Ken Little
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Ken Dawson Little is a modernist San Antonio-based sculptor who was born in Canyon, Texas in 1947. After graduating from Texas Tech University in 1970 with a BFA in painting, he received an MFA from the University of Utah in 1972. There, his interest in painting waned in favor of ceramics. In 1988, he settled in San Antonio, Texas, and his interests shifted to bronze animal masks. Little later shifted to steel sculpture, animal forms constructed from discarded shoes and human forms decoupaged with American paper money. He has been a professor of art at the University of Texas at San Antonio since 1988.
Since 1993, he has maintained a studio in a warehouse building that he owns in downtown San Antonio, Texas. He is an advocate for contemporary art in south Texas, renting studio space to 8 other artists. From 1994 to 1999, he directed Rose Amarillo, a 1500 square foot alternative exhibition space showing the work of local and national artists.
The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu (Hawaii), the City of Seattle, Washington and the Nelson Gallery (University of California at Davis) are among the public collections holding works by Ken Little.
[edit] References
- Caldwell, Susan Havens, Ken Dawson Little: A Catalog of Works, San Francisco, California, Quay Gallery, 1983.
- Hickey, Dave, Ken Dawson Little: A Bestiary of Damaged Goods, 1986.
- Whitney, Kathleen, "The Buck Stops Here: A Conversation with Ken Little", Sculpture Magazine, Dec. 2004, Vol. 23, No. 10) 51