0

smNoImage
Sorry. You are not of age.
Dream Big. Drink Responsibly.
You Must Be 21 To Enter This Website.
  • BOURBON & RYE
    • CAVEHILL
    • HEIGOLD
    • DARERINGER
    • BOXERGRAIL
    • FOUNDER'S COLLECTION
    OTHER SPIRITS
    • BESPOKE GIN
    • LIDDEL VODKA
    STORY
    • OUR PURPOSE
    • FOUNDER'S STORY
    VISIT US
    • BOOK AN EXPERIENCE
    • OVERLOOK
    CREATIVE PARTNERS
    • BARRELS
    • VENDOME
    • DIESEL CIGARS
    STORE LOCATOR
    SHOP
    CAREERS
    Rabbit Hole Distillery
    • Bourbon & Rye
    • Other Spirits
    • Story
    • Visit Us
      • Book an Experience
      • Overlook
    • Creative Partners
    • Store Locator
    • Shop
    • Careers
    • Search
    Cavehill

    FOUR GRAIN
    BOURBON

    HEIGOLD

    HIGH RYE
    BOURBON

    DARERINGER

    SHERRY CASK
    FINISHED BOURBON

    BOXERGRAIL

    SOUR MASH
    RYE WHISKEY

    FOUNDERS COLLECTION

    LIMITED EDITION
    CASK STRENGTH

    BESPOKE GIN

    LONDON DRY

    LIDDEL VODKA

    FRENCH WHEAT

    OUR PURPOSE

    WHISKEY MAKERS

    FOUNDER'S STORY

    KAVEH ZAMANIAN

    PRESS

    IN THE NEWS

    BLOG

    LEARN BOURBON

    BOOK A TOUR

    AT OUR DISTILLERY

    BOOK AN EVENT

    SPECIAL GATHERINGS

    BARRELS

    CRAFT COOPERAGES

    VENDOME

    COPPER & BRASS

    DIESEL

    INFUSED CIGARS

    Rabbit Hole Distillery
    Rabbit Hole Distillery
    • Bourbon & Rye
    • Other Spirits
    • Story
    • Visit Us
      • Book an Experience
      • Overlook
    • Creative Partners
    • Store Locator
    • Shop
    • Careers
    • Search

    Bridge (Victory)

    by Glenn Kaino
    The imposing and muscular raised fist of 1968 Olympic Gold Medalist Tommie Smith confronts the viewer with this symbolic gesture and brings to bare both the struggles of the past and the perpetual need for resistance ahead.
    Learn More ›

    Executive Order

    by Jeremy Dean
    Taking inspiration from MLK’s famous letter written from the Birmingham Jail in 1963, this work was created for Rabbit Hole distillery in 2018 as a hopeful response to the Trump administrations original executive order 13769 that banned immigrants from seven Muslim-majority countries.
    Learn More ›

    Spirit Runners

    by Gary Simmons
    This ghostly piece of art, rendered using Simmons signature erasure drawing technique, honors forgotten distilling heroes of the past.
    Learn More ›

    [M][O][V][E][M][E][N][T]

    by Keltie Ferris
    A series of body prints inspired by the Woman’s March in Washington, DC following the 2017 Presidential Inauguration.
    Learn More ›

    #RabbitHoleMural

    by Jeremy Booth
    This iconic mural, located in the center of Louisville’s arts district, portrays a mid-century minimalist view of our great city from the vantage point of Overlook, our cocktail lounge located on the top floor of our distillery.
    Learn More ›

    Hyperspace 13

    by Letitia Quesenberry
    Inspired by the Light and Space Movement of the 1960s, this piece uses color lenses, filters, shadow and light as a means of pushing the boundaries of perception.
    Learn More ›
    Glenn Kaino

    Bridge (Victory)

    Cast of the arm of Olympian Tommie Smith.
    Bridge (Turn) is a continuation of Glenn Kaino’s ongoing relationship with the athlete Tommie Smith, who along with fellow athlete John Carlos, famously raised his arm and black-gloved fist in a symbolic form of solidarity for the fight for human rights after winning the gold medal in the 200-meter men’s race at the 1968 Olympic Games. The gesture, still resonates today as catalytic symbol for a multitude of beliefs, ideas and social causes.

