• Departure: From the Ordinary

    Collage Dreamscapes, by Terri Clark,

    with guest artist Anthony DiMichele

    (Jan. 12th - Feb. 13th, 2026)

    Bede Gallery, Mount Marty University,

    Yankton, SD

    Featuring photo collages by Terri, from her 2025 collections, 'Cat Dreams' & 'Once Upon a Time'; and photo collages by Anthony, including 'Ghost Farms' and other works.

    A gallery talk was presented by Terri, entitled "Transforming Grief into Wonder through the artistic process".

  • Artist's Statement: (by Terri Clark)

    In this show, I present works from two recent photo-collage projects: the first entitled 'Cat Dreams', and the second entitled 'Once Upon a Time'. This body of work (though no one would guess it by looking) was born out of profound grief and loneliness which moved into my life like a quiet, dark, and slow-moving storm, after the passing of my mother, in the autumn of 2024. In many of the collages, a somber, black-and-white, or muted, background is juxtaposed with colorful creatures or flowers. Both bodies of work feature the combining of color elements with monochrome (or desaturated colors), bringing subtle tention into the pieces.

    The darker elements, can be interpreted, directly, as a reflectionof the grief around my personal loss, but also (at the forefront of mymind, in the wake of my mother’s death) the sobering realization that ALL living creatures will, not only suffer death themselves, but also (beforehand, or in the process), lose EVERYONE to whom they have formed an attachment. This reality is the canvas, so-to-speak, on which all of life is painted.

    The colorful and playful elements are the infusion of my mother’s spirit. Though not a silly person, she did, indeed, have a silly and delightful sense of humor, that flowed naturally from her even in the most adverse of situations. I did not plan these collages or begin with the idea that they were, in any way, about my mother and/or the grief over her death. However, I found her spirit naturally flowed through me into my creations. She is so much a part of my being and consciousness, that her spirit bubbles through me, at times, like a natural spring.

    Other themes and archetypes show themselves in these works, particularly, the 'Cat Dreams' series: First, the transparent figures, which signify the dream state, and so too, the glow around certain figures. Sometimes it is the dreamer (the cat) who is illuminated, sometimes the subject of the dream who is illuminated. Arches play a prominent role, symbolizing passage through to another state, as do pathways leading toward the horizon. Butterflies also show up frequently, representing a flight-of-fancy, or departure from the ordinary.

    The collaged images in the 'Once Upon a Time' came about a little more intentionally, and feature old family photographs of my mother as a child, her parents (my grandparents) and/or her sister. This body of work features some of the same symbology seen in the previous work (Cat Dreams) with additional elements at play, notably water - representing memory and reflection - and trees, also representing memory as well as quiet fortitude.

    These works are intended to be little poetries – works which (hopefully) resonate with the viewer, without interpretations, explanations or, indeed, any intellectual exercise at all – a direct communication from artist to viewer which bypasses language.

    I have also featured in this show some of Anthony’s collages and some created collaboratively:

    With some of these, Anthony provided the source images for my collages (the two entitled "Cats Guard My Dreams"); in others ("Ghost Farms" & "A Great Wind"), I provided technical assistance in producing Anthony's collages, with the originating vision and creative direction being his.

    I would also like to note two of Anthony's which were made in a very unique and innovative way, involving manual layering of transparent images and then photographing them – no digital layering involved. These works are “The Haunted Violin” and “Transparencies”.

    I am honored to share in the creative process with Anthony and to include his work in this show, as he is a true, life-long artist, and my own journey into art would have been very different – had it not been for our association and friendship. So, I extend a heartfelt Thank You to Anthony!

  • ARTIST'S BIO: - Terri Clark

    Terri Clark is co-owner and creative partner at Cloud Shadow Studio & Art Gallery, in Wakonda, and is employed as Assistant Director at Yankton Area Arts, in Yankton.

