Virginia artist, educator turns âtrash into treasureâ in new MSU exhibition
Contact: Sasha Steinberg
STARKVILLE, Miss.âCoffee lids, plastic utensils and other repurposed materials make for one-of-a-kind creations in a special display Oct. 9-Nov. 11 in ´ķĪķAPPâs Visual Arts Center Gallery.
Free to all, the âHow Soon is Now?â exhibition features original sculpture and photographic prints crafted by Richmond, Virginia-based artist Susie Ganch, who serves as associate professor and head of the metal program at Virginia Commonwealth Universityâs Department of Craft and Material Studies.
Ganch will give an 11 a.m. public talk about her work Thursday [Nov. 9] in the Robert and Freda Harrison Auditorium at Giles Hall, home to MSUâs College of Architecture, Art and Design. She also will be available at 4 p.m. that day to meet with visitors at the VAC Gallery, located at 808 University Drive on the edge of the Starkville campus. A public reception in Ganchâs honor also will take place at 5-6 p.m. Thursday in the same location.
Regular gallery hours are 1-5 p.m., Monday-Friday and 1-4 p.m. Saturday, as well as by appointment.
A Bachelor of Science and Master of Fine Arts graduate of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Ganch is director of Radical Jewelry Makeover, an international jewelry mining and recycling project that travels across the country and abroad. In addition to California, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Virginia and Wisconsin, Ganchâs work has been on display in Australia, England and Japan.
Visitors of the VAC Gallery exhibition can examine Ganchâs pieces from a distance and then explore the details of each piece up-close.
âFrom a distance, the âwasteâ is beautifulâplastic coffee lids appear almost hand-braided, rhythmic and full of movementâyet up-close we notice the coffee stains, dirt and grime indicative of the life of used, discarded garbage,â said Lori Neuenfeldt, MSU art department gallery director.
Ganchâs piece âDrag, 2012â is made from zip ties, nametags, bottle caps, cups and other items tied together to multiple steel rings. Arranged from large to small, the rings lead up to a final ring that can been chained to the wall.
When attached to a personâs wrist like a bracelet, this particular work of art by Ganch âconveys the pull and weight of irresponsible consumerism on an individual and the trail of waste that is left behind or leading the wearer,â Neuenfeldt said.
In addition to the College of Architecture, Art and Designâs Department of Art, the exhibition is made possible through a Community Arts Grant from the Starkville Area Arts Council.
Additional information on Ganchâs campus visit and âHow Soon is Now?â exhibition is available from Neuenfeldt at 662-325-2970 or LNeuenfeldt@caad.msstate.edu.
Part of the College of Architecture, Art and Design, MSUâs Department of Art is home to the Magnolia ´ķĪķAPPâs largest undergraduate studio art program. For more, visit .
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