New College Art Professor
Barry Freedland Earns SECAC Artist's Fellowship
Annual prize is awarded to a leading artist or
sculptor from the U.S.
(January
4, 2007) -- New College of Florida art professor Barry Freedland
recently was awarded the 2006 Southeastern College Art
Conference (SECAC) Artist’s Fellowship. The $3,000 prize is
awarded annually to an artist or sculptor from the U.S. who has
demonstrated creative excellence in his or her artwork and
exhibitions. In addition to the cash prize, Freedland will
have a solo exhibit at the 2007 SECAC conference to be held next
fall in Charleston, West Virginia, and will have an interview
published in an upcoming issue of The SECAC Review.
Freedland, who joined the New
College faculty in 2003, is an Assistant Professor of Art and a
sculptor who interfaces with computer technology to create
complex machine-oriented objects. His work was selected from a
pool of 76 applicants.
Since graduating with an M.F.A. in sculpture from the School of
the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts University in Boston,
Massachusetts, Freedland has exhibited in more than 25 group
shows. He also has exhibited throughout the United States in
national juried group and solo shows. His solo exhibitions have
been featured in the Sundaram Tagore Gallery in New York City,
at the Manatee Community College Gallery in Bradenton, Florida,
the Mobius Gallery in Boston, Massachusetts, and in the Anderson
Gallery at Bridgewater State University in Bridgewater,
Massachusetts. A second solo show is planned for the Sundaram
Tagore Gallery in 2007.
As one of the nation's leading organizations promoting the arts
in higher education, SECAC facilitates cooperation and fosters
on-going dialogue about pertinent creative, scholarly and
educational issues between teachers and administrators in
universities, colleges, community colleges, professional art
schools and museums. Although the organization represents the 12
states of Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina,
Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia, members are located
across the United States and abroad. SECAC's annual fall
conference, hosted by an institution of higher learning,
provides members with a forum for the exchange of ideas and
concerns relevant to the practice and study of art. The
organization also publishes a newsletter and a scholarly
journal, The SECAC Review.
Members
of the SECAC Artist’s Fellowship Committee who selected
Freedland for the current award were Pat Wasserboehr from the
University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Chair of the
Artist’s Fellowship Committee; Gregg Schlanger of Austin Peay
State University; Andrea Wheless of High Point University; and
Barbara Yontz of St. Thomas Aquinas College.