Rick Lowe

Last updated
Rick Lowe
ATC 14 Rick Lowe.jpg
NationalityAmerican
Education Columbus State University (then Columbus College);
Texas Southern University
Occupationartist
Known for Social Practice Art
Awards Heinz Award in the Arts and Humanities (2002)
MacArthur fellowship
Website ricklowe.com

Rick Lowe (born 1961) is a Houston-based artist and community organizer, whose Project Row Houses is considered an important example of social-practice art. In 2014, he was among the 21 people awarded a MacArthur "genius" fellowship. [1]

Contents

Early life and education

Lowe was born in Eufaula, Alabama as the eighth of twelve children [2] on a sharecropping farm. [3] He was trained as a landscape painter, attending Columbus College in Georgia, before moving to Houston in 1985. [4] There, he created politically charged installations and studied with muralist and painter John Biggers at Texas Southern University. [5] [6]

Work

Project Row Houses

Project Row Houses' mission is " to be the catalyst for transforming community through the celebration of art and African-American history and culture." [7] Employing the terminology of the German artist Joseph Beuys, Lowe describes the project as "social sculpture." [8] [9] He also draws inspiration from the work of artist John T. Biggers (whose own paintings depicted Houston's shotgun houses), working from his Five Pillars: Art and Creativity; Education; Social Safety Nets; Architecture; and Sustainability. [10] [11]

PRH dates from 1993, when Lowe and fellow founding six artists James Bettison, Bert Long Jr., Jesse Lott, Floyd Newsum, Bert Samples, and George Smith, alongside community organizers, arranged for the "purchase and restoration of a block and a half of derelict properties — 22 shotgun houses from the 1930s — in Houston's predominantly African American Third Ward." [12] [13] With funding from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Elizabeth Firestone Graham Foundation, [14] these houses were then converted to arts spaces, revitalizing the neighborhood and providing community development for the blighted neighborhood. More than 20 years later, according to an ArtNews article, the project has grown to 49 buildings spread out over 10 blocks and has a support program for young mothers. [15]

This unusual amalgam of arts venue and community support center has served as a model for Lowe to expand into other neighborhoods in need of revitalization. The artist has initiated similar projects in the Watts Housing Project in Los Angeles, in post-Katrina New Orleans, and in a North Dallas neighborhood with a dense immigrant population. [16]

In 1997 Project Row Houses won the Rudy Bruner Award for Urban Excellence, a national design award that seeks to identify and honor projects that address social and economic concerns of urban design. [17]

Other projects

In 1999, Lowe served as a selection committee member for the Rudy Bruner Award for Urban Excellence. [18] He received the 8th Annual Heinz Award in the Arts and Humanities in 2002. [19]

Lowe developed Trans.lation: Vickery Meadow for the Nasher Sculpture Center's 10th anniversary exhibition "Nasher XChange" and Victoria Square Project in Athens, Greece as a part of documenta 14 in 2017.

Lowe served as a visiting artist at University of California, Berkeley Arts Research Center, a Loeb Fellow at Harvard University, Haas Center Distinguish Visitor at Stanford University, a Mel King Community Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Breeden Scholar at Auburn University, and a Neubauer Collegium Visiting Fellow at the University of Chicago. In 2016 he joined the faculty at the University of Houston's Kathrine G. McGovern College of the Arts. in 2014. [20] [21] He also sits on the board of Mark Bradford’s Art + Practice Foundation. [22] Lowe had a critically reviewed inaugural exhibition at Storage Art Gallery by artist Onyedika Chuke in 2021, which was Lowe's Manhattan debut exhibition, described by Artforum as "paradigmatic". [23] His first exhibition at Gagosian Gallery in the fall of 2022 further solidified his work interrogates social structures, probing questions on wealth disparity, architectural inequity, and aerial discrepancies. [24] [25]

Art market

Lowe has been represented by Gagosian Gallery since 2021. [26]

