Artists Space

Lonnie Holley:
Performance Dialogue and Book Signing

Friday, April 4th
7pm
Free, no RSVP required

Join us for a special performance dialogue and book signing with the multifaceted artist Lonnie Holley. Holley’s widely admired practice spans painting, drawing, assemblage sculpture, and performance that combines experimental music and poetry. In his first major monograph, which features texts by Harmony Holiday and John Beardsley, every facet of his practice is explored. Holley will be accompanied by multi-instrumentalist Shahzad Ismaily.

Book cover featuring a black background, and a sculpture resembling a cross, with the word "MITH" engraved into a block of stone. In the top right corner of the cover bold text reads "Lonnie Holley."
Cover of Lonnie Holley, Rizzoli Electa, 2025. [Book cover featuring a black background, and a sculpture resembling a cross, with the word "MITH" engraved into a block of stone. In the top right corner of the cover bold text reads "Lonnie Holley."]

Lonnie Holley’s widely admired practice spans painting, drawing, assemblage sculpture, and performance that combines experimental music and poetry. After decades of making art, he is now getting the recognition he richly deserves.

The artist’s first sculptures were carved tombstones for his nieces who perished in a house fire in 1979. Over the following years, he devoted himself to making sculptures that populated his property near Birmingham, a large all-encompassing outdoor installation that was eventually destroyed in 1997. The artist’s work continued unabated as he began to gain recognition and exhibit his work in the South and throughout the US.

In his first major monograph, every facet of his practice is explored. Holiday considers Holley’s art and music as interconnected components of the artist’s overall creative vision. Beardsley focuses on the artist’s Birmingham roots connecting the cultural firmament of that city with other major creative communities in Alabama, most notably Boykin, more popularly known as Gee’s Bend, home of the famous quilters.

Since 1979, Lonnie Holley has devoted his life to the practice of improvisational creativity. Holley’s sculptures are constructed from found materials in the oldest tradition of African American sculpture. His work is collected by major museums throughout the world, on permanent display in the United Nations, and has been displayed in the White House Rose Garden.