 We're at Studio Place Arts. We're located at 201 North Main Street in Berry, Vermont. I'm Sue Higbee. I'm the executive director of Studio Place Arts. Here in the first floor gallery at Spa, we're showing an exhibit of a group of MFA candidates at the Vermont College of Fine Arts Graphic Design Program. This was an opportunity for them to experience their work in a different, in a more creative artistic context than they normally get to see it. Even when we first started to have exhibitions as part of the residency, everyone was very unsure and new students coming in. Many of them have never actually shown their work. Just having the honor of having someone outside of our programs come to see the work and then select some of it for an exhibition was really important to them. I think the fact that it's student-led and that students are really purposeful in what they're exploring during this program, that's the reason we're seeing so much of this. The drawing game on the second floor of the Studio Place Arts gallery involves three generations of the Hect family, a family that resides here in central Vermont. And they've been playing this game since the late 1940s. I heard these artists in Europe, I mean, you know, Picasso and all those people who did this game, they would play a game called Exclusive Corpse, Exclusive Surveillance, Sundry Ritone, and that whole crowd. These are on the convention of head to neck, neck to waist, waist to knees, knees to feet. However, we interpret those anatomical components pretty liberally. So we, you know, our job is to surprise the next person so they don't get to see what happens. All I get is two little lines that go below the fold of the paper. The third floor show at Studio Place Arts is a show by Mark Laura. He's a studio artist at Spa and he's exhibiting a show called Anti-Algorithmic. It's a show that includes cardboard constructions, mixed media work, paintings, and also photography and clay sculpture. It's not about one particular media. It's about the process and about finding the characteristics of the particular media that I'm working in. And I think that doing work in different realms kind of will highlight what's unique about each. My background is a computer programmer and anti-algorithmic is a little bit of a slam against my profession. So anti-algorithmic is about setting up rules and breaking them. I always want to set up a framework, a structure, a scaffolding against which to take intuitive action and to do things that are irrational, which I think is the privilege of art. Studio Place Arts is located at 201 North Main Street in Berry, Vermont. Our website is www.studioplacearts.com. We look forward to seeing you soon.