Fine Arts Gallery moves under Library umbrella and starts year with new exhibit

As of July 1, the Vanderbilt Fine Arts Gallery has moved out of the College of Arts & Science purview and now reports to the Provost’s office, under the direction of University Librarian Valerie Hotchkiss. Professor Hotchkiss’s expertise with special collections and curation make this an excellent fit for the Gallery, and this move also puts Vanderbilt’s Fine Arts Gallery more in alignment with similar galleries/museums at our peer institutions.

Then & Now: Five Centuries of Woodcuts
January 10–March 1, 2019

You are cordially invited to attend the opening reception on Thursday, January 10 from 5 to 7 p.m. in Cohen Memorial Hall.

Surveying artworks created over multiple continents and 500 years, Then & Now: Five Centuries of Woodcuts spotlights more than forty prints from Vanderbilt’s collection. Together, these works speak to the arresting potential of the woodcut medium and its persistent place in contemporary art. Beginning with a print made in 1491 by Michael Wolgemut, the exhibition presents works including: a sixteenth-century example by the medium’s Northern Renaissance master Albrecht Dürer; a rare, large-scale volume of The Works of Geoffrey Chaucer, published with magnificent engraved illustrations by Edward Burne-Jones in 1896; stark images made by German Expressionists Gerhard Marcks and Conrad Felixmüller in the wake of WWI; and an animated woodcut film, produced in recent years by contemporary artist Jay Bolotin.

Beginning February 11, a concurrent presentation of works in Gallery 2, curated by Vanderbilt University Fine Arts Gallery Intern Echo Sun (art and psychology major, Class of 2020), focuses on Japanese woodblock prints from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This companion presentation to Then & Now: Five Centuries of Woodcuts includes editions by artists Katsushika Hokusai, Utagawa Hiroshige, Tsukioka Yoshitoshi, Kiyoshi Saito, and Takahashi Hiroaki (Shotei), among others.

Then & Now: Five Centuries of Woodcuts has been created and organized by Fine Arts Gallery Director Joseph Mella. The gallery extends special thanks to intern Echo Sun for her research and selection of Japanese woodblock prints, as well as to the Jean & Alexander Heard Library, Special Collections and Archives, for their loan of The Works of Geoffrey Chaucer, 1896.

For further information, please visit: vanderbilt.edu/gallery

Gallery Hours
11a.m. – 4 p.m. Monday – Friday
1–5 p.m., Saturday & Sunday

Vanderbilt University Fine Arts Gallery
1220 21st Avenue South
Nashville, Tennessee 37203
(615) 322–0605 Gallery
(615) 343–1702 Office

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