art exhibit – UofL News Mon, 20 Apr 2026 15:43:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 Cressman Center exhibit explores relationship between illusion and reality /section/arts-and-humanities/cressman-center-exhibit-explores-relationship-between-illusion-and-reality/ /section/arts-and-humanities/cressman-center-exhibit-explores-relationship-between-illusion-and-reality/#respond Wed, 07 Dec 2016 16:53:05 +0000 http://uoflnews.com/?p=34392 Dorothy wakes up after a nasty bump on the head. She finds herself once again in a familiar place, comforted by loved ones. No need to fear, Dorothy, Oz was all just a dream.

“But it wasn’t a dream,” she insists, “It was a real place.”

We believe her.

University of Louisville’s Hite Art Institute presents “It Wasn’t a Dream, It was a Real Place,” an exhibition by Benjamin Duke that explores the relationship between illusion and reality at the Cressman Center for Visual Arts Dec. 16-Jan. 28. Opening reception is 6-8 p.m. Dec. 16.

Duke, an associate professor of painting at Michigan State University, was the city’s first participant in a visiting artist initiative introduced in 2015 as part of the Mayor’s Music & Art Series, for which he produced the large scale painting, “Louisville 2015: Full of Life, Now” (2015) on view at Metro Hall. Duke also has been an artist-in-residence in Taiwan and exhibited his works in galleries worldwide.

“For Duke, art is always about illusionism — about creating a fictional space out of color, form and texture. But such illusionism is also how we understand the real world,” said Chris Reitz, director of galleries at Hite. “Our bodies are complex sensory organs feeding our minds an endless supply of perceptual data. We make sense of it by cobbling together pictures of the world around us. These pictures, like artworks, are merely illusions: strange and confusing and false, but also often beautiful.”

Reitz also noted that bodies appear in many of Duke’s paintings, and indeed, the work itself is also bodily. Fleshy tones and chunky, gestural brushwork give the art a corporal presence. Duke’s paintings are often crowded. The illusory spaces he constructs are filled with bewildered and over-stimulated figures.

“To view this work is to step into these spaces—and to acknowledge, simultaneously, that the world you left behind is just as dreamlike; filled with bewildering sensations and bewildered sensing bodies, too,” Reitz said.

for directions to the Cressman Center Gallery, 100 E. Main St., and for gallery hours.

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Conference showcases history, art of printmaking /section/arts-and-humanities/conference-showcases-history-art-of-printmaking/ /section/arts-and-humanities/conference-showcases-history-art-of-printmaking/#respond Fri, 30 Sep 2016 14:17:12 +0000 http://uoflnews.com/?p=32994 The University of Louisville is co-hosting the 2016 Mid America Print Conference, Oct. 5-8. The conference, held at UofL’s Belknap Campus and Indiana University Southeast, will include demonstrations, panel discussions, portfolio exchanges, exhibitions and speakers.

Held in the area for the first time in 20 years, the conference offers numerous open house events and exhibitions in gallery spaces the public is invited to explore.

“This is a great chance for people to see what a print is and what a print can be, and not only learn about the history of printmaking, but also what is happening with printmaking today,” said Rachel Singel, professor of printmaking at UofL’s Hite Art Institute and conference organizer.

Highlights include:

  • Through Oct. 15, “Making Matter,” UofL Student Invitational Exhibit, Galerie Hertz, 1253 S. Preston St.The reception is 5-7 p.m. Oct. 7.
  • Oct. 2-Oct. 28, “Digital Action,” a collection of laser-cut drawings and prints by Dana Potter, First Build, 333 E. Brandeis Ave.
  • Through Dec. 31, “Interventions: Re-Framing the Printed Image,” curated by Susanna Crum, 21c Museum Hotel, 700 W. Main St.
  • Through Oct. 15, Mid-America Print Council Members Juried Exhibition, Carnegie Museum of Art and History, 201 E. Spring St., New Albany, Ind.
  • Through Oct. 29, “Printmaking in Kentucky,” Kaviar Forge and Gallery, 1718 Frankfort Ave.
  • October 8, 2-5 p.m. Open Houses at Calliope Arts Printmaking Studio, 324 East College Street, Hope Mills Collaborative, featuring Brad Vetter Letterpress Studio, 954 E. Kentucky St., and Hound Dog Press, 1000 Barrett Ave.

For a complete list of exhibitions, receptions and other events, .

