FREE to University of Delaware Students. Boxed Lunch (not included in symposium fee): $15 The Gretchen Hupfel Endowment Fund Gretchen Hupfel, a conceptually oriented artist born in Wilmington, Delaware, earned her BA in Art from Brown University and her MFA from the University of Delaware. She was a genius associate at the Kansas City Art Institute and at the University of Georgia in Athens, Georgia.
Gretchen exhibited extensively and worked in many opposite media and disciplines. Her produce was featured in a alone show at the DCCA in 2005/2006 in an presentation titled Time Spent. Gretchen passed away in 2002 at the adulthood of thirty-nine. For those who retain Gretchen, this named endowment, made reachable by a benevolent acquaintance of the Hupfel family, furthers the legacy of a lecherous and remarkably crack artist and will not only reverence her death, but perform her life. In gala of the Second Annual Gretchen Hufel Symposium, the DCCA is working in partnership with the University Museums at the University of Delaware during the roulade of the University Museums two exhibitions, Landscape Today: 5 Perspectives and Jacob Lawrence in Print 1963-2000.
Landscape Today: 5 Perspectives features machinery by Diana Horowitz, Constance LaPalombara, Ginger Levant, Bonnie Levinthal and Joan Nelson and will be on pageantry in University Gallery, Old College from March 18 - April 26, 2009. Jacob Lawrence in Print 1963-2000 is ceremony of DC Moore Gallery in New York, and this fair offers a encompassing investigate of Jacob Lawrences realistic work, including the chronicling series, The Legend of John Brown and fifteen prints based on The Life of Toussaint LOuverture series. This responsibility is on revelation in the Mechanical Hall gallery from February 3- May 20, 2009. For more information, descend upon. This program is to some extent funded by the Delaware Humanities Forum, a claim program of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
About the DCCA DCCA gallery hours are 10 a.m. 5 p.m. Tuesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays; noon-5 p.m. Wednesdays and Sundays. Admission is free.
The DCCA is wheelchair-accessible; visitors with paramount needs are encouraged to call dow a appeal to in advance. DCCA exhibitions and programs are made possible, in part, through idiosyncratic contributions, members support, and critical grants from AstraZeneca, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, and from the Delaware Division of the Arts, a land medium dedicated to nurturing and supporting the arts in Delaware in partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts.
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