'Land Division' by Jeremy Grant
February 6, 2026 12:00 PM –5:00 PM
2752 W. Colorado Ave
| Colorado Springs, CO | 80904
Admission: Free.
Event Summary
Surface Gallery is proud to present "Land Division" featuring artwork by artist Jeremy Grant.
Artist Statement:
During a long drive out in western Colorado, I found myself idly musing about how much “open land” there exists in the world. But as soon as that thought arose I began to notice the fences. They wrapped each field and divided every open space. And I noticed the colors and texture of the grasses changing at each fenceline, hinting at the unique histories each parcel of land represented.
Every land has a history and here in the west, even seemingly “untouched” or “unused” lands contain a tapestry of stories. These lands have been traversed, stewarded, worshipped, grazed, plowed, sowed, stolen, claimed, divided, taxed, inherited, disputed, polluted, exploited, and developed. And yet these lands have existed longer than any of these actions performed upon them. They existed before colonizers stole them from indigenous nations. They existed eons before the emergence of humankind as a species. In the context of geological time, the assertion of individual ownership over these ancient lands seems absurd. But they’re owned nonetheless.
So, these collages are meditations on our history and our hubris. I’m referencing the westward expansion of the American empire by using vintage train imagery. And I’m obscuring and superseding those images with fragmented patchworks of grass, dirt, foliage and flowers. I’m asking if, in the elevation of nature, it’s possible to shift our focus off “what we own,” toward “what we owe?”
About the Artist:
Jeremy Grant is a multi-disciplinary artist whose work is rooted in contrasting modes of natural and mystical, association and obfuscation. He has exhibited work regionally in Colorado since 2008. His 2019 film “Remnants” was exhibited at the Supernova Film Fest and the Denver Film Festival. He holds degrees in Graphic Design and Illustration (John Brown University, 2007).
Artist Statement:
During a long drive out in western Colorado, I found myself idly musing about how much “open land” there exists in the world. But as soon as that thought arose I began to notice the fences. They wrapped each field and divided every open space. And I noticed the colors and texture of the grasses changing at each fenceline, hinting at the unique histories each parcel of land represented.
Every land has a history and here in the west, even seemingly “untouched” or “unused” lands contain a tapestry of stories. These lands have been traversed, stewarded, worshipped, grazed, plowed, sowed, stolen, claimed, divided, taxed, inherited, disputed, polluted, exploited, and developed. And yet these lands have existed longer than any of these actions performed upon them. They existed before colonizers stole them from indigenous nations. They existed eons before the emergence of humankind as a species. In the context of geological time, the assertion of individual ownership over these ancient lands seems absurd. But they’re owned nonetheless.
So, these collages are meditations on our history and our hubris. I’m referencing the westward expansion of the American empire by using vintage train imagery. And I’m obscuring and superseding those images with fragmented patchworks of grass, dirt, foliage and flowers. I’m asking if, in the elevation of nature, it’s possible to shift our focus off “what we own,” toward “what we owe?”
About the Artist:
Jeremy Grant is a multi-disciplinary artist whose work is rooted in contrasting modes of natural and mystical, association and obfuscation. He has exhibited work regionally in Colorado since 2008. His 2019 film “Remnants” was exhibited at the Supernova Film Fest and the Denver Film Festival. He holds degrees in Graphic Design and Illustration (John Brown University, 2007).
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Also Occurs On
- Friday, February 6
- Saturday, February 7
- Tuesday, February 10
- Wednesday, February 11
- Thursday, February 12
- Friday, February 13
- Saturday, February 14
- Tuesday, February 17
- Wednesday, February 18
- Thursday, February 19
- Friday, February 20
- Saturday, February 21
- Tuesday, February 24
- Wednesday, February 25
- Thursday, February 26
- Friday, February 27
Overview
2752 W. Colorado Ave
| Colorado Springs, CO | 80904
