March 9, 2013
Arts Notes: March 10, 2013
"December River," by Jerre Watkins, is in a show at Artworks Around Town, in Wheeling.
"A Prayer for the River," a pastel by Jerre Watkins.
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Cross Lanes artist

WHEELING, W.Va. -- Jerre Watkins, of Cross Lanes, is a featured artist in March at Artworks Around Town, 2200 Market St., Center Market in Wheeling.

Watkins has a master's degree in fine arts, painting, from Marshall University. She works in watercolor and in varied and mixed media. She paints a variety of subject matter and style from realism to total abstraction.

"In recent years, the theme of my work has mostly focused on West Virginia landscape and rivers which provide an unlimited opportunity for expression," Watkins said.

She teaches workshops each year at Cedar Lakes in Ripley. And she has won awards at several shows, including Louisiana Watercolor Encounter, Allied Artists of West Virginia and Tri State Art Association. Her entry won Best of Show in the 2011 West Virginia Watercolor Society exhibit at the Parkersburg Art Center. She has had solo exhibits sponsored by the Governor's Office, Culture Center and the University of Charleston.

The Wheeling gallery, a nonprofit cooperative, is open from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Charleston photographer Deborah Herndon is also featured in March.

Preservation ideas

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- The West Virginia State Historic Preservation Office will hold 12 meetings across the state to get comments on the historic preservation comprehensive plan and ideas for the future direction of historic preservation efforts.

"We want to hear what the successes have been as well as the challenges so that we can develop new goals and objectives for the next five years," said Susan Pierce, deputy state historic preservation officer.

The most recent comprehensive plan was published in 2009; a new plan will be out by June 2014.

Meetings to be held include:

Charleston, 5 p.m. March 14, Education Room, Culture Center.

Williamson, 6 p.m. April 11, Mingo County Courthouse, County Commission Courtroom, 72 E. Second Ave.

Sutton, 5:30 p.m. May 13, Sutton Community Building, Fourth Street.

Ronceverte, 6 p.m. May 16, Ronceverte City Hall, Council Chamber, 200 W. Main St.

Fayetteville, 6 p.m. May 22, American Legion Post 149, 205 W. Maple Ave.

No prior registration is required to attend a meeting. Each meeting is scheduled to last 1 1/2 hours.

An online questionnaire also is available at www.wvculture.org/shpo/shpoindex.aspx. Paper copies can be requested by calling 304-558-0240.

For more information, contact John Adamik, education and planning coordinator, at 304-558-0240, ext. 122, or john.d.ada...@wv.gov.

Cornstalk talk

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Douglas McClure Wood will present "The Roots of Un-civil War: The 250th Anniversary of Cornstalk's Campaign" at 6 p.m. March 14 in the Archives and History Library at the Culture Center. The program is free.

Wood will focus on the Shawnee warrior's 1763 campaign in the context of the larger war waged by Pontiac against the British colonies. Cornstalk was considered a brilliant military strategist whose coalition-building efforts, strategic planning, campaign coordination and battle tactics were followed 50 years later by another Shawnee, Tecumseh.

In response to Cornstalk's warfare, the Virginia frontiersmen learned to fight more like the Indians, skills that became useful in subsequent wars, including the Civil War.

Wood has researched 18th-century middle Appalachian cultures, with a particular focus on American Indian cultures of the Ohio Valley region. He also is a living-history character with the Humanities Council's History Alive! program, currently portraying Ostenaco, a Cherokee military leader who fought for three years against the French during the French and Indian War.

Participants are encouraged to register for the lecture by contacting Bobby Taylor, library manager, at Bobby.L.Tay...@wv.gov or at 304-558-0230, ext. 163.

Art auction for children

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