Tag Archives: sculpture

exhibitions

The Bruce White School of Sculpture in the Trahern Gallery

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The Bruce White School of Sculpture
Nov. 8 – 24, 2010 Trahern Gallery
Nov. 8, 2010 – Aug. 2011 Outdoor Works

Reception and Informal Gallery Talk with ten of the Artists
Monday, Nov. 8, 4:30 – 6:30 pm, Trahern Lobby

This exhibition is a tribute to sculptor Bruce White. White was a professor at Northern Illinois University from 1967 to 1996. He maintains his sculpture studio in DeKalb, Ill. Bruce White has an extensive exhibition record and has created more than 30 large-scale public sculpture commissions.

The exhibition included the work of Bruce White and a group of 24 former students.

Tim Scofield
Bruce A. Niemi *
Liz Wolf
Scott Wallace *
Lee Sido
Tom Stancliffe
David Lepo
Charles Yost *
Michael Bennett
Rob Lorenson *
Jason Peot
Jill King
Paula Martinez
John Kobald
Tom Skomski
Joel Graesser
Jack Balas
Mike Helbing *
Chris Nitsche
Richard Peglow
Andrew Arvanetes *
Rex Silvernail
Bruce White *
Gregg Schlanger
Bobby Joe Scribner

*outdoor sculpture

Uncategorized

Sculpture Bruce Niemi Installs an Outdoor Sculpture

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announcements faculty news

Gregg Schlanger Exhibition at the Renaissance Center

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Gregg Schlanger B.W.R ( Basic Water Requirements) 50 Liters will be at the Renaissance Center in Dickson, TN from January 21 – March 6, 2010.

On Thursday January 21, Professor Schlanger will be giving an artist lecture from 5 – 6 pm followed by a reception from 6 – 7:30 pm.

Uncategorized

Husband and Wife Artists Tackle Global Water Crisis

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Husband and wife artists Gregg Schlanger and Monica Quattrochio, troubled by what a billion Third World inhabitants must drink to survive, are opening a new installation and exhibit at the Twist Art Gallery in Nashville that deals specifically with water.

“Water is a symbol of life, fertility, purification and healing,²
Quattrochio, an APSU alumna and fine arts photographer, said. ³It can evoke feelings of calmness and serenity but also conjure up strength and power.”

The exhibit, which opens Nov. 7 from 6 to 9 p.m. and runs through Nov. 28, will feature literal and abstract photographs by Quattrochio and a public installation by Schlanger, a professor and chair of the APSU Department of Art.

“My photographs are a study on water and its essential purpose for the
function of the human body in relation to the symbolic meanings that quench the spirit,” she said.

Schlanger¹s installation will feature 48 one-gallon glass bottles displayed on a wooden shelf inside the gallery.

“Each bottle represents a different country and indicates the amount of
water used per person per day in each country,” he said. “There will be 14 small houses made of ice. The icehouses will melt each day. The amount of water used to create the icehouses each day will be 50 liters. The houses are to represent the domestic use of water around the world.”

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 world¹s population only uses around five liters a day.

“It is my intention to bring awareness about this global crisis through this piece,” Schlanger said. “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.”

Schlanger works primarily in installations and community public art, and
this new piece is a continuation of a larger installation he created in
Potsdam, Germany. That work is now on display at the Bank of America Plaza in Charlotte, N.C.

The installation is for sale, and Schlanger said the majority of the money earned will go to purchasing a well water system for a developing nation.

The Twist Art Gallery, located at 73 Arcade, is part of a collective of 11 art studios and galleries known as Art at the Arcade.

The show is free and open to the public. For more information, visit
http://www.twistartgallery.com or call 888-535-5286. — Charles Booth

faculty news

Gregg Schlanger, documentation video, installation at the University of Northern Iowa, 2000

student news

Professor Reagan’s 3-D Class Create Sculptures for “Cats”

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Professor Brad Reagan’s spring semester 3-Dimensional Design class with
their projects made from cardboard. They were made for the Roxy’s production
of CATS which opened April 10 and runs through May 2

faculty news

Professor Schlanger Dedicates “Rugby Gates” in Memphis

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click here for full article

announcements faculty news

Professor Schlanger in Memphis Installing “Rugby Gates”

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Professor Schlanger is in Memphis this week over seeing the final installation of his large scale public art work, “Rugby Gates”. The piece was commissioned by the UrbanArt Commission. More photos and information will be posted soon.

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announcements faculty news

Administrative Shuffle for the Department of Art This Fall

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Big changes are coming to the Art Department starting July 1.  Dr. Jim Diehr, Dean of the College of Arts and Letters, is stepping down from his post and is returning to the Department of Art where he will teach ceramics, sculpture, and art appreciation.  Dr. Dixie Webb, Chair of the Department of Art, has agreed to serve as the Interim Dean of the College of Arts and Letters while a national search in conducted.  Professor Gregg Schlanger will be serving as Interim Chair of the Department of Art.

