ONCE WAS A SHAPE

New work by Athena Trames, Buzz Smith, Ella Stuart, Lara Spurgeon, and Jordan Hogan.

B A D S T A R

2nd Year Graduate Candidate Exhibition featuring work by Dana Buzzee, Agnese Cebere, Kara Clarke, Noelle Herceg, Erin Langley, Caroline Lichucki, Hannah Petkau & Tyler Stoll.

Enabling Exploration

This exhibition showcases student outcomes in Ceramics and Furniture Design studios. Through art making and exhibition design, students worked collaboratively to create an art exhibition that provokes inclusive and accessible aesthetic experiences for all viewers.

IARC 4/586: Furniture Design Studio – Kyuho Ahn
ARTC 355: Intermediate Ceramics – Brian Gillis

Participating Artists:

Shainen Bautista-O’Reilly
Yilin Chen
Kate Chiddix
Emma DeRosia
Camille Hench
Kathleen Keuter
Yao Liu
Yana McClinton
Arielle Names
Marcella Rosen
Laurenne Ross
Zack Smith,
Shifandi Sun
BK Tang
Cameron Ure
Leigh Williams
Taylor Winegar

Participating Designers:

Vayle Khalaf
Amicia Nametka
Julia Roath
Joe Shaner
Ryan Arreola
Jaime Barajas Gomez
Camille Brandt
Megan Edelblute
Sarah Hill
Jess Houdek
Joshua Fox
Carlye Lenk
Mayberlin Mariscal Felix
Marin Nagle
Andrea Padilla
Samantha Reynolds

Pretty Ugly

New work by Kate Liu, A.G. Schukis, Mady Maszk, Madeline Peveto, Baily Thompson, Ari Lenkov, Siggi Bengston, Shanti Bartz, and Clara Wolff

In the Dragon’s Keep

In the Dragon’s Keep features various artworks from Carousel — the Art & Technology BFA group. Through the closeness of artwork in a gallery with limited space, the show references themes of collection and childhood. Artists, embracing the concept of accumulation, transform the gallery space into one that is unexpectedly full.

LICK OF PARADISE

LICK of PARADISE merges lines of black, white, grey, silver by graduate students Hannah Petkau and Dana Buzzee. Harnessing the tension between Buzzee’s large wall-mounted webs and Petkau’s illustrative interventions, the charismatic objects of Lick of Paradise offers considerations of community, the natural world, and the confluence of the two.

 

Funeral + And They Were Roommates

Funeral” = Zane Bjorge + Daniel McNamara

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Is it dancing or lucid dreams or where forgetting is just as important?

Is it the material or figments of light or filled suspension? Is it a shared delusion living in the same space?

“and they were roommates” by Kale’a Calica-Younker, Kaitlyn McCafferty, and Kezia Setyawan.

 

Kosmos / Three Bodies

Kosmos:

Featuring work in sculpture, fibers and found objects, kosmos is an
exposition that explores time as it relates to the artists’ individual
experiences. In their portrayal of time as an image, the artists’ seek
to create a discourse around the color pink regarding its historical
lineage. They intend to reclaim the color pink while also attempting to
stray away from the deeply ingrained traditional understanding of
femininity in our society. They want to convince the audience that pink
is a comfortable place of refuge as well as a representation of strength
and softness.

Emma DeRosia and Kate Chiddix

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Three Bodies:

Each element of this collaborative installation reflects an exploration
of the feeling of melancholy translated into a physical space. The use
of concrete sculptures emulates weight, frigidity, and suspension. The
nets represent entanglement, repetition of mindless acts as a form of a
coping mechanism, a meditative act in order to bind and hold together a
fleeting sense of self. The projections transform the rigid, immobile
sculptures into glowing, dynamic bodies.

Geordi Helmick, Eva Emter, and Koa Hencke