• 29Mar

    Friends,

    HFM annual spring meeting took place Saturday March 27th at Kent Free Library. The board of directors passed along decisions which were then formally voted on by the general membership. A new board of directors was elected and opening date and fee structure were approved.  For more information click on the link for a Word document transcript of the meeting minutes.

    Fritz Seefeldt.

    2010 spring meeting minutes

  • 23Mar

    Kent State graduate hopes to turn bridge into mural

    image

    Haymaker Farmers’ Market board present idea for mural

    The proposal would turn the underside of the state Route 59 bridge into a structural mural.

    Fritz Seefeldt, manager of Haymaker Farmers’ Market, dreams of working beneath a new canvas this September.

    About two weeks ago, the market’s board of directors presented the idea for a mural in an application for state funding to the Ohio Arts Council.

    The proposal would turn the underside of the state Route 59 bridge, now covered with graffiti, into a structural mural, designed by Elaine Hullihen, a local artist and Kent State graduate.

    “There will be agricultural scenes as well as scenes from the farmers’ market and downtown Kent,” Seefeldt said. “And it will also involve the community in the painting itself. We’re going to have volunteers doing the painting — citizens and students — hopefully Kent State art students.”

    Seefeldt, who developed the concept with help from Jeff Ingram, director of Standing Rock Cultural Arts, a local art awareness group, said he drew inspiration from two places.

    The first was a mural by Kent local Edwin George, a Native American Folk artist who received an individual artist’s grant from the Ohio Arts Council in 2005. The mural, entitled “Love,” is painted on the northern wall of Scribbles Coffee Co. on North Water Street. ? Seefeldt’s second inspiration was an overpass he discovered while traveling through North Carolina.

    The colorful mural along the heavily traveled Lexington Avenue depicts the history of the Asheville area in what is called the Asheville Mural Project.

    To bring Asheville’s idea to Kent, the board’s next step is to propose the project to Kent City Council and the Ohio Department of Transportation.

    Seefeldt said he anticipates full support from council. Ward 5 councilwoman Heidi Shaffer holds a place on the market’s board of directors and is already in support of the project.

    “I think the more public art a place has, the more it expresses its character,” she said. “It’s sort of an example of grassroots public art. Rather than a statue being commissioned by a city administration, I think it’s very different. It’s more like this comes from the people.”

    Shaffer also said the project would benefit the city in ways beyond visual appeal.

    “The peeling paint on the support of the bridge (has) really detracted from the beauty of the farmers’ market,” she said. “And I think that the manager was concerned about peeling paint and children. So it was more than just an aesthetic issue, it was also a safety issue.”

    Also on board is Kent City Manager Dave Ruller, who has created buzz about the mural recently through his blog.

    In his March 3 entry about the mural, Ruller wrote, “It’s just crazy enough to be perfectly Kent.”

    Coinciding with downtown revival initiatives and a recent uprising from the local art community, the mural would be a year-round fixture of the city, offering a unique backdrop to those who work and shop at Haymaker Farmers’ Market May through October.

    The biggest hurdle, Seefeldt said, may be gaining approval from ODOT, which owns the bridge. Materials will have to be analyzed to determine their affect on concrete, and all specifications must be submitted to the department. ?? Despite the hurdle, Seefeldt is hopeful.

    “I think they are likely to approve because there have been precedents for projects like this on public bridges before,” he said. “One example is the I-240 overpass in Asheville, N.C. That’s a federal highway, governed by the North Carolina Department of Transportation.”

    Seefeldt said if the board does not receive the state grant, the project may be pushed back a few months, but he is confident that Kent residents and market-goers will see a change in landscape soon.

    Contact public affairs reporter Samantha Laros at slaros@kent.edu

  • 20Mar

    Friends,
    Dave Ruller has always been supportive of our market here in Kent and I wanted to pass along his most recent “Kent 360″ blog update that features our proposed mural project. Artist Elaine Hullihen and I met with Dave this past week and discussed the public art project and how the city fits into the picture. There are still many details that will need to be sketched in as things progress, but I believe we’re quite a few brush strokes closer than two weeks ago. I appreciate the role that Dave plays in facilitating positive change in our diverse city and look forward toward more city/market interaction in the future.
    Please feel free to comment and reply. This market is about all of you, the vendors, friends and members of our community.
    Fritz Seefeldt.

    Art Spark…

    Posted by daver in City Living on March 12, 2010 | No Comments

    My mention of the Haymaker Farmer’s Market interest in an art mural on the columns beneath the Haymaker Bridge earlier in the week sparked a fair amount of interest from folks.  People seemed to feel that the Market was on to something good and they were letting me know that we (aka the City) needs to do more to promote public art projects like this since art runs deep in Kent’s DNA — both formally with the art education programs and professional galleries like the KSU Gallery and the McKay Bricker Gallery, and at the other end of the spectrum with a glom of  indie artists randomly found around town doing their own thing in unexpected places (like streetcorners or at the Professor’s Pub).

    I tend to agree that the City needs to do whatever it can to advance the arts — both the formal and informal forms of creative expression.  I don’t make that statement to be politically correct or for some philanthropic agenda, rather if we’re serious about selling the Kent experience as an eclectic mix of characters, places and sensory stimuli then art has to be part of the community conversation and stake it’s claim at the alter of eccentric Kent.  The adjectives and descriptors of art — quirky, surprising, confusing, thought provoking, and even shocking — also happen to pop up when talking about many aspects of Kent so in that regard art resonates and even amplifies the Kent ethos (or milieu for the high brow artists among us.)

    Our efforts to market the Kent lifestyle is not unique to us — it’s the core of a lot of city development efforts.  Those bold Texans in Austin have taken it so far as to proudly adopt the tag line “Keep Austin Wierd” in a national campaign to be the world headquarters of everything odd.  You can’t help but admire the lengths they’ve gone to realize their aspiration — the video of the 6?4? cowboy walking down the street in his raw hide boots and matching thong did me in but clearly they have no fear in embracing their unique sense of style.

    Another ambitious city that has embraced the off-beat is Asheville North Carolina.  They’ve carved themselves a unique place in the mountains of North Carolina that is equal parts hippie and hill-billy – and it works really well.  Great art, great street scene, great restaurants and a surprising mix of people of all kinds of dispositions.

    It turns out that Asheville is one of the sources of inspiration for the Kent art mural project that has been adopted by the Haymaker Farmer’s Market.  They’ve got their own infrastructure art thing going on.

    City Manager’s website:
  • 20Mar

    Friends,
    Spring is here, and so is the Haymaker Farmers’ Market spring meeting!
    We have finally outgrown our living room and will be meeting at the Kent Free Library meeting room, next Saturday 27 March at 2:00 pm. I am attaching a map to this email with the location if you’re not familiar with Kent and where the library is located.
    Our agenda will include discussions on:

    • This past season -how did you do?
    • our market budget and account balances.
    • the upcoming season, mural project and new ideas, joining the Chamber of Commerce, the Porta-Potty
    • news from the manager and board of directors
    • electing the market board for the 2010 season
    • 2010 start up date.

    Please, if anyone would like to add anything to the agenda, let me know and I’ll add it on. The meeting should be over in an hour or so, but we will have the room for two hours. The market board will meet from 1:30 until 2:00 pm before the general membership meeting in the adjacent Wiland Room.
    All the best to everyone,
    Fritz Seefeldt
    Haymaker Farmers’ Market.

    map to Kent Free Library-downtown Kent

    map to Kent Free Library-downtown Kent