What is Intersect Arts Center?
Under the direction of Sarah Bernhardt, this ministry is at the intersection of Art and Community. Intersect creates connections with the community through its classes for adults and children, gallery exhibitions, technology center, and more exciting events. Intersect partners with many other community organizations to become a hub for healing and new life. It is exciting to watch as Jesus makes himself known to people of all ages and backgrounds in profound and beautiful ways.
Please visit www.intersectstl.org for more information.
To get involved please visit www.intersectstl.org/support or contact the Intersect staff.
Intersect Arts Center is located across the street from Holy Cross at 3636 Texas Avenue.
Untitled (detail) by Allison Luce, St. Louis, 12.7.24 - 12.8.24 (detail) by Anna Schenker, Shiner and Sailor (detail) by Carmen Ribaudo, Barn Owl (detail) by Linnea Ryshke, Towards Futurity by Summer Zah
Thousands of years ago, human beings went deep into a cave in Indonesia. Using earthy red pigments, they made expressive marks on the walls of the cave, carefully depicting three human-bird type characters surrounding a large pig. Using simple colors and marks that now seem distant , these humans told a story, recording something important they wanted to mark, to remember, to celebrate, to see. A phenomenon not isolated to a singular Indonesian cave, this kind of mark-making appears in ancient spaces all over the world. In southern France a stampede of animals dance across rock walls. In Egypt figures swim through some prehistoric lake now only desert. We see realistically rendered buffalo in Spain, abstracted cattle in Somaliland, a multicolored rave in northern Australia. In Argentina a throng of stenciled human hands reaches out across 9,825 years; in those marks spray painted through bone pipes we see our own humanity, not so distant. This desire to mark continues; across place and across time, artists everywhere still use simple lines, complex shapes, textured movement to create marks that draw our attention, marks that memorialize, marks that can connect us.
The five artists featured in this show mark time, they mark caretaking , they mark memory. They mark with the strokes of a brush, rubbings of a crayon , moulding out of clay, and imprints from press and plate. Similar to scripts, fonts, and handwriting, these artists craft a kind of visceral vocabulary that helps them communicate ideas in new ways. Interpreting these marks tells us something about what each artist sees, what they care about, what they ask us to observe and reflect on.
Curated by Sarah Bernhardt and Megan Kenyon, The Mark features work by Allison Luce, Anna Schenker, Carmen Ribaudo, Linnea Ryshke, and Summer Zah. The Mark runs from February 18 - April 5, 2025, with regular gallery hours Tues-Fri 10:30am-4:30pm and Sat 12-6pm.*
*Note: please stay tuned to our socials for updates on snow or ice closings!