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    An Artistic Education

    Kiki Smith takes a vacation from her life to share her artistic talents with UNT

    Kendall Morgan
    kendall Morgan
    Jan 28, 2014 | 8:27 am

    Sculptor, draftsman and printmaker Kiki Smith is in a league of her own. Her woven tapestries, large-scale drawings, and bronze and aluminum figures have been the focus of full-scale museum surveys at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Walker Art Center and the Whitney Museum of American Art. She is one of the most influential artists of her generation.

    This school year, University of North Texas students have a rare opportunity to work alongside Smith in her role as the school’s Institute for the Advancement of the Arts 2013-2014 artist-in-residence. She is the fourth guest creative in this ongoing series, following performance artist Nick Cave, Oscar-nominated screenwriter and director Guillermo Arriaga, and composer Jake Heggie.

    “She’s just captivating, and she’s generous about sharing her inspiration and ideas.” — UNT Galleries director Tracee Robertson on artist Kiki Smith

    Smith’s participation in the program came through her appearance as a speaker in the Nasher Lecture Series last spring.

    “When Kiki was the Nasher lecturer, she also gave a lecture at UNT in our main art building on campus, which has a three-story atrium in the center,” says Tracee Robertson, the director of UNT Galleries. “There were people surrounding the atrium on every floor, and they were hanging on her every word.

    “She’s just captivating, and she’s generous about sharing her inspiration and ideas.”

    “For me, it’s like a vacation from my life,” says Smith of her participation in the program. “I like working with students because they come from a very different world than I do.

    “I’m 60, and they’re on the forefront of modern life. I think it’s good for them to see what it is to be a practicing artist or one version of what it is to be a practicing artist.”

    Flying back and forth from New York to conduct a series of lectures, Smith is spending the rest of her time at UNT creating two limited edition series of works in collaboration with the Print Research Institute of North Texas. P.R.I.N.T. Press director Lari Gibbons says the process of realizing Smith’s vision has been fulfilling for both the organization’s guest master printer, Catherine Chauvin, and the participating students.

    “One of the things that impresses me about how she works is how flexible she is,” Gibbons says. “She’s so broadly responsive to materials and ideas, and it’s remarkable how she can take a small idea and enlarge on it and then change course if it’s not working.

    “That rather nimble quality of being involved in your work but looking at it objectively is such a positive role model for students.”

    The two series of prints — some of which may eventually be sold to fund future visiting artist programs — are still in progress. But Smith showcases tapestries she adapted from original drawings in “Kiki Smith: Transformations,” opening January 29 at UNT on the Square.

    The artist says this “transformation” from one medium to another is a link between the older pieces in the exhibit and the current work she is crafting with the help of UNT’s artistic community.

    “It’s a rich way of working that I got essentially from my father [sculptor Tony Smith] — how one can use the same form and it could change radically as it moved one medium to another,” Smith says. “What I like about printmaking is you make a mark and react to that, and each time you make a proof you change it.

    “You get a sense of making spontaneous decision-making and reflection.”

    ---

    “Kiki Smith: Transformations” runs through February 27 at UNT on the Square. The Contemporary Art Dealers Association of Dallas (CADD) bus tour, which explores the exhibition, is January 29 at 2 pm. There is also an artist talk January 29 at 7 pm at UNT on the Square. Official opening reception is January 30, 7-9 pm.

    Kiki Smith is the Institute for the Advancement of the Arts 2013-2014 Artist in Residence at UNT.

    Kiki Smith
    Photo courtesy of Kiki Smith
    Kiki Smith is the Institute for the Advancement of the Arts 2013-2014 Artist in Residence at UNT.
    unspecified
    news/arts

    History on Display

    Landmark Nelson Mandela exhibition to kick off in Dallas during World Cup

    Alex Bentley
    Jan 7, 2026 | 1:09 pm
    Mandela: The Official Exhibition
    Photo courtesy of Lawrence Jenkins
    Mandela: The Official Exhibition will open at The African American Museum, Dallas on June 13.

    The African American Museum in Dallas will capitalize on an expected influx of global tourists by hosting Mandela: The Official Exhibition, opening on June 13 to coincide with the start of the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

    The exhibition will offer an attraction in Fair Park, which will also host a Fan Festival for the World Cup.

    The World Cup will take place June 11-July 19 in locations throughout North America. Nine World Cup games will be played at AT&T Stadium in Arlington between June 14 and July 14.

    Making its debut in Texas, Mandela: The Official Exhibition explores the life of late South African president Nelson Mandela, one of the world’s most recognizable champions of freedom and justice.

    Mandela also had strong ties to soccer, embracing the sport as a tool for unity and hope in post-apartheid South Africa. From organizing matches while imprisoned to championing the 2010 FIFA World Cup, Mandela demonstrated how soccer could bridge deep divisions.

    His appearance at the tournament’s closing match, when he donned South Africa’s national team jersey, became an enduring symbol of sport’s power to unite a nation and inspire the world. Mandela died in December 2013.

    “Nelson Mandela devoted his life to justice and to the fight against apartheid, enduring 27 years in prison before becoming South Africa’s first democratically elected president,” said Lisa Brown Ross, president and CEO of the African American Museum, Dallas, in a statement. “This exhibition tells the full arc of his life and affirms the Museum’s role as a vital cultural destination for North Texas and for visitors from around the world.”

    According to the release, the exhibition will span all four galleries and unfold through multisensory experiences, tracing Mandela’s extraordinary journey from his rural childhood in the Eastern Cape to his decades of resistance against apartheid and his election as South Africa’s first democratically elected president.

    His journey to becoming the “Father of South Africa” and a globally revered figure is presented in personal and revealing ways. Through his own reflections and stories shared by his family and those who knew him best, visitors will see Mandela - respectfully called Madiba - in a new light. Madiba is his Thembu clan name and is used as a sign of respect and affection.

    One gallery will be transformed into a fully immersive, multimedia environment that places visitors within defining chapters of Mandela’s life. Guests will encounter rarely seen films, photographs and personal artifacts on loan from the Mandela family, as well as museums and archives worldwide, illuminating the people, places and pivotal experiences that shaped one of the 20th century’s most remarkable leaders.

    The exhibition will remain on display through November 1. Admission to the museum is free, and it is open Tuesdays through Fridays from 11 am-5 pm and Saturdays from 10 am-5 pm, with special summer hours to be announced. Free self-parking is available in nearby lots.

    exhibitions-visual-artsgallerieshistorymuseumsnelson mandelasoccersportsworld cup
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