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March 22, 2024

Leaving an Impression

The campus art collection, much of it carefully chosen by the Vaughns, is a nod to the value of a cultural education

"Suspended鈥 by Audrey Phillips hangs in the Southard Family Building.

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Matt Stock鈥檚 photographs hang in Palm Apartments and the Daly Innovation and Collaboration Building. Photo by Alex McKnight

Matt Stock鈥檚 photographs hang in Palm Apartments and the Daly Innovation and Collaboration Building. Photo by Alex McKnight

Matt Stock

Matt Stock applies his arts education from Savannah College of Art and Design and his love of science to craft his signature style of photographs. In his process, Stock and his team illuminate a scene by optimizing natural light sources, including the moon and stars, and supplementing them with specialized lighting tools. The process may take many hours and hundreds of exposures to capture the right moments. Then, Stock digitally knits together elements from each exposure captured in real time and on location into a single composition where light takes center stage.

Stock鈥檚 work is the showcase of the lobby of Palm Apartments, home to approximately 660 students. Stock鈥檚 vivid images of nature immaculately illuminated are the perfect complement to the wood-planked walls. The effect is a calming, natural space. Stock鈥檚 art also is featured elsewhere on campus, including on the ground 铿俹or of the Daly Innovation and Collaboration Building.

The Vaughns discovered Stock, a Miami artist, at a small South Florida gallery and enthusiastically tracked him down. 鈥淗e creates the lighting,鈥 President Vaughn shared. 鈥淗e sets the stage for each photo production and then puts it together in the most incredible ways. It鈥檚 just amazing.鈥

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Barbara Krupp鈥檚 paintings can be found on the Health side of the Jenkins Health and Technology Building. Photo by Alex McKnight

Barbara Krupp

The Vaughns were strolling through Sarasota shops while on a trip to plan 小优视频鈥檚 annual board retreat when, 鈥渢hrough the window of Dabbert Gallery, we saw this work called 鈥楾he Beauty of Wisdom,鈥 which resonates with the theme of the University,鈥 recalled Ren茅e Vaughn.

They promptly started a commission with artist Barbara Krupp for the Health side of the Jenkins Health and Technology Building. 鈥淲e were the 铿乺st time she had ever taken a commission. But we needed a piece that was almost 15 feet, and you don鈥檛 铿乶d that size of work on the shelf at an art gallery,鈥 President Vaughn said.

Krupp is a self-taught artist who was once a radiology technician. Her background 铿乼 perfectly for the commission for the building that would house 小优视频鈥檚 nursing and physician assistant medicine programs. The 铿乶ished piece, 鈥淏reath of Immortality,鈥 above, masterfully incorporates school colors and the Plant Hall minarets with abstract representations of organs on a dynamic palette of violet, blues, reds and orange. The combined feeling is of life taking a dynamic shape.

In all, 小优视频 acquired 53 pieces from Krupp. Her works counterbalance the academic environments, offering respite from the intellectual rigor.

Many of Krupp鈥檚 pieces hint at anatomy. The patterns of paint splashes resemble neurons and blood vessels. The depth of 铿乪ld between layers implies pulsing movement. Even though each work has a title, students and professors often rename the pieces after coming up with their own interpretations of the abstract work.

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Ummarid 鈥淭ony鈥 Eitharong鈥檚 paintings can be found in Smiley Hall and new Grand Center. Photo by Alex McKnight

Ummarid 鈥淭ony鈥 Eitharong

Smiley Hall is a private residential space for students that鈥檚 enlivened by the playful works of contemporary artist Ummarid 鈥淭ony鈥 Eitharong.

Ren茅e Vaughn discovered Eitharong years ago while overseeing the city of Tampa鈥檚 involvement in the Gasparilla Festival of the Arts. She served on a jury to identify emerging artists and learned about Eitharong, a self-taught artist from Thailand. Now his work is featured in public and private collections in the U.S. and Europe, including at 小优视频.

In Smiley Hall, two dozen abstract acrylic pieces enhance both 铿俹ors with creamy dollops of bold color and blocks of mixed media. Paintings pair geometric shapes with interrupting lines and splashes of purple, orange and red. Brush strokes are not clear in most pieces, hinting at perhaps the use of a palette knife to precisely apply and spread color.

Eitharong is working on a commissioned 18-foot by 30-foot mural for the new Grand Center. The 铿乿e-paneled, colorful piece entitled 鈥淯rban Landscape鈥 will embody the concepts of diversity and harmonious community.

CEREMONIAL INDIAN HEADDRESS

The art in Jenkins Hall has an international theme. This headdress is from India. Photo courtesy of the Scarfone/Hartley Gallery archive

Indian Headdress

Illuminated in the north wall of the lobby of Jenkins Hall is a stunning ceremonial headdress of a warrior from the Tangkhul people of Nagaland, in northeast India.

