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Please Note: MSU MEMO is archived as a part of Mississippi State University's history. Articles may refer to situations which have changed or people who are no longer affiliated with the university.

MSU MEMO

March 27, 2006    Volume 30, Issue 27


Art exhibition featuring works of Rodger Roundy through March 31

Paintings by a Yale-educated artist now living in New Haven, Conn., are on exhibit through March 31.

Titled “Us and Them: Recent Paintings by Rodger Roundy,” the collection featured in the McComas Hall art gallery includes a series of sepia-toned paintings. Also, 10 large acrylics dealing with issues of race, identity, class, and culture were created especially for the university show.

Located on the ground floor of McComas Hall, the gallery is open 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Mondays-Fridays, and 1-4 p.m. Sundays.

Roundy’s paintings have been included in solo exhibitions throughout the U.S. and in Europe. He has described the acrylics as “allegorical paintings” exploring themes related to race and class.

“I chose red and white to differentiate between the two tribes who inhabit these walled environments, and deliberately removed any other cultural indicators such as costume, jewelry or hair,” he said.

“Although I was certainly thinking of specific historical instances of apartheid, of physical and metaphorical wall-building, I also wanted to use colors and situations that could stand in for the multiple ways that those in power continue to exploit perceived differences.”

Gallery director Bill Andrews said Roundy has become well-known for his extremely fine lines and areas of detail. “The content of the images is powerful, to be sure, but at the same time we can’t overlook their technical mastery,” he said.

For more information, telephone the Art Department at 325-2970 or visit http://www.caad.msstate.edu/art .