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Teen Collage Clique
with Lance Rothstein

Thursdays, 6 classes

4:30pm – 6:30pm

Ages 11-16

Offered for:

Winter Session 1 (Jan 12, 19, 26, Feb 2, 9, 16)

In this new, exciting class, we’ll take a deep dive into the art of collage, and we’ll explore how it interacts with the “underground” worlds of Street Art, Found Object Art, and Mail Art.

Participants will learn many techniques for collage art making and dissemination, with established, international street artist, Lance Rothstein, (AKA fanclub.13). In addition to putting up street art collages in more than 15 countries, he’s served as an instructor at Kolaj Fest, New Orleans and led an international residency program for the Kolaj Institute. 

With art in many publications and numerous exhibitions, Lance will share his enthusiasm for this unique art form.

We’ll explore:

  • How to find great collage material by recycling found objects
  • Using collage as mindful exercise of self-expression
  • Putting our collages back out on the street for people to find and enjoy
  • Make our own “ink stamps” to enhance the artworks
  • Use the postal service to share our collages with Mail Art enthusiasts around the globe.
 
Non-Members: $190
Members: $140

Sign up for a membership HERE, and receive $50 offFor more information, please call the Morean Arts Center at 727.822.7872

Instructor Bio

Lance Rothstein is a native Floridian photographer, now living in Clearwater. A professional photojournalist by trade, his clients have included Time Magazine, The Miami Herald, Sports Illustrated, and the New York Post. He was photo editor for FSView News and was a staff photographer for the Vero Beach Press-Journal, The Ft. Pierce Tribune, The (former) St. Petersburg Times, and most recently The Tampa Tribune.

During eight years in the FSU Bachelor of Fine Arts program 1986 – 94,  He studied Studio Art under great artists such as George Blakely, Robert Fichter, Ed Love, Mark Messersmith and Mary Jo Toles. Other workshops included Jerry Ullesmann, Donna Ferrato, James Nachtwey, Sebastiao Salgado and Gordon Parks.

After spending six years living in Belgium and capturing images all over Europe, Lance has returned to Florida and is continuing his never-ending experiments with all things photographic. He has a passion for traditional film and alternative photography methods, he’s a Polaroid addict and a pathological camera collector. Lance also does street-art collages under the name Ray Johnson Fan Club, and runs an Art & Photography website called Labeauratoire.

Gallery Exhibits:
A.E. Backus Gallery, Fort Pierce, FL
Gallery on the Circle, Maryland Federation of Art
Faces & Facets – Visual Arts Center of Northwest Florida, Panama City
Pasco Art Council Gallery
621 Gallery, Tallahassee, FL
Tallahassee, FL City Hall Gallery
Hunter Museum of American Art
Florida State University Fine Arts Gallery, Tallahassee, FL
Florida Museum of Photographic Art, Tampa, FL
Starbucks Coffee House – solo exhibit, New Port Richey, FL
La Livre de Café – solo exhibit, Mons, Belgium
Parcours 40 – group exhibit, Royal Fine Arts Academy, Mons, Belgium
Bauhaus Inspired Photography – Chicago Photography Center
GREEN ART: Art & Ecology – l’Auberge de Jeunesse de Mons, Belgium
Bushwick Spray Paint Shop – Brooklyn, NY
Pikes Gallery – Eastpointe, MI

“After a decade of trying to make perfect digital photos, I decided to return to film and embrace the so-called imperfections. I find them to be integral in giving my images a semblance of soul. My initial inspiration to take up photography was my grandfather William Nurenberg, a magnificent unknown street photographer. I often recall the nights we’d gather around the slide projector to see pictures from his latest trip on Kodachrome. While I’ve made my living documenting the most dramatic moments of life, it’s often been the more insignificant things that intrigue me most. I identify closely with the artists of the abstract De Stijl movement of the 1920’s. I love to capture tidy little relationships of light and shadow. I’m constantly searching for a way to express my idea that ‘everything is perfectly what it is.”