Artful Lives: Evelyn Patricia Terry: Guess Who Stayed (Part 1 / 2) - 2021-05-03 by WXRW riverwestradio.com 104.1fm published on 2021-04-28T20:11:12Z Still waters run deep. Celebrated artist Evelyn Patricia Terry exemplifies this adage. She approaches life with respect, curiosity, and determination which feed the powerful creative currents that guide her work. In this first of two episodes, we discuss Evelyn’s remarkable path to becoming an artist and witnessing how her projects evolve. And what work it is! Drawings, paintings, printmaking, installations, artist’s books, and public art. She writes, teaches, collects art, and created a gallery in her home in honor of her partner, George Ray McCormick, Sr., after his death. Her work has been shown and collected both in the Midwest and internationally. She was a 2014 Milwaukee Arts Board Artist of the Year and received the 2012 Wisconsin Visual Artist Lifetime Achievement Award. Beyond all that, there’s a special magic about this artist. More opportunities to explore it below! Artists books at publisher website: vampandtramp.com/finepress/t/Evelyn-Patricia-Terry.html Virtual 360-degree 2020 tour of my home gallery space for the 2020 Doors Open annual event Lynden Sculpture Garden – Evelyn Patricia Terry: America’s Favor/Guests Who Came to Dinner (and Stayed!) April 28, 2019 – July 28, 2019 lyndensculpturegarden.org/exhibitions/evelyn-patricia-terry Evelyn Patricia Terry’s website: evelynpatriciaterry.com/ Two videos of Terry’s Cedarburg Art Museum exhibition “Eye of the Beholder: African Americans Collecting Art . She was guest curator. PBS “Wisconsin Life” video feature produced by Joel Waldinger and Josh Kappler (7-min) 9/13/18: pbs.org/video/evelyn-patricia-terry-ttrby7/ Northside Neighborhood Services (2-min) video created by Marquette students Sidney Czyzon, Jenny Whidden, and Grace Connatser : 2018/04/18/north-side-artist-evelyn-terry-curates-little-gem-gallery Positively Milwaukee / TMJ4 short feature (2-minute) produced by Carole Meekins: milwaukee-woman-bringing-art-to-the-heart-of-the-city