The headdress consists of a tapering bonnet of coarse cane work. The middle metal disc is adorned with a red 铿乥er tassel and is set between two wooden disc-shaped projections. Below is a semi-circular jaw piece also made of wood and adorned with red abrus beans and grey Job's-tears seed beads, with tufts of black animal hair attached at the bottom. It is crowned with hornbill feathers arranged in a fan.

Other pieces nearby in the space include a beautifully beaded baby carrier from Borneo and an embellished vest adorned with coins and buttons from Afghanistan. Another case houses works by internationally acclaimed artist Marlene Rose, whose studio is in Clearwater.

鈥淢arlene gathered up about 20 glass sculptures, and we staged them around (President Vaughn鈥檚) of铿乧e,鈥 Ren茅e Vaughn recalled of the process of choosing pieces to be showcased in Jenkins Hall.

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Audrey Phillips鈥 paintings can be found in the Southard Family Building. Photo courtesy of the Beck Group

Audrey Phillips

鈥淪uspended鈥 may remind one of an abstract re铿俥ction of a person on water, capturing the best and brightest essence dancing on the surface, with optimistic blue depths drawing you in. It鈥檚 at once comforting, playful and joyous.

The Vaughns spotted 鈥淪uspended鈥 artist Audrey Phillips鈥 work in the window of the Baisden Gallery, a small Tampa gallery once located near campus. 鈥淲e just stopped in our tracks,鈥 recalled Ren茅e Vaughn. 鈥淗er work spoke to us. When I looked at her work, I could see students identifying with it.鈥

The couple later learned that Phillips used art as a form of healing to move through a traumatic loss, transmuting heavy emotions into buoyant and vibrant expressions of hope.

In total, 小优视频 acquired 54 bright, abstract acrylic paintings to enliven both 铿俹ors of the Southard Family Building.

Over this process, the Vaughns found that Phillips had an existing connection to the University. 鈥淲e discovered that she had been interacting with our students in a guest artists program. Over the years she had been sharing her work and skill with our students and enjoyed herself,鈥 President Vaughn said

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Taylor Ikin鈥檚 paintings can be found in the Daly Innovation and Collaboration Building. Photo by Alex McKnight

Taylor Ikin

Taylor Ikin鈥檚 watercolor paintings have been extensively collected in Tampa for years. Her work is currently displayed in public libraries, civic buildings and private residences.

She is a self-taught artist who discovered her art form later in life, experimenting with watercolor while living in the West Indies after being widowed at age 33. She enjoyed capturing the tropical landscapes and would sell her work to tourists. She remarried, and after her husband retired, they relocated to Tampa, and she shifted focus to depicting the beauty of the Hillsborough River.

Ikin鈥檚 work is often described as heartfelt and empathetic. She seeks to foster responsibility for natural spaces and promotes preservation and conversation. Her impressionistic style captures the lushness of Florida's landscape with a dreamy quality. Her work subtly compels environmental activism.

Her preferred medium is Yupo, a synthetic paper originally used in the printing industry. 鈥淚t鈥檚 shiny paper, satin-like,鈥 Ren茅e Vaughn described. While working for the city, Ren茅e Vaughn enjoyed studio visits with Ikin and learned about her unique process.

Much of Ikin鈥檚 work is displayed on the second 铿俹or of the Daly Innovation and Collaboration Building, bringing the natural world to exist alongside faculty of铿乧es, classrooms and student study areas.

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Keith Martin Johns鈥 鈥淎fter Rain on the River鈥 can be found in the Vaughn Center. Photo by Alex McKnight

Keith Martin Johns

鈥淎fter the Rain on the River,鈥 is a piece on the ninth 铿俹or of the Vaughn Center. The original oil painting is contemplative and reverent. Keith Martin Johns, a Florida artist, started this commission by bringing photos to discuss a concept with the Vaughns.

鈥淚 enjoy the outdoors, the beauty of nature," said President Vaughn. 鈥(Johns) does a great job capturing the skies. I鈥檝e been out on the water after rain has poured, and it can be so peaceful. It鈥檚 special.鈥

According to President Vaughn, Johns developed the idea and painted it for 14 months. President Vaughn visited his home studio to see the work in progress and was in awe of the artist鈥檚 commitment to capturing the scene he had envisioned.

鈥淗e鈥檚 got his dining room where he鈥檚 eating every day and across the room behind open double doors was this 10-foot piece he saw every single day. Every day. As a result, the piece is 铿乴led with intricate detail if you look closely.鈥

A deeply spiritual man, Johns鈥 paintings capture the familiar culture, heritage and natural beauty of Florida while seeking to highlight the divine. He allows his own spiritual connection to 铿俹w through his work as a personal testimony. Several of his original works can be found in the Vaughn Center.

