Posts Tagged ‘Fine Art Museum at Western Carolina University’

Western Carolina University in Cullowhee, NC, Offers Handmade Items for Sale – Apr. 14, 2011

April 5, 2011

It’s a busy spring at the Fine Art Museum at Western Carolina University, in Cullowhee, NC, with exhibits, receptions and a sale of handmade items all in April.

Finally, in time for Mother’s Day and spring commencement ceremonies, the Fine Art Museum will host a Handmade Springtime Sale from 3 to 6:30pm, on Thursday, April 14, 2011, in the Star Lobby, with a wine and appetizer reception from 5 to 6pm. A selection of handmade items by WCU students and staff will be for sale, including ceramics, jewelry, cards, scarves and more.

For more information, contact Denise Drury, museum interim director, at 828/227-3591, e-mail to (ddrury@wcu.edu) or visit (http://www.wcu.edu/museum/).

Martin DeWitt, Founding Curator and Director of the Fine Art Museum at Western Carolina University in Cullowhee, NC, to Retire

December 4, 2010

Martin DeWitt, founding director and curator of the Fine Art Museum at Western Carolina University, in Cullowhee, NC, has announced his retirement.


Martin DeWitt, in the museum’s main gallery with a piece that renowned ceramicist Don Reitz created during a demonstration at WCU and is now part of the university’s permanent collection.

“I think the timing is right for changes,” said DeWitt, whose career spans more than 30 years in museum administration. He will end his work at the museum in December.

“Martin has been an outstanding founding director of the Fine Art Museum,” said Robert Kehrberg, dean of WCU’s College of Fine and Performing Arts. Kehrberg praised DeWitt for his strength in defining a vision for the museum and cultivating it as a cultural destination. He also credited DeWitt with strengthening the university’s ties with the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.

DeWitt joined the university in 2003, with the museum opening in 2005 as part of WCU’s Fine and Performing Arts Center, a $30 million, 122,000-square-foot facility. With a mission of cultural enrichment for the region, FAPAC also houses a 1,000-seat performance hall and classrooms, studios and offices for the School of Art and Design.

As founding director, DeWitt launched the 10,000-square-foot Fine Art Museum, which comprises a main gallery and three auxiliary spaces. He was involved in the facility’s construction, curated the museum’s permanent collection (which grew from about 400 objects to now more than 1,200), drafted the museum’s policies and procedures – a blueprint for the facility’s operation – and scheduled the museum’s inaugural exhibitions.

A reception honoring DeWitt’s service will be held from 2-4pm, Tuesday, Dec. 7, 2010, in the Fine Art Museum atrium.

Denise Drury, curatorial specialist at the museum, has been named the museum’s interim director beginning in January, when the museum reopens after the university’s holiday break. Prior to her arrival at the museum in January 2010, Drury spent four years, including two as executive director, with 621 Gallery, a nonprofit, contemporary visual art space in Tallahassee, FL. “Ms. Drury brings experience, professionalism and forward-looking vision to this position,” Kehrberg said. A national search is planned to permanently fill the director’s position by July 1, 2012.

Since the museum opened, DeWitt has overseen approximately 100 exhibitions, ranging from historical and collaborative projects to work by WCU students and internationally known artists alike. “These exhibits, like children, have all been favorites,” DeWitt said. Many accomplished regional artists have exhibited at the museum, among them Harvey K. Littleton, a pioneer of the studio glass movement and creator of the vitreograph technique of printing; Lewis Buck, who creates paintings and assemblage pieces; glass artist Richard Ritter; and Mike Smith of Tennessee, who photographs contemporary Appalachia. “Fragile Earth, an environmental-themed competition, featured works by 40 regional artists, and DeWitt and Drury recently oversaw the installation of a one-year outdoor sculpture exhibit in the FAPAC courtyard that features five artists from the Southeast.

