Environmental artist Dougherty launches fall artist series Sept. 14

Environmental artist Patrick Dougherty has earned an international reputation for weaving whimsical, freeform installations from sticks, branches and saplings.

Environmental artist Patrick Dougherty with *Putting Two and Two Together* (2004), an installation at the Woodson Art Museum in Wausau, Wis. Dougherty will launch the Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts Visiting Artist Lecture Series Sept. 14.
Environmental artist Patrick Dougherty with *Putting Two and Two Together* (2004), an installation at the Woodson Art Museum in Wausau, Wis. Dougherty will launch the Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts Visiting Artist Lecture Series Sept. 14.

At 7 p.m. Sept. 14 in Steinberg Auditorium, Dougherty will launch the fall Visiting Artist Lecture Series, sponsored by the Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts.

Since the early 1980s, Dougherty has combined masterly carpentry skills with an appreciation for primitive building techniques to create elegant, sinuous installations that suggest fairy tales and childhood tree houses as well as the basic human need for shelter.

Using saplings as his principal construction material, the “Stick Man,” as he is sometimes known, has gradually expanded his practice from single pieces on conventional pedestals to monumentally scaled environments that require saplings by the truckloads.

In the past decade alone, Dougherty has built more than 100 works throughout the United States, Europe and Asia.

The Visiting Artist Lecture Series will continue Sept. 28 with T.L. Solien, associate professor of painting at the University of Wisconsin.

Subsequent speakers include photographer Phyllis Galembo Oct. 19, graphic designer Michael Mabry Oct. 27 and painter Helene Aylon Nov. 16.

The talks are free and open to the public.

For more information, call 935-9347.