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Sugar Creek Arts Festival expands and grows
NORMAL -- "More" is the word to describe the Sugar Creek Arts Festival this year. There will be more artists, more food, more entertainment and more ground to cover during the festival's run Saturday and Sunday. "Every aspect has expanded," said Doug Johnson, executive director of the McLean County Arts Center, which coordinates the show with the town of Normal and WGLT radio. "It puts us in the big league." The festival will feature a record 210 artist booths. The lineup will begin on North Street, west of Constitution Trail, and, for the first time, continue onto the Illinois State University quad. "The partnership with ISU is really ideal," Johnson said. "It gives us extra space, expands the size and exposes the public to the quad. The Fell Arboretum (on the quad) is really one of the prettiest areas in town." The move also helps the festival work around construction in uptown Normal. Johnson and Normal's Community Development Director Steve Westerdahl have been working on alternatives for this year's festival for four or five years, knowing the uptown redevelopment plan would influence the space. "The university came to us knowing we were pressed for space," Westerdahl said. "They wanted to help us out and enhance their (150th anniversary) celebration." The extra space allowed the Arts Center to accept 60 more artists than last year. Johnson said word of the expansion brought in a record 315 applications from across the nation. "The quality was as high as it's ever been, too," he said. The pool includes numerous new artists and 63 returning favorites like Twin City residents Fernando Cornejo, who earned the 2006 first place award in fine arts, and Jeanine Abels, who also has won awards with her abstract collages. "I think competition is great for those at shows for several years," said Cornejo. "It keeps us on our toes." Abels said the expansion also could attract more out-of-town festival-goers. Cornejo's one hope is that the quality of the artists remains the same with the expanded festival. Shandor Madjar from Colorado Springs, Colo., is one of the newcomers. Much of his kinetic jewelry includes carved deer antlers and silver settings. Prices range from $60 to $400. "I combine a lot of filigree with modern ideas," said Madjar, who apprenticed under a California designer for six years after high school. He went out on his own at age 22. Shandor usually participates in the Ann Arbor, Mich., arts festival and looks for others in the area. He said he found the Sugar Creek Arts Festival on the Internet and decided to apply. Joan Mulvehill of South Rockwood, Mich., said Sugar Creek gets high ratings from other artists so she and her partners, Larry Kiefer and Lisa Robideau, decided to apply. "Other artists gave high marks for the setting, the town and the people who ran it," she said. "The Arts Center has added an extra bit of professionalism to it. "They are more aware of what a professional art show should look like. They understand what people who are professional artists want." This is the trio's 15th year traveling the arts festival circuit. They have sold their metal work at more than 800 shows. Prices range between $25 and $250. Artist Dan Bartos originally taught and sold his pottery in Alaska but recently moved to South Dakota. Many of his pieces feature his signature carved-out areas. "In 30 years of making pots and looking in books and magazines, I've never seen the carving," he said. He's been working on the technique for about 12 years. "It's getting more and more elaborate," he said. "They're fun. It's a neat way to get an artsy piece for a discount price." Mugs he makes are about $26 each. Besides new and familiar artists, the festival will feature two entertainment stages -- one in its typical spot at Broadway and North streets, the other on the ISU quad. Westerdahl said the Broadway stage will offer up-tempo music and the quad stage will feature more laid-back music. There will food choices at both areas. The festival also will include activities from the Children's Discovery Museum, but in a new spot between Watterson Commons and the Alamo II bookstore. The museum parking lot is inaccessible because of uptown construction. The children's area will feature a rock climbing wall, arts and crafts, and face painting. At a glanceWhat: Sugar Creek Arts Festival When: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday; 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday Where: Begins west of Constitution Trail on North Street in uptown Normal and continues west into the Illinois State University quad Cost: Free Information: www.mcac.org Getting aroundThe 2007 Sugar Creek Arts Festival will begin just west of Constitution Trail on North Street and continue west on North Street into the Illinois State University quad at the Fell Gates, off School Street, just north of Hovey Hall. Besides artists, the quad also will feature an entertainment stage. Additional vendors will be in front of the old ISU union and around the "In Exchange" area on School Street. The Children's Discovery Museum will offer children's activities at an area near Watterson Towers, east of The Alamo parking lot. Entertainment lineupEntertainment for the Sugar Creek Arts Festival will be located on two stages: at Broadway and North Street and on the ISU quad. Following is the performer lineup for each: First stage, Broadway and North streets Saturday 10 a.m.: Sugar Creek Cloggers 11 a.m.: Sally Weisenberg 1 p.m.: Delta Kings 3 p.m.: Hip Pocket Sunday 11 a.m.: Inland Island 1 p.m.: Mount Pisgah Gospel Group 3 p.m.: Heartland Jazz Band Second stage, ISU Quad Saturday 10:30 a.m.: Joe Metzka & Friends 12:30 p.m.: Backyard Tire Fire 2:30 p.m.: Southside Cindy & The Slip Tones Sunday 10:30 a.m.: Wise Guise 12:30 p.m.: David Hoffman Quartet 2:30 p.m.: Mike and Amy Finders Festival parkingSeveral parking lots and a shuttle service will be available for those attending this weekend's Sugar Creek Arts Festival in Normal. All listed parking is free. Illinois State University parking garage at School and Beaufort streets (first floor only; about 70 spaces) ISU parking garage on University Street, north of Beaufort and east of the ISU tennis courts ISU Bone Student Center lot Public lots at City Hall, 100 E. Phoenix Ave., and at Parkinson and Linden streets Chiddix Junior High School lot, 300 S. Walnut St. The town will offer a shuttle service from the Chiddix lot to the Amtrak depot from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Saturday and from noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. |
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