Kalamazoo Lively Arts
Kalamazoo Lively Arts - S08E03
Season 8 Episode 3 | 26m 46sVideo has Closed Captions
The Ecumenical Senior Center and Amelia Falk's well-rounded artistic journey!
The Ecumenical Senior Center provides a wide range of programs and services for seniors to spend quality time together while also giving back to the community. Amelia M. Falk describes her approach and principles of jewelry making, her well-traveled artistic endeavors, and unique home built by Norman F. Carver Jr.
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Kalamazoo Lively Arts is a local public television program presented by WGVU
Kalamazoo Lively Arts
Kalamazoo Lively Arts - S08E03
Season 8 Episode 3 | 26m 46sVideo has Closed Captions
The Ecumenical Senior Center provides a wide range of programs and services for seniors to spend quality time together while also giving back to the community. Amelia M. Falk describes her approach and principles of jewelry making, her well-traveled artistic endeavors, and unique home built by Norman F. Carver Jr.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship- [Shelley] Welcome to Kalamazoo Lively Arts, the show that takes you inside Kalamazoo's vibrant, creative community and explores the people who breathe life into the arts.
(bright energetic music) - [Narrator] Support for Kalamazoo Lively Arts is provided by the Irving S. Gilmore Foundation, helping to build and enrich the cultural life of greater Kalamazoo.
(bright gentle music) - On this episode of Kalamazoo Lively Arts, Amelia Falk describes her approach and principles of jewelry-making, her well-traveled artistic endeavors, and unique home built by Norman F. Carver Jr.
But first, the Ecumenical Senior Center provides a wide range of programs and services for seniors to spend quality time together while also giving back to the community.
Well, I'm here with Tim Barnes, who's the executive director of the Kalamazoo Ecumenical Senior Center.
Thank you so much for talking with me here today.
- Glad to be here.
- So, Tim, let's start with this because what would you say, you deal with seniors all day long, what is the biggest misconception that people have about seniors?
- We are a active, vibrant community, and we have a lot of people that wanna come and present in front of the seniors.
We're a great audience, and I always come back with, let's do almost, like, a town meeting, because you'd be surprised at what our seniors have ideas, they have opinions, they're not afraid to share their opinions, and let's give them an opportunity to be heard.
So, yeah, I am just pleased to be working in a job where I get to interact with seniors every day.
I'm very, very lucky.
- And really the goal right, of the Ecumenical Senior Society is really to enrich the lives of seniors, right?
You wanna do it body, mind, and spirit.
- Absolutely.
You know, we are a day center, so we're open Monday through Friday.
We are here just to engage our seniors and, you know, we provide a meal and, you know, a safe place to just come.
Sometimes we just hang out.
Sometimes we're doing activities, and seniors really see this as their home away from home, and it's really developed a family atmosphere.
- You do some exercise classes with the seniors, and I think I remember seeing that there's maybe a little dancing to some Marvin Gaye and Aretha Franklin afterward.
- Yeah, you know, it's amazing what music does, and it's amazing that we have some seniors that have memory loss, but they know every single word to the oldies and to the songs, and they love to dance.
And so we try to do that whenever we can.
I'm really excited about a new program that we've been partnering with the Kalamazoo Athletic Club, and I was told that the CDC recommends that seniors get, at least, I think it's 2 1/2 hours of exercise a week.
And most seniors don't get that.
But when you look at African American seniors, it drops to only 4%.
And I'm like, wow, we need to do something.
And 95% of our clientele are African American seniors, and most are dealing with emotional and physical challenges.
And so it's a program that we're really excited.
- [Kim] You know, Tim, I wanted to ask you about the building that you're in, because it's the Van Avery Drugstore, right?
And there's a rich history associated with that drugstore that goes all the way back to the civil rights movement.
- Right, yeah, we kind of feel like it's sacred ground here, and we hope to, with our new capital campaign to really highlight the rich history that started here.
And it used to be a neighborhood drugstore, and bottom line is that a teenager wanted to get a job, get an application, was denied an application, and is that the community came out, they picketed, they boycotted, and they, you know, made it known that that was not all right.
And it pretty much, for people in Kalamazoo, they see that moment and that movement as a beginning of the civil rights movement here in Kalamazoo.
- So as we talked about body, mind, and spirit, that's what you're all about.
So when you talk about some of the classes that you offer, you know, there's music, there's sewing.
What else am I missing?
- Wednesday has been kind of set up as our craft days.
