Your Custom Text Here
Bio:
Arron Foster received his Bachelors of Fine Arts degree in Printmaking and Art Education from East Carolina University in Greenville, NC and his Masters of Fine Arts degree in Printmaking and Book Arts from the University of Georgia, Athens Georgia. He has exhibited both nationally and internationally. Arron currently resides in Kent, Ohio where he is an Assistant Professor, (NTT) In Print Media at Kent State University.
Statement:
As an artist, I am intrigued by the idea that the land is something that we can use to mark time against, and that through an intuitive approach to observing, studying and documenting specific locations we can be witness to change. Through my studio practice, I ask how our perception and experience of place is mediated by time, change and memory and how these elements play out and unfold across different scales as we attempt to make sense of change. By subsuming emergent trends and placing them alongside traditional tools and techniques, I provide myself the space to cross traditional boundaries and utilize new and different effects in my work. The multiple, in its many forms, echos our varying perception and memories of time and space while congruently creating new experiences and again transforming our memories across time.
See more of Arron’s work here.
Bio:
Arron Foster received his Bachelors of Fine Arts degree in Printmaking and Art Education from East Carolina University in Greenville, NC and his Masters of Fine Arts degree in Printmaking and Book Arts from the University of Georgia, Athens Georgia. He has exhibited both nationally and internationally. Arron currently resides in Kent, Ohio where he is an Assistant Professor, (NTT) In Print Media at Kent State University.
Statement:
As an artist, I am intrigued by the idea that the land is something that we can use to mark time against, and that through an intuitive approach to observing, studying and documenting specific locations we can be witness to change. Through my studio practice, I ask how our perception and experience of place is mediated by time, change and memory and how these elements play out and unfold across different scales as we attempt to make sense of change. By subsuming emergent trends and placing them alongside traditional tools and techniques, I provide myself the space to cross traditional boundaries and utilize new and different effects in my work. The multiple, in its many forms, echos our varying perception and memories of time and space while congruently creating new experiences and again transforming our memories across time.
See more of Arron’s work here.