Bryant Holsenbeck Works Using Recycled Bottles. Image courtesy of the artist.

STUFF: Where does it come from and where does it go?

Exhibition begins: 
Friday, April 6, 2012
Exhibition ends: 
Saturday, July 28, 2012
Venue: 
Mayer Gallery

Bring us your recycling

The Turchin Center and the Catherine Smith Gallery need items from your recycling bins! This spring we are partnering with artist, Bryant Holsenbeck, to create an installation requiring many recyclable items. These items will become part of the installation. Requested items include:

  • Bottle caps
  • Plastic water bottles (clear in color)
  • Used chopped sticks
  • Plastic lids, straws from "to go cups"
  • Glass bottles

Other items needed for the workshop on February 2nd include:

  • Items dark or black in color
  • Dark fabric
  • Old Cloths
  • Yarn
  • Tires
  • Electronic parts
  • Black plastic or bags
  • And other items such as old records, beads, wires, etc...

There will be three major collection points: Turchin Center, Farthing Auditorium and Wey Hall. Items can be dropped off during normal business hours between now and Friday, March 23rd. (At the end of the exhibition, these materials will be recycled.)

An Installation by Bryant Holsenbeck

A project in partnership with the Catherine J. Smith Gallery and other campus partners, funded in part by Appalachian's Sustainability Council Competitive Arts Grant.

The Turchin Center for the Visual Arts and the Catherine Smith Gallery partner with environmental artist Bryant Holsenbeck to create an installation project that will encourage reflection and raise awareness of environmental issues. Holsenbeck will be on campus to complete a residency in conjunction with this exhibition. The project she will create at Appalachian State University will utilize recycled materials collected by contributing individuals, organizations and campus partners and will be constructed with community participation. Components of the residency will incorporate workshops, classroom visits, volunteer opportunities, and a public lecture. 

Bryant has been producing works with recycled materials for over ten years and is skilled at bringing together groups of people, young and old, to build projects that promote sustainable practices in communities and in homes.

About the artist

Bryant, an environmental artist, has been documenting the "stuff" of our society that we use once and throw away for over a decade. Americans create more garbage, per capita, than any other culture, yet we are blind to our waste. She collects many things, among them, bottle caps, credit cards, pencils, shoes and chopsticks. Bryant uses these everyday items to make work, which transforms the objects, which surprise us. We are used to using "stuff" once and then throwing it away. We may throw it away, but Bryant's work makes her aware of its continual impact.

Catherine J. Smith GallerySustain Appalachian

Bryant began her arts career as a basket maker. Since that time she has evolved into an environmental artist who makes large-scale installations that document the waste stream of our society. She has shown her work and taught throughout the United States. She has been the recipient of two North Carolina Arts Council Fellowships, a Project Grant and an NEA Arts and Learning Grant that she worked on in collaboration with the Chapel Hill Public Arts Commission. She is currently attempting to live one year without disposable plastic and writing a blog about it entitled "The Last Straw: A Reluctant Year Without Disposable Plastic." Most recent past projects are AGAIN AND NEVER AGAIN: Can We Co-Exist with Ourselves? at Guilford College, Greensboro, NC and a 28 foot recycled mandala for blueshere: earth art expo, sponsored by the Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art in Charleston, S.C. She is a community artist who likes to work with groups of people to make large-scale installations using the "stuff" of our society. She is also an independent studio artist who makes books, birds, and sculptures out of recycled materials.

This exhibition will be accompanied by a lecture, workshop and artist residency. 

Related events

Mar 28 - Apr 6 (All day) Artist Residency: Bryant Holsenbeck
Apr 6 7:00pm - 9:00pm Spring Exhibition Celebration

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