We have a large quilt that everybody's name, we put had everybody's name put on it.
And so the seniors are working on that, that we're hoping to be able to hang in the new facility as a memory of the people that are actively coming every day.
We have some woodworking projects going on.
They're making purses and shawls for the fall.
Sometimes we have people come in and they make cards and book, you know, scrapbooking, that type of thing.
But trying to keep them, jewelry making, trying to show their creativity and, you know, keeping them active.
One of the things that's unique about us is that membership is free, so we're open to anybody 60 years or older.
- [Kim] What makes the Ecumenical Senior Center so important to Kalamazoo?
- It's really about accepting people where they are and having a place that people can call home.
That when seniors are here, you know, we talk about it, we try to have a home setting and we take care of each other.
And it's very clear that that's what happens.
The whole concept of being called ecumenical, which refers to a lot of things, but mostly probably in the church community of all faith and all backgrounds, being able to have a place where everybody's welcomed.
So our overall mission is to provide activities, to provide resources.
We distribute food and transportation and, you know, access to information.
- Is it like a family for a lot of these seniors?
- There's no question.
We had, you know, it is interesting, I had a senior that ended up leaving to visit for an extended period in Arizona.
And I remember he kept saying, "I wanna go home to be with my friends."
And I'm like, well, that's us.
I mean, it's, like, it kind of hit me.
Like, I guess I sometimes forget that for seniors, you know, we see them every day, and having that fellowship and that checking in with people, how important that is for their mental health and for their, you know, for them to thrive.
- And you also give back to the community.
We can't oversight that, because the knitting group is one group that does that with scarves and mittens.
- I was trying to run a program where I wanted to highlight, you know, simple acts of kindness.
And, you know, so often in the community people will do things, like, they'll pay for someone's groceries or they'll pay for someone's dinner at the table next to them.
And it's, like, you know what?
People have been so good to the center, and when we need support with in kind, I mean, I just need to send out an announcement saying, you know, we need 50 turkeys and they show up at the door type of thing.
And the community has been really, really good about that.
But we started a program, a pay it forward program where the intent was for seniors to raise, so we'll raise a little bit of money, but then let them decide how they would give back.
But it's a neat way for us to have our seniors making decisions on how they wanna give back to the community that's been so positive to them.
- And I'm sure that, you know, in their younger days, they probably maybe worked outside and had gardens.
And when the weather warms up, do they have any time to be able to head outside?
Do you do any outdoor activities?
- My first two years I was here, we have a parking lot that is just blasted hot, and there was no protection, no shade.
And so we created four large garden planters.
And then I have a garden tarp or a sail, so we have a shaded area.
And so it's really been fun.
For the last two, three years we've been working on growing flowers and the seniors are adamant about, you know, they get the hose out.
On a daily basis, they're pulling weeds and watering the gardens.
And they really take a lot of pride in that.
And they love just hanging out.
I mean, there are times where I'm ready to leave at 5:00, 5:30, and I go outside and there's still people hanging out under the tarp and it's like, okay, the bar's closing out here.
I'm gonna lock the gate here.
But just being able to have a place where they can hang out in the breeze and just share and talk with people.
So it's been really, really positive.
- Yeah, it's just so wonderful to be able to talk to seniors.
Even when I was a young girl, I was always drawn to seniors because they're just full of life experience, right?
I mean, their knowledge.
They've seen so many things in their life.
So Tim, I wanted to thank you so much for talking with me a little bit here today about this wonderful program that you're doing.
The Ecumenical Senior Center of Kalamazoo.
Thank you so much.
- It's great to be with you.
Thank you so much.
(bright energetic music) - [Kim] Growing up in Kalamazoo, arts culture has inspired Amelia Falk throughout her life.
Her home is also connected to Kalamazoo's history and is a piece of art itself.
Let's check it out.
Well, today I'm talking with Amelia Falk, who's the co-chair of the Jewelry Department at the Kalamazoo Institute of Art.
She's a jewelry lady.
She does photography.
What doesn't she do?
So thank you so much for talking with me here today, Amelia.
- Oh, thank you.
- Hey, listen, you know, I wanna talk about your house first.
Okay, we have to talk about your house, 'cause it's a little piece of art.
Tell me about it.
- Well, my house was designed and built in 1973 by Norm Carver, who was a student of Frank Lloyd Wright's.
He and my parents sat down and got together, decided what they wanted for a house.
And interestingly enough, Norm's idea for my house came from a grain silo.
