Join us for DONUT TALKS, a series featuring artists from our Fellowship and Artist-In-Residence programs during their studio residencies. DONUT TALKS are free of charge and open to the public. And donuts will be served!
September’s DONUT TALK features 2014-2015 Fellowship artist Richelle Gribble. Richelle Gribble creates mixed media paintings and collages, prints, interactive installations, videos, drawings, computer games and sculptures. Her artwork is inspired by concepts of virality, biology, networks, group dynamics, and social trends that connect us all. For her DONUT TALK, Richelle will provide a glimpse into the work she has been completing at Kala through a casual artist talk followed by donuts and conversation.
Richelle Gribble earned a BFA in Studio Arts from the Roski School of Art and Design with dual minors in Social Entrepreneurship and Marketing at the University of Southern California, in 2013. She is a recipient of the Kala Fellowship Award and the USC Discovery Scholar Prize. Her work was included in numerous solo and group exhibitions such as the International Print Center New York Gallery, New York, NY; Christie’s New York Salesroom at Rockefeller Center, New York, NY; Jonathan Ferarra Gallery, New Orleans, LA; Helen Lindhurst Gallery, Los Angeles, CA; Con Artist Gallery, New York, NY; ARTery Gallery, Costa Mesa, CA; The Gallery Project, Ann Arbor, MI; Artlink Contemporary Gallery, Fort Wayne, IN; Fisher Museum of Fine Arts, Los Angeles, CA; and many other public and private spaces. She was thrilled to receive a commission to create an artwork celebrating our humanity, which flew to outer space and back aboard Blue Origin’s New Shepard’s space system. She is represented in several collections including that of Ilene & Stanley Gold and American composer Morten Lauridsen. Her current research and art projects are presented in a TEDxTrousdale talk “What is our Role within a Networked Society?” which examines the ways that interconnectivity transforms communities and contributes to our happiness.
Join us for DONUT TALKS, a series featuring artists from our Fellowship and Artist-In-Residence programs during their studio residencies. DONUT TALKS are free of charge and open to the public. And donuts will be served!
September’s DONUT TALK features 2014-2015 Fellowship artist Richelle Gribble. Richelle Gribble creates mixed media paintings and collages, prints, interactive installations, videos, drawings, computer games and sculptures. Her artwork is inspired by concepts of virality, biology, networks, group dynamics, and social trends that connect us all. For her DONUT TALK, Richelle will provide a glimpse into the work she has been completing at Kala through a casual artist talk followed by donuts and conversation.
Richelle Gribble earned a BFA in Studio Arts from the Roski School of Art and Design with dual minors in Social Entrepreneurship and Marketing at the University of Southern California, in 2013. She is a recipient of the Kala Fellowship Award and the USC Discovery Scholar Prize. Her work was included in numerous solo and group exhibitions such as the International Print Center New York Gallery, New York, NY; Christie’s New York Salesroom at Rockefeller Center, New York, NY; Jonathan Ferarra Gallery, New Orleans, LA; Helen Lindhurst Gallery, Los Angeles, CA; Con Artist Gallery, New York, NY; ARTery Gallery, Costa Mesa, CA; The Gallery Project, Ann Arbor, MI; Artlink Contemporary Gallery, Fort Wayne, IN; Fisher Museum of Fine Arts, Los Angeles, CA; and many other public and private spaces. She was thrilled to receive a commission to create an artwork celebrating our humanity, which flew to outer space and back aboard Blue Origin’s New Shepard’s space system. She is represented in several collections including that of Ilene & Stanley Gold and American composer Morten Lauridsen. Her current research and art projects are presented in a TEDxTrousdale talk “What is our Role within a Networked Society?” which examines the ways that interconnectivity transforms communities and contributes to our happiness.
read more
show less