KAREN RODERICK-LINGEMAN [email protected] the University of Toledo Department of Art Center for the Visual Arts 620 Grove Place Toledo, OH 43620

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

KAREN RODERICK-LINGEMAN Karen.Roderick-Lingeman@Utoledo.Ed the University of Toledo Department of Art Center for the Visual Arts 620 Grove Place Toledo, OH 43620 KAREN RODERICK-LINGEMAN [email protected] The University of Toledo Department of Art Center for the Visual Arts 620 Grove Place Toledo, OH 43620 EDUCATION___________________________________________________________ Master of Fine Art, Ceramics, 1983 University of North Dakota Grand Forks, ND Secondary Concentration in Fibers Bachelor of Education, Art, 1979 University of Toledo/Toledo Museum of Art School of Design Toledo, Ohio Cum Laude POSITIONS HELD_______________________________________________ The University of Toledo, Toledo, Ohio Senior Lecturer, Department of Art, 2011 to present Ceramics / Art Education / Studio Foundations Ceramics Program Coordinator, 2014-present Associate Lecturer, Department of Art, 2005 to 2011 Ceramics / Art Education / Studio Foundations Lecturer, Department of Art, 2002-2005 Ceramics / Art Education / Studio Foundations Visiting Professor, Department of Art, 1999-2001 Ceramics / Art Education Adjunct Instructor, Department of Art, 1987-1999 Ceramics / Art Education / Fibers / Studio Foundations / Intro to Art Adjunct Instructor, University College, 1999-2001 Adult Liberal Studies Program The Toledo Museum of Art, Toledo, Ohio Instructor, 2012-present, 1979-1988 Owens State Community College, Oregon, Ohio Instructor, Department of Visual and Performing Art, 2003 Beginning Ceramics The University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, ND Instructor of Record / Graduate Teaching Assistant, 1981-1983 SELECTED EXHIBITIONS______________________________________________ *Denotes National Exhibition * 2014 HORIZON: Comtemporary Landscapes Community Art Center Danville, IL * 2013 POSSESSION: A National Juried Ceramics Exhibition Morrison Gallery Duluth Art Institute Duluth, MN 2013 UNDEFINED: Skot Horn & Karen Roderick-Lingeman The Secor Gallery Toledo, OH * 2012 NOW WOW Hudson gallery Sylvania, OH 2012 RECLAIM & COLLABORATE UT Faculty Exhibition Center for the Visual Arts Toledo, OH 2012 68th Ohio Annual 2012 Zanesville Museum of Art Zanesville, OH * 2011 BOWLS Guilford Art Center Guilford, CT 2010 VESSELS A Collaborative Exhibition: 6 Ohio & 6 California Vessel Artists Angels Gate Cultural Center Gate Gallery San Pedro, CA 2010 50/50 Retrospective Exhibition: The Cable Years and The Contemporary Years The University of North Dakota Ceramics Program Grand Forks, ND 2010 Summer Showcase June 2010 Hudson Gallery Sylvania, OH 2010 The University of Toledo Authors & Artists Exhibition Ward M. Canaday Center for Special Collections Carlson Library Toledo, OH 2009 VESSELS A Collaborative Exhibition: 6 Ohio & 6 California Vessel Artists Walter E. Terhune Gallery Owens Community College Toledo, OH 2009 LIGHT & MASS – UT Art Faculty Exhibition The University of Toledo Center for the Visual Arts Gallery Toledo, OH 2009 Toledo Museum of Art Perrysburg Community Exhibition: 20 Years of PAAC Toledo Museum of Art Community Gallery Toledo, OH 2008 View: A Juried Landscape Competition Rosewood Gallery Kettering, OH 2008 The University of Toledo / Toledo Museum of Art Ceramic Faculty Art Exhibition Fogt, Roderick-Lingeman, Dilday & Ziemke The University of Toledo Center for the Visual Arts Gallery Toledo, OH 2008 The University of Toledo Authors & Artists Exhibition Carlson Library Ward M. Canaday Center for Special Collections Toledo, OH 2007 Sculpture & Ceramics Tom Lingeman Karen Roderick-Lingeman American Gallery Sylvania, OH 2007 Faculty Exhibition The University of Toledo Center for the Visual Arts Gallery Toledo, OH 2007 All Ohio All-Media Art Competition The Coburn Gallery Ashland University Ashland, OH 2006 Holiday Invitational Mac Worthington Gallery Columbus, OH 2005 / University of Toledo Faculty Authors and Artists Exhibit 2006 The University of Toledo Carlson Library Ward M. Canaday Center for