Workshop and Lecture by
Peter Rose
October 11, 12, & 13
Monday 8-12 & 2:30-5:30, Trahern 101
Tuesday 8-12 Trahern 101
Tuesday 7PM Trahern 401, Lecture
Wednesday 8-12 Trahern 101
Workshop and Lecture by
Peter Rose
October 11, 12, & 13
Monday 8-12 & 2:30-5:30, Trahern 101
Tuesday 8-12 Trahern 101
Tuesday 7PM Trahern 401, Lecture
Wednesday 8-12 Trahern 101
On September 20 the Department of Art and the Center of Excellence in the Creative Arts welcomes Photographer Arno Minkkinen to Clarksville for a lecture at 7 pm in the Trahern Theater.
Arno Rafael Minkkinen is a Finnish American photographer, educator, curator and writer. Over two hundred one-person and group exhibitions at galleries and museums worldwide includes the recent traveling exhibition titled SAGA: The Journey of Arno Rafael Minkkinen, Thirty-Five Years of Photographs with venues in Massachusetts, Eastern Europe, Finland, Italy and Canada. His self-portrait photographs have been published internationally with six monographs: Frostbite (Morgan & Morgan, 1978); Waterline (Marval, Aperture, and Otava, 1994), Grand Prix du Livre at the 25th Rencontres d’Arles; Body Land (Motta, Nathan, and the Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997-1999); SAGA: (Chronicle Books, 2005), Special Jury Prize at the 2nd Lianzhou International Photography Festival in China; and Homework: The Finnish Photographs, 1973 to 2008 (Like Publishing Ltd., 2008); and Swimming in the Air (Cavallo Point, 2008). http://www.uml.edu/Dept/Art/faculty-minkkinen.htm
The lecture is free and open to the public.

On Tuesday April 6 at 7 pm, artist Rick Lowe will speak in the APSU Trahern Theater.
Rick Lowe is a twenty-first-century Renaissance man. He is an artist, architect, urban designer, developer, businessman, and activist who is a catalyst for social outreach for underserved neighborhoods. Lowe’s early founding of Project Row House in Houston’s Third Ward in 1993 became the template for others to follow on how to bring local people together to engage their own creative energies and aesthetic values to produce a “collective expression” to reinstate a community. Lowe’s socially engaged methodology helps individuals excavate talents that they might have either forgotten about or just lost sight of. An example of his progressive thinking can be seen in a recent concept for a series of small businesses that draws on local individual’s abilities—such as homemade cookies and laundry service—and turns them into emerging noted talents and proprietors.
On Monday April 5 at 7 pm, The Acuff Chair of Excellence will speak in the APSU Theater before the opening of the exhibition “I Am. Amen” which he curated. The exhibition contains work created by students enrolled in Mr. Berry’s Special Topics course with several visiting artists.

Ian Berry is Associate Director and The Susan Rabinowitz Malloy Curator of The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College. A specialist in contemporary art, Berry has organized several exhibitions for the Tang that combine collections of antique maps, scientific equipment, Edward Curtis photographs, Rube Goldberg cartoons, and Shaker furniture with new works of international contemporary art. Among his many solo contemporary projects Berry has produced exhibitions and catalogues on artists such as Amy Sillman, Jim Hodges, Alyson Shotz, Lee Boroson, Joseph Grigely, Shahzia Sikander, Nina Katchadourian, Martin Kersels, and Nayland Blake.
I am. Amen.
Berry has organized a special topics class that is focusing on contemporary curatorial classes
The class is exploring experimental curatorial projects and students are thinking a great deal about the role of the curator as cultural producer. The artist’s role is more important than ever as we are witness to huge economic, political, and inspirational shifts. Ezra Pound said that “artists are the antennae of the race,” and as artists of all stripes from a wide variety of disciplines continue to be on the front lines of cultural criticism they will be looked to in these times of change.
Students are studying the history and practice of avant-garde exhibition practices driven by artists that pushed against the constraints of the modern museum, in many cases moving outside their walls.
The semester will culminate with an exhibition in the Trahern Gallery.
On Monday March 1, APSU welcomes Dr. Kevin Tavin. Associate Professor, Ohio State University. His lecture will focus on visual culture and art education.
Kevin Tavin Lecture
March 1, 7 pm
Trahern 401
This event is free and open to the public.
Every Wednesday during his visit, Ian Berry hosts a public dialogue with his visiting artists. This week our guests were Hope Ginsburg and Nina Katchadourian. We had a very interesting conversation about audience, participation, the role of the artists, and selling out.
The exhibition, “Surrender – The Books of Clifton Meador,” is on display in the Trahern Gallery through today.
“Surrender,” curated by APSU art faculty members Cynthia Marsh and Warren Greene, features 26 artist books written, photographed, printed and bound by Clifton Meador. Currently, Meador is the director of the M.F.A. program in interdisciplinary studies at Columbia College in Chicago, Ill. He has received numerous international grants and residency opportunities to support his creative wanderlust and his unique vision concerning the historic narrative.
Meador will speak about his work as a book artist at 7 tonight in Trahern 401. A closing reception for the exhibition will follow from 8-9 p.m. in the Trahern Gallery.
An on-demand exhibition catalogue, designed by the artist with an introductory essay by Cynthia Marsh, is available through Lulu.com.
Support for the exhibition, “Surrender – The Books of Clifton Meador,” comes from the Center of Excellence for the Creative Arts and the APSU Department of Art.
For more information on the exhibit, please contact either Marsh at marshc@apsu.edu or Warren Greene at greenew@apsu.edu.

Visiting Artists Carrie Moyer and Nayland Blake will give a lecture on Tuesday January 26, 2010 at 7 pm in Trahern 413.
They will also participate in a public dialogue with Ian Berry on January 27, 2010 at 12:20 in Trahern 413.
Both events are free and open to the public.
Moyer and Blake are visiting as part of Ian Berry’s, this year Acuff Chair of Excellence, series of lectures and course titled “I Am Amen”.
For more about Ian Berry and I Am. Amen visit:
http://www.artapsu.com/?p=620 and
http://www.iamamen.artapsu.com/
Carrie Moyer’s website
Nayland Blake’s Website

The Department of Art and the Center of Excellence in the Creative Arts is pleased to welcome Joan Linder to campus for a public lecture on November 24th. The lecture will be at 7 pm in Trahern 401 on the campus of Austin Peay State University.
Joan Linder uses traditional materials to create large scale drawings that deal with “the banality of mass produced artifacts; the politics of war; sexual identity and power; and the beauty disclosed in the close scrutiny of natural and mad made structures.”
This event is free and open to the public.
image: “It’s Easier to Think at Night”, 2004, Ink on Wall
On Monday November 10, the Drive-By Press will be visiting APSU. They will be in front of the UC from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m selling hand printed woodblock t-shirts and they will present a lecture at 5:30 in Trahern Room 404.

Artist Clive King will present a lecture on November 3rd at 7 pm in Trahern 401. An opening reception for his exhibition in the Trahern Gallery will take place from 8 – 9 pm. The event is free and open to the public.
Artist Clive King will present a lecture on November 3rd at 7 pm in Trahern 401. An opening reception for his exhibition in the Trahern Gallery will take place from 8 – 9 pm. The event is free and open to the public.
—————————————-
Proudly powered by Wordpress