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September 23, 2005
LIVINGSTON, Ala.—The opening reception of the
University of West Alabama art exhibition “Kindred
Spirits: Thirty Years of Friendship, Thirty Years of
Art,” which showcases the works of Alabama artists
Tut Altman Riddick and Charles Smith, drew a large
crowd of faculty, staff, students and area
residents. The reception on Sept. 15 allowed guests
to meet the artists and hear stories about their
works.
Riddick, a York, Ala. native and founder of the
The Coleman Center for Arts and Culture, expressed
her gratitude for the reception: “To have all those
wonderful students sitting and studying my ideas and
listening to Charles tell of his love of clay was a
dream come true.”
The exhibit features paintings, photographs, and
multimedia work by Riddick and many examples of
Smith’s pottery. In addition, several pots completed
through collaboration by both artists made the trip
from the pair’s hometown, Mobile. These special
pieces reflect the artists’ friendship.
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Grenada by Tut Altman Riddick |
Riddick said she knew Smith was “her soul mate
off the bat.” The two are now working together to
complete 100 pots, hand-thrown by Smith and
featuring Riddick’s poetry carved on the sides.
Another piece of special interest, a Riddick
painting titled “Grenada,” portrays young
African-American children’s faces following a
Mississippi bombing in the 1960s. The painting won a
prize from the Mobile Museum of Art and hung in a
coffeehouse in a predominantly Black area during
integration.
“When Blacks saw it in the paper or in the
coffeehouse, they realized they had a champion in
the arts,” Riddick said. “The work is special to me
because it represented the stand I took.”
The “Kindred Spirits” exhibit in the Webb Hall
parlor will remain open until Dec. 16. For more
information about the exhibit, contact Dr. Neil
Snider at 205-652-3614 or nsnider@uwa.edu.
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