Working Artist and Popular Professor

How Many Hats Can a Person Wear at One Time and Still Excel?

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Hollis Hammonds with a group of students in a Paris street

It鈥檚 a challenge that Associate Professor of Art Hollis Hammonds knows well, as she balances five professional art exhibits a year, three classes to teach a semester and hours of administrative work every week as chair of the Department of Visual Studies.

鈥淚 always tell new faculty that they have to be patient because being a good teacher is very difficult,鈥 she says. 鈥淗onestly, I didn鈥檛 feel very creatively productive for my first four years working here, until I鈥檇 learned how to balance the two.鈥

Hammonds keeps an off-campus studio and exhibits her work around the country. In 2016, she鈥檒l take a sabbatical to work with students at the University of North Carolina颅鈥揅harlotte and complete an artist residency at McCall Center for the Arts. One of the benefits of being a practicing artist, she hopes, is that she can inspire her students and show how they too could become working artists.

And the inspiration goes both ways.

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Hollis Hammonds writing on a white board in a classroom

鈥淚 think we stay intellectually and creatively fresh by working with young people who have different viewpoints than ours,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 think my work would be very different if I weren鈥檛 teaching. It鈥檚 exciting to watch them in the process of discovering something I take for granted, like seeing color with a painter鈥檚 eye; as we get older and more established, we forget what that discovery is like.鈥

The same self-critical discipline that pushes Hammonds to improve as an artist drives her to strive to better her teaching. And she hopes to instill the same values in her students about their own work.