(laughing) - [Kim] That's wild.
- Yeah, if you look at it from straight up, it looks like a giant X.
And then when you walk in, it's all, well, you can see behind me, redwood paneling.
And my mother kind of leaned over his shoulder and said, "Hey, you're not gonna make my kitchen that small."
(both chuckling) So if you know Frank Lloyd Wright homes and Norm Carver homes, they tend to have really small kitchens.
- Right, right, right, right.
- [Amelia] This one does not.
It has a kitchen that my parents used to throw a lot of parties.
And so they set it up so you could do it banquet style through the kitchen.
- [Kim] How wonderful.
- And I happened to get to know Norm down when I had a gallery space with a local painter down on the Kalamazoo Mall, and Norm happened to be our next door neighbor.
So I walked in one day and said, "Hi, Norm, I'm Amelia, you designed my parents' house."
And he looked at me kind of grumpily and said, "You look like a Falk."
(both chuckling) - That guy has an eye, right?
- Oh yeah, absolutely.
Absolutely.
- Tell me a little bit about what you do at the Kalamazoo Institute of Arts.
It sounds like such an interesting job.
- So I am the co-chair for the Jewelry Department, which means that I'm kind of the one on the ground, but I do a lot of the general managerial things like cleaning and repairing equipment, you know, helping students that are down there.
And then I also teach in the photo department, so (laughs) I'm kind of running all over the place.
You get to know everyone, and I like the kind of intimate setting that we have down there, because the students do feel really comfortable and close with the instructors.
- And you were also described as meticulous, meticulous and creative artist.
How meticulous do you have to be if you're doing art or your photography?
- I question whether I should call myself a photographer or an installation art artist, because I have this tendency to put these super elaborate photo shoots together.
And I make the costumes a lot of times from pins, like, literally with safety pins.
So their whole costume will be something like a piece of fabric that I wrapped around them.
And then I do these, they're all based on kind of gods and goddesses and, you know, heroes and heroines, that kind of thing.
And so I do this kind of very elaborate, lots of fabric, lots of different types of props and things.
And then I will go in and add smoke or atmosphere in some way, create wind that wasn't there.
And so what I say, is that I'm putting this installation together and I photograph it to catalog it, and then the installation is over when the photo shoot is over.
But I have had many college advisors over the years that have done installation work, and they've always said that that would count as an installation.
- Oh, yeah, the amount of time and energy.
Where did you learn how to become an artist if you did learn it?
Some of the skills maybe?
- Oh, well, I traveled all over.
I hate to admit it, but I am the consummate artist in the fact that I wandered a bit in college.
(laughs) I started at Kalamazoo Valley, but then I wound up at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York.
I did a few years of study there, and then before coming back to Western to finish up.
And then I wound up out in Brisbane, Australia for my graduate degree.
And that's in photography with a minor in jewelry design.
And so that's where I learned.
- You do such original things with, you know, history, really, historical images, and you kind of incorporate it into jewelry.
Talk about some of your work like that.
- My jewelry work is based really on three principles.
And so the first one is the gods and goddesses.
I love all of my mythology.
And I was brought up, I lived in India when I was a kid, so my mother taught Indian religion.
And so I really loved the idea of being empowered.
You know, in the '70s we didn't have a lot of those kind of images around.
And so I would read these great comic books from India that explain all of their history and all of their mythology and things like that.
And so that was all really inspiring, because they had these female goddesses that would, you know, go and beat the bullheaded god and things like that.
And so I grew up with those stories.
So that runs kind of throughout all of my work, whether it's photography or jewelry or something else.
The second principle is zero waste.
You know, in jewelry we are making these things, we end up having these buckets full of waste products.
And my goal is to try to not waste anything and to keep using the metal until it gets smaller and smaller and finally I melt it down.
The third principle is these dyes.
And the dyes are historical dyes from the manufacturing industry.
They are around 100 years old.
These are all from companies that have gone out of business.
Some of these warehouses have been sitting empty for years.
And I'm talking, you know, some of them have been closed for almost 100 years now.
Luckily, a company that I work with down in Arizona has been going through and saving all of these millions of dyes from these production houses that have closed down.
If you're a tooling dye person at all, have any kind of history, we think of tooling dyes as car parts.
In the production days, there was male and female part, and they would stamp those together, and in between there would be a piece of metal that would then get smashed in and make this stamped, raised relief.
And so now in order to keep the cost down, he will take the male part, which is the hub, and he uses a 300 ton drop hammer to drive that hardened piece of steel down into a softer piece.
