By Kim McDarison
Artists, their guests, and members of the community assembled in a small but intimate group to participate in this year’s Hallow’s Gala event, which was sponsored by the Whitewater Arts Alliance and held in the organization’s gallery at the Whitewater Cultural Arts Center in the city’s downtown.
Some 25 participants viewed art placed on display by eight area artists, enjoyed treats and listened to live music performed by “Los Bromanceros.” The two-man band is composed of area musicians Brain “Looper” Lucas, of Whitewater, and Kenny Jones, of Williams Bay. Both also are members of a band called “Brothers Quinn,” which has been showcased during the alliance’s Savory Sounds summer concert series, Hallow’s Gala co-chairpersons Ashe McDarison and Christine Hayes, who also is a member of the alliance’s board, said.
On Sunday, Jones said that the Los Bromanceros band has been in existence for about two years. He and Lucas formed as a duo, Lucas said, to “give back” to a community in Michigan. The group initially played at a relay race, Jones said. The two, making a quick calculation about past engagements, said that their performance on Sunday marked their debut in Wisconsin. The musicians described their music as “country, classic rock, and Americana, further noting their repertoire to include a diversity of music, which Jones described as “from Hank Williams to Judas Priest.”
The group performed in a costume featuring athletic wear, which was originally developed for the relay in Michigan, and has since become part of the act, Jones said. He added that as an undergraduate at UW-Madison, he played football. The athletic wear was, at that time, “team-issued gear,” he said, noting, “this is now what we wear as bromanceros.”
In keeping with the event’s Halloween theme, some participants came in costume. Counted among guests, were Dracula, a cowboy, Star Trek characters, and a two-person team comprising a 1/8 note.
On Sunday, event-goers found some 19 pieces of art, both 2D and 3D, on display, forming a collection which featured spooky and mythically oriented works from artists hailing from Delavan, Janesville, Menomonee Falls, Watertown, Waukesha and Whitewater.
During the event, several award winners were named, including Anna Curtis, Menomonee Falls, whose work titled: “The Gates of Memory,” was named Best of Show by a panel of three judges; Woody Olsen, Janesville, whose work titled: “Masked Horus,” was chosen through voting for a viewers choice award, and Taylor McDarison, whose work, titled: “Forest Spirit Lamp,” was chosen for honorable mention by the judging panel.
Ashe McDarison, who uses gender-fluid pronouns, noted that the three-member panel was composed of two anonymous judges and Lucy Couch, whom, zey said, is an area artist and a friend of the Whitewater Arts Alliance.
As awards were announced, comments provided by the judges about each piece selected also were shared.
Describing their thoughts about Gates of Memory, the judges wrote that they found the piece a “dreamy” use of surrealism using fish swimming above a cemetery. The piece, they said, “lends beauty to the macabre.”
Describing Forest Spirit Lamp, the judges found the piece to provide a “unique medium to hold a creature in,” further noting its detail.
Along with certificates, the Best of Show winner was presented with a prize of $150. The viewers choice winner received a prize of $50.
Photos from the event follow.