Special Studies Toledo, OH 2005 Faculty Exhibition The University of Toledo Center for the Visual Arts Gallery Toledo, OH 2004/ University of Toledo Faculty Authors and Artists Exhibit 2005 The University of Toledo Carlson Library - Ward M. Canaday Center for Special Studies Toledo, OH 2004 Sculptures & Ceramics Lingeman & Roderick-Lingeman Maumee Valley Country Day School Wolf Gallery Toledo, OH 2004 New Work Thomas Lingeman / Karen Roderick-Lingeman The University of Toledo Lake Erie Research and Education Center Oregon, OH * 2004 WAD Juried Annual Space 101 Gallery Pittsburg, PA * 2004 Its Only Clay Bemidji State University Bemidji, MN 2004 Faculty Exhibition University of Toledo Center for the Visual Arts Gallery Toledo, OH 2004 Faculty Exhibition Owens State Community College Oregon, OH 2003 The University of Toledo Faculty Authors and Artists Exhibit The University of Toledo Carlson Library Ward M. Canaday Center for Special Collections Toledo, OH 2003 Toledo Area Artists Exhibition Toledo Museum of Art Toledo, OH 2001 The University of Toledo Faculty Authors and Artists Exhibit The University of Toledo Carlson Library Ward M. Canaday Center for Special Collections Toledo, OH 2002 Faculty Exhibition The University of Toledo Center for the Visual Arts Gallery Toledo, OH * 2001 All Media III Invitational Art Exhibit Period Gallery Omaha, NE 2001 2001 Annual All-Ohio Juried Exhibition Ohio State University at Mansfield Pearl Conard Gallery Mansfield, OH 2000 Seven in the Middle Flatlanders Art Gallery Blissfield, MI * 1999 Women’s Works: 11th Annual Exhibition of Fine Art by Women Old Court House Arts Center Woodstock, IL * 1998 16th Hoyt National Art Exhibition Hoyt Institute of Fine Arts New Castle, PA AWARD – 1ST PLACE SCULPTURE 1996 Ceramic Vessels / Ceramic Sculpture Bastian, Fogt, Roderick-Lingeman The University of Toledo Center for the Visual Arts Gallery Toledo, OH * 1996 Women in the Visual Arts – 1996 Erector Square Gallery New Haven, CT * 1995 14th Annual Women Artist YWCA Gallery Youngstown, OH * 1994 Purple Haze Galeria Mesa Mesa, AZ Purchase Award City of Mesa Contemporary Collection * 1993 Alumni Invitational The University of North Dakota North Dakota Museum of Art Grand Forks, ND 1993 Faculty Ceramics The University of Toledo Center for the Visual Arts Gallery Toledo, OH * 1990/ Arizona Commission of the Arts 1992 Traveling Exhibition Program The Divine Line: A Selection Sun Cities Art Museum, Sun City, AZ (1/92) Tempe Arts Center, Tempe, AZ (9/91) Kirkpatric Center, Oklahoma City, OK (7/91) City of Las Vegas, Las Vegas, NV (5/91) Yavapi College, Prescott, AZ (10/90) Arizona Commission on the Arts, Phoenix, AZ (9/90) * 1989 The Divine Line Galleria Mesa Mesa, AZ * 1989 Great Lakes National Lill Street Gallery Chicago, IL * 1987 Small Works National Handweavers Guild of America Northern California Weavers Conference Asilomar Conference center Gallery Pacific Grove, CA * 1986 Annual National Miniature Show Art Gallery of Fells Point Baltimore, MD 1985 Faculty Exhibition The University of Toledo / Toledo Museum of Art Toledo, OH 1984 Fibers Alive Crosby Gardens Toledo, OH 1984 Ohio State Fair Art Exhibition (Professional) Rhodes Hall Gallery Columbus, OH 1983 Winter Exhibition Beck Center for the Arts Cleveland, OH * 1983 13th Biennial National Art Exhibition Second Crossing Gallery Valley City State College Valley City, ND 1983 Karen Roderick MFA Exhibition University of North Dakota Department of Visual Arts Gallery Grand Forks, ND * 1982 Electrum XII Helena Art Gallery Helena, MT 1982 Fargo Regional Art Exhibition Fargo Museum of Art Fargo, ND 2nd Place Award * 1982 Electrum XI Helena Art Gallery Helena, MT 1982 27th Five State Exhibition North Platte Valley Artist Guild Gallery Scotts Bluff, NE 2nd Place Award 1980 Toledo Festival of the Arts Toledo, Oh 1st Place Ceramics Award * 1980 Art in the Park Crosby Gardens Toledo, OH 3rd Place Ceramics Award 1980 Spring Show ‘80 Memorial Hall Lima, OH 1st Place Award 1979 Procenium ‘79 Beck Center for the Arts Cleveland, OH 3rd Place Award 1979 Ohio State Fair Art Exhibition (Professional) Rhodes Hall Gallery Columbus, OH .
