Calendar of Events


Space 204: Jean Kang, 2011 Hamblet recipient, and painter Jered Sprecher

ICS | MORE

1/18/2013, 10:00 am - 4:00 pm


Open to the Public
Location: Ingram Studio Art Center Gallery (Google map of this location)

The Vanderbilt University Department of Art is proud to welcome two new exhibitions into Space 204. Yuja by Vanderbilt alumnus Jean Kang, recipient of the prestigious Margaret Stonewall Wooldridge Hamblet award in 2011, and The Dreams of Architects and Poets by the artist and painter Jered Sprecher will be on display from Thursday, Jan. 17, through Friday, Feb. 8, 2013.

An opening reception will be held Thursday, Jan. 17, from 4 to 6 pm, at the gallery which is located on the second floor of the E. Bronson Ingram Studio Art Center, 25th Avenue South and Garland on the Vanderbilt University campus. Kang will give a gallery talk at 4:30 pm during the reception. All Space 204 exhibitions are free and open to the public. Gallery hours are Monday through Friday, 10 am to 4 pm.

In conjunction with this event, free shuttle buses will be available between the Space 204 gallery and the Vanderbilt Fine Arts Gallery. The Fine Arts Gallery, located in Cohen Memorial Hall, is hosting its own opening reception from 5 to 7 pm that evening for the new exhibition, Mark di Suvero: Affinities. The Mark di Suvero sculpture, Tumbleweed, was recently installed on the front lawn of the E. Bronson Ingram Studio Art Center, where Space 204 is located.

As recipient of the 2011 Margaret Stonewall Wooldridge Hamblet award, Kang's prize was earmarked for a year of art research and travel, culminating in a solo show in Space 204. For Kang, the year saw her dedicating herself to her art while attending the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA) Post Baccalaureate in Fine Arts program. Calling the experience "invaluable," Kang said the Hamblet award provided her the means to "greatly expand upon my ability to view the world in a more open and thoughtful manner."

Kang's show, Yuja, a term meaning female or woman in Korean, is a collection of drawings, prints and installation developed during a time of reflection for Kang. "In this period of personal confrontation, I established ideas about my self as a female and as a Korean American. My work evolved out of observations of the body, the mind, and my cultural heritage. More specifically," she continued, "I reflected upon my experiences regarding these elements which can act both contentiously and harmoniously. Through these works, I explored the nuances of identity, and with Yuja, I came to an understanding about the complexities of my personal identification and the ever-evolving nature of this concept."

Also reflective, Jered Sprecher's paintings "grasp a single moment, a glance, a small epiphany." The associate professor of Art at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville describes his art in this way: "I am a hunter and a gatherer, constantly accumulating images produced by the people and cultures around me. Segments of this collection of images then emerge in my paintings. My work shows images that are revealed as fragments in the midst of change, destruction, redefinition, and restoration."

A 2009 Guggenheim Fellow, Sprecher has had solo exhibitions at Jeff Bailey Gallery in New York, Wendy Cooper Gallery in Chicago, Steven Zevitas Gallery in Boston, Kinkead Contemporary in Los Angeles, and Gallery 16 in San Francisco. His work has also exhibited at The Drawing Center, Brooklyn Academy of Music, Urban Institute for Contemporary Arts, Irish Museum of Modern Art, Bronx River Art Center, Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Des Moines Art Center, Weatherspoon Museum of Art, and the Knoxville Museum of Art. Sprecher participated in the Artist Residency Program at the Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin and the Marie Walsh Sharpe Space Program, New York. He has also taught at Princeton University and Cornell University.

For more information, contact The Department of Art at 615-343-7241 or visit www.vanderbilt.edu/arts.


blog comments powered by Disqus