Local art framed at the Katzen Arts Center

WASHINGTON–A photograph of SpaghettiOs hangs against the wall.

Paintings of bare women, one smoking a cigarette, line a nearby hallway.

A portrait of a cowboy, made of colors and oils, is framed and hung.

These are just some of the many works on display this summer in sixth temporary exhibits at the Katzen Arts Center on the campus of American University in Washington D.C. The works are all on loan and contribute to the museum’s international, local and political messages, according to Lucy Crowley, an administrative and marketing assistant at the museum.

“You can take pictures and even small videos,” Crowley said.

Will's picture-S.O's
A picture of SpeghettiOs stands out in the local art exhibit at the Katzen Arts Center. Photo by Will Amari.

The local art exhibition is a donation from the Franz and Virginia Bader Fund, a 13-year-old organization that gives grants to artists within 150 miles of Washington, D.C.

In order to be eligible to receive a grant, an artist must be at least 40 years and must write an essay on why it would advance their lives as an artist, according to the Bader Fund website. Donations are given out every year, with minimum grants awarded of $15,000.

The exhibit opened on June 14 and closes Aug. 17. Artists include Aaron Brown, Hadieh Shafie and Rik Freeman, all of whom are long-time painters still trying to master their craft.

“My favorite piece is this one,” said Maia Plesent, a 20-year-old who works at the museum. She pointed at one of the works done by Emily Piccirillo. It is a photograph of what looks like the branches of trees.

“All of it so strange and interesting,” Piccirillo said.

Genevieve Stegner-Freitag, 20, is a gallery attendant at the Katzen Arts Center and she feels that it is a great idea to promote artists in the local metropolitan area.

“It is a way of expressing your individual personality, who you are,” Stegner-Freitag said. “It’s fun.”

To find out more about the Franz and Virginia Bader Fund, visit the website.

Summer museum hours are 11 a.m to  4 p.m. Located at 4400 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Washington, D.C. 20016

 

Health care costs and access still an issue, worry in D.C.

pharmacist
Rosaline Ngachie in a CVS pharmacy in Tenleytown, D.C.

WASHINGTON- Alex Epperly is a doctoral biophysiology student who enjoys learning about the human body and health.

However, when it comes to a health care plan, he believes it is a political game.

“I think they’re (Congress) playing softball too much with insurance companies,” Epperly explained. “Too much back and forth.”

Sunday marked the first day that Epperly would no longer be protected by his parents’ health care plan. He is on his own now, paying for his cheaper plan that would only protect him in cases of like a severe car crash or a heart transplant, he said. Starting Monday, he began paying $200 a month for the health care plan that only covers catastrophic illnesses.

Like Epperly, most people interviewed in Tenleytown on Monday, agreed that the biggest problem with health care is that the people who need it most, can’t afford to get it, leaving some nervous about the future.

Some 16-year-olds like Jauan Durbin know a great deal about the battle for affordable, effective health care. Durbin, who typed on a computer in the local Tenleytown Library, expressed his worries that he would not be able to afford an adequate health care plan. He believes Congress represents health care companies’ best interest, not the people.

Durbin has heard of the Affordable Care Act, sometimes referred to as Obamacare which allowed people to stay longer on their parents’ plans, and is insured by his parents. However, once he turns 26, he doesn’t know if he is going to pay for health care or not.

“It should be my choice to pay or not to pay,” Durbin said. “People should just mind their own business.”

On the corner of a busy Tenleytown street sits a CVS pharmacy where Rosaline Ngachie, 49, works as a pharmacist. She meets with many ill patients daily, and comes across few who are without health insurance.

“Half of the time they are covered and they get sick,” said Ngachie.

When asked about how the people without health insurance pay, she said “We give them a discount card.”

Many people frequent the pharmacy in CVS for all sorts of reasons.

“We can usually predict what people will need before they come in,” Ngachie said. “Allergy season is big and after big holidays you have Pepto and heartburn.”

When asked whether everyone should have health care, Ngachie replied, “You should because you never know what will happen to you unless you have a CT scan of your body.”

Other people in Tenleytown have a slightly different take on health care.

Nan Ivy, 66, grew up in Atlanta, Georgia before moving to Tenleytown.

When she was in her 20s, Ivy lost her parents’ health coverage and went for an extended amount of time without any kind of health insurance because it was too expensive.

“In Atlanta there’s a hospital that’s tax-funded,” said Ivy. “I went there whenever I was sick and couldn’t go to a doctor.”

Once she got a steady job, things improved for Ivy and after a while her job provided her with the health insurance that she needed.

Now she faces a new problem with health insurance.

“I have a daughter,” said Ivy. “She lives in Florida and she didn’t get Obamacare. I told her to, but she didn’t listen.”

Ivy had a difficult time trying to speak about the topic because it was so upsetting to her.

“She’s so sick,” said Ivy. “She’s so sick and no one will help her. I don’t know what to do.”

People like Ivy’s daughter, who is in her late 20s, struggle on a daily basis without health insurance, and even though they may be ill, or in need, no one will help them because they aren’t insured.

Ivy is “disgusted” by the lack of health care assistance in the U.S.

Ivy said, “Senators and congressmen get free health care and I don’t know why we can’t.”

Independence Day receives mixed reviews

WASHINGTON–People of all ages at American University are celebrating the Fourth of July with some excited and others indifferent.

For some people Fourth of July is a big deal. Laura Dmesey, 49, works at the Subway on campus. Dmesey plans on partaking in a cookout with her family in Maryland. Instead of watching fireworks at the National Mall, she’s buying her own to set off in the backyard.

Some people have different ways of celebrating. A student at AU, biting an apple by the front desk in Anderson Hall, said she was excited to crash at her friend’s house in the city. Nineteen-year-old, Barbara Martinez, is a rising sophomore from Northern Virginia and is ready to get off work to tour the Capital and relax in the heat.

Martinez, for example, believes that the Fourth of July is a time to celebrate American pride, nationality and egotism. Others see the great holiday as nothing more than a excuse to party. In fact according to 15-year-old New Jersey native, Ashley Fowler, July Fourth is one of America’s drunkest holidays.

“I feel that it’s like a fun holiday, but I don’t actually find it to be that important,” Fowler said.

Brendan Ryan, 17, was sitting at the Starbucks waiting to get picked up by his family. For him, Fourth of July is just another day. He normally spends his time with his family, watching the fireworks, and eating food. Ryan says that for him, Independence Day is no big deal, just a silly tradition.

Assistant Director of Discover the World of Communication Tony Cohn begs to differ. Cohn, 21, has always thought of our nation’s birthday as a “patriotic holiday,” a time when everyone of every race can get together to celebrate unity and tradition.

Every year Cohn takes the students of DWC to the National Mall, in front of the Lincoln Memorial. There, they do it all: from playing soccer on the grass, to visiting museums.

“It’s a fun Washington D.C. experience,” Cohn said.

Here in D.C. visiting the National Mall seems to be the most popular thing to do, according to those interviewed Wednesday. Hundreds of thousands of people visit the mall each year to watch the closing fireworks. It’s an all day event and many of the monuments close before 5 p.m. That way people have more room to camp out.

“You can’t see the ground because of so many people,” Cohn explained. “There’s so much energy that’s so crazy, it’s indescribable.

You’re celebrating the nation’s birthday at the nation’s capital on the national mall. There’s something so special and so much novelty behind that.”