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Press Release: 01/14/09

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE/OPPORTUNITY FOR COVERAGE

TO: All News Directors

MEDIA CONTACT:
Cjala Surratt
P: 315.442.2943
F: 315.442.2972
E: casurrat@syr.edu
URL: www.communityfolkartcenter.org

COMMUNITY FOLK ART CENTER (CFAC)

CONTEMPORARY CRAFT MASTERS
Espi Frazier, Hermon Futrell, David MacDonald

Exhibition: January 17- March 7, 2009
Panel & Reception: Saturday, February 7, 2009
Time: 2:00pm - 4:00pm
Venue: Community Folk Art Center
Address: 805 East Genesee Street
Contact: 315-442-2230
Admission: FREE

Syracuse, NY – From January 17 to March 7, 2009, Community Folk Art Center (CFAC) will exhibit the work of three artists whose works were featured on HGTV’s Modern Masters: African American Artisans Program in 2003. Featured artists include, Espi Frazier, Hermon Futrell and David MacDonald. These artists are at the forefront of contemporary crafts and reflect the diverse and innovative palette of today’s artists.
Community Folk Art Center invites the public to a reception and panel discussion with the artists Saturday, February 7, 2009 from 2-4pm.The opening is free and we encourage the public to join the discussion about the artists’ work and issues relevant to contemporary art.

Espi Frazier
It is never a mere scratch, with each deliberate stroke Espi Frazier releases from her wooden canvas graceful female forms. Her mahogany figures reside amongst deftly carved undulating vines, flowers or roots. Each panel invites the viewer into a discourse about femininity, beauty and nature. Frazier reflecting on her work stated, “Every piece of art that I create expresses me wholly as an African-American woman. I wish to convey Black womanhood and family in its greater beauty, spirituality and raw essence.
Frazier holds an MFA from the Maryland College of Art and a BFA from the Art Institute of Chicago. She has exhibited her work widely in the east coast and Midwest, including exhibitions at the Washington Project for the Arts in Washington, DC and at the Smithsonian Anacostia Museum in Washington, DC.

Frazier currently teaches art at the Friends Middle School in Baltimore Maryland.

Hermon Futrell coaxes spare willow limbs into organic furniture pieces that reveal a hint of the artist’s early architectural training. Each Adirondack rustic throne announces its presence in the space with brightly painted surfaces of green, red or yellow. Those left bare without the added veneer draw the viewer in to observe the craftsmanship. All of the furniture joints are resolved to their purpose and scoff at the need for screw, nail or hammer. Though skillfully and masterfully crafted, the pieces are offered without pomp, any chair could comfortably return to the artist’s Upstate woodland muse without issue. It is the natural, simple and functional that are most earnestly celebrated in these works.
Futrell immersed himself in architectural, and industrial design studies in his formative years, studying at City College in New York, New York and Society of Arts and Crafts in Detroit, Michigan. His painting, sculptures and art furniture are represented in private and corporate collections throughout the United States.

Professor David MacDonald is one of this country’s most highly regarded African American ceramic artists. MacDonald creates a wide variety of work including vessels for daily use and one-of-a-kind pieces for exhibition. His earth-tone vessels bear rhythmic valleys, which pay homage to the surface decorations that are found in the many cultural groups of sub-Saharan Africa.
 
MacDonald received his MFA from the University of Michigan and his BS from Virginia’s Hampton Institute. MacDonald was recently named professor emeritus after teaching studio arts for nearly four decades in the College of Visual and Performing Arts at Syracuse University.  He is a founder and board member of the Community Folk Art Center. His work is represented in many private and public collections throughout the United States.

The Community Folk Art Center is a unit of the African American Studies Department in the College of Arts and Sciences at Syracuse University. CFAC is a vibrant cultural and artistic hub committed to the promotion and development of artists of the African Diaspora. The mission of the center is to exalt cultural and artistic pluralism by collecting, exhibiting, teaching and interpreting the visual & expressive arts.

The Community Folk Art Center is sponsored, in part, by the New York State Council on the Arts, the Cultural Resources Council, The Coalition of Museums & Art Centers at Syracuse University and The Office of the Chancellor at Syracuse University. Our media sponsors are CNY Latino, Urban CNY and WAER 88.3. The Genesee Grande and Park View Hotels are the official accommodations for guests of the Community Folk Art Center.