Past Present: The Indigo Work of Rowland Ricketts
Sunday, September 12, Noon to Sunday, October 10, 2010, 4 pm
Audience:
Current Students
Faculty
Staff
Alumni
The public
Past Present: The Indigo Work of Rowland Ricketts
September 12–October 10, 2010
The Robert and Elaine Stein Galleries opens the new academic year at Wright State University on Sunday, September 12 with an exhibition engulfing the gallery in installations of indigo-blue forms.
Past Present: the Indigo Works of Rowland Rickets, which runs October 10, will transform the gallery space into an experience of the art and history of indigo. Textile artist Rowland Ricketts has created a series of installations from hand-dyed indigo blue forms. Ricketts plants, harvests, dries, and composts the leaves that are fermented into the indigo dye himself. The documentation of the process, as well as indigo's historical and cultural meanings, is explored in his installations. Rickets transforms the traditional dyeing technique into contemporary art, with his installations turning the process and product into a sensual, tactile experience for the viewer.
"The metamorphosis of indigo into blue dye is a chemical process that borders on the magical," said the exhibition's curator, Lisa Morrisette, assistant professor of art and art history at Wright State. "Indigo dyeing is on the verge of becoming a lost art as the traditional process is replaced by synthetic blue dyes."
Rickets became an indigo artist through the traditional Japanese educational process of apprenticeship, thus preserving the legacy of the past. Rickets worked for two years in Tokushima, Japan, as an apprentice learning traditional farming and dyeing techniques. After returning to the United States he earned a Master of Fine Arts at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan. Currently, he is assistant professor of textiles at the Henry Radford Hope School of Fine Art at Indiana University in Bloomington.
On Sunday, September 12, Ricketts will be giving a free, public lecture in M252 Creative Arts Center at 2:30 p.m., with a reception to follow until 5:30 p.m. The exhibition is supported by the Friends of the Galleries and the Ohio Arts Council.
Gallery hours are Wednesday and Friday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Thursday 10:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday 12:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. All visitor parking areas on campus are free, and parking at the Creative Arts Center is unrestricted after 4:00 p.m. Friday and on the weekends. A dedicated parking space for galleries patrons is available during school hours in Lot 15. All galleries events are free and open to the public.
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