FOR RELEASE: Feb. 18, 2013
EDITORIAL CONTACT: Eric Snyder, 615-898-5653 or eric.snyder@mtsu.edu
MURFREESBORO — A free public reception in the
MTSU Department of Art's Todd Art Gallery will open a new exhibit, "Visual
Vernacular, Icons and the Handcrafted Book,” today, Feb. 18, from 6 to 8 p.m.
Billed as
explorations of materials and book forms printed by hand, the exhibit features
new Department of Art faculty members Andrew Kosten, Kathy O'Connell and Ashley
Hairston representing the art areas of printmaking, book arts and graphic
design, respectively.
Also
included in the exhibit is the invited work of some of the trio’s
contemporaries and associates, including Brandon Sanderson, Matt Hopson-Walker
and Amos Kennedy.
“Throughout
its all-too-often tragic history, humanity has turned to the comical, the
bizarre and the extraordinary to maintain a sense of lightheartedness,"
Kosten said of the new exhibit, noting that art has responded to the
"human condition" with "the most challenging and engaging
critiques of human behavior.”
The "Visual
Vernacular, Icons and the Handcrafted Book” exhibit, which also is free and open
to the public, runs through Friday, March 22.
O'Connell's "Mixtura" represents the “Handcrafted Book” portion of the exhibit and is a
food-inspired international book arts project that includes Taller 72, an
independent arts studio in Lima, Peru, and a total of 16 artists through an
MTSU Access and Diversity Grant.
The “Mixtura”
artists represent a wide diversity of nations, including France, Japan, Romania
and South Korea, in addition to Peru and the United States.
Hairston’s work from her Masters of Fine Arts
thesis, “The Space Between,”
will also be on display.
She noted that the piece “is a means of
translating the personal into public for conceptual action and art. … My work
concerns itself with the tension of a personal sense of identity that conflicts
with cultural expectations and how that affects and limits personal and
relational mobility.”
Sanderson, an assistant professor of art at the
University of North Carolina at Pembroke, teaches multiple levels of drawing
and all levels of printmaking, including intaglio, lithography and woodcut.
He describes his “Denizens Series (Folly of Post-Literacy)” as etchings that explore
human folly with characters that are “absurdly constructed of mechanical and
organic elements. Just like many people, they are unaware of an awkward and
ill-conceived nature.”
Hopson-Walker played in a band after receiving
his Bachelor of Fine Arts from Kansas City Art Institute, but completed his
Masters of Fine Arts degree at the University of Iowa five years later and has
since placed work in collections at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the
University of North Dakota Art Collection in Grand Forks and the Tama Art
Museum in Tokyo, Japan.
He currently teaches at the College of the
Sequoias and California State University at Fresno.
Todd Art
Gallery exhibitions and receptions are always free and open to the public. The gallery
is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday and is closed on
state and university holidays.
For more
information, including parking and directions, contact Snyder at 615-898-5653
or eric.snyder@mtsu.edu or visit www.mtsu.edu/art.
—30—
MTSU is committed to developing a
community devoted to learning, growth and service. We hold these values dear,
and there’s a simple phrase that conveys them:
“I am True Blue.” Learn more at www.mtsu.edu/trueblue. For MTSU news
anytime, visit www.MTSUNews.com.
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