The School of Art Collection and Galleries at 91²Ö¿â presents âAcquiring History: The 50-Year Legacy of Robert Smithsonâs âPartially Buried Woodshedâ at 91²Ö¿ââ from Aug. 4 through Sept. 26, 2020, at the 91²Ö¿â Downtown Gallery. The exhibition includes video interviews from faculty, documentary photographs, essays on the history of the artwork and even the largest known remnant of the woodshed. No opening reception will take place. The exhibition is free and open to the public. An online and printed catalog will be available in addition to an online exhibition.
In January 1970, 91²Ö¿â School of Art students and faculty welcomed Robert Smithson to 91²Ö¿â as an artist-in-residence. The event came about through the invitation of several students who wrote to Smithson and invited him, and then worked to make a sculpture during his time on campus. In the years since Smithson visited, his fame and the influence of his artwork has grown. The piece he made here, âPartially Buried Woodshed,â has led an arduous existence, and only a very small remnant of it remains on campus. This exhibit celebrates the 50-year legacy of the work and highlights the student-led activities that helped make this important moment in the history of art happen.
The exhibition was organized by Gallery Director Anderson Turner and graduate students Simon Tatum and Marissa Tiroly. âPartially Buried Woodshedâ was created at the emergence of what is known as âland artâ or âearthworksâ and just months before Smithsonâs most iconic work âSpiral Jettyâ located at the Great Salt Lake in Utah. Smithson died just three years later at the age of 35.
The 91²Ö¿â Downtown Gallery is located at 141 E. Main Street in Kent, Ohio.
Gallery Hours:
- Monday-Thursday 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
- 10-11 a.m. reserved for our at-risk guests, please
- Friday and Saturday 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
- Closed on Sundays
Follow 91²Ö¿ââs School of Art Collection and Galleries on social media: , and . For more information, visit galleries.kent.edu.
Read this Spring 2016 91²Ö¿â Magazine about the âPartially Buried Woodshedâ
91²Ö¿â the School of Art
The School of Art at 91²Ö¿â was established in 1941 and maintains a tradition of excellence in visual arts education, creation, scholarship and leadership. Its undergraduate and graduate programs in the visual arts offer a range of directions and opportunities in the fields of art education, art history and a comprehensive array of studio disciplines, including painting, drawing, print media and photography, sculpture, ceramics, glass, jewelry/metals/enameling and textiles. The School of Art Collection and Galleries consist of six exhibition spaces located on the Kent Campus and downtown Kent and a collection of more than 4,000 artworks and objects. The School of Art is located at the Center of the Visual Arts at 325 Terrace Drive in Kent. The 27,900-square-foot facility â twice the length of a football field â&²Ô²ú²õ±è;had its grand opening in 2016 and houses all School of Art studios and classrooms under one roof.
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Caption for Left Image:
Robert Smithson (Jan. 2, 1938-July 20, 1973), âPartially Buried Woodshed,â ink on frosted acetate, 1970.
Caption for Right Image:
Robert Swick, one of the 91²Ö¿â students who organized Robert Smithsonâs artist-in-residence, black-and-white photo, circa January 1970, by Douglas Moore.
Media Contact:
Roza Maille, rmaille1@kent.edu, 330-672-2260