and our relationship to curiosity and knowledge. They invite us to participate, to interact, but opportunities that foster this interaction can be rare.

CAFE FLUTES

CAFE enriches, enlightens, and inspires Central Arizona residents by presenting interactive concerts and educational programs that showcase the flute family’s diverse instruments. The 7-member group offers interactive concert programs that feature various musical styles:  show tunes, patriotic, folk, oldies, pop, and classical.  Since 2014, they have performed over 250 concerts, including Desert Botanical Garden, Mesa Art Center, senior communities libraries, art galleries, Tempe History Museum, Arizona Broadway Theatre, and Peoria Center for Performing Arts.  www.cafeflutes.com

Meet the Juror:

Brittany Corrales is based in Tempe, Arizona, and currently serves as Curator at the ASU Art Museum. She has organized numerous exhibitions and programs at the ASU Art Museum since 2016, including “A Country is not a House: Ronald Rael and Virginia San Fratello” (2022); “Twin Flames: The George Floyd Uprising from Minneapolis to Phoenix (2023); and “Notes on Motherhood” (2024).

Previously, Corrales held administrative positions at the Center for Creative Photography, Phoenix Art Museum, and the Skystone Foundation.

Corrales received her MA in Art History from ASU and her BA in Art History from the University of Arizona.

Congratulations Award Recipients!

FIRST PLACE

SECOND PLACE

THIRD PLACE

HONORABLE MENTION

HONORABLE MENTION

HONORABLE MENTION