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ARTWORK BY CHICAGO ARTIST
ACCEPTED BY MDA ART COLLECTION

"ST3-63 & me"

TUCSON, Ariz., Dec. 16, 2003 — A digital creation by Kenneth M. Jasch a Chicago software/hardware training manager has been accepted by the Muscular Dystrophy Association’s Art Collection. Now in its 12th year, the Collection features artwork by people from across the country with neuromuscular diseases.

“ST3-63 & me” depicts the stages of the launch of the ST3-63 Discovery space shuttle in 1995, which Jasch attended. He took photographs of the night launch, then scanned them into his computer and enhanced them using filters and other digital art techniques.

Jasch designs, develops and executes technical software/hardware and manages training. In addition, he has a Web site development business at www.kenjasch.com. As an artist, Jasch has won awards for his hand-detailed models of NASA’s Apollo and Gemini spacecraft.

Jasch, 39, has spinal muscular atrophy, which affects the part of the nervous system that controls voluntary muscle movement. SMA causes weakness in the legs, hips, shoulders and arms. Jasch, a member of MDA’s National Task Force on Public Awareness from 1994 to 1996, has made frequent appearances on the Chicago broadcast of the Jerry Lewis MDA Labor Day Telethon.

“We’re deeply honored to welcome Ken Jasch’s work into the permanent MDA Art Collection,” MDA President & CEO Robert Ross said. “His contribution to our Collection will undoubtedly delight all who see it as it travels to galleries and museums as part of special exhibits of the Collection.”

The new addition by Jasch will be displayed at MDA’s national headquarters in Tucson, Ariz. It will also be included in MDA Art Collection traveling exhibits. The Collection was established in 1992 to focus attention on the achievements of artists with disabilities, and to emphasize that physical disability is no barrier to creativity.

The permanent Collection comprises some 300 works by artists aged 2 to 82 and represents all 50 states. Each artist is affected by one of the neuromuscular diseases in the MDA program.

Selected art from the Collection has been exhibited at the Dallas Museum of Art; Cork Gallery at Lincoln Center and Forbes Magazine Galleries in New York; Tucson Museum of Art; Bishop Museum in Honolulu; Chicago Public Library, Harold Washington Library Center; Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art; Los Angeles Children’s Museum; JFK Center at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.; Fresno Metropolitan Museum; Duluth Art Institute; Capital Children’s Museum, Washington, D.C.; and the Henry Ford Centennial Library in Dearborn, Mich.

MDA is a voluntary health agency working to defeat neuromuscular diseases through programs of worldwide research, comprehensive services, and far-reaching professional and public health education. MDA maintains clinics for adults and children affected by neuromuscular diseases in the Chicago area at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Rush-Presbyterian-Saint Luke’s Medical Center and University of Chicago Hospitals in Chicago.

The Association’s programs are funded almost entirely by individual private contributors.

 

 
 
 
 
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