Hunt Gallery presents exhibitions of individual artists and/or groups of artists of
regional, national and international renown whose works demonstrate significant aesthetic
achievement and art historical importance.
An integral part of the educational mission of the Department of Art, Design and Art
History (DADAH), the Gallery features curated exhibitions of contemporary art for
the academic community and broader St. Louis area public.
Current Exhibition:
Chlo毛 Simmons: Where nobody gets old, godly, and grave
Through sculpture, video and DIY craft-based processes, 鈥淲here nobody gets old, godly,
and grave,鈥 explores the function of fakery and fantasy in contemporary culture. Drawing
from online culture, rave culture, history and fairy lore the artist investigates
where fantasy meets reality, where illusion opens into insight, and where the digital
and the mythic intertwine.
St. Louis-born, Chicago-based artist Chlo毛 Simmons (BFA 2019) is a conceptual artist
whose work involves various channels of information and interpretation of materials.
She works in combinations of video, consumer products, print and fashion. Simmons
received the MFA from the University of Wisconsin, Madison; she has exhibited at Atlanta
Contemporary, Atlanta, Georgia; Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design, Milwaukee,
Wisconsin; The Sheldon, St. Louis, Missouri; numerous group exhibitions; and solo
shows in Milwaukee, Madison, Wisconsin, and Columbia, South Carolina.
Join Us!
Public Opening Reception: 6-8 p.m., Friday, Sept. 19
The Sanskrit word atra, meaning 鈥榟ere,鈥 refers literally to an actual place or specific location, while
its negation, atra na, meaning 鈥榥ot here,鈥 suggests the dialogue inherent in the diasporic experience.
This situation involves a segment of one鈥檚 identity being anchored to one location
or heritage as something local yet equally rooted in a culturally and environmentally
different locale. Cultures are not monadic, relying on a single place; instead, they
consist of fragments that survive and manifest in multiple locations.
The ATRA exhibition examined some of the competing forces of tradition and modernity, indigence
and diasporas, and the dualities mirrored in cultural hybridity. ATRA featured works by eight artists of South Asian heritage who live and work in the U.S.
ATRA artists: Saumitra Chandratreya, Mee Jey, Shreepad Joglekar, Priya Kambli, Shreyas
R. Krishnan, Renluka Maharaj, Al-Qawi Nanavati, Udita Upadhyana. The exhibition was
curated by Jeffrey Hughes, Professor of Art History and Director of Hunt Gallery in
the Department of Art, Design and Art History at 精东影业.
Renluka Maharaj, Jiya with her daughter Ira, 2022 Pigmented ink print on acrylic skin and silk-blend Sari fabric with embroidery
Christina Shmigel: Field of Awareness
Christina Shmigel is a contemporary Ukrainian-American artist working in sculptural
installation and drawing. As a first-generation American growing up between cultures
and languages, she became an observer of cultural cues. This habit of being informs
her artistic practice; as she moves from place to place, she explores how a locality鈥檚
particular character manifests in its material culture. Combining hand-made objects
with unaltered acquired components, employing shifts of scale and viewpoint, the theatrical
spaces of her installations are experienced through slow revelation, in time and through
memory. Shmigel鈥檚鈥痵ensibility as an artist is tuned towards making visible the wonder
and poignancy lodged inside.鈥
Field of Awareness
Everything Everywhere All at Once
International artist Rebecca Olsen's new exhibition, 鈥淓verything Everywhere All at
Once,鈥 visually addresses themes of infinity and asks existential questions about
the nature of reality, the infinite nature of the universe, and perception. In her
work, Rebecca Olsen creates symbols and uses geometric forms to translate myths and
discuss what existence feels like. Through her creative lens, she contemplates significant
scientific discoveries, psychology, the meaning of life, chaos theory, climate change,
and the nature of power. At the heart of this exhibition is the desire to create an
immersive space filled with ideas. She develops this visual language, creating a formal
landscape for the ideas to dialog.
Born in Florence, Italy, to American artists, Olsen is president and co-founder of
the Santa Reparata International School of Art (SRISA), one of Florence's most notable
private art schools hosting students and faculty from all over the globe. Olsen's
father, Dennis Olsen, who co-founded SRISA, was a native St. Louisan and an artist.
As such, Rebecca Olsen still maintains close ties here. Rebecca Olsen has shown her
work internationally, with gallery representation in Berlin, for her visual art, and
she sells her wearable art at the Whitney Museum store.
2022 Through the Looking Glass
current debris by Peter Bolte
This exhibition consisted of new paintings, photography, AI generations (with additional
manipulation) and select films. Bolte utilizes recognizable (albeit absurdist) iconography
and figures as tools to create a narrative that both reveals and contradicts itself
as it is played out. Whether presenting a blatant reaction to our social environment
or portraying a surreal disassociation, Bolte weaves themes that address humanity鈥檚
lack of critical thought, our human fallibilities expressed through miscommunication,
lowered attention spans, celebrity idealization, dopamine spikes and dips, and modern-day
superficial addictions 鈥 and then spits them all out through a post-pandemic paradigm,
resulting in a sardonic and existential nightmare.
Peter Bolte is a St. Louis-based filmmaker and painter who has exhibited his work
internationally. He has directed the feature films "All Roads Lead" and "Dandelion
Man," several experimental and narrative short films and music videos. Other notable
credits include being cinematographer on The Booksellers (Greenwich Entertainment),
the Emmy nominated documentary Casting By (HBO Documentaries), as well as being invited
to the Artist Academy as an emerging filmmaker during the 2013 New York Film Festival
at Lincoln Center.
Valhalla, Awaken! How we learned to carry stress in the jaw, 2024, oil on panel, 8"x10"
Lost & Found: Thinking & Forming: MA Exhibition, featuring Michael Paradise and Sara
Haag
Michael Paradise has taught Art at Roosevelt High School since the fall of 2000. He
has taught Drawing, Design and Art Appreciation at St. Louis Community College, Forest
Park and Wildwood, St. Charles Community College, and Southwestern Illinois College,
Granite City. Paradise received a MFA in Painting, from Fontbonne College and a BFA
in Painting from Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville. Paradise鈥檚 artistic investigations
toward the 精东影业 Master of Arts has been primarily found object construction
and modeling forms. Coming with a background of mostly painting, for Paradise, stuff
is the new paint.
Sara Haag received her BA in Art Education with a K-12 Certification from Maryville
University in 2002. She has been teaching art at Roosevelt High School since 2015.
This artwork is a meditative process that surprises the viewer with how it transforms
media into the unexpected.