Exhibits by American Indian artists have been “especially rewarding,” DeWitt said. These include “Hive” by Natalie Smith, “Pilgrimage Ribbon” by Luzene Hill, and “Reclaiming Cultural Ownership” by Shan Goshorn. DeWitt has showcased the expanding permanent collection in an ongoing “Worldviews” series.

Colleagues say DeWitt has a particular talent for discussing complex concepts in plain language and for gallery presentation that draws visitors into exhibits, a valuable skill in a university setting. DeWitt teaches an exhibition practicum class where students learn how museums and galleries function.

“He is so astute at judging and evaluating art and being able to give thoughtful comments and feedback to artists,” said Luzene Hill, an Eastern Band member and conceptual artist. “His manner is so wonderful. He’s accessible and approachable. I think he’s fantastic in his job and in his life.”

DeWitt received his master’s degree in fine art from Illinois State University in 1978. He began his career in 1980 as executive director of the Rockford Art Association in Illinois. From 1989-2003, he was director of the Tweed Museum of Art at the University of Minnesota Duluth. A painter and sculptor, DeWitt widely exhibits his own work and looks forward to more time in his studio. Other postretirement plans include appraising art; traveling, particularly to Mexico and Latin America, countries he loves and has long enjoyed; and moving with his wife, Sharon Sanders, a federal government employee, to Minneapolis to be closer to family.

For more information about WCU’s Fine Art Museum, contact Denise Drury at 828/227-3591 or by e-mail at (ddrury@wcu.edu), or go online to (http://www.wcu.edu/museum/).

Fine Art Museum at Western Carolina University in Cullowhee, NC. Offers Fun Activities that Encourage an Interest in Art During November 2010

November 5, 2010

The Fine Art Museum at Western Carolina University in Cullowhee, NC, will host a number of events including  family fun, holiday shopping, and a reception in November.

The museum is in the Fine and Performing Arts Center on the WCU campus. All events are free and the public is invited to attend.

Family Day takes place from 10am-noon on Saturday, Nov. 13, 2010 – Parents and children are invited to participate in a scavenger hunt and other activities that encourage children’s interest in art. Enjoy popcorn and prizes at the event, which is sponsored in part by the WCU School of Art and Design’s art education program and the Jackson County Arts Council through support from the NC Arts Council.

A Handmade Holiday Trunk Show takes place from 2:30-6:30pm on Thursday, Nov. 18, 2010 – As part of its 3rd Thursdays at the FAM series, the Fine Art Museum will host the Handmade Holiday Trunk Show, an opportunity to buy directly from artists including WCU students and staff and community members. All items are priced at less than $100 and include silk scarves, jewelry, knitted wear, soaps, note cards and more. Coffee and tea will be available, with wine and cheese served from 5-6pm.

A reception for an exhibit by graduating students will begin at 4pm on Monday, Nov. 29, 2010 –  Titled, Oh Sweet Pestilence, the exhibition will include a mix of ceramics, drawing, painting, printmaking and sculpture by 12 students who are part of a class taught by Marya Roland, associate professor of art, that prepares students for entry into the professional art world. Participating students, all earning bachelors of fine arts, are Christine Cady, sculpture; Michael Dodson, sculpture; Lisa Erato, painting; Allyson Greer, printmaking;  Rachael Griffin, painting; Lauren Hill, printmaking; Alexandra Kirtley, printmaking; Sarah Lovell, painting; Michelle McAfee, sculpture; Constance McCormick, ceramics; Janine Paris, drawing; and Traci Pierce, ceramics. The exhibit will run through Friday, Dec. 3, 2010.

The Fine Art Museum’s hours are 10am to 4pm, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday and 10am to 7pm on Thursdays. The museum also is open one hour before Fine and Performing Arts Center Galaxy of Stars performances.

For more information about these events, contact Denise Drury, the WCU Fine Art Museum curatorial specialist, at 828/227-3591; e-mail to (ddrury@wcu.edu) or visit (http://www.wcu.edu/museum/).