Rashawn Griffin


Rashawn Griffin is an American visual artist and educator. He has worked as an installation artist, sculptor, multimedia artist, and painter. His work explores identity and race. Griffin teaches at the University of Kansas.

Early life and education

Rashawn Griffin was born in 1980, in Los Angeles, California. He was raised in Olathe, Kansas, and attended high school in Kansas City, Kansas.
Griffin received a BFA degree in 2002, from Maryland Institute College of Art ; and a MFA degree in 2005, from Yale University.

Career

Griffin teaches art in the department of visual art at the University of Kansas in Lawrence, Kansas.
He has been an artist-in-residence in 2006 at the Studio Museum in Harlem, and an artist-in-residence multiple times at the MacDowell Colony. Griffin received the Joan Mitchell Foundation Fellowship in 2017, and a grant in 2007.
He has participated in notable group exhibitions including the Whitney Biennial at Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City; and Minimal Baroque: Post-Minimalism and Contemporary Art at Rønnebæksholm in Næstved, Denmark.
Griffin's artwork is in museum collections, including at the Studio Museum in Harlem.

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

Group exhibitions