Anderson Ranch Arts Center
Anderson Ranch Arts Center is a non-profit arts organization and art gallery founded in 1966 and located in Snowmass Village, Colorado.[1][2] The center hosts an artist residency program, summer arts workshops and a January workshop intensive.[3][4] AboutThe campus is five acres in size with working studio space in historic buildings for ceramics, painting, printmaking, drawing, photography and new media, sculpture, furniture making and woodworking as well as a digital fabrication lab, library, café, gallery and a lecture hall.[5] The Ranch invites visiting artists, critics and curators year-round. Anderson Ranch hosts many public events throughout the year, such as the Summer Series: Featured Artists & Conversations, Lunchtime Auctionettes, Guest Faculty Lectures, the Annual Art Auction and Recognition Dinner, as well as indoor and outdoor exhibitions. The nearby Aspen Art Museum and Aspen Institute along with Anderson Ranch forms a trio of significant arts institutions in the Roaring Fork Valley.[6] HistoryLocated in the Rocky Mountains, just 8 miles west of Aspen, Colorado, the art center was formerly a working sheep ranch settled by Swedish immigrants in the late 19th century.[1][7] Hildur Hoaglund Anderson, born in 1907 in Aspen, was the youngest child of the family that built and lived in the current campus buildings.[8] Anderson Ranch became an artists’ community in 1966 when it was founded by ceramic artist Paul Soldner.[9][2][10][11] Other early artists involved were Dennis Hopper, Sally Mann, Daniel Rhodes, Jim Romberg, Toshiko Takaezu, James Surls, and Charmaine Locke.[12][13] The center became a non-profit in 1973 and started offering an artist residency program in 1985.[10] In 1990, the campus buildings and barns were relocated to their current locations and designed by architect Harry Teague.[14] Takashi Nakazato, a 13th-generation master potter from Karatsu, Japan, where he is recognized as a living national treasure, has been creating ceramics at Anderson Ranch in a designated Visiting Artist studio since 1994.[15] The ceramics program has a long artistic connection with the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University and the furniture and woodworking program has a similar creative history with San Diego State University and RISD. Past summer faculty have included Mickalene Thomas, Catherine Opie, Judy Pfaff and Wendy Maruyama, among many others. Anderson Ranch is amongst the few remaining arts and crafts schools across the U.S. located in historically unique architecture like Haystack Mountain School of Crafts in Maine, Penland School of Craft in North Carolina and Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts in Tennessee. Since 1978, Anderson Ranch Editions has published limited edition prints in etching, lithography, woodcut, and silkscreen with visiting artists including Steve Locke, Tom Sachs, Hiroki Morinoue, Nina Katchadourian, Roy Dowell and Laurie Anderson.[16] One of the lithographs Anderson created with Bud Shark at Anderson Ranch became the cover art for her second studio album Mister Heartbreak released in 1984.[17] Since 2019, the art center has hosted a curator-in-residence.[18] The inaugural curator was Helen Molesworth from 2019–2021.[19] Douglas Fogle was curator-in-residence from 2022–2023.[20] The outdoor sculpture gardens on campus have displayed works by Isamu Noguchi, Sanford Biggers, Letha Wilson and Hank Willis Thomas.[21] International Artist AwardSince 1997, the International Artist Award is given to globally-recognized artists who demonstrate the highest level of artistic achievement and whose careers have fundamentally influenced contemporary art.[22] Past honorees include:
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