    Terri has family roots, going back four generations, in both Yankton and the rural Viborg area. Born in Colorado, she moved with her family back “home” to South Dakota, in her teen years; attended school in Viborg and Yankton; and attended University at USD, Vermillion. After college, she moved to the west coast, settling on San Juan Island, in Washington state. There she was employed with San Juan County, in the capacity of Engineering Technician, with a specialty in Geographic Information Services, in a career lasting 30 years.

    Terri returned “home” to South Dakota, in 2021, settling in Wakonda; and with her artist partner, Anthony DiMichele, opened Cloud Shadow studio & Art Gallery. As an artist, sheworks both independently and collaboratively (with Anthony), in various genres, including print making, photography & digital art. Terri and Anthony host art exhibitions throughout the year, at Cloud Shadow Studio, as well as virtual art shows, via their Cloud Shadow Studio website (https://www.cloud-shadow-studio.art/).

    As the Graphics Designer and Business Manager of their artstudio, she builds and maintains their websites and social media presence; produces the videos and virtual-gallery counterparts to their studio shows; as well as designing all of their advertising materials. As an adjunct to the studio, Terri offers hergraphic design services to clients, via her personal website, TLC Digital Arts (https://www.tlc-digital-arts.com/), where you can also view more of her art work.

    Terri particularly enjoys the combination of creative and technical work, making digital photographic collage a natural fit for her talents and creative expression.

  • ARTISTS BIO: - Anthony DiMichele

    Anthony DiMichele began his printmaking career in the mid-1980’s, in Seattle, Washington, where he studied intaglio and relief printmaking techniques, with Peter Ramsey, via The Experimental College. He was a founding member of Pressworks, a Seattle-based printmaking collective; and taught printmaking to developmentally disabled adults, as an instructor for (ResCare) Creative Living. He was also an art instructor for black and Hispanic youngsters who were involved in street gang activities.

    Anthony specialized in Mezzotint, after residencies in Nantes, France, studying under the master Mezzotint artist Laurent Schkolnyk.

    From the late 1990’s to 2020, he was an active member of the arts community in Friday Harbor, Washington, where he was a founding member of another artists’ collective; the manager of Studio7 gallery & printmaking studio; and a private printmaking instructor. Anthony was also an art instructor at Skagit Valley Community College (San Juan Center); a participant in the annual San Juan Island Artists’ Studio Tours; and a participating artist, as well as employee of, the San Juan Island Museum of Art.

    Anthony relocated to Wakonda, South Dakota, in 2021, where he and his art partner, Terri Clark, established a new, private art studio and gallery, which they named Cloud Shadow Studio, to reflect their appreciation of the sunshine, big blue skies, puffy white clouds and the beautiful rural landscape of South Dakota. Cloud Shadow Studio holds open-house events & gallery art shows several times a year, featuring local and international artists.

    Anthony is an active member of the Yankton Area Arts Association (YAA). He has given educational art presentations on the subjects of art history and modern art; exhibited work in group and solo shows; and participated as a vendor in YAA’s annual Summer Arts Festival at ‘Riverboat Days’, Yankton’s premier summer event.

    Anthony has also connected with the arts at Mount Marty University, in Yankton. In 2022, he presented an art talk and a solo art show, ‘The Marriage of Intaglio & Photography’; in 2024, Cloud Shadow Studio hosted a solo show of work by MMU art professor, David Kahle; and this past December, Mount Marty hosted a photography exhibit which was curated by Anthony, and co-hosted by Cloud Shadow Studio.

    Anthony’s work has been represented, over the years, by Davidson Galleries (Seattle, WA), Fine Impressions Gallery (Seattle, WA), Flatbed Press (Austin, TX), and Wenniger Gallery (Rockport, MA), among others. His work has been exhibited internationally in venues in England, Italy, Bulgaria, Lithuania and others; and is part of museum collections in both Italy and China.

    Anthony's current projects include 'Ghost Farms', a digital collage series featuring abandoned farm buildings of SE South Dakota; learning the art of oil painting; and keeping his three studio cats – Honey, Sugar and Mama Mina – on their winter diet and exercise program.