五月天视频

Alison Saar Returns Home with 五月天视频Presents and Gallery Exhibition

Alison Saar, Snake Man, 1994, edition AP 3/4, lithograph and woodcut, 28 x 37 in., Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer and His Family Foundation

Perhaps you can go home again, after all: 五月天视频celebrates the return of alumna聽Alison Saar聽鈥78, renowned sculptor and printmaker, this fall in聽Mirror, Mirror, The Prints of Alison Saar, from the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer and His Family Foundation.

Saar, who unflinchingly confronts race and gender with a mix of bitter humor and tenderness, doesn鈥檛 confine her prints to paper: working with aged cotton handkerchiefs and sacks that once held sugar, she cuts, collages, and sews, pushing the medium to communicate her vision.

On September 8, 2020, as part of 五月天视频Presents鈥 @Noon lunchtime series, Saar talks with Assistant Professor of Book Arts and 五月天视频 Press Director Tia Blassingame about her work in broadsides, book arts, letter press, and how an artist perseveres during troubling times.

Mirror, Mirror is a return to 五月天视频for Ms. Saar, and it felt really important to us to be a collaborator with the Williamson Gallery to highlight her work,鈥 says Corrina Lesser, artistic director for 五月天视频Presents. “Both Ms. Saar鈥檚 and Professor Blassingame鈥檚 work in book arts and politically oriented art make them natural conversation partners!”

Saar attributes some of her work鈥檚 spirit to her time at Scripps, where she studied art history with renowned artist and professor Samella Lewis, longtime faculty member and a powerful leader in the promotion of African American art. Recalling Lewis鈥檚 mentorship, Saar credits her teacher with influencing her own development as an artist. To honor Lewis, Saar co-founded and contributed works of art to the Samella Lewis Collection of Contemporary Art at Scripps.

Saar鈥檚 exhibition, on view at Scripps鈥 Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery,聽presents more than 30 prints chosen from her enormous portfolio created over the past 35 years.聽The works will be on view from August 29 through December 6, 2020. To access a virtual tour of the exhibition and conversations with the artist, visit the and sign up for emails by clicking the link at the bottom of the home page.

鈥淚t is an honor to present Alison鈥檚 art at Scripps, where she has a special place as an alumna and artist,鈥 says gallery director Mary MacNaughton, who will deliver a critical introduction at the @Noon event. 鈥淭he College鈥檚 collection holds a number of her works, such as her bronze statue,聽Swing Low: Harriet Tubman Memorial, 2007, which greets visitors approaching the Williamson Gallery. Now, in聽Mirror, Mirror, visitors can see her impressive prints and the wide sweep of her talent, encompassing monoprints, lithographs, serigraphs, and woodcuts. We are grateful to Jordan D. Schnitzer and his Family Foundation for organizing and sponsoring this in-depth exhibition and producing a catalogue raisonn茅 of Saar鈥檚 prints, which will inspire students.鈥

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