Appalachian Center for Craft - Exhibitions
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Exhibitions

The Appalachian Center for Craft hosts multiple exhibitions annually featuring functional and sculptural works of traditional and contemporary fine craft and mixed media by international, national and regional artists including artists from the Appalachian Center for Craft.

  • Our Gallery Spaces

    Dogwood Gallery

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    Lakeview Gallery

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    Joe L. Evins Gallery

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  • Exhibitions Schedule for 2025

    Kimberly English, Where The Line Falls Slack, fiber

    September 1 – November 15, 2025, Joe L. Evins Gallery

    Expanding upon her undergraduate textiles education from Savannah College of Art and Design, Kimberly English (b. 1994) earned her MFA from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill as a Carolina Digital Humanities Fellow in 2018. Kimberly has been awarded residencies at McColl Center, Woodstock Byrdcliffe Artist Colony, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs, Penland School of Craft, Berea College, and The Gibbes Museum.

    Line Falls Slack Poster


    Tim Spurchise, On Monsters, glass

    September 24 – November 17, 2025, Lakeview Gallery

    Tim Spurchise, originally from Syracuse, New York, is a career glass artist focusing in hot glass sculpting. Tim’s glass work has been shown both nationally across the United States, and abroad in Germany, Bulgaria, Sweden, and China. He received first place for the exhibit in Sweden, and received an excellence work award for the exhibit in China. Tim’s current solo exhibition at the Appalachian Center for Craft in Tennessee  features a new series of sculptural glass monsters.

    Tim Spurchise show poster


    Laura Post, Lari Gibbons & Kate Lynn Aitchison, Fiber Under Pressure, printmaking

    September 25 – December 2, 2025, Dogwood Gallery

    Laura Post earned an MFA from Rhode Island School of Design in Printmaking and a B.A. from Swarthmore College in Studio Art and Asian Studies. She is currently Assistant Professor of Printmaking at University of Dallas. Her work is rooted in the traditional craft of printmaking and papermaking, yet expands the definition of print to include life casts and paper molds, along with traditional woodblocks and engraved plates. The work focuses on familial relationships or those that shape the community around her. Through workshops and events, she collaborates with the Fort Worth Botanic Garden, the Fort Worth Public Library, and the community to remove and process invasive plants which are used to create large-scale pulp paintings and prints.

    Lari Gibbons explores new and traditional approaches to printmaking through inno- vative projects. She is a professor at the University of North Texas, where she teaches printmaking and served as a collaborative printer for renowned artists. Her work has been published in numerous books, including Bill Fick and Beth Grabowski’s Printmaking: A Complete Guide to Materials and Processes, Lynne Allen and Phyllis McGibbons’ The Best of Printmaking: An International Collection, and Stephanie Standish’s Contemporary American Printmakers. She has participated in residencies at Mokuhanga Innovation Lab (Japan), Banff Center (Canada), Penland School of Craft (North Carolina), and Morgan Conservatory (Ohio), among others.

    Kate Aitchison is an artist steeped deeply in the landscape of the desert southwest. She expresses her vision through papermaking and printmaking. Each step of the multi-faceted process mirrors the complicated relationship of human beings with their landscapes–water, drying, pressure, erasure, movement. Beginning with the handmade paper substrates themselves, she harvests fiber from invasive plant species along with recycled textiles. Formed into sheets of multicolored paper, they are imbued with place-based specificity. The paper represents the physical act of cleaning up harmful plants and textile waste that negatively affect biodiversity and landscape resiliency. Within the paper she embeds stencils from previous prints along with other memorabilia to add physical interventions within each sheet, creating representations of how humans mark the landscape.

     

    Fiber under pressure work poster


    Graduating Thesis Exhibitions, various artists

                November 20 – December 9, 2025


    Kevin Vanek, Memento Mori: The American Way

    December 8, 2025 – February 4, 2026, Dogwood Gallery

    Exhibition poster


    Millian Giang Pham, Subtle Vision

    December 12, 2025 – February 15, 2026, Lakeview Gallery

     After trampling in the muddy rice fields of rural Vietnam then learning to readproduct labels in supermarket aisles in the United States, Millian Pham receivedher BFA in painting and printmaking from the University of Tulsa in Oklahoma. She further disappointed her family by doubling-down on her passion with anMFA in sculpture from the University of Florida. Pham uses her art practice to dismantle social and cultural expectations through the mediums of painting, printmaking, sculpture, performance, and installation. Her visual research hasbeen exhibited nationally and internationally in Canada, Pakistan, Korea, and across the United States. Pham was an artist-in-resident for the I-Park Artist Enclave, the Hambidge Art Center, ACRE, Santa Fe Art Institute, Virginia Center for Creative Arts, Connect International Residency, and Pollinator Coop. She iscurrently the Studio Art Foundations Coordinator and Assistant Professor of Art at Auburn University in Alabama, where she keeps her studio practice.

    Exhibition poster


    Jeff Repko, Echoes of Industry

    December 13, 2025 – February 16, 2026, Joe L. Evins Gallery

    Exhibition Poster

Artists featured in the Appalachian Center for Craft's exhibition program are selected through a jurying process during an annual call for proposals.  

 

 

 

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