Tag Archives: sculpture

announcements area art events exhibitions Uncategorized

Unfolding Visions: The Ned and Jacqueline Crouch Collection of Outsider Art

This spring and fall, the Mabel Larson Gallery will be housing an exquisite collection of folk and outsider art, donated by Ned and Jacqueline Crouch. The exhibit will include works by Herbert Baggett, Miles Smith, Inez Nathaniel and many more artists. The works featured are varying in media, from stoneware and wood carvings to paintings and drawings.

Everyone is invited to visit the opening reception on April 18th from 5 to 7pm. We hope that you will get a chance to stop by and share the experience of this exquisite collection.

faculty news

Professor Virginia Griswold Presents “Here and Back” at the Coop Gallery in Nashville

Virginia Griswold

Here and Back

by Virginia Griswold
December 1st – December 24th, 2012 – opening reception December 1st 6-9pm

A sewing needle pierces through threads, creating holes and separating material. This activity straddles the line between construction and deconstruction. The pulling apart and separation of threads is necessary in the creation of new forms.

I pay attention to material change and random events in my day-to-day life. Something as commonplace as a pot of water boiling over on the stove can bring back memories of leaving a specific brand of Southern girlhood behind me and, as I grew into an adult, inhabiting what felt like a foreign body in an unfamiliar environment.

To cap off the year COOP Gallery excitedly presents Here and Back an exhibition of works by Virginia Griswold. Virginia is currently teaching sculpture at Austin Peay State University. Her work is a synthesis of poetic conclusions. She explains her work, “as a push/pull between certainty and ambiguity – making and un-making – movement and stasis.” Please help COOP celebrate the end of the year with the opening reception of Virginia’s work on December 1st from 6-9 pm.
Downtown Gallery faculty news

Professors Virginia Griswold and Morgan Higby-Flowers at the Downtown Gallery

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The APSU Downtown Gallery and the Center for Excellence in the Creative Arts are pleased to present liquid states: works by Morgan Higby-Flowers and Virginia Griswold for the month of August. An opening reception will be held August 2 from 5-8pm in conjunction with the First Thursday gallery hop through downtown Clarksville. Everyone is welcome.

exhibitions installation Living Gallery studios

Living Gallery Alert: First Site Specific Project Breaks Ground outside Trahern

APSU’s Living Gallery Program is coming to life! Nashville artists Will Tucker and Matt Christie broke ground on the untitled earthen installation in front the Trahern building this past week, and have been working away in the hopes of completing their project before classes begin.

APSU’s Living Gallery Program will feature vibrant student studios within our Trahern Gallery, incredible visiting artists and lecturers and site specific exhibitions and sculptures across campus for the 2012-2013 school year.

Check out the photos below of Will Tucker and Matt Christie’s project in the works below:

Matt and Will will be on campus to speak about their project and meet with our new Trahern Studio participants in the first week of classes. The next big project to kick off will be the construction of the student studios in the Trahern Gallery starting the week of August 6th.

For more information about these projects or how to get involved please contact Prof Paul Collins at collinsp@apsu.edu.

Downtown Gallery faculty news

Professors Haggard and Barwick’s Exhibition in the Downtown Gallery Reviewed in artnownashville.com

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Read the review here

faculty news

Artist, retiring professor Diehr to be honored at April 5 salon event

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Here’s how artist and Austin Peay State University professor James Diehr described his new retrospective exhibit, “memories unwound,” coming to the Downtown Artist Coop:
“It’s a grand opening/going out of business deal.”

The “grand opening” refers to some new works he’s including in the exhibit. The “going out of business” phrasing hints at Diehr’s upcoming retirement after 42 years of teaching – 30 of those years as a professor, art department chair and first dean of the College of Arts and Letters at APSU.

To honor his work and career, the APSU Center of Excellence for the Creative Arts is hosting a special opening reception of the exhibit as part of its Spring Salon Series. The event, which is free and open to the public, begins at 5 p.m. on April 5 at the DAC. The “memories unwound” exhibit runs through April 25.

“Jim Diehr is one of the visionary founders of the Center of Excellence for the Creative Arts, and the last of that group still teaching at Austin Peay,” Christopher Burawa, the center’s current director, said. “I felt strongly that we need to honor him for his work as an educator and artist, and for his lasting impact on the University and Clarksville communities.”

The Center hosts the Salon Series once a month during the fall and spring semesters, featuring distinguished local artists and arts organizations, followed by refreshments and good conversations.

The “memories unwound” exhibit will include sculptures, paintings, drawings and some pottery from throughout Diehr’s career, including pieces that “go back a ways,” he said. The event is somewhat of a bittersweet experience for him.
“This whole retirement thing is a surprisingly conflicting kind of experience,” he said. “I’ve done something for 42 years and enjoyed doing it, and now I realize I’m not going to do it any more. But now I have a chance to be a full-time artist.”