Recommended publications
  • News Release | Yayoi Kusama: Fireflies on the Water
    NEWS RELEASE 9/30/2019 Contact: Mike Brice, Public Relations Specialist Office: 419-254-5082 Cell: 419-708-4822 [email protected] Toledo Museum of Art announces extraordinary installation Yayoi Kusama: Fireflies on the Water to open Saturday, Dec. 14, 2019 TOLEDO, Ohio – Toledo Museum of Art (TMA) visitors will have the opportunity to experience the unique vision of one of the world’s most influential contemporary artists when Yayoi Kusama: Fireflies on the Water opens Saturday, Dec. 14, 2019, in Canaday Gallery. Visitors will experience 60 seconds alone in the room, which uses lights, mirrors and water to transport viewers to a space that seems endlessly expansive. The experience will cost $5 for nonmembers while Museum members will receive a fixed number of free tickets based on their membership level. Members will be able to reserve those during a pre-sale period before tickets go on sale to the general public. “Over the past several years the Toledo Museum of Art has cultivated an exhibition program that strives to embody a celebration of singular masterworks, a demonstrated commitment to global contemporary art, the promotion of diverse perspectives, and an emphasis placed on multisensory artist projects and installations,” said TMA’s Director of Curatorial Affairs Halona Norton-Westbrook. “All of these elements will be brought together in this exhibition, which stands as an icon of contemporary visual art, created by one of the most significant artists of our time.” Yayoi Kusama, who experienced hallucinations as a child, uses her artwork as a means to express and communicate her particular psychological world.
    [Show full text]
  • The Hard to Shop For
    THE BLADE: TOLEDO, OHIO ■ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2 , 2011 toledoBlade.com SECTION A , PAGE 7 HOLIDAY COUNTDOWN SHOPPING DAYS LEFT WHAT TO BUY THE HARD TO SHOP FOR hat to do for that person who is so hard to shop Wfor? They’re either so particular that the op- Arcade game. For the husband who still brags tions are narrowed to a select-few stores, or their about his Pac-Man high school score at the neigh- tastes are so broad that finding the perfect gift can borhood pizza shop. The sister who was a Meteor overwhelm even the most seasoned shopper. Here maniac as a kid. And the cousin who considered Donkey Kong his personal arch nemesis. This is a are some suggestions for that hard-to-shop-for pricey gift, but imagine the shock your favorite ar- member of your circle. cade aficionado will get when he or she finds that — Nolan Rosenkrans favorite game in the garage. Most of the classics BLADE STAFF WRITER have been re-created for modern, home-specific consoles, but there’s nothing like the old-school, big-box arcade games. Local stores, such as “Dr. Scott’s” Pinball Store and Champion Amuse- ments, sell the real deal, along with pinball ma- chines, jukeboxes, and other relics of the 20th Century. Prices vary, but the machines won’t come cheap. A refurbished 1980 Cen- tipede goes for $1595 at “Dr. Scott’s.” Christmas flower arrangement. Flowers are always appreciated, though they might work best as a complement to a centerpiece gift. Just like candles, adding a seasonal theme can turn a run-of-the-mill gift into something spe- cial.
