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New Works by John and Connie Ernatt: "The Collaboratives"

06:00 PM, November 7, 2025 | The Diver

New artworks by John and Connie Ernatt, “The Collaboratives,” are on display at The Diver, 424 S. Commerce St. in Wichita, KS. Public showings are during the First Friday art crawls on November 7th and December 5th from 6-10 p.m. After 25 years of marriage, John and Connie are hardly strangers to each other’s creative processes, but this is the first time they worked together on a fully collaborative collection of art.

Connie is perhaps best known locally for her bronze sculptures, including the elusive Wichita River troll, the WSU Wushock, and the Sedgwick County Law Enforcement Memorial. She has also been the de facto art director and house artist at Botanica for most of the last decade, overseeing the recently renovated Chinese garden and the Joyland Carousel, a project she and John worked on together. Her individual art often features bronze chimpanzees living out darkly comedic narratives in a world of found objects and oddities.

John has left a major imprint on the Botanica gardens as well; his sculpture “The Attendant, 1923” stands at the entrance to the terrace. He also designed the McAfee Pool gates as part of a public art project for which Connie was hired as a consultant. Perhaps most notably, John is a founding member of the Fisch Haus, an artist collective that played a critical role in the development of the Wichita Arts District on Commerce Street. His enormous abstract paintings, thoughtfully built into custom frames, have been featured in numerous galleries and are the highlight of prestigious collections throughout Wichita and the greater Midwest.

Their new collaborative works are part painting, part sculpture: fourteen monolithic towers that echo each artist’s unique creative voice. John describes how he was enamored with the beauty of collaborative processes, hoping that together they might push the boundaries of creativity confined to a repeated form. Connie was already considering ways to subdue narrative in her own creative process and was excited for the challenge of including representational forms without overwhelming a simplified focus on line, shape, and color. Ultimately, both artists were drawn toward a more intimate collaboration in response to the collective isolation of the pandemic and a more personal shared grief following the death of an inspirational family member.

While aptly titled “The Collaboratives,” this exhibition also features individual paintings and sculptures by John and Connie. Their art will be on display at the Diver through the new year with a closing reception on Friday, December 5th. Private showings are also available by request.

  • Admission:

    Free

  • Recurrence:

    Recurring monthly on the 1st Friday

  • Days:

    November 7, 2025 - December 5, 2025

  • > 2025-11-07 2025-12-05 22:00:00 New Works by John and Connie Ernatt: "The Collaboratives" <p>New artworks by John and Connie Ernatt, “The Collaboratives,” are on display at The Diver, 424 S. Commerce St. in Wichita, KS. Public showings are during the First Friday art crawls on November 7th and December 5th from 6-10 p.m. After 25 years of marriage, John and Connie are hardly strangers to each other’s creative processes, but this is the first time they worked together on a fully collaborative collection of art.<br><br>Connie is perhaps best known locally for her bronze sculptures, including the elusive Wichita River troll, the WSU Wushock, and the Sedgwick County Law Enforcement Memorial. She has also been the de facto art director and house artist at Botanica for most of the last decade, overseeing the recently renovated Chinese garden and the Joyland Carousel, a project she and John worked on together. Her individual art often features bronze chimpanzees living out darkly comedic narratives in a world of found objects and oddities.<br><br>John has left a major imprint on the Botanica gardens as well; his sculpture “The Attendant, 1923” stands at the entrance to the terrace. He also designed the McAfee Pool gates as part of a public art project for which Connie was hired as a consultant. Perhaps most notably, John is a founding member of the Fisch Haus, an artist collective that played a critical role in the development of the Wichita Arts District on Commerce Street. His enormous abstract paintings, thoughtfully built into custom frames, have been featured in numerous galleries and are the highlight of prestigious collections throughout Wichita and the greater Midwest.<br><br>Their new collaborative works are part painting, part sculpture: fourteen monolithic towers that echo each artist’s unique creative voice. John describes how he was enamored with the beauty of collaborative processes, hoping that together they might push the boundaries of creativity confined to a repeated form. Connie was already considering ways to subdue narrative in her own creative process and was excited for the challenge of including representational forms without overwhelming a simplified focus on line, shape, and color. Ultimately, both artists were drawn toward a more intimate collaboration in response to the collective isolation of the pandemic and a more personal shared grief following the death of an inspirational family member.<br><br>While aptly titled “The Collaboratives,” this exhibition also features individual paintings and sculptures by John and Connie. Their art will be on display at the Diver through the new year with a closing reception on Friday, December 5th. Private showings are also available by request.</p> 424 S Commerce St Wichita, KS America/Chicago
  • The Diver
  • 424 S Commerce St
  • Wichita, KS 67202
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