For immediate release 
July 21, 2022

Kira Houston, Outreach Coordinator
828.350.8484 | kira@blackmountaincollege.org

 

Thursday, August 25th 2022 at 1 PM Eastern

Streaming to Vimeo + Facebook

Presented as part of the Faith in Arts Institute

Hosted by BMCM+AC and UNC Asheville, these conversations and interviews with a diverse group of artists, curators, faith leaders, and scholars explore the role of arts in spiritual practice and religious life in the arts.

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Thursday, August 25th 2022 at 1 PM Eastern

Vandorn Hinnant is a visual artist, poet and educator based in Durham, North Carolina. He grew up in Greensboro, North Carolina and received a Bachelor’s of Art degree from North Carolina A&T University. After college, he moved to New York City and worked for the printmaker Josef Werner.

Known for his visual exploration of metaphysical ideas, Hinnant utilizes Sacred Geometry (studied formally under his mentor, inventor and physicist Robert L. Powell, Sr.), fractal mathematics, the Golden Ratio, and the Logarithmic Spiral to create his dynamic two and three-dimensional artworks. Referencing Buckminster Fuller, Leonardo da Vinci, Frank Lloyd Wright, and M.C. Escher as inspirations because of their use of geometry and math in making their artworks, Hinnant catalyzes dialogue through and around his work about the golden proportion, human relationships, and metaphysical energy. His work has been exhibited widely, including at the Fayetteville Museum of Art, Antioch College, and Saugerties Performing Arts Factory, and belongs to numerous private and corporate collections.

More from Vandorn Hinnant in our bookstore.

“I dare suggest that the clearest examples of relationship are to be found in geometry. When we show students, with physical examples and through living experience, that the concept of relationship rises out of geometry, they are able to see with their eyes and sense with their minds and hearts living/tangible evidence of what the word relationship means. It is here that such concepts as pattern, symmetry and proportion, to name a few, are to be seen. With geometry as the body reference for learning about relationship, we can best illustrate principles of mathematics and arithmetic. Given this understanding, one is equipped with the foundation for critical and clear thinking, and is best prepared to navigate with a healthy respect for self in relation to other in the domain of community.”
Vandorn Hinnant, 2009