And then I get that piece of steel in the mail, and I use a 20 ton hydraulic press myself to push my bronze, brass, copper, silver down in to make that impression.
This is always the most fun part.
I think I have enough gas left.
(flame whooshing) So by annealing it, all I'm doing is I'm softening those internal molecules up so that they stretch out and relax.
It's like they take a gasp of air.
And I just need to get this to a dull red.
I can see that red coming up now.
And so that's now all those molecules are in, and they're nice and relaxed.
And so now this metal is going to get very soft, and that will allow me to put it into the dye and press it again.
So this just needs to cool down a little bit.
So, and then I need to put that in to pickle it, and that's kind of a funny word.
It's a really low-grade acid that clears the fire scale off of it.
And then I keep down here to keep it away from my cats.
(laughing) So once that's cool, I'll take it over to the hydraulic press and then press it.
So this one is actually made from a penny.
So I used 1982 and prior.
They made 'em in solid copper.
So they press really well.
And so this one, these are these dyes.
This is gonna sit down.
So that first one I showed, that is actually with the first press.
And I use something like this piece of beat up urethane, and I would put it in here and do the first press with that.
And so I can...
It's all hand cranked.
(machine clicking) Okay, and so I watch this little gauge here to make sure that I'm not giving it too much pressure.
And these are not the same kind of hydraulic presses that you see in all the YouTube videos.
(laughing) This is made for jewelry making, not for squishing crayons.
(laughing) Sometimes this happens where it splits off and cuts through a little bit, but most of the time it comes out.
And I will continue to press with some either pewter or aluminum, anything that gives it some, I've even pressed these with paper, sometimes with paper towel that's sitting around just to get any of the details.
Because the main issue with these is if you look closely, you can see that her nose is still pretty smashed in.
It's pretty flat.
So I'm gonna stick this down into where I see where the nose pattern is.
(hammer thudding) And I'm gonna give it a little bit of help.
(hammer thudding) If you pop that back up again, start to see that the nose is going to become more bulbous, the way that it's supposed to look.
And so I have to do that at the very end to pop the noses out and pop the lips out.
And that's because I'm only getting 1/2 of the original dye.
Back then, you know, everything was kind of made this way.
And they would use, this would be the female side of the hub, and then they have the actual hub, which is the male side.
And those two pieces would come down in a big machine and they would stamp together and they would instantly have this perfect, you know, perfect image because of the two halves coming together.
The problem is that the steel becomes prohibitively expensive at that point.
So when you've got these two pieces that fit together, you know, it just becomes too much for a small jeweler like me to be able to buy that.
And so they only give us the one half, the female half, and I have to use different things to press my metal down in there.
So it's very labor intensive.
That's why things are not made like this anymore.
You know, it's just too costly to pay people to be in a big studio or in a big factory and using all these things.
(bright gentle music) - Take me through image creation for you.
What are the steps when you're doing image creation?
- Oh, gosh.
Well, for me, it's very intuitive.
I think I kind of joke around and say, "Well, some people go and they put puzzles together before going to bed.
Go up to my studio and take all the pieces that I've pressed and I'll look at the stones that I have, and it becomes, you know, what is the stone saying to me?"
And they do, they talk to me a little bit and they tell me what will look good around them.
And because I do a lot of cutting apart these dyes, I'll cut pieces and parts out of them, I tend to go in then, and create these little stories.
So they'll either have one of my historical points of view, or they'll have some kind of odd sense of humor.
I have one "Alice in Wonderland" ring that has a pressed Cheshire cat on one side and a little white rabbit on the other side.
You know, my sense of humor comes through in those pieces as well.
So the whole creation process is very freeform, it's very flowing.
Just looking at things, I kind of piece them all together and make them into something that's really mine.
- You know, Amelia, you are just so fascinating to talk to.
I bet your students, I just know that they get so much out of you, you know?
And then you create, and sometimes we have these little happy accidents where everything all comes together.
And I think with your planning and your education and just your life, you're able to put those puzzle pieces together and just make beautiful art.
So I just wanted to thank you so much for talking with me here today.
I was so looking forward to it.
- Oh, thank you so much.
I really appreciate it.
(bright gentle music) - [Narrator] Support for Kalamazoo Lively Arts is provided by the Irving S. Gilmore Foundation, helping to build and enrich the cultural life of greater Kalamazoo.
(bright energetic music) (bright energetic music continues)
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