We invite you to attend these exciting lectures by visiting artists and educators brought to campus by the UT School of Art and its partners. All lectures in the series are free and open to the public.
3:30 p.m. Thursday, January 24
Lindsay Young Auditorium, John C. Hodges Library
Journalist and lawyer Peter Aronson will discuss his children’s book Bronislaw Huberman: From Child Prodigy to Hero, the Violinist Who Saved Jewish Musicians from the Holocaust. Limited parking passes are available for Lot 23. Contact Sam Yates for a pass.
Aronson’s visit, which is sponsored by a Ready for the World grant, is paired with Violins of Hope: Strings of the Holocaust, on display at the UT Downtown Gallery through January 27.
The following lectures take place at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday evenings in the McCarty Auditorium, Art + Architecture Building. Parking services usually stops ticketing by 7 p.m., or you can find visitor parking on campus.
February 7
Jon Swindler. Swindler is a professor of printmaking and book arts and an associate director for technology, space, and community for the Lamar Dodd School of Art at the University of Georgia. He will be in residence February 4–8 at the UT Printmaking Studio, working with graduate students and faculty to create a series of large-scale pressure prints.
February 21
Aaron Coleman. Coleman is an Arizona artist whose mixed media and prints focus on political and social issues. His background in hip-hop culture and street art is a major influence in his fine art practices. He will spend February 20–27 in residence at the UT Printmaking Studio, collaborating with students and faculty. Coleman will exhibit his work in the UT Printmaking Showcase Gallery January 4–February 28 and will serve as juror for the 72nd annual student art competition, to be held in the Ewing Gallery March 4–14.
March 7
Brandon Ballengée. Ballengée is a visual artist, biologist, and environmental educator based in Louisiana. He creates transdisciplinary works inspired by his ecological research. He is a 2015 recipient of a New York Foundation for the Arts fellowship.
March 14
Zuzanna Dyrda. Dyrda is an assistant professor at the Eugeniusz Geppert Academy of Art and Design in Wrocław, Poland. She experiments with various nontraditional materials and substrates and focuses on the conceptual and social aspects of printmaking.
March 28
Stephen Carcello. Carcello is an artist working as a production manager and designer for a contracting firm in Knoxville, TN. He holds a BFA in Studio Art (2D) from UT and an MFA in Visual Communication and Design from the University of Arizona. He has worked as a designer for one of America’s fastest growing handbag brands, and has designed and fabricated themed environments for mega churches and festivals.
April 4
Tommy Kha. Kha, an award-winning photographer based in New York and Memphis, is an En Foco Photography Fellowship recipient and a former artist-in-residence at the Center for Photography at Woodstock, Light Work, Fountainhead, and Baxter Street at the Camera Club of New York. His work appears on the cover of Vice magazine’s 2017 photography issue. Kha holds an MFA in photography from Yale University. In conjunction with his visit, the UT Downtown Gallery will host a First Friday reception for his exhibition from 5 to 9 p.m. on April 5.
More details are available at the School of Art events calendar.
