Schools
Towson University: Alumni Artist Collective Returns To TU To Curate Summer Gallery Show
See the latest announcement from Towson University.
Rebecca Kirkman
July 11, 2021
Find out what's happening in Towsonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
“Novo Legado: Bmore Legends” at TU Holtzman MFA Gallery through July 24
This summer, two Towson University alumni have returned to campus to curate a gallery
exhibition highlighting Baltimore’s vibrant artist community.
Find out what's happening in Towsonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
“Novo Legado: Bmore Legends” is on view in the Holtzman MFA Gallery in the Center
for the Arts through July 24 and online. It is curated by Hot Sauce Artists Collective, an artist-run organization dedicated to giving opportunities to emerging artists.
Three of its four founders are College of Fine Arts & Communication alumni.
The exhibition includes artwork from Hot Sauce co-founders James Alpha Massaquoi,
Jr. ’19, Italo De Déa ’20 and Kayla Fryer, as well as Ernest Shaw, Erin Fostel and
2020 Sondheim Award winner LaToya Hobbs. (Hot Sauce's fourth co-founder Alexandre
Edoh Yao Amegah ’18 is currently on sabbatical.)
“‘Novo Legado’ is a love letter to the Baltimore artists who we see as legends, the
artists who are on top of the game and just bringing them also to the Towson community,”
says Massaquoi, who studied art with a concentration in painting, drawing and printmaking. Returning to Towson University with Hot Sauce Artists Collective to curate the exhibition,
he says, is “the best thing ever—it’s like a homecoming show for us.”
In fact, Towson University is where the collective’s co-founders met and built friendships.
“Towson is the basis of everything for me,” says De Déa, a Brazilian native who earned
an MFA in Studio Art at TU. “I was painting and drawing but had no training, I had
no network. And Towson gave me all of that. In all aspects—personally, professionally,
even spiritually—the conversation we had here laid the ground for me to be where I’m
at and have the knowledge I have, too.”
Later, they began working together to pitch group shows to local galleries.
“James came up with the idea of ‘Let’s make this a collective, let’s keep going as
a group, but instead of looking and applying for opportunities, why not create our
own?’” De Déa recalls.
The group’s diverse background and skills in art education and curation gave them
the confidence to not only create art but also the framework to share art with others
in new ways, like outdoor pop-ups during the pandemic.
“The way we curate is less academic and less conceptually driven and is much more
about the people we bring in [and] the energy that's going to happen there,” he adds.
“Novo Legado” is the first time TU has invited an artist collective to curate a show
on campus. The collaboration came together through TU Galleries Director Erin Lehman and Community Art Center Director Stacy Arnold, who worked with Massaquoi and De Déa as students. When they
saw Hot Sauce Artists Collective begin to emerge last summer, they wanted to bring
them back to TU.
“We’re always looking for ways to connect our Community Art program and the galleries
with and through our alumni to the community at large,” says Arnold, who is working
with the collective to mount the exhibition.
The show can serve as a model for expanding the use of gallery spaces on campus and
an opportunity for current students to explore the artist collective model. “We’re
happy to use our space to support community activity and programming with a new and
upcoming generation,” Lehman says. “It offers an excellent opportunity to explore
the business model of the artist collective in today’s environment at the same time.”
Two programmatic events will be offered: an artist panel via Zoom and an in-person
printmaking workshop at TU. The gallery will be open to the public on three Saturdays:
July 10, 17 and 24, from 1–6 p.m. and by appointment by emailing tugalleries@towson.edu.
Thursday, July 15 at 7 p.m. | via Zoom (password: Hotsauce)Artists Erin Fostel, LaToya Hobbs and Ernest Shaw talk about working with the Hot
Sauce Artists Collective, what it means to have other artists amplify new work, the
benefits of the artist collective as a model for the art community and how the collective
engages communities in Baltimore. Moderated by Hot Sauce co-founder James Alpha Massaquoi,
Jr.
Saturday, July 17 from 1–5 p.m. | TU Center for the Arts | Adults 18+ | CA 3004Registration required | $15 registration fee (includes supplies)Hot Sauce Artists Collective co-founder Kayla Fryer will conduct a gallery tour of
her work displayed in “Novo Legado,” then conduct a workshop on how to apply the printmaking
techniques she incorporates into her artwork. Pre-registration is required.
This press release was produced by Towson University. The views expressed here are the author’s own.