    [Show full text]
  • Leasing Brochure
    ENDLESS POSSIBILITIES ENDLESS POSSIBILITIES ENDLESS POSSIBILITIES FRANKLIN PARK ENDLESS POSSIBILITIES FRANKLIN PARK MALL #COMETOGETHER FASHION FAMILY FUN FOOD FASHION FAMILY FUN FOOD Franklin Park Mall is a super-regional shopping center located in Toledo, Ohio offering the PROPERTY INFO area’s premier selection of shopping, dining and entertainment options. The 1.3 million sq. ft. center is positioned in a rapidly expanding retail corridor and features exceptional freeway access to Toledo’s interstates and the Ohio Turnpike. Franklin Park Mall is the BUILT 1971 only enclosed shopping center within a 50-mile radius and welcomes more than 6 million REDEVELOPED 2005 visitors per year from surrounding Northwest Ohio and Southeast Michigan communities. TOTAL TENANTS 150+ The community destination is anchored by Dillard’s, Macy’s, JCPenney, Dick’s Sporting TOTAL CENTER GLA 1,300,000 SF Goods, a Cinemark 16 & XD theater and is home to 150+ local, regional and national DAILY VISITORS 16,400+ retailers. Visitors can enjoy the region’s only Dave & Buster’s, BJ’s Brewhouse and Apple Store as well as many first-to-market retailers including Altar’d State, Dry Goods and Box ANNUAL VISITORS 6+ MILLION Lunch. A bright and airy Food Court serving fast casual favorites such as Chick-Fil-A, PARKING SPACES 6,100 Steak Escape, Auntie Anne’s and Sbarro compliment an impressive lineup of full-service restaurants including Black Rock Bar & Grill, Bravo!, bd’s Mongolian Grill and Don Juan Mexican Restaurant. ANNUAL SALES As the fourth largest city in the state of Ohio, Toledo has the amenities of a lively metropolis and the charm of a small town.
    [Show full text]
  • Glass Pavilion Floorplan
    MyGuide A Monroe Street Lobbey Dale Chihuly, Chandelier: Campiello del Remer #2, 1996/2006 Dale Chihuly’s “chandelier” greets visitors at the Monroe Street entrance. Chihuly’s team installed the 1300-pound hanging sculpture so that its 243 components complement the arcs of the curved walls and the Crystal Corridor that bisects the Glass Pavilion floorplan. B Gallery 5 Roman, Jar with Basket Handle, late 4th–5th century Glass The most elaborate jar of its type known from the late Eastern Roman world, this is one of thousands “As physical borders blur and of glass objects given by glass industrialist and TMA founder/benefactor Edward Drummond Libbey blend, so do notions such as Pavilion (1854–1925) of the Libbey Glass Company. He wanted the Museum to display a comprehensive program and context. This fits Since opening in August 2006, the history of glass art for the education and enjoyment the dynamic environment at the Toledo Museum of Art Glass Pavilion of the community. The Museum continues to build on has attracted a lot of attention from his vision today. Toledo Museum of Art, where around the world. This guide sheds a a wide range of collections little light on this architectural marvel are allowed to interact in new and the stellar collection it houses. C The Glass Study Gallery The Glass Study Gallery provides open storage of constellations, where workshop works not on display in the exhibition galleries. interacts with collection…and Divided into cases featuring ancient, European, American, and contemporary glass, the Study Gallery where the Museum campus allows visitors to compare many examples of similar objects, to contrast different techniques, and to enjoy interacts with neighborhood and the full range of the Museum’s varied collection.
