Stake

McCoy attended Kansas City Art Institute in the early 1980s, but received his B.A. degree from the University of Kansas in Lawrence. He received his M.F.A. degree in sculpture from Stanford University in California in 1987. His works have appeared in exhibitions at the Walker Art Gallery at the University of Nebraska, the Leedy Voulkos Gallery SOFA exhibition in 1997, and the Stanford Art Gallery in California. McCoy has received several awards and fellowships, including the Prix de Paris from Stanford University and the Lockwood Fellowship Grant from the University of Kansas. The Spencer Museum of Art at the University of Kansas and the Menorah Medical Park in Overland Park, Kansas, include his work in their collections. This exquisite sculpture formed from laminated plywood displays McCoy?s ability to transform something as common as plywood into a sophisticated work of art. By extracting only the most vital components from the wood, the artist communicates his deep level of understanding of qualities that also exist in human nature.

Orpheum

On the faculty of Kansas City Art Institute since 1975, Sutton has had numerous solo and group exhibitions throughout the United States. In 1987 the Charlotte Crosby Kemper Gallery featured his work in a seven-year survey. This exhibition detailed his development and expansion of his unique style of work. He has received several honors, including the excellence award from the Society of Contemporary Photography, the MIAA-NEA Photography Fellowship and a Fulbright Grant. Sutton?s commercial work has appeared in such prestigious publications as Artforum, Time/Life Books, Ceramics Monthly, American Crafts Magazine and Art in America. The Minneapolis Institute for the Arts, the Denver Museum, and the Belger Cartage Corporation have purchased prints by Sutton. Photo Metro published his portfolios twice and his cover photograph from it won an award for magazine publishing. This professor?s artistic interest lies in photo montage that deals with time and place in collision. Sutton successfully creates new visual possibilities out of realistic concepts. Today he continues to excite viewers with his innovative style of photography.

Fa?ade #7

Siskind is one of the leading figures in the evolution of modern photography. He received a Bachelor of Social Science degree from the College of the City of New York in 1926. After graduating, he earned his living teaching English in the New York public school system. Since fine art photography was not being taught in colleges, Siskind learned his photography skills by repeatedly practicing on making exposures and print photographs. He joined the politically conscious and socially active Photo League group in New York City and gained notoriety for his documentary style of photography. Ordinary people from the streets of New York were his subjects in these early works. By 1943 he moved in another direction with encouragement from some of his fellow artists. These artists called themselves the New York School but later became known as Abstract Expressionists. This group of friends included Adolph Gottlieb, Robert Motherwell, Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko, and Willem de Kooning. His friends from this group offered Siskind the kind of support he needed to pursue this new direction in his work. No other photographers were working in the abstract style at this time. He learned not only to share his new work with his friends, but also to bounce ideas around with them. He developed a new mode of abstraction that was somewhat similar to the gestural works of the Abstract Expressionist painter Franz Kline. These new photographs had a powerful and stark appearance. Viewers of these new photographs learned to experience and interpret new visual forms. Often the spectator found himself pondering what these new visual forms suggested. Soon viewers discovered the relationships that existed between the forms, and a whole new visual language in photography opened up.

Funnels & Floats No. 2

Scotchie received her M.F.A. in 1985 from the prestigious Alfred University School of Ceramics in New York. Presently, she is an Associate Professor of Ceramics at the University of South Carolina. Her works have appeared in numerous exhibitions both nationally and internationally at such notable places as The American Craft Museum in New York and the Butler Institute of Art in Maine. At the present time her work is part of a traveling exhibition called Domestic Abstractions. Her works included in this traveling exhibition were created during a recent artist?s residency at the Studio Art Center in Florence, Italy. The exhibition has already been to Florida, South Carolina and Chicago and it will continue traveling through the year 2001 to the Lamar Dodd Art Center in Georgia, the Everson Museum in New York, the Zanesville Art Center in Ohio and The Rowe Art Gallery at the University of North Carolina.