The layered histories of land use, industry, and environmental change resonate deeply with the themes I explore. Tulsa’s scale and cultural landscape offer an ideal environment to root down, connect with place, and create work that responds to both the natural and built environments. I see Tulsa steering my practice toward place-based research, community collaboration, and providing me with the foundation I need to take creative risks.
— Amy Hoagland

SCULPTURE, INSTALLATION

AMY HOAGLAND

Amy Hoagland is a sculptor and researcher whose work investigates the human relationship to nature through immersive installations, often informed by time in remote or ecologically significant landscapes. Her practice is shaped by a commitment to site-responsiveness, material sustainability, and interdisciplinary exchange.

Hoagland’s work has been supported by numerous awards, including the Visionary Glass Award from Art Alliance for Contemporary Glass (2024), Windgate Fellowship at Vermont Studio Center (2024), Puffin Foundation Grant (2024), Colorado Art Science Environment Fellowship (2023), Windgate Fellowship for Sustainable Art presented by Honoring the Future (2022), Andy Warhol Foundation Grant presented by RedLine Arts Center (2022), and the Windgate-Lamar Fellowship (2017).

She has participated in residencies at Artica Svalbard (Longyearbyen, Svalbard), Arctic Circle Program (Svalbard), Marpha Foundation (Nepal), Tallgrass Artist Residency (Kansas), Mountain Research Station (Colorado), and Uncommon Arts (New York), among others—experiences that deeply inform her sculptural language and conceptual frameworks.

Her work has been exhibited at RULE Gallery (Marfa, TX), Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art (CO), Casa Lü (Mexico City), Yellowstone Art Museum (MT), and Univ. of Colorado Art Museum (CO). Hoagland is a Tulsa Artist Fellowship recipient (2026-2028). She lives and works in Tulsa, OK.