The current exhibition in the Spotlight Gallery features work by Truman Art Department alumna Danielle Yakle. Prof. Yakle completed her BFA in Fibers and Sculpture at Truman and earned MFA in Textiles from the University of Kansas (2010) where she currently serves as an Lecturer in Textiles. The exhibition, "Futilitarian", showcases fibers installation work by Prof. Yakle. Hope to see everyone there!
Author: art history faculty
Alumnus in Hong Kong
We were very happy to hear recently from Art Department alumnus Shawn Griffin.
Shawn writes: "I was accepted into the Master of Fine Arts program for photography at SCAD [Savannah College of Art & Design] Hong Kong in the Fall of 2012 and am currently in my second semester. Since living in Hong Kong, my undergraduate photos from Truman were shown in the Hong Kong Mid-Levels Gallery and two of my graduate works have been added to the SCAD Hong Kong permanent collection. I will be graduating with my MFA in the Spring of 2014." He also let us know that his work was shown to represent SCAD at the Hong Kong Film Festival and was displayed in Hong Kong at the Oasis Gallery.
Congratulations, Shawn!
If you are an alum and have news to share with us, please e-mail art@truman.edu. We'd love to hear from you.
Spring Break!
Photo Credit: Tim Barcus (Campus Photographer)
Even though we're still snow-covered here, Truman State University will be on Spring Break until Monday, March 18 so we hope everyone can enjoy viewing some great art outside of Kirksville.
As a reminder, when you return, check out the two shows in the University Art Gallery: the Student Juried Exhibition, and Futilitarian (and exhibition of work by alumna Danielle Yakle). Congratulations to Ms. Yakle and to all the students who had work selected for the exhibition.
The annual Friends of the Gallery fundraiser will be Friday, March 22. Please contact Aaron Fine (afine@truman.edu or (660)785.5386 if you'd like to know more about that.
For now, have a great break everyone and we'll see you in a little over a week!
Museum & Gallery Internships!
We are coming into the season when applications for internships in Art History–and all areas in Art–come to be due. Here is some further information and some links about some internships that might be of interest to various majors in the Art Department. We will also be updating this list as we learn of more opportunities, so check back often!
Chicago Area
Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago
Kansas City Area
The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
For those of you especially interested in curatorial work, see the Nelson’s Mellon Summer Academy
Kemper Musuem of Contemporary Art
The National Museum of Toys/Miniatures
Contact Dr. Jason McDonald in History at Truman (jasonmcd@truman.edu) about internships for Truman students at the National World War I Museum and Memorial in Kansas City.
Kirksville
For more information on the Conservation Internship in Special Collections (Pickler Memorial Library), please contact Ms. Amanda Langendoerfer (Director, Special Collections) at alang@truman.edu.
St. Louis Area
St. Louis Art Museum: check website in January for more information or check here.
The Pulitzer Foundation: check website for more information
Contact Dr. Jason McDonald in the Department of History at Truman (jasonmcd@truman.edu) about internships for Truman students at both the Missouri History Museum and the Mercantile Library in St. Louis.
Other nearby areas
Summer Internship at the Harry S. Truman Museum and Library (Independence, Missouri) (before applying, please contact Dr. Jason McDonald in the Department of History at Truman to discuss possibilities to work on art-related projects: jasonmcd@truman.edu).
Daum Museum of Contemporary Art (they often have a Collections Internship on offer; please contact them for more information)
National Internships
McDermott Internships, Dallas Museum of Art
The Walters Art Museum, Diversity in the Arts Internships, Baltimore, MD (paid!)
Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C.
International Internships
Truman offers various opportunities for internships overseas. Check here for information about overseas internships through Truman’s Center for International Education, or here for information about the Truman in Washington program which also offers interships overseas!
Archival internship in Florence, Italy at the Medici Archive Project (scroll down to “Opportunities”; reading ability in Italian is likely required).
In addition, any urban area (or rural too!) will have art galleries, not-for-profit arts organizations, and the like so check Google to see what might be available. Listed above are some of the places where Truman students have found internships, but lots more are available. Students, please talk with your academic advisors, also, about more opportunities, including those outside the Midwest if you are interested!
Truman at CAA!
Last week in New York was the annual meeting of the College Art Association, the national professional organization for artists, designers, and art historians. Truman's Art Department in general, and the Art History program in particular, were very well represented! Four faculty members attended, as well as one current student, and a variety of Art History alumni. The picture above shows some of the alumni who came to a breakfast for Art History students and alumni on Thursday morning of the conference.
The conference was a great chance for faculty, students, and alumni to attend sessions on everything from using social media in the museum world to Egyptology to the 100th anniversary of the 1913 Armory Show to the popular television show "Mad Men". Two alumni also presented papers on their research, and the current student and one of the alumni were selected to work as session assistants for CAA. In addition, with the wide range of museums and galleries in Manhattan, everyone was able to see some great art!
Hope to see you there next year!
Submitting work to the Juried Student Exhibition!
Student will all know that artwork can be submitted for consideration for the Juried Student Exhibition this weekend. Submitted work should be dropped off at the University Art Gallery (OP 1114) Friday, February 22 and Saturday, February 23 from Noon – 4:00 p.m., and Monday from 9:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Artwork does not have to be from an Art class at Truman but must be at least a part of the submitting student's Truman experience (curricular or co-curricular).
