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Time to honor an accomplished artist, alum

Posted 8:10 a.m. Friday, Feb. 18, 2022

Truman Lowe, '69, will have his name added to UWL's Center for the Arts at a building dedication ceremony later this year. Lowe, a world-renowned artist and sculptor of Ho-Chunk ancestry, died in 2019 at age 75.

UWL’s Center for the Arts to be named after Truman Lowe

The UW-La Crosse Center for the Arts will soon be named after one of the most accomplished alumni in the university’s 113-year history. 

Truman Lowe, who graduated from UWL in 1969 and went on to become a world-renowned artist and sculptor, will have his name added to the arts building after the UW System Board of Regents approved the dedication Feb. 10. 

Chancellor Joe Gow proposed the idea in September, noting Lowe’s remarkable accomplishments as both an artist and educator, as well as the way he helped advance the perception of Native American art and culture. Lowe, honored twice as a distinguished alumnus at UWL, died in 2019 at age 75. 

“During his life, Truman Lowe fully embodied the UWL spirit — striving for excellence, honoring one’s culture and heritage, and leaving the world a better place than we found it,” Gow says. “I’m proud to call Truman Lowe an alumnus of our university. I hope seeing his name on the Center for the Arts will inspire future generations to learn about his legacy and work to create their own.” 

Lowe, who was born in Black River Falls and is of Ho-Chunk ancestry, is the first person of color with a UWL building named in their honor — a distinction Gow called long overdue. 

UWL's Center for the Arts

More than 650 people pledged their support for the name change by signing an online petition during the fall semester. 

Lowe’s family members say they’re grateful the man they knew is being celebrated for his outstanding career and transformative impact on so many people. 

“On a personal level, he was an incredibly empathetic person and always knew what to say to support someone at a pivotal moment in their life,” says Tonia Lowe, Truman’s daughter.  “Professionally, he was part of a second wave of Native artists that really helped change people’s perceptions of what Native art could be. This feels like recognition for all the work he did to open people’s minds and pave the way for the next generation.” 

“He really loved La Crosse — he loved the campus, the city and the beauty of the location. And it was really where he discovered art as a career,” adds Nancy Lowe, Truman’s wife. “Seeing his name on a building would make him very, very happy and be incredibly meaningful to him. That’s what makes it so exciting for us.” 

Lowe will be formally recognized at a building dedication ceremony later this year. Details will be announced soon. 

About Truman Lowe 

  • Earned an undergraduate degree in art education from UWL in 1969  

  • Known for his large art installations using natural materials, often focusing on the natural world and his Ho-Chunk heritage, shown nationally and internationally 

  • Taught as a professor of art at UW-Madison for over 30 years, including a stint as chair of the Art Department from 1992 to 1995  

  • Received the UWL Graff Distinguished Alumni Award in 1992 and the UWL Parker Distinguished Multicultural Alumni Award in 1999  

  • Curated contemporary art for the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C., from 2000 to 2008.


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