During his career, Diehr traveled to England as a Fulbright Scholar and served as a guest lecturer in China. The April 5 salon offers an opportunity for friends, colleagues, community members and everyday art lovers to commemorate the work of this local artist.

Downtown Gallery

The Austin Peay Downtown Gallery Presents the Work of Professors Carolann Haggard and Rusty Barwick

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The Austin Peay Downtown Gallery, Strawberry Alley, will open “Works from Rusty Barwick and Carolann Haggard” for the month of March.

Rusty’s work reflects twenty years of existence in rural, middle Tennessee. Storm-felled trees provide firewood and materials for sculpture. Old, rusted machine parts and even rocks gleaned from a garden patch have become components of Rusty’s sculptures.

Carolann’s work reflects a communion of past and present. Her sculptures are an assemblage of natural stones, man-made shapes in stone and found objects. Her use of classical materials stems from her past experience with architectural sites.

Both Rusty and Carolann work in the Department of Art and teach in both the 2D and 3D areas.

faculty news

Images of Commissioned Limestone Furniture by Professor Carolann Haggard

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announcements faculty news

APSU Purchases Sculpture by Gregg Schlanger for the Honors Commons

Former APSU Art Professor Schlanger to have work on display at University | The Leaf Chronicle – Clarksville, Tenn., and Fort Campbell | theleafchronicle.com.jpg

For 19 years, Gregg Schlanger sauntered across the Austin Peay State University campus wearing a blazer, an untucked shirt and a ball cap pushed back on his head. He’d stop the students, faculty and staff members who crossed his path to make a joke or tease them affectionately.

He was unassuming and relaxed, but for those who knew him, he was a deeply serious artist whose work brought light to important social issues, such as the availability of drinking water in Third World nations. Earlier this summer, Schlanger ended his long tenure at APSU as professor and interim chair of the art department in order to head up the art program at Central Washington University.

His legacy, however, remains on campus with one of his signature public art installations – B.W.R. (basic water requirements), 50 Liters.

“The piece now belongs to the University’s art collection,” Kell Black, interim chair of the APSU art department, said. “Gregg was here for 19 years and he did a lot for the community, so it’s also a community legacy. The nature of his work always engaged the community and politics.”

A few years ago in Potsdam, Germany, Schlanger conceived and created the piece, which consists of numerous glass bottles filled with water to varying degrees. Each bottle stands for the amount of water used per person per day in a given country. For many developing countries, hardly any water is present.

The average person needs about 50 liters of water a day for domestic uses such as drinking, hygiene, sanitation services and food preparation. About 20 percent of the world’s population only uses around five liters a day.

“It is my intention to bring awareness about this global crisis through this piece,” Schlanger said in 2010. “As a global community, we should guarantee that every person has access and the right to at least 50 liters of clean water every day.”

The piece is now on display in APSU’s Honors Commons, which serves as the home for the University’s Honors Program and the President’s Emerging Leaders Program.

“We are happy to provide a home for this provocative piece of Gregg Schlanger’s,” Dr. Linda Barnes, director of the APSU Honors Program, said. “The piece is an important reminder to all of us that true art communicates a message, often a message that makes us uncomfortable. At the heart of becoming an educated person is learning to be aware of the world we live in, and to take responsibility for what goes on in it. Gregg’s work encourages those of us who work and learn in the Honors Commons to do this every day.”

Christopher Burawa, director of the APSU Center of Excellence for the Creative Arts, echoed this sentiment about Schlanger’s work.
“Gregg’s sculptures always challenge our sense of art and beauty by presenting us with works that reveal what we choose to ignore as we go about our daily existence,” he said. “The work in the Honors Commons springs from his awareness and strong desire to open people’s eyes to what is going on and why we need to be more responsible for our actions. We don’t encounter many people in our lives who have such clear vision as Gregg’s. And his motivation for making his art is compassion, plain and simple.”

Black said the piece is another example of Schlanger’s work as a community activist in Clarksville. During his time at APSU, he worked to improve this area, even running for county commission. He narrowly lost that election.
“One of the strongest things he did was run for public office,” Black said. “It’s one thing to make art about issues. This was him saying, ‘let’s get off the sidelines and let’s grab the bull by the horns. As a colleague and friend, that was the most inspiring thing I ever saw him do.”

For more information on Schlanger’s B.W.R. piece, contact the APSU art department at 221-7333.

alumni news Downtown Gallery Photos

Travis Childers “The History of Things” at the Austin Peay Downtown Gallery

Travis Childers

See more photos here

announcements student news

Student Created Public Art Piece on Display at APSU

Student Created Public Art Piece on Display at APSU | The Leaf Chronicle – Clarksville, Tenn., and Fort Campbell | theleafchronicle.com.jpg

On that first day, the reactions ranged from laughter to gasps of horror.

