Anne Arrasmith

[2] In 1986, she and Peter Prinz founded Space One Eleven[2] with a mission to present exhibitions that confront ideas in a southern context or framework.

Arrasmith was on the steering committee of Birmingham Art and Music Alliance as well as a participating member of The NEA Tapes[3] through the Eidia House in New York, NY along with other notables Edward Albee, Jane Alexander, Ed Asner, Ron Athey, Chuck Close, Karen Finley, Agnes Gund, Alex Katz.

[6] "BAMA" curated in 2004, included the works of Amy Pleasant, Annie Kammerer Butrus and Jane Timberlake, three of Birmingham's most promising artists.

[7] "Suspended in Conflict" in 2005 was the work of three established artists that was created based on introspection and the intense questions raised by a rapidly changing Southern culture.

It featured Darius Hill, Larry Jens Anderson, and James Emmette Neel and was funded by a grant from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.