Quantcast Daily Skiff
College Media Network

Daily Skiff

  • Front Page

New satellite art gallery showcases non-traditional talent

Emily Allen

Issue date: 2/15/08 Section: News
  • Print
  • Email
  • Page 1 of 1

Gone are the cubicle walls and linoleum flooring left over from a tanning salon. Instead, the scent of dried paint and open space remain in the university's new 2,500-square-foot satellite art gallery.

The Fort Worth Contemporary Arts gallery will hold its community opening tonight from 6 to 9 p.m. Its first exhibit, titled "Material Culture", consists of 30 3-D, non-traditional pieces created by 12 artists, said Frances Colpitt, who holds the Deedie Potter Rose Chair of Art History.

"This is a survey of Texas artists - what we call emerging or mid-career (artists) - who are not really famous yet, who work in three dimensions using real materials like fabric," Colpitt said. "They make sculptures but they don't use bronze and other traditional sculpture materials."

A yearlong search for a potential gallery space resulted in the renovation of a TCU-owned commercial space next to the Fort Worth Police Department substation on Greene Avenue across from the GrandMarc.

"We wanted to be in a real urban location and this seemed really appropriate," Colpitt said.

The gallery was created with assistance from one of five TCU Vision In Action transformational grants, in which projects are "expected to transform the nature of the institution," according to the grant's Web site.

Ronald Watson, project director and chairman of the department of art and art history, said the grant is highly competitive.

"This was our second year to apply for the grant," Colpitt said. "We applied in 2006, but weren't successful until this past year."

The gallery opening coincides with Tuesday's annual meeting of the College Art Association of America in Dallas. A second opening reception will also be held that day specifically for visitors from the convention.

"We wanted to attract people from all over the country who are going to be in Dallas for this meeting," Colpitt said.

In addition to the Fort Worth Contemporary Arts gallery, the University Art Gallery in Moudy Building North will remain open.

"Moudy is going to become a teaching gallery. It will be more integrated into the classroom with student shows," Colpitt said. "This gallery is a way of bringing TCU out into the community."

For Your Info

Fort Worth Contemporary Arts:
Open 1 to 6 p.m. Thursdays through Sundays


Page 1 of 1

Article Tools

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Poll


Have you added your boss/professor on Facebook?


Submit Vote

View Results

TCU Daily Skiff

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

News Now Webcast 3/10/10





Daily Skiff Video





Advertisement



Follow Me!



  Frog Football '09

  Print Archives

  Search the Archives

  - Fall 2005 to Present

  - Fall 1998 to Fall 2003

  Contact Us

  Get E-mail Updates



  About Us

  Staff List

  Jobs

  Advertise

  Classifieds



On the Web

TCU Daily Skiff readers shop Toy Stores online and throughout Fort Worth for birthday gifts and more.

See the freedom debt relief profile

Compare free Texas moving quotes for your college move

Daily Skiff readers who are accounting majors should get familiar with the CPA Exam to prepare for a future in accounting