Esteemed author Ernest Gaines and renowned
artist Donald Sultan will deliver the UNC Asheville Commencement
address on Saturday, May 12. The ceremony begins at 9 a.m. on the
Ramsey Library Terrace. In case of rain, Commencement will begin at
10 a.m. at the Asheville Civic Center. Some 590 students are
candidates for bachelor's and master's of liberal arts degrees.
During the ceremony, Chancellor Anne Ponder will also confer
honorary doctoral degrees on Gaines and Sutton. Tickets are not
required.
Gaines, a professor of English and
writer-in-residence at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, is
acclaimed for his novels and short stories, including the Pulitzer
Prize-nominated "A Lesson Before Dying" and "The Autobiography of
Miss Jane Pittman," which was made into a popular television movie.
Gaines was nominated
for the Pulitzer Prize for fiction for his 1997 novel, "A Lesson
Before Dying," which received the National Book Critics Circle
Award, Southern Book Award, Langston Hughes Award, Louisiana
Literary Award and Black Caucus of the American Library Association
Award. Gaines is also a MacArthur Fellow, 1993 Louisiana Humanist of
the Year and 2000 Louisiana Writer of the Year. He is a member of
the American Academy of Arts and Letters and has received a National
Humanities Medal.
A native of
Louisiana, Gaines was among the fifth generation of his family born
on the River Lake Plantation in Pointe Coupee Parish, La., an
influence and common setting for his fiction. The eldest of 12
children, he was raised by an aunt in slave quarters on the
plantation. His early schooling in the 1930s consisted of six years
in the quarters’ one-room church and three years at St. Augustine, a
Catholic school for African Americans in New Roads. When he was 15,
Gaines joined his mother and stepfather in Vallejo, Calif., because
there was no high school available to him as an African American in
rural Louisiana.
Gaines published his
first short story, "The Turtles," in a college magazine at San
Francisco State University, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in
literature in 1957. After service in the Army, he won a writing
fellowship to Stanford University. Gaines’ books include "A
Gathering of Old Men" (1984), "In My Father’s House" (1978), "A Long
Day in November" (1971), "Bloodline" (1968), "Of Love and Dust"
(1967) and "Catherine Carmier" (1964). Since 1984, he has
divided his time between San Francisco and Lafayette.
Sultan, a successful New York artist, is a
native of Asheville and graduate of UNC Chapel Hill, where he earned
a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree. After receiving a Master of Fine
Arts from the Art Institute of Chicago, Sultan moved to New York in
1975 to begin his career.
Sultan quickly
established himself as a prominent painter, printmaker and sculptor.
He has exhibited his extensive body of work in some of the most
prestigious galleries and museums around the world. His works are
included in the permanent collections of New York’s Museum of Modern
Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Whitney Museum of American Art and
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. Sultan’s art is on display in the
galleries of his alma maters and in the Museum of Fine Arts in
Boston, Australian National Museum, Dallas Museum of Art, North
Carolina Museum of Art, High Museum of Art in Atlanta, and the
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Gardens of the Smithsonian
Institution in Washington, among others.
Sultan is best known
for his bold, large-scale treatments of still-life subjects, in
which he depicts natural objects using industrial materials and
methods. He describes his works as abstract—“heavy structure,
holding fragile meaning”— giving the still-life tradition a fresh
approach.
In recent years,
Sultan has collaborated with playwright David Mamet on the book,
"Bar Mitzvah." In addition, "Visual Poetics: the Art of Donald
Sultan" includes several specially commissioned poems by beat
veteran Robert Creeley. The voluminous and varied work of Donald
Sultan—which demonstrates his ability to successfully merge the best
of the artistic tradition with a fresh, modern approach that is
unique—embodies the creative energy that has placed him at the
forefront of contemporary art.
For more information about Commencement, call
UNC Asheville's Office of the Provost at 828/251-6474 or click on
www.unca.edu/news/commencement07.html.