PEAR Alumni Network

Summer 2025

A NOTE FROM CHERYL LU-LIEN TAN, PEAR ALUMNI CHAIR

Dear PEAR Friends,

We have a big anniversary for the Peyton Evans Artist Residency (PEAR) program coming up and we’ve been reflecting on how important art is in these times. The PEAR program turns 20 in 2026, and we’re planning a season-long celebration beginning in the fall of next year.

We’re just thrilled to be sharing your news and celebrating how your work is shining out in the world, and we’ve also been thinking a lot about the art that you have created here at The Studios of Key West and pieces that your time on this island may have inspired.

Take, for example, Ransome…

Whose 2024 residency led to a powerful new body of work

When Rhinebeck, N.Y.-based visual artist ransome was a PEAR in early 2024, he was on his way to visit the studio of beloved Key West sculptor John Martini in Bahama Village when he said he started to feel a presence around him.

“Walking around that area, I felt like I could see people,” ransome said. “People from the past — sitting on their porches, moving about, kids playing on the streets back when it was a segregated African American community. I wanted to capture those ghosts and images.”

ransome had been to Key West before his time as a PEAR but he said it was only when he was on the island for his residency that he truly discovered the history of Bahama Village and its original Black Bahamian, Cuban and Chinese population. His explorations of the neighborhood inspired him to create dozens of acrylic and collage works — pieces that will make their debut in February at The Studios of Key West in an exhibition titled “Ghost in Bahama Village.”

“It’s a neighborhood that was largely occupied by African Americans who are now mostly gone,” he said. “We have a migration story here — I wanted to investigate the lives of the people who moved away.”

This show dovetails with ransome’s artistic mission, which has guided him since he first encountered art as a first grader living with four step-sisters in Passaic, New Jersey, who spent hours with their coloring books on their balcony. “My step sisters were so creative — their coloring books were just magical to me,” ransome said. “That’s what got me interested in drawing.”

As ransome graduated from Pratt Institute, received his MFA in Studio Arts at Lesley University and became a tenured professor in the School of Visual Performing Arts at Syracuse University, he dedicated his art to exploring a question. “My son told me once that a guy said to him, “African Americans have been here for so long — why do they seem so far from having successful middle class lives?” ransome said. “I was asked that question when I was younger and I didn’t have an answer to it. My son doesn’t have an answer for it. I’m trying to give my son and others an answer to that question. Those are the things that inspire my work.”

ransome said he hopes that his February exhibition at The Studios will inspire people to ponder the past and how it informs our present and future. “My goal is to stimulate conversation, to never give answers,” he said. “I’m just placing things in front of people and letting them discuss them, letting them find the answers.”

Thank you, ransome.

Yours,

Your PEAR Alumni Chair,
Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan
2013 & 2024 PEAR
The Studios of Key West

FEATURED ARTIST: RANSOME