Associate Professor David Riep to Give Curator Talk on Shattering Perspectives: A Teaching Collection of African Ceramics, Followed by Reception and Book Launch
Colorado State University’s Gregory Allicar Museum of Art is steward to the largest collection of intact African ceramics at an art museum in the United States. Comprising 183 vessels by artists from over 57 cultures, the teaching collection provides CSU and the larger community with world-class pottery and the opportunity to explore ceramic arts from across Africa. This fall, GAMA celebrates faculty and student research on the public collection in Shattering Perspectives: A Teaching Collection of African Ceramics, encoring August 23 to December 17; forthcoming installations in the Lory Student Center; and a curator talk, reception, and exhibition catalogue launch on October 19. The museum’s programming is free and open to all.
A HISTORY OF THE COLLECTION
Colorado State’s extensive African art collection has grown since the mid-twentieth century, long before the Gregory Allicar Museum of Art was formed as the University Art Museum in 2009. The earliest donations came from Professor of Veterinary Medicine Rob Udall and his wife Dorothy in the 1960s. Later donations were generously given to the university by John and Mary Carlen, who lived and worked in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (formerly Zaire) in the 1970s, Warren and Genevieve Garst, and Professor of Pottery Richard De Vore and his wife, Jan. Today GAMA’s African art collection features substantial gifts from Bill Simmons and Robert F. Bina and Delores De Wilde Bina, among other anonymous donors.
SHATTERING PERSPECTIVES: A COLLABORATIVE EXHIBITION
Shattering Perspectives: A Teaching Collection of African Ceramics is a collaborative exhibition exploring pottery arts from across the African continent. Originally on view from February 21 to April 25, 2021, the show was produced with CSU undergraduates enrolled in a Spring 2020 art history seminar course. The students served as co-curators, authors, and exhibition designers under the mentorship of Associate Professor of Art History and Associate Curator of African Art David Riep while exploring the politics and poetics of museum display alongside pottery’s methods, functions, and symbolism. “The entire Shattering Perspectives project is centered around the Gregory Allicar’s role as a teaching museum, providing an opportunity for learners to actively engage with the vessels themselves,” says Riep. “It’s a testament to the value of active learning outside of the classroom, and the new perspectives that can be discovered through working directly with objects.” Both the original and encore Shattering Perspectives displays are thematically organized around art versus artifact, misconceptions about “anonymous” artists, pot-making techniques, and visual expressions of identity. These perspectives share insight into working with a teaching collection and the resulting dialogue that develops through direct encounters with art objects and critical texts. The current encore exhibition highlights more than 100 objects by artists from over 50 cultures, and is on view in the museum’s Griffin Foundation Gallery until December 17.
Shattering Perspectives is also accompanied by a new exhibition catalogue, which will be released at Riep’s curator talk on October 19. Equally collaborative, the publication surveys the museum’s extensive collection of African ceramics through an exhibition inventory and student texts, as well as essays by Patricia Crane Coronel, professor emerita of art history; Del Harrow, associate professor of pottery and sculpture; alumna Brenna McWhorter, class of 2020; and exhibition organizer and lead curator David Riep. Museum staff are also working on long-term displays for the Lory Student Center, in partnership with Riep and Doug Sink with the LSC Arts Program. New cabinetry in the north end of LSC level three will host several dozen vessels in a display similar to the exhibition.
CURATOR TALK AND RECEPTION WITH CATALOGUE LAUNCH
On Thursday, October 19, Riep will give a lecture on the Shattering Perspectives exhibition and catalogue process. Tracing the project from ideation through Spring 2020 development, and then from the 2021 exhibition through the encore and catalogue expansion this fall, Riep will explain the curatorial and research process and discuss the exhibition’s major themes.
“Dave’s work with this spectacular collection brings it to life in a way that is exciting for all audiences,” says Lynn Boland, GAMA director and chief curator. “He’s a huge hit with students, including K-12, college, and life-long learners. make it a point to hear him talk whenever I can, especially when the topic is African ceramics.”
Riep’s curator talk begins at 5:30 p.m. in the museum’s Robert W. Hoffert Learning Center followed by a reception and catalogue launch at 6:30 p.m. This event is free and open to all.