Philip Sugden

For English historian who studied Jack the Ripper case, see Philip Sugden (historian).

Philip Sugden[1] (born April 1949) studied art in Paris under French painter, Arnaud D'Hauterives (winner Grand Prix de Rome). After graduating from the New York School of Visual Arts and the Paris American Academie des Beaux Arts in Paris, he made twelve journeys throughout the Himalaya and Tibet, including the Kingdom of Mustang and Ladakh. In May 2007, he and writer, Carole Elchert were married by Lama Nawang Tenzin at Tengboche Monastery near Mt. Everest.

In 1990, Philip and his wife were awarded grants from the Ohio Joint Projects in the Arts and Humanities and the National Endowment for the Humanities, to create a Public Television presentation and companion book based on their 1988 Cultural Arts Expedition to the Himalaya and Tibet. They were guests of His Holiness the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan Government in Exile, and spent six months in Tibetan communities throughout India, Nepal, Ladakh, and Tibet gathering images and recordings for the production entitled, White Lotus, An Introduction to Tibetan Culture, (companion book published by Snow Lion 1991). According to the 1991 articles from the Cleveland Plain Dealer and The Toledo Blade Sunday magazine articles, Sugden completed 165 ink drawings on location during that trip.

In 1991, Sugden co-organized the Dalai Lama's two-day visit to his home and studio in Findlay, Ohio. While there the Dalai Lama spoke at The University of Findlay, where Mr. Sugden was a part-time art faculty at the time. According to The Findlay Courier articles written at the time, the Dalai Lama visited Sugden's studio where he accepted one Mr. Sugden's drawings.[2][3]

During that same year, Sugden was a guest curator at the Nicholas Roerich Museum in New York City, where he organized a six-month series of exhibitions, which included a solo show of works by Robert Rauschenberg, celebrating the 1991 International Year of Tibet. In the summer of 1998 Sugden was invited by, "Artists for Tibet," to mount a solo exhibition at the Denis Bibro Gallery in New York City as part of “Art Against Chinese Human Right Abuses.”

During his thirty-five-year career, Sugden’s work has been exhibited in over one-hundred solo shows internationally including New York, Los Angeles, London, Paris, Washington D.C., Melbourne, and Kathmandu. He is currently an Assistant Professor of Fine Arts at Bluffton University.

References

  1. http://www.philipsugden.com
  2. White Lotus. Snow Lion Publications
  3. Visions from the Fields of Merit. Floating Temple Press

The Cleveland Plain Dealer: March, 1991. The Toledo Blade: March, 1991. The Findlay Courier: February, 1991. White Lotus; An Introduction to Tibetan Culture: Snow Lion Publications 1991. Visions from the Fields of Merit; Drawings of Tibet and the Himalayas: Floating Temple Press 2000.

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