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GALLERY ONE

Benson, The Two Witnesses
Aaron
Lee Benson
It's About to Kill Me
September
12 – November 6, 2009
In his latest body of work, sculptor Aaron Lee Benson has returned to
an exploration of the aesthetic power of pure form. Benson’s new
works are reminiscent of much of his work from the late 1980s into the
early 90s. He is relying on a highly textured, organic sense of form,
with origins found in nature. His travels across the United States in
the late 70s (in a beat up VW van), and three other visits in the last
five years, have re-awakened in him a new devotion to the towering landscape
formations found in the deserts and higher elevations of Utah, Arizona,
and New Mexico. Benson and his family are avid hikers and climbers and
spend many weeks each summer camping and packing all around the world.
Month-long backpacking trips to many of the mountainous regions of the
world, including the upper midwest of the U.S. and the Alps of western
and central Europe, have also influenced his new work. Benson’s
new forms have combined with his ongoing interest in the human figure
to create new works with rich, striking surface texture.
Benson is a Professor of Fine Arts in Sculpture and Chairman of the Art
Department at Union University in Jackson, TN. Benson received his BFA
in Ceramics, BS in Art Education, and his MFA in Ceramics/Sculpture from
the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN. Benson’s work has been
exhibited throughout the US, including at the Joan Derryberry Gallery,
Cookeville, TN; Sculpture Invitational, San Antonio, TX; Skokie Northshore
Sculpture Park, Chicago IL; and Sarratt Gallery, Vanderbilt University,
Nashville, TN. Benson’s work is part of numerous collections including
the Alabama Institute for Deaf And Blind, Talladega, AL; Company Zero
Graphics, Columbia, TN; and the Jackson/Madison County Public Art Commission,
Jackson, TN. In 2008, Benson received the Best in Show award at Sculpture
Key West, FL. His latest sculpture commission is Our Peace, Follow
the Drinking Gourd, a one-acre earth work at The Hermitage, Home
of President Andrew Jackson, Nashville TN.
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