UT Downtown Gallery

Address: 106 South Gay Street, Knoxville, TN 37902

Dates: March 3 – April 2, 2023

Hours: Wednesday - Friday, 11am - 6pm, Saturday 10am - 3pm

Website: downtown.utk.edu

Artist: Lonnie Holley

In Collaboration with the Big Ears Festival, March 30 – April 2.

The gallery will be open from 12-8pm Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, and 12-6pm on Sunday of the Big Ears Festival weekend.

All events are free and open to the public.

image: BAD NEWS IN BIRMINGHAM © Lonnie Holley / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York, Courtesy of the artist and Blum & Poe, Los Angeles/New York/Tokyo

Lonnie Holley’s life and work read as a narrative retelling of Black American history—the residual effects of the Jim Crow era, the triumphs of the Civil Rights movement, and the struggles with false narratives around class mobility and race. Holley’s multidisciplinary practice seeks to educate viewers as a means of remedying the historical amnesia surrounding these topics. Rooting himself in the events of the past, the artist moves into the future—presenting synesthetic, multimedia work that visually engages its viewers with unique found objects and intricate motifs to subsequently inform on topics such as inequity and history as memory. Known throughout the art world for his found-object sculptures, paintings, and installations, Lonnie Holley gained a new audience when he started releasing and performing his music during the 2010s.

The UT Downtown Gallery is pleased to present a selection of recent works on paper, sculpture, paintings, and short films. Throughout the exhibition, we will be screening I Snuck Off the Slave Ship, I Went A Little Too Far (Mistreating Love), and I Woke Up… This exhibition is in collaboration with Knoxville’s Big Ears Music Festival, where Holley will be performing at the end of March. The UT Downtown Gallery is proud to be a free Big Ears Festival venue.

Lonnie Holley (b. Birmingham, AL, 1950) lives and works in Atlanta, Georgia. His work is represented in the permanent collections of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY; Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C.; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY; among many others. Holley’s work has been presented in numerous solo exhibitions including at Dallas Contemporary, Dallas, TX (2022); Parrish Art Museum, Water Mill, NY (2021); Atlanta Contemporary Art Center, Atlanta, GA (2017); Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art; Charleston, SC (2015); Birmingham Museum of Art, Birmingham, AL (2004), and many more. Holley has been the subject of several documentary films, and his own directed short film I snuck off the slave ship premiered at Sundance in 2018.

PREVIOUSLY:

January 6 - February 25, 2023

Artists: Kay Dartt and Ronda Wright

Creating Artifacts of Home is a series of workshops organized by Social Action For Equality, a platform for creative social justice initiatives. These workshops started in response to the overwhelming rate of LGBTQ+ homelessness and bullying, the premise of these workshops is that we all have a relation to home; and that iron is an element necessary to sustain life. While engaging in conversation, participants in person and through digital platforms create a symbolic artifact that reminds them of home as they share stories with one another. The artifact is then cast in iron and installed as part of a larger collection of memories that reenact relations of Home. Participants’ artifacts link themselves not as “others” but to others, and their name will be added to a list of growing creators displayed during the exhibition. Workshop participants will receive an Fe= For equality patch that links them together in a shared experience.

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