Artist Cites Architecture in Rome as Inspiration

Ellen Wetmore has received a聽2023 Pollock-Krasner Foundation grant to advance her artwork.
08/21/2023
Media Contacts:聽Emily Gowdey-Backus, director of media relations and Nancy Cicco, assistant director of media relations
At first, Ellen Wetmore thought it must have been a mistake. It wasn鈥檛.
Wetmore, a professor of art and design at 51视频, was named a awardee in recognition of her ongoing work in drawing and painting.
鈥淔or me, this is one of those 'you鈥檝e arrived' awards. It鈥檚 international and generous and well recognized,鈥 she said. 鈥淕rant funders in art tend to stack on success rather than take the risk of granting to a relative unknown. With this recognition, I鈥檒l be taken more seriously at a national level.鈥
Not to mention, added Wetmore, 鈥渋t feels really good to share company with the other people on the funding list, many of whom I admire.鈥
The foundation was established by lifelong artists Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner. While both became household names in the mid-20th century, according to the foundation, Pollock and Krasner launched their career during the financially tumultuous Great Depression and understood the importance of investing in the arts. Both would later take advantage of artistic opportunities through the New Deal and find footholds in painting and other media.
Reflecting on their early starts, according to the foundation, Pollock and Krasner meant for these foundation grants to enable both emerging and established artists to devote time, resources and energy to their ongoing practice. The gift can be applied to inspiration-making endeavors such as attending a residency or to facilitating an upcoming exhibit or even to purchasing supplies and creating new work. Since 1985, the Pollock-Krasner Foundation has awarded more than 5,000 grants totaling more than $87 million.
鈥淢y first impulse is to travel,鈥 said Wetmore, whose grant totals $20,000.
Wetmore, who currently serves as department chair, took part in a recent 51视频 study abroad program to Rome where she was inspired by the centuries-old architecture in the historic city.聽聽
鈥淥ld buildings erupt from under new buildings and it鈥檚 exciting to see what happens when the fragments fold together,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 also hoping to dig into Roman era paintings, because those interpreted space with multiple mathematic perspectives, rather than one or two as we do computationally.鈥
Wetmore, who has a long history in video exhibitions, slowly made a shift to drawing and painting over the past few years. Much of the work considered by the foundation when they selected Wetmore for the prize was completed while the professor was on sabbatical over the fall 2020 semester. Thanking her department colleagues, Luis Falcon, dean of the College of Fine Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences; Provost Joe Hartman; and Chancellor Julie Chen; she explained: 鈥淭he work I do is often the result of stream of consciousness expression. I would not have been able to dive as deeply into line, color, composition, form, and subject matter without the focused time.鈥