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UofL employees show off talents for annual Open Walls art exhibit /post/uofltoday/uofl-employees-show-off-talents-for-annual-open-walls-art-exhibit/ Thu, 09 Jun 2016 19:28:05 +0000 http://uoflnews.com/?p=30923 Did you know your department’s program coordinator can also create a fiber tablecloth that is far too pretty to eat off of? Or that the associate professor knows how to paint with acrylic, in addition to teaching brain science?

Were you aware that the employee from physical plant who fixed your heater last week can also create glass pieces? And that the communications specialist you just met with can also weave a basket out of reed and seagrass?

Did you know your dean has quite the eye for photography?

While most of us are focused on making UofL great by day, some employees also have artistic talents they hone outside of the office. As part of the 6th annual Open Walls art exhibit, 30 faculty and staff from across campus will display their talents. The show starts June 13 with an opening reception from noon-2 p.m. in Ekstrom Library’s Photographic Archives Gallery.

Open Walls started as an initiative of the Great Places to Work Committee as an opportunity for employees to show their creative side. Participation has grown steadily each year and this year will feature one more artist than last year.

The artists are from all corners of the university including, for the first time this year, a dean. College of Arts & Sciences Dean Kimberly Kempf-Leonard’s photograph captures her perspective during a hike at her family summer vacation home in Wyoming.

“I spend a lot of time hiking in the mountains with my camera around my neck. The photograph I have on display is from a special family birthday celebration in Yellowstone. I took the photo on a very early morning hike of this tree I thought looked particularly majestic with the steamy clouds from a geyser floating behind it,” she said.

Dean Kempf-Leonard has been taking photographs for fun for a long time. She loves shooting nature and family, mostly when she’s in Wyoming at her home in the Big Horn mountains, near Sheridan.

Chuck Sites is another artist featured in the show. The Systems Analyst from the Speed IT Group has two pieces on display, including an oil painting on canvas titled, “Inspired by Spring.” The title, he said, was motivated by the question, “What is art?”

“Art has such a broad meaning, but when we say ‘the art of X,’ the X has inspired creativity at its core regardless of what X is. For example, ‘the art of war;’ does war have beauty? ‘The art of cooking;’ cooking has something, but does it inspire? When you ponder all the possibilities, the best answer is art is a toy for the mind,” Sites said.

 

Holly Hogue, an administrative specialist in the College of A&S Research Office, has participated in Open Walls for the past three years. This year, she has submitted two pieces, including a canvas rug.

“The canvas rug I made while I was visiting my mom in Key West. She is an artist and gives my husband lessons whenever we visit. The rug sounded like fun so I took the lesson too. Count me in if it sounds like fun,” Hogue said. “The rug started out as a large Zentangle until I got carried away with the flowers. It is colorful and bright, which is totally me.”

Cheryl Monroe, with IT, is displaying two mermaid dolls which have won her awards at the Kentucky State Fair.

“I’ve been making dolls since I was little. My dad always said I had it in me. I used to cut up his socks to make them,” she said. “Normally I make people, but I did mermaids this year because my granddaughter loves them.”

Lana Metzler submitted a photo of Disney World’s Main Street for the show. The piece is especially personal for the HSC Shared Services employee.

“In January at age 42, I ran my first full marathon at Disney World. I never thought I could do it. We stayed for the fireworks in the evening and I captured some ‘magic’ on Main Street. I look back at this photo and remind myself that I am a marathoner and that magic truly does happen here,” she said.

Patrick Glisson, from Environmental Health and Safety, will display a collection of spheres created via knot-tying, a talent he developed out of necessity — he was tasked with teaching his son’s Cub Scout Troop how to tie knots. He’s been doing so ever since (his son is now an Eagle Scout and in his first year at Speed School).

“I like to say I got into tying knots out of self-defense. I’ve been actively doing it now for 11 years,” he said. “I now tie knots to keep me sane.”

William Burton, from the HVAC Shop in Physical Plant, brought his day job to life in a drawing he submitted titled “Firemain.”

“I am a pipefitter by trade and I love seeing art involving pipes, fittings and such,” he said. “I thought I would do one of my own.”

This is just a sampling of art that will be on display starting June 13 in the Ekstrom Library’s Photographic Archives Gallery, East Wing, Lower Level. The artwork will be on display from 8 a.m.-5 p.m.through June 30.

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