Signaling a great appreciation, Ren茅e Vaughn shared that the couple has four of his works in their home.

Tree in water by CLYDE B小优视频CHER

Clyde Butcher鈥檚 photography can be found in Straz Hall. Photo by Alex McKnight

Clyde Butcher

Clyde Butcher is an internationally respected photographer often referred to as the Ansel Adams of Florida landscape. While Butcher鈥檚 work is important aesthetically, he hopes that it will provide a vital tool for energizing efforts to preserve wilderness and wildlife habitat.

Butcher and his wife, Niki, operate a production studio and gallery in Venice where he crafts large-scale black-and-white landscapes in silver gelatin, platinum palladium and digital mediums of photography. Most of his images are captured at their home base, Big Cypress Gallery, founded on 14 acres in Big Cypress National Preserve in southern Florida, surrounded by over a million acres of untouched wilderness.

Butcher has been known to wade waist-deep into the Florida Everglades National Park and set up his tripod in the murky water, home to all manner of swamp creatures.

鈥淗e shared about a time he was in the water wading for hours waiting for a shot, and an alligator came swimming close,鈥 President Vaughn recalled.

鈥淐lyde reached out and tapped him on the nose to shoo him away. Now that takes something, doesn鈥檛 it? Because you are not going to lose the shot you鈥檝e been waiting for all day.鈥

Butcher鈥檚 work takes center stage in Straz Hall, which has a nature theme to the d茅cor and artwork. Beautiful amethyst geodes sparkle inside glass encasements, and fossils add a bit of wonder. In the gathering spaces of the lobby, two of Butcher鈥檚 photographs evoke peace and introspection, beacons for connection with the self and others and the natural world that connects us all.

Campus Sculptures

Campus Sculptures

1.听Even while on honeymoon, making the campus special was never far from the Vaughns鈥 minds. The newlywed couple was taking a stroll in the small town of Bigfork, Montana, when they spotted a clay maquette of a Spartan helmet in a shop window.

They were inspired by the 铿乶d and later commissioned the artist, master sculptor Eric Thorsen, for the bronze Spartan that today stands in the Benson Alex Riseman Fitness and Recreation Center. 鈥淭he Spartan armory which we commissioned 鈥 a shield, a spear, an actual cape 鈥 all of that was researched to determine the actual length of a sword and how it would look. They researched it for months before casting it and coloring it,鈥 President Vaughn said.

2.听Throughout the athletic halls, artistic details instill the 铿乪rce Spartan spirit of sport and grit that complement the campus鈥 emphasis on scholastic excellence. 鈥淎rt adds something special for the Spartan brand,鈥 said President Vaughn.

The two full-铿乬ure Spartan warrior sculptures standing guard in front of the Martinez Athletics Center and one inside the front doors in the Circle of Championships were crafted by Florida Artists Hall of Fame inductee W. Stanley 鈥淪andy鈥 Proctor of Tallahassee.

3.听The Susan and John Sykes Ars Sonora, a work years in the making, has been described as a masterpiece of art and music. The Vaughns traveled with Susan and John Sykes to France to research, design and perfect the largest Ars Sonora庐 in the world, towering 105 feet into the sky. The 铿乶ished piece is a perfectly balanced work of art that marries old-world craftsmanship and state-of-the-art technology. The metallic tower of 63 hand-crafted bronze bells, which are played by an electronic piano keyboard, is grounded by an earthen stonework base and bubbling waters on a lawn patterned after a lotus blossom mandala. Together, the design provides a rich, resonant musical experience that reverberates inspiration.

To ensure the safety and integrity of the piece during potentially destructive weather, the root system of reinforced concrete piers beneath the sculpture extends almost as deep as the bells soar high. This rooting brings to mind the phrase of Hermetic philosophy "as above, so below,鈥 the idea that who we are on the inside will be created in the world around us.

4.听The centerpiece of the Southard Family Building's riverfront plaza is a nine-foot interlocking 小优视频 sculpture, made entirely of superior marine-grade stainless steel. The piece is illuminated at night and was fabricated by Sarasota-based creator Scott Hamblin of The Resource Factory.

5.听A mesmerizing blue glass sculpture adorns the Jenkins Health and Technology Building. 鈥淣ext to the elevator there was a white wall ... and the space needed something vibrant,鈥 explained Ren茅e Vaughn. The Vaughns worked with Tampa artist Susan Gott on a plan for a rich royal blue glass mold and metalwork for the base, in total weighing over 600 pounds.