News release
Public Information Office   SLU 10880   Hammond, LA 70402   phone: 985-549-2341   fax: 985-549-2061
publicinfo@selu.edu Summer  2005 news releases Public Information home News archive


Contact: Christina Chapple
Date: 9/20/05
 
Ruth DusseaultClick on image for publication quality photo 

CONSTRUCTION BECOMES ART -- Large-scale photographs by Atlanta photographer Ruth Dusseault are on display through Sept. 29 at Southeastern Louisiana University’s Contemporary Art Gallery. Since 1999 she has been documenting the Atlantic Steel Redevelopment Project, a 138-acre site in midtown Atlanta slated as the largest urban brownfield redevelopment in the United States.

Kim FerrerCRATES OF EMOTIONS – Denver artist Kim Ferrer uses discarded crates, left as waste along the side of the road or in empty lots, as containers for human emotions. Five of her artistic crates are on display at Southeastern Louisiana University’s Contemporary Art Gallery through Sept. 29. 


SOUTHEASTERN TO HOLD CLOSING RECEPTIONS FOR EXHIBITS
       HAMMOND – Southeastern Louisiana University’s Contemporary Art Gallery will host a closing reception on Sept. 29 from 5-6:30 p.m. for “Urban Realists,” an exhibition curated by Gallery Director Dale Newkirk. The exhibition, which opened Sept. 1, features the work of Atlanta photographer Ruth Dusseault, the sculptures of Kim Ferrer, and two video works by Hubert Dobler. 
       Dusseault creates large-scale photographs of urban construction and demolition projects that have a formal elegance and sculptural beauty.  Since 1999 she has been documenting the Atlantic Steel Redevelopment Project, a 138-acre site in midtown Atlanta slated as the largest urban brownfield redevelopment in the United States. Beginning with the demolition of the old Atlantic Steel foundry, and continuing with blasting granite, laying sewers and constructing a parking garage, Dusseault will photograph this city-within-a-city until its completion. 
       Ferrer, who is from Denver, employs shipping crates as metaphors for the human body. Five “crate” sculptures will be part of this exhibition. 
       Dobler is a video artist from Austria now living in New York. Newkirk said his video artwork, “Bull,” is a powerful work that captures the live action noise and power of a motorcycle at full throttle that the artist hangs from the ceiling of a parking garage.  
       Gallery hours are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., weekdays, with extended hours until 7 p.m. on Wednesdays.
       Sims Memorial Library is showing an exhibition of the paintings by Cora Kelly Ward through Sept. 30. Ward, who died in 1989, lived a vibrant life as an abstract expressionist painter in New York from 1960 until her death. 
       Newkirk said the Contemporary Art Gallery has been chosen as one of the sites for a preview of the third season of National Public Broadcasting’s series “Art 21-- Art in the Twenty First Century,” which features contemporary artists working in their studios. The preview will be shown Oct. 21 at 6 p.m.
       For additional information, contact Newkirk at 985-549-2193 or 985-549-5080.