10/20/23-10/22/23
2:00 pm to 5:00 pm
Location
The Lemont Block Collective
150 Maine Street
Brunswick, Maine 04011
United States
October’s Featured Artist Weekend – Cinnamon Brûlée: A Transformative Experience
The event will kick off with a “Meet the Artist” session, where attendees will get the chance to delve into Mx. Brûlée’s creative process, inspirations, and her journey as a Fire Artist. What follows is an experience designed to ignite the senses and challenge preconceived notions of artistic expression. For business owners, the Spooky Soirée presents a unique opportunity to invest in art pieces that are not just decorative, but also conversation starters, capable of transforming spaces into sanctuaries of emotion and thought. In partnership with the Lemont Block Collective, Cinnamon Brûlée’s exhibit is a call to the community — artists, enthusiasts, and casual observers — to come together in a celebration of art, healing, and the resilience of the human spirit.
Meet the Artist:
Dates: October 20th – 22nd, 2023
Time: 1:30 pm – Close
Spooky Soirée
Dates: 10/20
Time: 4pm – 8pm
Burning Man & Disruptive Art
Dates: 10/21
Time: 4pm – 5pm
Bacon Brunch, Beats, & Bubbly
Date: 10/22
Time: 2pm – 4pm
Cinnamon Brûlée, renowned for her evocative Fire Art and transformative Mindset Coaching, is set to be the featured artist at the Lemont Block Collective’s much-anticipated weekend spotlight. The event spans three spellbinding days from Friday, October 20th, to Sunday, October 22nd; meet the artist, Mx. Brûlée, each day from 1:30 pm until close. Fresh from her mesmerizing activations at events like Wandering Cricket Night Market, Somerville Open Studios, Biddeford’s Riverjam Fringe Festival, and Portland’s First Friday Art Walk, Cinnamon Brûlée is bringing her unique blend of art and alchemy to the heart of Brunswick. “Yakisugi art is nuanced,” says Mx. Brûlée, reflecting on her upcoming exhibit. It’s about our attempt at protecting our inner core, past regrets, our fears, defensive boundaries, and traumas. My work invites participants into this transformative medium, allowing them to confront, release, and ultimately heal.” Hosted on land stewarded by the Wabanaki, People of the Dawnland, the exhibit is more than a passive display; it’s an invitation to engage with the visceral, the raw, and the deeply personal aspects of self that Mx. Brûlée’s art evokes. Maine’s blueberry industry flourished when it adopted cultural burning practices of those who stewarded the land before we arrived.
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