Honors and awards

Related Research Articles

Barnaby Evans is an American artist who works in many media including site-specific sculpture installations, photography, film, garden design, architectural projects, writing and conceptual works. Evans is known for WaterFire, a sculpture that he installed on the three rivers of downtown Providence, Rhode Island.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Guillermo Gómez-Peña</span> Chicano artist

Guillermo Gómez-Peña is a Mexican/Chicano performance artist, writer, activist, and educator. Gómez-Peña has created work in multiple media, including performance art, experimental radio, video, photography and installation art. His fifteen books include essays, experimental poetry, performance scripts, photographs and chronicles in both English, Spanish and Spanglish. He is a founding member of the pioneering art collective Border Arts Workshop/Taller de Arte Fronterizo (1985-1992) and artistic director of the performance art troupe La Pocha Nostra.

The Heidelberg Project is an outdoor art project in the McDougall-Hunt neighborhood on Detroit's east side, just north of the city's historically African-American Black Bottom area. It was created in 1986 by the artist Tyree Guyton, who was assisted by his wife, Karen, and grandfather Sam Mackey. The Heidelberg Project is in part a political protest, as Tyree Guyton's childhood neighborhood began to deteriorate after the 1967 riots. Guyton described coming back to Heidelberg Street after serving in the Army; he was astonished to see that the surrounding neighborhood looked as if "a bomb went off".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dorothea Rockburne</span> Canadian-American painter (born c. 1932)

Dorothea Rockburne DFA is an abstract painter, drawing inspiration primarily from her deep interest in mathematics and astronomy. Her work is geometric and abstract, seemingly simple but very precise to reflect the mathematical concepts she strives to concretize. "I wanted very much to see the equations I was studying, so I started making them in my studio," she has said. "I was visually solving equations." Her attraction to Mannerism has also influenced her work.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Edmund de Waal</span> British artist and author

Edmund Arthur Lowndes de Waal, is a contemporary English artist, master potter and author. He is known for his large-scale installations of porcelain vessels often created in response to collections and archives or the history of a particular place. De Waal's book The Hare with Amber Eyes was awarded the Costa Book Award for Biography, Royal Society of Literature Ondaatje Prize in 2011 and Windham–Campbell Literature Prize for Non-Fiction in 2015. De Waal's second book The White Road, tracing his journey to discover the history of porcelain was released in 2015.

Urs Fischer is a Swiss-born contemporary visual artist living in New York City and Los Angeles. Fischer’s practice includes sculpture, installation, photography, and digitally-mediated images.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Artists for Humanity</span> Non-profit organization in the US

Artists For Humanity (AFH) is a non-profit youth arts and enterprise organization based at 100 West Second Street in South Boston, Massachusetts, United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Anna Schuleit Haber</span> German-American artist

Anna Schuleit Haber is a German-American visual artist. Throughout her career, Schuleit Haber's work has focused on marginalized communities.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Walter J. Hood</span> American designer (b. 1958)

Walter J. Hood, is an American designer, artist, academic administrator, and educator. He is the former chair of landscape architecture at the University of California, Berkeley, and principal of Hood Design Studio in Oakland, California. Hood has worked in a variety of settings including architecture, landscape architecture, visual art, community leadership, urban design, and in planning and research. He has spent more than 20 years living in Oakland, California. He draws on his strong connection to the Black community in his work. He has chosen to work almost exclusively in the public realm and urban environments.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tom Joyce</span> American sculptor

Tom Joyce is a sculptor and MacArthur Fellow known for his work in forged steel and cast iron. Using skills and technology acquired through early training as a blacksmith, Joyce addresses the environmental, political, and social implications of using iron in his work. Exhibited internationally since the 1980s, his work is included in 30-plus public collections in the U.S. and abroad. Joyce works in Santa Fe, New Mexico producing sculpture, drawings, prints, photographs, and videos that reference themes of iron in the human body, iron in industry, and iron in the natural world.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Project Row Houses</span> Development in Houston

Project Row Houses is a development in the Third Ward area of Houston, Texas. Project Row Houses includes a group of shotgun houses restored in the 1990s. Eight houses serve as studios for visiting artists. Those houses are art studios for art related to African-American themes. A row behind the art studio houses single mothers.