    [Show full text]
  • The University of Toledo
    The University of Toledo Toledo, Ohio 43606-3390 Office of Public Information (419) 537-2675 February 1, 1995 FAX: (419) 537-4618 From: Sonya Thomas MECHA/LSU to Hold 22nd Annual Scholarship Dance MECHA/Latino Student Union,will hold its 22nd Annual Scholarship Dance on Saturday, Feb. 11, from 8 p.m. to 2 a.m. at The University of Toledo Student Union Auditorium. MECHABÿSU is an organization that focuses on education, cultural and social issues to promote higher education for Latino students at The University of Toledo. The theme for this year's dance is "Our Culture Has No Boundaries Nor Limits." Music will be provided by the bands Grupo Tecate and Nicolina and the Bad Boyz. Proceeds from the event will be placed in the MECHA/LSU scholarship fund. This fund provides financial assistance for needy Latinos attending UT, said MECHA/LSU President Dennis Slores. A cash bar will be featured during the dance. Tickets are $12 in advance and $15 at the door. For more information, call MECHA at (419) 537-4326. ### The University of Toledo Toledo, Ohio 43606-3390 Office of Public Information (419) 537-2675 FAX: (419) 537-4618 February 1, 1995 FROM: Scott McKimmy College of Engineering Provides Tours and Demonstrations The University of Toledo's College of Engineering now offers weekly tours for prospective students and their parents every Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday at 1 p.m. Tour members are to meet in the Engineering-Science Building Room 1032. According to W.C. Vance, recruitment coordinator for the College of Engineering, the tours help to show students how engineers turn ideas into reality.
    [Show full text]
  • Dale Chihuly
    Dale Chihuly Born September 20, 1941, Tacoma, WA EDUCATION 1968 M.F.A., Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, RI 1967 M.S., University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2016 Chihuly in the Garden, Atlanta Botanical Garden, Atlanta, GA Chihuly Drawings, Wichita Art Museum, Wichita, KS Chihuly, Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Ontario, Canada 2015 Chihuly Drawings, Museum of Glass, Tacoma, WA Chihuly in the Garden, Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, VA Glass Art Garden, Toyama Glass Art Museum, Toyama, Toyama, Japan Ulysses Cylinders, Vassar College, Dutchess County, NY 2014 Chihuly, Arthur Roger Gallery, New Orleans, LA Chihuly, Clinton Presidential Center, Little Rock, AR Chihuly, Denver Botanic Gardens, Denver, CO Ulysses Cylinders, Dublin Castle, Dublin, Ireland Chihuly at Fairchild, Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden, Coral Gables, FL 2013 Chihuly Venetians: From the George R. Stroemple Collection, Paine Art Center and Gardens, Oshkosh, WI Chihuly: Tradition and Transformation, Jundt Art Museum, Gonzaga University, Spokane, WA Chihuly, Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Montreal, Quebec, Canada Irish Cylinders, Museum of Glass, Tacoma, WA Chihuly in the Garden, Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, AZ 2012 Chihuly Venetians: From the George R. Stroemple Collection, Foothills Art Center, Golden, CO Chihuly at the Dallas Arboretum, Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Garden, Dallas, TX Origins: Early Works by Dale Chihuly, Museum of Glass, Tacoma, WA Chihuly Garden and Glass, Chihuly Garden and Glass, Seattle, WA Chihuly Venetians: From the George R. Stroemple Collection, Kimball Art Center, Park City, UT Chihuly at the VMFA, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, VA 2011 White, Arthur Roger Gallery, New Orleans, LA Dale Chihuly’s Northwest, Tacoma Art Museum, Tacoma, WA Chihuly: Through the Looking Glass, Museum of Fine Arts Boston, Boston, MA Chihuly Venetians: From the George R.
