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Art in the Field
Teen Program:
Anderson Ranch Arts Center

Dec 6, 2022
4:30 PM
Anderson Ranch Arts Center

Visit Anderson Ranch Arts Center and tour their world class studios, and get a chance to see some of their Fall Artists-in-Residence in action! After the tour, sit down and enjoy a lecture with their Visiting Artists, where they will share their art and art-making processes. These weekly lectures are part of the Ranch’s Fall Lecture Series and are free and open to the public. View the full series here.

Tour: 4:30–5:30 PM
Rashawn Griffin and Sam Yates Lecture: 5:30–6:30 PM

To register, please fill out this form.


About the Lecture:

Rashawn Griffin uses diverse materials such as bed sheets, tassels, food, and flora to create large-scale sculpture and paintings. After receiving a MFA from Yale University in 2005, he has exhibited in multiple solo and group exhibitions in the United States and abroad. Often pushing the boundaries between object and installation, his work challenges viewers to engage in their own past experiences when confronting his art. A haunting installation in the 2008 Whitney Biennial, for example, is punctuated by a live audio feed from a field in Kansas, where the artist was raised. A lumbering garbage bag man/sculpture wanders through a field in “To bring love/terrible things”, highlighting his exploration of place, site specificity, and identity. Griffin’s installations explore the relationship between architecture and the traditions of painting with a series of stretched fabric walls; as the picture becomes the space, the pictorial space highlights the architecture.

Living and working in Olathe, KS, he was a 2006 resident of the Studio Museum in Harlem’s AIR program. Along with the 2008 Whitney Biennial, his work has been exhibited widely, including a two-person exhibition at the Studio Museum with artist Senga Nengudi (RSVP), as well as “Freeway Balconies” at the Deutsche Guggenheim in Berlin, Germany, and “THREADS: Textiles and Fiber in the works of African American Artists” at EK Projects in Beijeng, China, curated by Collier Schorr and Lowery Stokes Sims respectively. Recently the subject of the solo exhibition “A hole-in-the-wall country” at the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art in Overland Park, Kansas, as well as participating in the exhibition “Minimal Baroque” at Rønnebæksholm in Næstved, Denmark, his work is currently featured in “The Regional”, a biennial of midwest-based artists opening at the Contemporary Arts Center Cincinnati in December, before traveling to the Kemper Museum in Kansas City, and an exhibition at The Momentary, connected to the Crystal Bridges Museum in Bentonville, Arkansas, entitled “We no longer recognize the backs of our hands”.

Sam Yates is a Midwest born designer, based in Kansas City, Missouri. Yates’ experience ranges from in-house media for Kansas City PBS, experiential design and wayfinding with Dimensional Innovations, to brand experience and identity with D.C. firm, Beveridge Seay. She has been an American In- house Design Awards winner and an American Graphic Design Awards winner through Graphic Design USA (GDUSA).

Yates currently designs with the Trends and Innovation Studio at Hallmark while teaching at the University of Kansas in the Visual Communications Department. She is President Emeritus for the Kansas City Chapter of AIGA (a professional association for design) and spends her free time working with her partner in their shared studio, Yup Yup Design, teaching yoga, or volunteering with various community groups.


This visit is part of our Teen Program: Art in the Field!

We are offering five $1000 scholarships for teens with a high level of participation in the program. Scholarships may be used for tuition, travel, or other activities related to future goals.

For more information about the program or scholarships, please email education@aspenartmuseum.org.