The Rudy Bruner Award for Urban Excellence (RBA) was established in 1986 by Cambridge, Massachusetts architect Simeon Bruner. The award is named after Simeon Bruner's late father, Rudy Bruner, founder of the Bruner Foundation. According to the Bruner Foundation, the RBA was created to increase understanding of the role of architecture in the urban environment and promote discussion of what constitutes urban excellence. The award seeks to identify and honor places, rather than people, that address economic and social concerns along with urban design.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joyce J. Scott</span> African-American artist

Joyce J. Scott is an African-American artist, sculptor, quilter, performance artist, installation artist, print-maker, lecturer and educator. Named a MacArthur Fellow in 2016, and a Smithsonian Visionary Artist in 2019, Scott is best known for her figurative sculptures and jewelry using free form, off-loom beadweaving techniques, similar to a peyote stitch. Each piece is often constructed using thousands of glass seed beads or pony beads, and sometimes other found objects or materials such as glass, quilting and leather. In 2018, she was hailed for working in new medium — a mixture of soil, clay, straw, and cement — for a sculpture meant to disintegrate and return to the earth. Scott is influenced by a variety of diverse cultures, including Native American and African traditions, Mexican, Czech, and Russian beadwork, illustration and comic books, and pop culture.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">LaToya Ruby Frazier</span> American artist and professor of photography

LaToya Ruby Frazier is an American artist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Titus Kaphar</span> American painter

Titus Kaphar is an American contemporary painter whose work reconfigures and regenerates art history to include the African-American subject. His paintings are held in the collections of Museum of Modern Art, Brooklyn Museum, Yale University Art Gallery, New Britain Museum of American Art, Seattle Art Museum, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, and University of Michigan Museum of Art.

Lovie Olivia is an American multidisciplinary visual artist. She uses the media of printmaking, painting, and installations to explore themes of gender, sexuality, race, class and power.

Amanda Williams is a visual artist based in Bridgeport, Chicago. Williams grew up in Chicago's South Side and trained as an architect. Her work investigates color, race, and space while blurring the conventional line between art and architecture. She has taught at the California College of the Arts in San Francisco, Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts at Washington University in St. Louis, Illinois Institute of Technology, and her alma mater Cornell University. Williams has lectured at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New Museum, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and at a TED conference.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ryan N. Dennis</span> American curator and writer

Ryan N. Dennis is an American curator and writer who currently serves as Senior Curator and Director of Public Initiatives at the Contemporary Art Museum Houston (CAMH). She was appointed in June 2023 after serving as Chief Curator and Artistic Director at the Mississippi Museum of Art's Center for Art and Public Exchange (CAPE). She previously served as Curator and Programs Director (2017-2020) and Public Art Director and Curator (2012-2017) at Project Row Houses in Houston, Texas. Dennis focuses on African American contemporary art with an emphasis on site-specific projects and community engagement.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jesse Lott</span> American artist (1943–2023)

Jesse Lott was an American visual artist known for his wire and wood sculptures, papier mâché figures, and collages made from found materials within a style he called "urban frontier art".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tricia Ward</span> American social practice artist

Tricia Ward is a Los Angeles–based artist whose work has included public and environmental art, sculpture, and social practice art. She emerged in the 1980s, when collaborations with underserved youth and urban groups that bridged art and social change began to gain institutional attention. Her work combines collaborative, interdisciplinary approaches that include physical transformations of derelict urban environments into "pocket parks," environmental remediation, cultural and educational programming, public policy and civic engagement.