    [Show full text]
  • Toledo Museum of Art Toledo, OH
    Technical Assistance Panel Report Toledo Museum of Art Toledo, OH August 28-29 2018 The mission of the Urban Land Institute is to provide leadership in the responsible use of land and in creating and sustaining thriving communities worldwide. ULI Cleveland, a District Council of the Urban Land Institute, has more than 200 members in the Cleveland region spanning the land use industry including develop- ers, builders, engineers, attorneys, planners, investors, financial advisors, academics, architects and public officials. Table of Contents Urban Land Institute Cleveland Section 1: Technical Assistance Panel The mission of the Urban Land Institute is to provide Introduction ...........................................................3 leadership in the responsible use of land and in creating Background............................................................3 and sustaining thriving communities worldwide. Process and Scope................................................4 ULI Cleveland, a District Council of the Urban Land Institute, has more than 200 members in the Cleveland Section 2: Recommendations region spanning the land use industry including General Recommendations..................................6 developers, builders, engineers, attorneys, planners, Concept 1: Comprehensive Arts Campus...........9 investors, financial advisors, academics, architects and Concept 2: Arts-Related Adaptive Reuse............14 public officials. Concept 3: Art Park ...............................................18 Procedural Recommendations & Next
    [Show full text]
  • The Art of Architecture
    LEARNING TO LOOK AT ARCHITECTURE LOOK: Allow yourself to take the time to slow down and look carefully. OBSERVE: Observation is an active process, requiring both time and attention. It is here that the viewer begins to build up a mental catalogue of the building’s You spend time in buildings every day. But how often visual elements. do you really look at or think about their design, their details, and the spaces they create? What did the SEE: Looking is a physical act; seeing is a mental process of perception. Seeing involves recognizing or connecting the information the eyes take in architect want you to feel or think once inside the with your previous knowledge and experiences in order to create meaning. structure? Following the steps in TMA’s Art of Seeing Art™* process can help you explore architecture on DESCRIBE: Describing can help you to identify and organize your thoughts about what you have seen. It may be helpful to think of describing as taking a deeper level through close looking. a careful inventory. ANALYZE: Analysis uses the details you identified in your descriptions and LOOK INTERPRET applies reason to make meaning. Once details have been absorbed, you’re ready to analyze what you’re seeing through these four lenses: OBSERVE ANALYZE FORM SYMBOLS IDEAS MEANING SEE DESCRIBE INTERPRET: Interpretation, the final step in the Art of Seeing Art™ process, combines our descriptions and analysis with our previous knowledge and any information we have about the artist and the work—or in this case, * For more information on the Art of Seeing Art and visual literacy, the architect and the building.
    [Show full text]
  • Traverse City Arts Commission Regular Meeting
    Traverse City Arts Commission Regular Meeting 3:30 PM Wednesday, March 20, 2019 Located in: 2nd Floor Committee Room Governmental Center Traverse City, MI 49684 Posted: Friday, March 15, 2019 If you are planning to attend the meeting and you have a disability requiring any special assistance at the meeting, please notify the City Clerk, immediately. The City of Traverse City does not discriminate on the basis of disability in the admission to, access to, treatment in, or employment in, its programs or activities. Penny Hill, Assistant City Manager, 400 Boardman Avenue, Traverse City, Michigan 49684, phone 231-922-4440, TDD/TTY 231-922-4412, VRS 231-421-7008, has been designated to coordinate compliance with the non-discrimination requirements contained in Section 35.107 of the Department of Justice regulations. Information concerning the provisions of the Americans with Disabilities Act, and the rights provided thereunder, are available from the ADA Coordinator. Traverse City Arts Commission: c/o Katie Zeits, Deputy City Clerk (231) 922-4480 Email: [email protected] Web: www.traversecitymi.gov 400 Boardman Avenue Traverse City, MI 49684 AGENDA Any interested person or group may address the Arts Commission on any agenda item when recognized by the presiding officer or upon request of any Commissioner. Also, any interested person or group may address the Commission on any matter of concern not on the Agenda during the agenda item designated Public Comment. The comment of any member of the public or any special interest group may be limited in time. Such limitation shall not be less than five minutes unless otherwise explained by the presiding officer, subject to appeal by the Commission.
    [Show full text]
  • Welles Sculpture Garden Guide 24
    Guidelines for enjoying the Sculpture Garden We invite you to walk around the Museum’s grounds and experience Visiting the Sculpture Garden with Children works of art complemented by nature. Look for shapes and colors in the sculptures. Identify them Please respect the works of art, the landscaping, and together. Be sure to look at the sculptures from all sides (feel other visitors. free to walk in the grass!). Do not climb, hang, or lean on sculpture or trees. Ask each other what you think the sculptures are made of— wood, metal, stone, or objects the artist found? Is it made of Please do not ride bicycles, skateboards, or other more than one material? recreational vehicles. Do you see a story in the sculpture? Please do not litter. Place all refuse in the receptacles provided. Enjoy swinging on Mark di Suvero’s Blubber together. Alcoholic beverages are not allowed without permission. Look carefully at the trees and plants in the Sculpture Garden. Museum grounds may not be used for parties or programs What shapes, textures, and colors do you see that you can also without permission. find in the sculptures? For your safety and the safety of the art, the garden is monitored What birds, insects, or other animals can you find in the by video cameras and Museum Protective Services. Sculpture Garden? www.toledomuseum.org 419.255.8000 Toledo, Ohio 43620 Ohio Toledo, 2445 Monroe Street Monroe 2445 Georgia and David K. Welles Sculpture Garden Guide 24 23 1 26 2 3 6 4 7 8 9 11 10 14 17 13 18 27 16 15 19 20 21 22 12 5 25 Acknowledgments The Museum is grateful to the donors whose generosity made the Sculpture Garden a reality: Georgia and David K.