Students may submit up to four (4) artworks and if the artwork requires special hardware for hanging other than the usual l-hooks, nails, pedestals, etc., then it should be supplied with the work.
A a reminder, $300 in awards from the University Art Gallery, as well as two $250 Student Union Building (SUB) Purchase prize awards will be given to selected artists!
Any questions? Contact Gallery DIrector Prof. Aaron Fine (afine@truman.edu).
Reception for Prof. Bates
Please join us on Tuesday, February 19 at 6:00 p.m. in the University Art Gallery (OP 1114) for a reception honoring Prof. Jamie Bates. Prof. Bates will make a few comments about her works currently on display in the Gallery, and there will also be refreshments and a general chance to celebrate as well!
The current exhibitions in the Gallery will close this coming Friday so if you have not been to see them yet, do stop by!
As always, Gallery events are free and open to the public.
Alumni back on campus!
In the past week we have been pleased and fortunate to have back on campus two Art Department alumni to work with students and the Department!
Last week, Heidi (Willhauck) Cook came back to meet with Art History Society and with students in ART 329 Historical Methods. Heidi is currently a Ph.D. candidate in Art History at the University of Pittsburgh where she is working on Modern European art.
This week, Galen Gibson-Cornell gave a wonderful campus-wide talk about his own work and worked with students and others in the Print Shop. Galen is currently in the MFA program at the University of Wisconsin-Madison where he focuses on lithography.
We are very grateful to both for coming back to campus and sharing their expertise with us.
If you are an alum and have news to share with us, please drop us an e-mail at art@truman.edu!
Alumnus to speak tonight!
We are so pleased to welcome back to campus Art Department alumnus Galen Gibson-Cornell. He is in the MFA program in printmaking at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and will give a talk tonight (Monday, February 11) at 7:00 p.m. in OP 2210. Please join us to welcome Galen back and to learn more about his work as a printmaker, artist, and grant writer!
Prof. Wiskirchen at KAA
Please join us on Tuesday, February 5, 5:30 p.m. for the opening reception for Prof. Kelsey Wiskirchen's exhibition at the Kirksville Arts Association. We hope to see you there!
Prof. Wiskirchen provided the following artist's statement about the exhibition and it appears on the KAA website.
Artist’s Statement by Kelsey Wiskirchen
"Cloth metaphors echo from many parts of the world, both today and in the past. Social scientists and laypersons regularly describe society as fabric, woven or knit together. Cloth as a metaphor for society, thread for social relations, express more than connectedness, however. The softness and ultimate fragility of these materials capture the vulnerability of humans, whose every relationship is transient."
—Annette B. Weiner and Jane Schneider, Cloth and Human Experience, 1989
I am driven to engage in work done with others and which also has a tradition of bringing communities together. In communities worldwide, women have found camaraderie and empowerment through the creation of textiles. When I weave and sew, I become aware of my connection to people across cultures and to those who create textiles as an act of survival. The repetitive nature of these processes allows me to reflect on time spent with others. The work in this exhibition focuses on the role weaving has in contemporary societies: sharing stories, continuing tradition, and creating new opportunities for women.
When I was seven, my grandmother taught me how to embroider images onto cloth. For practice, she drew on fabric with pencil and I stitched over her lines. Around the same time, my mother taught me how to use her sewing machine. When I was ready for different thread, she wound a new bobbin and re-threaded the machine for me because it was too complicated to remember. The time these women spent teaching me to sew was focused not only on the physical task but was also a time for sharing stories.
Spending time with women in this way has become a parallel practice to my studio work. During the past few years, I have had the opportunity to engage with women creating textiles in many places. I wove with women at the Foundation for Senior Living in Tempe, Arizona, and as they worked, the women exchanged stories of their lives. Their memories felt precious to me and are what first compelled me to document women’s stories. Through this process, I realized that women everywhere have memories to preserve. I spent time in Bolivia with Projecto Artesania Zona Andina (PAZA), a women’s weaving cooperative, and also with the Mapusha Weaving Cooperative in South Africa. I have been deeply affected by the kindness of these women, their willingness to share time and stories, and their dedication to supporting their families through craft. Women from my hometown of Kirksville, Missouri have written and shared memories of their own mothers, grandmothers, teachers, and other influential women in their lives. Despite differences in location, language, and ways of working, the women who have shared with me all have much in common. These women and stories are represented by this body of work.
Thread is a symbol of duality— representative of individual fragility and strength when woven into cloth. In this work, it is a unifying factor serving as connection between the many women represented. While each geography holds particularities, the creation of cloth is universal. Through the materiality of thread and physical dimension of the stitched line, I hope to bring a sense of both the individual and the collective to this space. The resulting tactile object documents a story that only existed in conversation and memory. Transparency and layering symbolize the relationship that time and distance have on the memory of shared experience.
We are all dependent upon one another and on the world in which we live. As time passes, some details fade from memory. In this way, true stories are fundamentally delicate. They become more fragile and more precious with time. There is poetry in the truth of sharing conversation, laughter, and time with others. The power of cooperative efforts is a solution to many of today’s global problems. My purpose is to examine the experiences women share: stories, skills, and traditions passed on to younger generations.