Bruce Metcalf | The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage
Skip to main content
Menu

Search form

Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
Menu

Search form

Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
  • About
  • Grants & Grantees
  • Apply
  • Questions of Practice
  • Collaborators & Colleagues
  • News
  • Events
  • Contact
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage
GRANTS & GRANTEES

Bruce Metcalf

1996 PEW FELLOW
Updated
30 Nov 2016

insta-25-bruce-metcalf-1996-01-web.jpg

Bruce Metcalf, Persephone, 2015, sterling silver, carved and painted maple, copper, micarta, glass cabochon, 5 x 4 1/2 inches. Photo courtesy of the artist.

Pew Fellow, 1996
Visual Arts

  • Bruce Metcalf's website
share
facebook twitter email
Explore More
Related People
James Primosch
Pang Xiong Sirirathasuk Sikoun
Rudolf Staffel
  • More +
Pew Fellowships
Visual Arts
  • News
    Pew Fellows News: Rasheedah Phillips on “Time”, Roberto Lugo’s Kamala Harris Teapot, Trapeta B. Mayson’s Poetry Hotline

    Catch up on this month’s Pew Fellows news, including awards, new works, and interviews. 

    news-content
    pew-fellows-news-rasheedah-phillips-on-time-roberto-lugo-s-kamala-harris-teapot-trapeta-b-mayson-s-poetry-hotline
  • GRANTS & GRANTEES
    Russell Davis

    Moments of grace or insight or good writing actually are dependent on a day-to-day process.

    people-content
    russell-davis
  • News
    Pew Fellows News: Kate Watson-Wallace Premieres Work at LA’s REDCAT, Tayarisha Poe’s Film to be Adapted by Amazon Studios, Benjamin Volta’s Mural Honored by Americans for the Arts

    Catch up on this month’s Pew Fellows news, including the latest recognition, new works, and press coverage.

    news-content
    pew-fellows-news-kate-watson-wallace-premieres-work-at-la-s-redcat-tayarisha-poe-s-film-to-be-adapted-by-amazon-studios-benjamin-volta-s-mural-honored-by-americans-for-the-arts
  • Questions of Practice
    Fellows Friday: Q&A with Electronic Musician King Britt

    Electronic musician and DJ King Britt describes how his practice has evolved since receiving the Pew Fellowships ten years ago, the best advice he has ever received, and more

    question-of-practice-content
    fellows-friday-q-amp-amp-a-with-electronic-musician-king-britt
  • GRANTS & GRANTEES
    Bill Nace

    Nace’s experimental improvisations and compositions extend the boundaries of electric guitar technique, using bows, metal, wood, glass bowls, and other implements. His distinctive musical vocabulary references folk, rock, and punk traditions as he works to make a ubiquitous instrument sound new.

    people-content
    bill-nace
  • Event
    crazy beautiful

    Choreographer and Pew Fellow Tania Isaac (2011) presents an iteration of her Center-funded discovery project open notebook: crazy beautiful.

    event-content
    crazy-beautiful
  • GRANTS & GRANTEES
    Merián Soto

    Over her 40-year career in performance, Merián Soto (Pew Fellow, 2015) has focused on investigating the living body and its relationship to consciousness. Her conceptual and process-based pieces work towards, in the artist's words, "a dance of the future, a dance of healing, transformation, and transcendence."

    people-content
    merian-soto
  • GRANTS & GRANTEES
    Anne Seidman

    Painter and 2008 Pew Fellow Anne Seidman's practice has allowed her to explore the nature of pure painting through abstraction, suggesting friction, awkwardness, and ultimately, a sense of self.

    people-content
    anne-seidman
  • GRANTS & GRANTEES
    Frances Negrón-Muntaner

    Frances Negrón-Muntaner is a filmmaker and a 1994 Pew Fellow.

    people-content
    frances-negron-muntaner
  • GRANTS & GRANTEES
    Nadia Hironaka

    Nadia Hironaka is a visual artist and a 2006 Pew Fellow.

    people-content
    nadia-hironaka
  • GRANTS & GRANTEES
    CAConrad

    Living and working in Philadelphia for 25 years, 2011 Pew Fellow CAConrad's work falls between poetics, performance, and pedagogy.

    people-content
    caconrad
  • News
    In Memoriam: Pang Xiong Sirirathasuk Sikoun, Textile Artist, Musician, and Pew Fellow

    Pew Fellow Pang Xiong Sirirathasuk Sikoun passed away on December 22, 2020, at the age of 76.

    news-content
    in-memoriam-pang-xiong-sirirathasuk-sikoun-textile-artist-musician-and-pew-fellow
  • GRANTS & GRANTEES
    James Ijames

    James Ijames' (Pew Fellow, 2015) plays and devised works examine how class and gender intersect with race, drawing inspiration from historical texts, the media, and stories of his own family to deconstruct history and its established figures.

    people-content
    james-ijames
  • GRANTS & GRANTEES
    Peter Paulsen

    Peter Paulsen is a classical and jazz performer, both of which influence his composition style, and a 2007 Pew Fellow.

    people-content
    peter-paulsen
  • GRANTS & GRANTEES
    Ken Lum

    Working across mediums, including painting, sculpture, and photography, Lum’s practice explores the formation of individual and societal identities as they are expressed within the context of public space.

    people-content
    ken-lum
  • GRANTS & GRANTEES
    Robert Crowder

    Robert Crowder (1930–2012) was the founder of Kùlú Mèlé African Dance and Drum Ensemble and a 2004 Pew Fellow in folk and traditional arts.

    people-content
    robert-crowder
  • Collaborators & Colleagues
    John King

    John King is a composer, guitarist, and violist and the recipient of the 2014 Award for Sound/Music from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts.

    people-content
    john-king
  • GRANTS & GRANTEES
    Babette Martino

    Babette Martino (1956–2011) was a visual artist and a 2000 Pew Fellow.

    people-content
    babette-martino
  • Collaborators & Colleagues
    Tina Satter

    Satter’s experimental theater productions reflect diverse textual, formal, and aesthetic influences to illuminate the stories of female and queer characters.

    people-content
    tina-satter
  • Questions of Practice
    Pew Fellow of the Week: An Interview with Writer and Cultural Scholar Brenda Dixon Gottschild

    Writer and cultural scholar Brenda Dixon Gottschild on her artistic journey, her interest in the presence and influence of the black dancing body in America, and more.

    question-of-practice-content
    pew-fellow-of-the-week-an-interview-with-writer-and-cultural-scholar-brenda-dixon-gottschild
back to top

The Pew Center
For Arts & Heritage
1608 Walnut Street, 18th fl
Philadelphia, PA 19103

Tel: 267.350.4900
Fax: 267.350.4997
Email: info@pewcenterarts.org

Facebook / Twitter / Vimeo
Instagram / LinkedIn

Questions of Practice RSS

Contact

Credit Guidelines

Privacy Policy & Copyright Statement

Copyright © The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage 2021