Photos student news

Photos from Sam Matthew’s Senior Exhibition

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Photos student news

Photos from Matt Smith’s Senior Exhibition Opening Reception

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alumni news

Paul Fly (’05) to exhibit “Wonderland” at the Renaissance Center

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Press release taken from the Renaissance Center’s Website. The Mad Hatter, March Hare, Mock Turtle, Caterpillar and other characters from Alice in Wonderland are waiting to greet students who come to The Renaissance Center to see the Mind Enriching Theatre series production of Lewis Carroll’s classic tale.Wonderland, a sculpture installation by Franklin artist Paul Fly, is on display in the rotunda of The Renaissance Center through May 23.Outside the Performance Hall, the Mad Hatter presides over his loony tea party with his guests the March Hare and the Dormouse. Just inside the center’s entrance are the Caterpillar, the Duchess and her baby and the Mock Turtle.The MET series is presenting the Prince Street Players’ version of Alice in Wonderland for school and group field trips through May 23 and Fly’s installation will be on display through that same period.A Nashville native, Fly created Wonderland as the final thesis for his Bachelor of Fine Arts degree at Austin Peay State University.“I was trying to produce an environment that one could be completely immersed into,” Fly said. “The show was originally installed in a Victorian house in Clarksville, where the viewer would move through each chapter in the story as a separate and complete environment.”For the tea party scene, Fly created a table of hand-forged steel, which is set with hand-thrown pottery pieces. He built the chairs and a phonograph from scratch, using the bell of a trombone for the horn. The heads and hands of each character at the table are bisque-fired stoneware and the fur on the March Hare and the Dormouse is actual rabbit fur that was cut from pelts and glued on in one-inch sections.The bodies of the Mad Hatter and March Hare are constructed from welded steel and foam padding. In addition to his creativity and sweat, Fly put even more into his pieces.“The hair on the Mad Hatter is partially mine and partially from a friend of mine from Clarksville,” he explained.The Duchess and her baby have the same style frame with hand-painted ceramic and steel skeleton bodies. The card men are sheet metal and have ceramic faces and hands.“The Caterpillar and Mock Turtle were mostly done in a media I had never worked in before,” Fly said. “The faces of each are ceramic, as well as the arms of the Caterpillar. The bodies, the rock and the mushroom are built of Styrofoam covered in several layers of Bondo.”Fly added special touches to make the characters come alive, such as speakers so the Mad Hatter and March Hare can converse, a pump so the Hatter can squirt water out of his finger and a fan inside the Caterpillar’s hookah that allows smoke from an incense cone to waft out.“I have always enjoyed the story (of Alice in Wonderland), at leas the Disney version that I was familiar with,” said the 24-year-old artist. “I wanted to produce an environment where the viewer could take on a part of the story, in this case, the place of Alice. While preparing to begin work on the project, I ran across the work of Arthur Rackham, whose work I found amazingly inspiring and it is from his etchings that most of my sculptures found their starts.”Growing up in Franklin, Fly said his early childhood interests in art and science were nurtured with an abundance of at-home projects, the dismantling of broken electronics and working toys. Countless hours were also spent wandering in the woods, daydreaming and collecting rocks.As with most children, Fly enjoyed afternoons filled with crayons and modeling clay. Writing and illustrating stories was also commonplace, not only in the home but at school as well, and his love of art and the narrative grew from these beginnings.His first exposure at The Renaissance Center came when one of his pieces was accepted for the 8th annual Renaissance Regional Art Exhibit in 2006, earning a Purchase Award.“We are excited that we are able to complement the theatre department’s production of Alice in Wonderland by hosting Paul Fly’s Wonderland installation,” said Armon Means, curator for The Renaissance Center. “This is a prime example of how the fine arts departments at the center can create field trip experiences that incorporate the visual arts, performing arts, music and dance.”Wonderland by Paul Fly will be displayed in the rotunda of The Renaissance Center through May 23. Exhibits at the center are open 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday-Saturday and are always free. For more information on the artist, visit www.paulfly.com. To learn more about exhibits and performances at The Renaissance Center, call (615) 740-5600 or visit www.rcenter.org.

faculty news

Professor Gregg Schlanger Commission in Owensboro, KY

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Professor Gregg Schlanger (not pictured) recently completed a commission of two large scale digital prints for the Daviess County Library in Owensboro, KY. 

faculty news

Professor Gregg Schlanger in Beeskow, Germany

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Dr. Gustav und Dr. Sabine Hannesen view Professor Gregg Schlanger’s work in “Welt Wasser, Wasser Welt’, a group exhibition being held in the Beeskow Castle in Beeskow Germany. 

faculty news

Professors Gregg Schlanger and Barry Jones in “Perspectives” at the Memphis Brookes Museum of Art

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Professors Barry Jones and Gregg Schlanger have been selected to participate in “Perspectives” at the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art. The exhibition was curated by Michael Rooks, curator at the Contemporary Museum in Honolulu. The exhibition will run from June 22 until September 9.