    [Show full text]
  • Disability History in Toledo a Place to Call Home
    Toledo is quickly becoming the “go-to” city of the Midwest. Nestled along Lake Erie, Toledo is a thriving area for growing families, young entrepreneurs, and those looking for a fresh start in a flourishing city. You Will Do Better in Toledo – See why. [VIDEO] - Toledo Chamber of Commerce - Do Toledo - City of Toledo Disability History in Toledo The Ability Center prides itself as being the first organization in the area to service individuals living with disabilities in the Toledo area. The Ability Center began as a Rotarian dream, established in December 1920 as the Toledo Society for Crippled Children. We began raising community funds to build a hospital and rehabilitation facility for children. Our programming has changed with the times, adapting to new technology and societal influences. Our name may have changed, but our commitment to providing consumer-driven services to those living with all types of disabilities has continued through our almost 100-year tradition of service. Our agency works to create inclusive communities in Toledo and surrounding areas where everyone feels accepted and fully integrated. Our mission is to assist individuals with disabilities to live, work, and socialize within a full accessible community. Read more about our agency’s history. A Place to Call Home Toledo is surrounded by neighborhoods full of rich history and tradition. High performing school districts and close-knit communities can be found at every corner. Toledo is a mid-size city with a big heart and room for more – view the communities in and outside of the Toledo metropolitan area to see which community you could call home.
    [Show full text]
  • Maumee Bay & Northwest Ohio
    EExplorexplore MMaumeeaumee BayBay & NNorthwestorthwest OhioOhio Fantastic Fishing....Page 4 Glorious Colors......Page 6 Hit the Links.............Page 9 Family Fun.............Page 12 Fall Issue 2021 www.presspublications.com Volume 33, No. 3 A ffreeree publicationpublication ofof TheThe PressPress NewspapersNewspapers Oregon on the Bay off ers visitors access to the shoreline of Lake Erie, Maumee Bay State Park, Pearson Metropark, shopping, dining and lodging. Oregon is conveniently located as a gateway to and from Lake Erie, the Lake Erie Islands, Cedar Point and all of the attractions along the way. Th e City of Oregon is a great place to visit, but an even better place to live! Sincerely, Mayor Michael Seferian Pearson Metropark Walking, running and biking paths, paddle boats, fi shing, children’s playgrounds, tennis courts, picnic areas, “Window on Wildlife” Exhibit, and Historic Johlin Cabin. Howard Marsh Metropark 6 miles of water trails for canoeing and kayaking and 5 miles of trails for hiking and bicycling. Howard Marsh is a birding hot spot of over 230 species including many rare and unexpected visitors German American Festival, Oak Shade Grove during migration. Maumee Bay State Park Beaches, Boardwalk, picnic areas, bike paths, view of Lake Erie and Toledo Harbor Lighthouse, indoor/outdoor pools and play areas, Nature Center, Storybook Interactive Nature Trail (1/2 mile), lodge, cabins and restaurant. Coontz Recreation Complex Baseball, soft ball, soccer, skate park, basketball, volleyball, pickleball and fi tness courts, (3) playgrounds, children’s water splash pad and bike trails. Storybook Interactive Nature Trail Rollin’ Food and Farm Market 2021 First Wednesday of each month --Sept 1 and Oct 6 Event located at 2973 Dustin Road (between Isaac Streets Drive & Harbor Drive) South Shore Park Boardwalk on Maumee Bay, fi tness trail, picnic area and children’s playground.
    [Show full text]