Tarleton fine arts professor garners Minnesota fellowship

Molly Dierks

Molly Dierks

FOR IMMEDIATER RELEASE

Thursday, October 10, 2019

STEPHENVILLE, Texas — Tarleton State University fine arts professor Molly Valentine Dierks was selected for a competitive fellowship this summer in support of an ambitious project at Franconia Sculpture Park in Minnesota.

Over several weeks’ time and with help from assistants, she mounted “I Worried,” an interactive sound piece that will endure in the park for two years before moving elsewhere.

Inspired by the eponymous poem by Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Mary Oliver, “I Worried” is a series of modified street signs that replace typical regulatory language with lines of the work about anxiety, vulnerability and evolution.

Dierks is excited to share her work with the outdoor park, which has hosted over 150,000 visitors.

“The process of manipulating and recombining my collection of language, objects and forms is part of a quest to deconstruct and distill the formal and linguistic qualities of desire, conformity and love in post-industrial culture,” she wrote.

Attaching electrodes to leaves and human skin, Dierks recorded the music made by plants, as well as by her body and those of Franconia residents as they meditated on states of being like worry, love and connection.

The music was combined with natural sounds of wind, birds, water and frogs to make original compositions. As viewers pass by, a solar-powered sound device vibrates the thin aluminum, and select signs act as speakers, “singing” each unique song.

“Memory, experience and personal relationships are generative fields for me, coloring the ways I mine and expand the space between the machine-based constructs of ‘function’ and ‘dysfunction,’ ” she said. “Using the visual vernacular of contemporary culture — plastic, neon, signs, advertising, rubber, cast metal, digital prototyping — I probe a space of vulnerability where desire is amorphous, shape-shifting, irrepressible, both human and animal.”

Located in the scenic St. Croix River Valley, the 43-acre Franconia Sculpture Park is a nonprofit arts organization featuring an active artist residency and community arts programming.

Tarleton, founding member of The Texas A&M University System, provides a student-focused, value-driven education marked by academic innovation and a dedication to transform today’s scholars into tomorrow’s leaders. It offers degree programs to more than 13,000 students at Stephenville, Fort Worth, Waco, Midlothian, RELLIS Academic Alliance in Bryan, and online, emphasizing real-world learning experiences that address societal needs while maintaining its core values of tradition, integrity, civility, excellence, leadership and service.

Contact: Phil Riddle, News and Information Specialist
817-484-4415
priddle@tarleton.edu

A founding member of The Texas A&M System, Tarleton State University is breaking records — in enrollment, research, scholarship, athletics, philanthropy and engagement — while transforming the lives of approximately 18,000 students in Stephenville, Fort Worth, Waco, Bryan and online. For 125 years, Tarleton State has been committed to accessible higher education opportunities for all while helping students grow academically, socially and professionally through programs that emphasize real world learning and address regional, state and national needs.
dingbat
Tags: Performing & Fine Arts