References

External videos
Nuvola apps kaboodle.svg Public Artist Rick Lowe, 2014 MacArthur Fellow, MacArthur Foundation [29]
  1. "The New York Times". MacArthur Awards Go to 21 Diverse Fellows. The New York Times. September 17, 2014. Retrieved September 29, 2014.
  2. Huebner, Michael (September 17, 2014). "Alabama Artist Rick Lowe Receives $625K MacArthur 'Genius Grant'". AL.com. Retrieved May 1, 2024.
  3. Sargent, Antwaun; Roelstraete, Dieter, eds. (2024). Rick Lowe. New York and Chicago: Gagosian and the Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society. ISBN   9781951449452.
  4. Sewing, Joy (May 27, 2016). "Project Row Houses Melds Art and Community in the Third Ward". The Houston Chronicle. Retrieved May 1, 2016.
  5. Kriston Capps (Sep 19, 2014). "How a Houston Housing Project Earned a MacArthur Grant". Atlantic City Labs. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
  6. Tom Finkelpearl, "Interview: Rick Lowe on Designing Project Row Houses," in Dialogues in Public Art, ed. Tom Finkelpearl (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2000), 243.
  7. "Project Row Houses". Project Row Houses. Retrieved 2016-02-05.
  8. Sports, Bad at. "Interview with Rick Lowe | Art Practical". Art Practical. Retrieved 2016-02-05.
  9. "About PRH". Project Row Houses. Retrieved 2016-02-05.
  10. Sports, Bad at. "Interview with Rick Lowe | Art Practical". Art Practical. Retrieved 2016-02-05.
  11. "About PRH". Project Row Houses. Retrieved 2016-02-05.
  12. "MacArthur Foundation website". MacArthur Fellows / Meet the Class of 2014 Rick Lowe. MacArthur Foundation. September 17, 2014. Retrieved September 29, 2014.
  13. "Mission + History". Project Row Houses Mission + History. Retrieved 23 April 2016.
  14. Nikil Saval (December 3, 2015), Three Artists Who Think Outside the Box T .
  15. Miranda, Carolina A. (April 7, 2014). "How the Art of Social Practice Is Changing the World, One Row House at a Time". ArtNews. Retrieved September 29, 2014.
  16. "Rick Lowe — MacArthur Foundation". www.macfound.org. Retrieved 2016-02-05.
  17. "Call for Entries: $50,000 Award for Urban Excellence".
  18. "Rick Lowe". Rudy Bruner Award. Retrieved 2019-03-22.
  19. "Heinz Awards - Rick Lowe".
  20. Sports, Bad at. "Interview with Rick Lowe | Art Practical". Art Practical. Retrieved 2016-02-05.
  21. "MacArthur Foundation website". MacArthur Fellows / Meet the Class of 2014 Rick Lowe. MacArthur Foundation. September 17, 2014. Retrieved September 29, 2014.
  22. Nikil Saval (December 3, 2015), Three Artists Who Think Outside the Box  T .
  23. Chamberlain, Colby. "Colby Chamberlain on "Storage_"". www.artforum.com. Retrieved 2023-05-21.
  24. Amadour, Ricky. "Don't Miss These 10 New York Art Shows". www.culturedmag.com. Retrieved 2023-05-21.
  25. Master, Web; Fuse, Arte (2022-10-09). "Art Exhibits, Art Magazine, Contemporary Art, Art Blogs, Art Artists". ArteFuse. Retrieved 2023-05-21.
  26. Maximilìano Durón (September 20, 2021), Gagosian Now Represents Rick Lowe, Whose Art Has Its Roots in Local Communities ARTnews .
  27. "President Obama Announces More Key Administration Posts". White House Archives. 11 April 2013.
  28. "Rick Lowe Wins $625,000 MacArthur Genius Award". 17 September 2014.
  29. "Rick Lowe". MacArthur Fellows. MacArthur Foundation. September 17, 2014. Retrieved December 13, 2014.

"Rick Lowe Maps the Unknown" on the National Gallery of Art's "West to East" stories page