An image of the mural, courtesy of Walter Colley
Arts & Culture Local News Visual Arts

GCC Adjunct Art Professor’s Mural Inspires Farm Landscape Project at The Harley School

In 2014, the owners of the Village Bakery and Café located at 145 Culver Road at the Armory in downtown Rochester, New York, contacted Karen (Todd) Flack to paint a mural to illustrate their fresh food philosophy which boasts local farm products, produce and free-range eggs. Flack was excited about the project and she developed a farm scene stretching across nearly a full wall in the Café. The 10′ x 25′ painting features the sun rising behind mountains that edge a farm with chickens, a cow, trees, a wagon, fields and flowers and a banner that reads: “It’s not just what we use. It’s what we don’t.” Patrons have been enjoying the mural for nearly four years since her original artwork was developed.

An adjunct art teacher at Genesee Community College, Flack teaches all of her students to do their homework and use a variety of resources to maximize the impact of a visual assignment. In fact, she collected approximately 150 images for visual reference while doing the Village Bakery and Café painting. In her ten years of teaching at GCC, Flack has enjoyed teaching students of all ages. She has also worked various art restoration projects and architectural conservation projects including assignments in the Senator’s Mansion in Churchville, The First Universalist Church in Rochester, and privately owned works by artists such as Andy Warhol and Ramon Santiago. She also designed the commemorative button for the Second Annual Orleans County Heritage Festival in 2017.

As both an artist and educator, Flack was recently honored when she discovered the mural in the Village Bakery and Café was being used as a reference by R.I.T. graduate student, Kelly Ryan in a teaching unit for a seventh grade studio art class at The Harley School in Brighton. The unit Ryan developed teaches students about effective use of the foreground, middle ground and background to develop great compositions, how to foster creativity and apply acrylic painting techniques. The farm-scape unit included a guest artist session where Ryan’s students met Flack to discuss not only the mural, but the students’ artwork, as well.

“I was so impressed seeing all of the pieces these young budding artists created using my work as inspiration,” Flack said. “Most artists hope their work inspires or educates and it was humbling to see it first-hand in these students.”

Ryan’s unit also served to illustrate the various careers available to artists. “With each unit I teach, I work hard to make sure my students see the opportunities their learning and skills can produce. Having Karen come into the classroom created a real-world connection for the students that demonstrated how art can be used to communicate messages, in this case the farm to table concept, to the community through a social context,” Ryan said. The farm-scape unit culminated with a student art exhibit at the Village Bakery and Café. “The public display really drove the students to produce their very best work.”

Flack’s mural, which was one of four nominated for the Best Mural in Rochester in 2014 is visible at the Culver Road Village Bakery and Café, and online at https://villagebakeries.com//photos/gallery/village-bakery-pittsford/. To appreciate Flack’s additional creativity in arts go to her website, http://www.davincijane.com which features a video of her playing her violin or “fiddle” as a guest appearance with the Marshall Tucker Band at the Rochester Lilac Festival, and also her work at the Perry Chalk Art Festival where she won first place in 2016 and was the featured artist in 2017.

For more information, contact Marketing Communications Associate Director Donna Rae Sutherland at (585) 343-0055 ext. 6616, or via email at dsutherland@genesee.edu.

About the author

Frank Parlato

1 Comment

Click here to post a comment