Anne Arrasmith

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Anne Arrasmith is an American artist and curator who lives and works in Birmingham, Alabama. She co-founded along with Peter Prinz and operates the not-for-profit Space One Eleven. Arrasmith was a student of Edith Frohock while at University of Alabama at Birmingham. She and Peter Prinz founded Space One Eleven with a mission to present significant, provocative exhibitions that confront ideas in a southern context or framework. Arrasmith is the director for this facility. Arrasmith received support from the Birmingham Museum of Art before it began receiving grants from the Andy Warhol Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. Under the leadership of Arrasmith and Peter Prinz, Space One Eleven has made it possible for the children who live in Metropolitan Gardens to participate in art.

Arrasmith is on the steering committee of Birmingham Art and Music Alliance. Arrasmith is a participating member of The NEA Tapes<ref> The NEA Tapes through the Eidia House in New York, NY, 2007 </ref> through the Eidia House in New York, NY along with other notables Edward Albee, Jane Alexander, Ed Asner, Ron Athey, Chuck Close, Karen Finley, Agnes Gund, Alex Katz. David Moos, Tim Robbins, Andres Serrano, Kiki Smith and Lawrence Weiner among many others. Arrasmith works with Creative Capital as a recommender helping to determine grant nominees.

Curatorial work

  • Jon Coffelt was the inaugural artist at Space One Eleven when it was founded by Arrasmith and Peter Prinz, opening in 1989 in Birmingham, Alabama<ref> James R. Nelson, "Space One Eleven is Important Addition to Arts Scene," Birmingham News, Birmingham, AL, November 29, 1987: pg. 6F </ref>.
  • In 2000, Arrasmith curated "House and Garden: Twists on Domesticity," at Space One Eleven, Birmingham, AL through a grant from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Arts. The exhibition included the work of Karen Rich Beall and Jon Coffelt. This exhibition also included a catalog with a foreword by David Moos. In this exhibition, Beall exhibited realistic tableau life-size sculpture while Coffelt hand-sewed more than 250 miniature garments that were exhibited as memory sculptures. <ref> Nancy Raabe, Tiny Treasures, "Birmingham News", Birmingham, AL, September 10, 2000: pg. 1F & 8F</ref>
  • “Art on the Inside” a self-portrait exhibition of prisoners who are part of the Alabama Prison Arts + Education Program incorporating drawings, paintings, poems and stories. This arrangement to exhibit this work is as much educational as it is artistic, but don’t think this is simply an exercise in kindness.<ref> [http://www.bhamweekly.com/_print_article.php?article_id=332 Cover Story

Art on the inside: Life in Alabama’s prisons gets examined from the inside-out by Phillip Jordan, Birmingham Weekly ] </ref>

    • “Every human being can express something – even in the most depressing and oppressive of environments,” says Anne Arrasmith, co-owner of Space One Eleven. She has just seen the works for the first time this week, as well. -Anne Arrasmith
  • "BAMA" curated by Arrasmith in 2004, included the works of Amy Pleasant, Annie Kammerer Butrus and Jane Timberlake. The exhibition showcases three of Birmingham's most promising artists.<ref> BAMASOE's "Storefront Windows," Birmingham, AL, 2004 </ref>
  • "Suspended in Conflict" in 2005 was the work of three established artists that was created based on introspection and the intense questions raised by a rapidly changing Southern culture. This exhibit curated by Arrasmith, provided Darius Hill, Larry Jens Anderson, and James Emmette Neel with the opportunity to experiment and to present new works that challenge myth and reality. This exhibition was funded by a grant from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.
  • "Politics, Politics: Nice Artists Explore the Political Landscape" curated by Arrasmith and Peter Prinz of Space One Eleven was funded by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and included Pinky Bass, Clayton Colvin, Peggy Dobbins, Randy Gachet, Binx Newton, Arthur Price, John Trobaugh, Paul Ware, and Stan Woodard. This exhibition featured the introspective works of nine artists, both established and emerging, as they explored the personal and social impact of political events and trends. Those explorations, in turn, become universal statements on the impact politics has had on environment, sports, religion, race, and government in the South.

Since 1987, Anne Arrasmith has included numerous artists' books into her exhibitions including the works of Sara Garden Armstrong, Larry Gens Anderson, Pinky Bass, Jon Coffelt, Edith Frohock, Anne Howard, Lee Isaacs, Joni Mabe, Mary Ann Sampson, David Sandlin, Joel Seah and Marie Weaver along with many others who have worked in field of book arts.

Books and Catalogs

  • House and Garden: Twists on Domesticity, foreword by David Moos
  • UpSouth by bell hooks, Emma Amos and Antoinette Spanos Nordan, University Press, University of Alabama, Birmingham, 1999, pp 70-73
  • White Graphics: The Power of White in Graphic Design (Paperback), by Gail Deiber Finke,included many examples of Marie Weavers work for UpSouth.
  • BAMA catalog, Space One Eleven, Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, 2004

See Also

Artists books

References