    The arm in this piece is an actual cast of Tommie Smith’s gloved arm. In 2013 Kaino made a monumental sculpture using the same cast to create a 100 ft long construction of cast arms to form Bridge. The sculpture formed a literal and figurative bridge. Or as the artists describes, “it is a golden path leading forward from the present but connected to the past, a spectacular reconciliation of a historic record, an individual memory, and a public symbol all renegotiated in an infrastructure of time to creates stories of the now.”
    Jeremy Dean

    Executive Order 13769

    Threads from the Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Yemen and American flags; 25,000 needles, custom frame.
    The overlapping colors of the flags from the eight Muslim-majority countries cited in the Trump administration’s Executive Order 13769 create shifting perspectives of these symbols of nationhood. Dean suggests that the work can be seen as a metaphor for “restitching our connectiveness,” further suggesting that our “connection to others can be severed but not forgotten.” This is a fundamental aspect of human nature that we may lose sight of at times but is never really gone. The Rabbit Hole commission is one of Dean’s largest flag constructions to date. Unweaving the American flag and the seven foreign flags string by string, Dean then reassembled only the vertical (warp) strings of the American flag over top of a selection of horizontal (weft) strings of the foreign flags. The end of each string is threaded through a needle and pinned back into registration (over 25,000 hand knotted needles).
    Gary Simmons

    Spirit Runners

    White chalk on slate painted panels.
    Honoring forgotten distilling heroes of the past, this erasure drawing, in which Simmons draws in white chalk on slate painted panels, then smudges it with his hands, reveals a ghostly image that haunts the soul. This commissioned piece remembers:

    Gertrude Cecilia Lythgoe (1888-1974) Queen of the Bahamas | Liquor Wholesaler | Rum Runner

    Jokichi Takamine (1854-1922) Whiskey Scientist

    Mary Dowling (1859-1930) Distillery Owner | Bootlegger | Businesswoman

    Hezekiah Pierrepont (1768-1838) Distiller | Owner of Anchor Gin

    Elizabith Leitch “Bessie” Williamson (1910-1982) The Lady of Laphroaig

    Birdie Brown (1871-1933) Moonshiner
    Keltie Ferris

    [M][O][V][E][M][E][N][T]

    Oil and powdered pigment on paper.
    This group of 14 body prints by Keltie Ferris is inspired by the Women’s March on January 21, 2017, which took place the day after the presidential inauguration. The display of body prints in a grid format, stacked two high, evoke the appearance of a crowd or a gathering of individuals in protest.

    To create her body prints, Ferris covers herself in natural oils and pigments and presses her body against a life size sheet of paper. The body prints are a form of self portraiture, but in this particular body of work the artist has intentionally not included her head in the image. The resulting headless torso takes on what the artist calls an “Elvis stance” ( a reference to Andy Warhol’s Double Elvis, 1963) and the modular quality of the portrait is “like an army of the every woman or every man.”
    Jeremy booth

    #RabbitHoleMural

    Paint on brick.
    This vibrant mural located on the most recognizable wall in Louisville’s NuLu neighborhood is a depiction of Louisville’s skyline from Overlook, our mid-century inspired craft cocktail bar on the top floor of our distillery. Created by local artist Jeremy Booth, it follows his signature minimalist style of bold lines, limited palette, and sharp shadows to become a landmark in the creative hub of our great city. In the preliminary stages, Booth spent hours sketching different scenic possibilities. After several iterations we landed on a drawing that truly embodied the life and optimism in Louisville. We projected the final sketch onto the white-washed brick in the dead of night. With that, the piece came to life. After creating a digital stencil, Booth and team worked five days around the clock creating our larger-than-life, modern masterpiece.
    Letitia Quesenberry

    Hyperspace 13

    Wood, plexiglass, and spray paint.
    This piece is from Quesenberry’s ongoing Hyperspace series, which she began in 2015. For over 20 years, she has created individual bodies of work that are seemingly different because of her pursuit of different materials (Polaroid, painting, sculpture, light, and technology), but the constant thread throughout her work has been to push her chosen medium (or material) to its edge. Hence the name “Hyperspace.” The result is a literal blurring of lines and depth of field but metaphorically bring to bare our own perceptions of preconceived truths and narrative.  Hyperspace 13 was influenced through collaborations with the Louisville Ballet and the Light and Space movement of the 1960s. James Terrell and Bruce Nauman were influential in this mature work.
    Brand Image
    Privacy Policy Shipping Policy Refund Policy
    Brand Image
    Contact Us Careers Terms of Service
    © 2025 Rabbit Hole Spirits, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    Dream Big. Drink Responsibly.