A friend of mine heard screaming when people saw it, Tobey Lee, an Austin Peay State University art student, said. It scared them.

Thats no surprise considering it was a death-defying scene they were witnessing. A painter, dressed in white coveralls, balanced on his toes some 15 feet in the air, to paint a red circle inside the APSU Morgan University Center.

Luckily, the painter known as Ivan wasnt real. Hes a mannequin that bares a striking resemblance to APSU painter Ivan Colon. The artificial Ivan, standing dangerously atop a small ledge, is part of a new art display created by students in APSU art professor Gregg Schlangers Public Art class.

Part of the class is learning to be a professional by creating a full proposal, a budget and how to plan something like this thats going to be in a public space, Schlanger said.

The new display, titled A Hard Days Work, was installed last month into a large, indented circle situated high on one of the University Centers walls.

Lane Lyle (the architect), 10 years ago when he designed this building, in his mind that was a space for public art by students, Schlanger said. President (Tim) Hall and I started talking about it, and we decided that was an appropriate use for that space.

The class, consisting of art students Colon, Lee, Melissa Cox, Rachel Evans Hyoung Philippe Kim, Sean McFadden and DL Zartner, spent the semester researching public art projects and coming up with a concept for the University Center space. They decided to create a likeness of one of their classmates, Colon, standing on the edge of the circle and painting it red.

I guess it was because Ive worked here so long, a lot of people have seen me and know me, Colon said. When they decided to do that, I was OK with it. People say, Hey, thats Ivan.

With a budget of $847, the students purchased a mannequin and a mask-making kit to create the replica of the APSU painter and art student.

If you put white hair and a white mustache on somebody, its going to look like me, Colon said.

The Ivan mannequin was then anchored to the wall with a chain, while his toes were nailed to the ledge. On the day the display was installed, Lee hung around the UC to hear the publics reactions.

Im surprised how much everyone likes it, he said. It turned out better than I thought it would.

The piece will remain on display in the UC indefinitely, but Schlanger said theres potential that new student art pieces could fill that spot every year.

For more information on the work or on the public art class, contact Schlanger at schlangerg@apsu.edu.

exhibitions student news

Senior Exhibition by Melissa Cox – March 22 – 25

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announcements exhibitions visiting speakers

House is Not A Home by John Ford in the Trahern Gallery – Artist Lecture Monday Feb. 21

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The world, in its vast entirety, can easily be broken down into a series of small objects. Each tiny piece plays an important part in the whole, and it is those relationships that fascinate the artist John W. Ford.

“I am interested in the power of small objects, and collections of small objects, to catalyze interpretation and speculative meaning,” he said. “As an archaeologist examines a pot shard to gain insight into the individuals or groups who created the original pot, or as the paleontologist studies a fossil to comprehend ancient life in its context, my interest is to examine and present small objects for their potential to evoke aesthetic, intellectual, and/or emotional responses in the viewer.”

A new exhibition at Austin Peay State University’s Trahern Gallery, “John W. Ford: House Not a Home,” will present the artist’s unique and fascinating obsession with the smaller pieces of our world. The show opens with a reception at 8 p.m. on Feb. 21 in the gallery and it runs through March 16. Ford, an artist who’s works include sculptural installations, low-relief assemblages and prints that deal with specific places, will also deliver a lecture at 7 p.m. on Feb. 21 in Trahern 401.

The works in this exhibit were partly supported by several granting agencies, including The Arts and Science Council, The North Carolina Arts Council, The Pollock-Krasner Foundation, Inc. and the University of North Carolina at Charlotte’s College of Arts and Architecture.
Ford’s artworks have been featured in at least 43 solo and 63 group exhibitions in Canada, the U.S. and throughout Europe.  He received his MFA in studio art from the Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville. He is an assistant professor of Art at UNC Charlotte.

His new exhibit coming to APSU focuses attention on small objects, which he hopes will “encourage thoughtful examination, a counter-balance in a world of sensationalized visual media.”

“I would like the viewer to develop a heightened sensitivity to detail as it relates to the whole, and to exercise informed and balanced judgment in terms of visual literacy,” he said.
For more information on the upcoming exhibit, contact the APSU Department of Art at 221-7333.

exhibitions

Photos from “The Bruce White School of Sculpture” in the Trahern Gallery

Photos by Cass Moore

alumni news exhibitions

Work by Scott Wise at the APSU Downtown Gallery

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Work by Scott Wise
December 2 – December 31, 2010

Opening Reception on December 2 from 5 – 8 pm.