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Tuesday, March 31, 2026 |
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| Speed Art Museum names the next two artists for the Sam Gilliam Visiting Artist Program |
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Brandon Ndife, installation view, Clearance, Greene Naftali, New York, 2024.
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LOUISVILLE, KY.- The Speed Art Museum announced today the selection of acclaimed photographer Deana Lawson (b. 1979) and Louisville-raised sculptor Brandon Ndife (b. 1991) as the second artist cohort for the Sam Gilliam Visiting Artist Program (SGVAP). Established in 2024 in collaboration with the Sam Gilliam Foundation, SGVAP honors the profound impact that Gilliams formative years in Louisville had on his groundbreaking career by bringing two leading artists to the city each year to create new work shaped by its communities, histories, and evolving cultural landscape. Lawson and Ndife will conduct research, engage local community members, and develop new work, which will be presented through a series of exhibitions and public programs at the Speed.
Deana Lawson and Brandon Ndifes engagement with place, lived experience, and community through their work makes them an ideal selection for this years Sam Gilliam Visiting Artist Program residency at the Speed Museum, said Annie Gawlak, Founder and President of the Sam Gilliam Foundation. Their practices align with the programs goal to foster artistic exchange with the history, culture, and people of Louisvillea place that was deeply impactful in shaping Sams career and the experimentation and innovation that defined it. We are excited to bear witness to their development of new work through this residency and to see how it advances both their own creative practices as well as Louisvilles arts ecosystem.
Led by Sam Gilliam Assistant Curator of Artist Programs Diallo Simon-Ponte and supervised by Tyler Blackwell, curator of contemporary art at the Speed, the program enables visiting artists to engage Louisville and the broader Southern cultural landscape as catalysts for intellectual and spiritual exploration. By seeding dynamic dialogues between these artists and local communities, the residency advances each artists practice while contributing to the vitality of the citys creative ecosystem. Central to the program is an expanded understanding of artistic practice to encompass painters, sculptors, and photographers as well as writers, archivists, librarians, community activists, and farmers, all of whose work shape the social life of the region. Through its interdisciplinary framework, SGVAP positions artistic production as a site of collective knowledge-building and civic engagement.
Brandon Ndife and Deana Lawson represent two of the most unique and compelling voices in contemporary art today, said Blackwell. Each artist brings a distinct yet resonant approach to questions of place, embodiment, and the construction of lived experience. Through their time in Louisville, we look forward to the ways their practices will engage the city as both site and subjectcontinuing to expand the programs vision of sustained, reciprocal exchange.
"My practice has been shaped through a porous relationship to placemoving between geographies, communities, and modes of seeing, said Lawson. Each location brings its own visual language, its own psychic and social conditions, which then become embedded within the work. I am interested in how Louisvilles histories and lived realities might enter that continuum, expanding the ways I think about image-making, intimacy, and the construction of presence.
I grew up in Louisville craving contemporary art outlets, and I worked at the Speed in high school, so it is exciting to come back and engage a younger, wider, and more diverse audience with my work, which centers around physical displacements and the future of lived environments, said Ndife. Louisville is a city of many parts, and its landscape varies in access, promise, and development. I am very excited and honored to integrate lived experience and engage the community with my work through the Sam Gilliam Visiting Artist Program.
By inviting artists to work in dialogue with Louisvilles layered histories and contemporary realities, the Sam Gilliam Visiting Artist Program models an approach to artistic exchange that is both locally rooted and nationally resonant, continuing Sam Gilliams legacy of innovation, experimentation, and engagement with place. Following its inaugural year with vanessa german and Eric N. Mack, the program enters its second year with a focus on artists whose practices move between local specificity and global discourse.
Year two of the Sam Gilliam Visiting Artist Program will build on the dialogue developed and deepen the exchange between the program and Louisville residents, said Simon-Ponte, the Sam Gilliam assistant curator of artist programs. Brandon and Deana each bring practices that are profoundly attentive to the social and political context in which we live and offer rigorous reflections on how these conditions shape the way we exist. We are excited to welcome them into sustained conversation with Louisville, and to support the ways their work will embed itself in the citys histories, communities, and futures.
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