Open Studio with Artist-in-Residence Holly Wilson
Get an inside look at the work of a studio artist!
Join us Friday, April 29, for a laid-back open studio session with multi-media artist Holly Wilson. Currently an artist-in-residence at the Momentary (March 28 – April 30), Wilson is working on a new sculpture exploring and addressing the intersections of how colonialism has affected Indigenous land in the Ozarks.
Stop by and see for yourself how Wilson transforms personal moments into sculptural storytellers, meet the person behind the art, and learn more about her work and residency. See you there!
Free, no tickets required. Drop in anytime from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Multi-media artist Holly Wilson creates figures that serve as her storytellers to the world, conveying stories of the sacred and the precious, capturing moments of our day, vulnerabilities, and strengths. The stories are, at one time, both representations of family history as well as personal experiences. Wilson’s work reaches a broad audience allowing the viewer the opportunity to see their personal connection. Wilson works in various media, including bronzes, paint, encaustic, photography, glass, and clay.
She has been exhibiting her intimate bronzes, photography, and encaustic relief paintings nationally and internationally since the early 1990s. Additionally, her works are in corporate, public, and museum collections throughout the United States, as well as national and international private collections such as; The Heritage in Oklahoma City, The Central Library in downtown Tulsa Oklahoma, Virginia Museum of Fine Art, the C.N. Gorman Museum, The Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art, The Heritage Center at Red Cloud Indian School, and the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art.
Wilson has received recognition for her artwork through her inclusion in important exhibitions, most recently, “Art for a New Understanding: Native Voices, 1950s to Now” that opened at Crystal Bridges Museum of Art, then traveled. Wilson’s work has also been included in “Hear My Voice: Native American Art of the Past and Present,” a traveling exhibition from the Virginia Museum of Fine Art in Richmond, Virginia. She was chosen to represent Oklahoma in the Museum Exhibition “Four by Four 2016: Midwest Invitational” at the Springfield Art Museum in Springfield, Missouri, and “Expressions of Spirit” at the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian. Wilson has received many awards, grants, and fellowships for her evocative sculptures, including a 2017 SWAIA Discovery Fellowship from the Santa Fe Indian Market and a 2015 Eiteljorg Fellowship from the Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art. Currently, Wilson has a solo exhibition “Bloodline” at Bonner David Galleries, 22 E. 81 ST New York City, New York 10028 from Jan 27 – Feb 26, 2022.
Holly Wilson of Delaware Nation and Cherokee Nation is now based in Mustang, Oklahoma. In in 2001, she graduated with an MFA in sculpture, and in 1994, she earned an MA in ceramics both from Stephen F. Austin State University, Nacogdoches, Texas; she received her Teaching Certification in K-12 Art from Cameron University in Lawton, Oklahoma, in 1993; and in 1992 she finished her BFA in ceramics at the Kansas City Art Institute.