An award-winning artist will return to Fort Smith to show her work at the university she graduated from more than 20 years ago.
The reception for Arlene Wilsonâs art exhibit, titled âMono Ki: The Kimono as Language,â will take place from 5-6 p.m. Jan. 21 in the hallway of the Smith-Pendergraft Campus Center.
The exhibit, which will run through February and is sponsored by the Chancellorâs Coalition for the Visual Arts, features one of the art departmentâs most accomplished graduates. Don Lee of Fort Smith, head of the art department, said Wilson is âone of our art stars.â
âHer passion, organization, acumen and an accomplished portfolio resulted in her acceptance to the Rhode Island School of Design, the premier art school in the country,â he said. âShe could have been in any art school anywhere and flourished. Sheâs brilliant.â
Wilson, who graduated from Westark College in 1988 after studying painting and printmaking, has worked in a variety of artistic mediums over her 20-plus years as an artist. Her exhibit at UAFS will feature her work with fine art textiles.
Wilson said the show is âa visual response to the country and people of Japan, consisting of a series of handmade kimonos.â
âEach one is a tableau of my experiences in a country whose culture and people I enjoy and admire,â she said. âThese kimonos inspired âAW Art to Wearâ and âCrinkle Couture,â my line of shiboried clothing which I sold in Providence, Boston, New York and beyond.â
Wilson said she has created 12 kimonos but does not know how many will be shown at the exhibit.
âSome of them took months to construct while others took weeks, but the accumulated thoughts -- from many visits to Japan, my Japanese friends and the collection of fabrics -- took years.â
With numerous awards won and over 50 combined solo and group exhibitions to date, Wilson has enjoyed an enormously successful career as an artist, a career which she credits UAFS for helping forge.
âMy years of training in all aspects of painting, drawing and print-making at Westark with Don Lee and Pete Howard gave me a firm foundation for what followed: a career in fine art textiles,â she said. âIt will be exciting to return with what I feel is my best work in the medium to date.â
For more information about the exhibit, contact the Campus and Community Events office at 479-788-7300.