Art Department events during Finals Week!

Strong Foundations

Monday, December 9 – Friday December 13

University Art Gallery (OP 1114)

The University Art Gallery will hold its annual Strong Foundations exhibition.  This show features student work from our Foundations courses selected by faculty as some of the most exemplary artwork produced in these intro-level Art courses.  The exhibition will be up during Finals Week, as well as the first four days of the Spring semester.  The closing reception will be held on Thursday, January 16 at 4:30 p.m.

Exhibition of Student Photographs

Wednesday, December 11

5:00 – 6:30 p.m.

Kirksville Arts Association (117 S. Franklin St.)

Students in Prof. Priya Kambli's Photography classes will be displaying work at Kirksville's arts center.  The opening will be on Wednesday from 5:00 – 6:30 p.m. 

As always, these events are free and open to the public.  We hope to see you there!

Art Department events this week!

We have a busy upcoming week this week–also the last week of classes–in the Art Department.  We hope that everyone can join us for some or all of these events!

Tuesday, December 3                                                         

Art History Out-of-the-Classroom Experience Presentations

All Art History majors are required, sometime during their time at Truman, to gain valuable experience outside the classroom.  Three Art History majors, Paige Allinson, Danielle Bell, and Grace Billimack, will be presenting their experiences on Tuesday.

6:00 p.m., OP 2115

Studio Art Exhibition Opening

Two Studio students, Emily VanGelder and Daniel Riekena, will have work for their Studio Art Capstone on display this week in the University Art Gallery with an opening reception Tuesday evening.

6:00 p.m., University Art Gallery (OP 1114)

Thursday, December 5                                                        

Exhibition Reception

A reception for students exhibiting work from Prof. Aaron Fine's advanced painting and drawing classes will be held.

4:30 p.m., KB Gym

Presentation of Graduate Research

Mayda Bell, Toni Brister, Emily Frierdrich, and Andrea Linskey will present graduate research.

7:00 p.m., OP 2210

As always, all Department events are free and open to the public!  We hope to see you there.

 

Site-Specific Fibers Project in OP!

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Work by Jessica Zilch

Students, staff, and faculty who are in Ophelia Parrish (the building that houses Art, Music, and Theatre) this week will have a chance to see some great site-specific fibers projects created by students in Prof. Lily Lee's Fibers I class.  There are eleven works in total all around the building.

For the assignment, students were asked to tailor-make a slipcover or other fabric construction that alters a structure, part of a structure, or space in or near Ophelia Parrish.  The works also needed to involve a minimum of two manipulated fabric methods.  Students were also given a variety of installation options, including that the sewn form "fits over the existing structure (like a slip cover), ties or loops connecting the fabric to the structure, or ties securing the structure to itself to conform to the shape of the existing structure (like a wrap-around skirt), or more."

Students were also challenged to "Keep in mind how the color, pattern, imagery, design, and subject matter of the surface [they created] relates to the form [they constructed], and the existing structure or space [they altered]."

The pieces will be up through Friday, so please stop by to see them!

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Work by Anna Grace

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Work by Lauren Moll

Prof. Lee in Juried Exhibition

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Congratulations to Prof. Lily Lee (Fibers-Sculpture-3D).  One of her recent works, shown above with details below, has been chosen for inclusion in a juried exhibition, Post-Racial U.S?.  The exhibition will be up at the University Art Gallery at New Mexico State University through December 20, 2013.

Izzy_Whole_001

 

Kirksville Skate Park vote!

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"Octopus", Kristen Williams

Prof. Aaron Fine (Studio Art;  University Art Gallery) sent the following about a great class project;  hope you can all sign on and vote soon!

"My Advanced Drawing students came up with designs for a Skate Park Mural for Kriksville Parks and Recreation. Folks can go to this facebook page and "like" the one they want to see become a reality. www.facebook.com/kirksvilleparksandrecreation."  

Prof. Wilbur Residency

AIAImageNightJune13-WEB

As part of her recent sabbatical leave, Prof. Wynne Wilbur participated in an artist's residency at the Red Lodge Clay Center in Montana.  Prof. Wilbur shared with us information about (and pictures of!) her great experience.

"I
was part of an AIA group of 5 women (all who loosely have ties to Kansas).  AIA
stands for Artist Invites Artists. In this case, Glenda Taylor (Ceramics, chair
of art at Washburn U. in Topeka) had been to Red Lodge before and invited the
rest of us to join her for a month in June. We all worked in the same studio
and lived in the same restored Victorian house in town. We mostly worked on our
own stuff, but shared ideas, processes, impressions etc. while we worked."

AIAImageNightJune13-WEB-18

Truman Ranked #3 by Washington Monthly

Good news from Truman Today:

Truman State University has again been named one of America’s best colleges by a national publication.
 
Truman  is No. 3 in the Best Master’s University category of the 2013 Washington Monthly College Rankings. Truman is the only Missouri school listed in the top 75, and the only public Missouri school on the entire Top 100 Master’s Universities list.

Washington Monthly bases its rankings on three criteria: social mobility, which gives colleges credit for enrolling low-income students and helping them earn degrees; research production, with particular emphasis on schools where undergraduates eventually earn Ph.D.s; and commitment to service. More information about the rankings can be found here.

In addition to the Washington Monthly, The Princeton Review listed Truman as one of the nation’s best institutions for undergraduate education. The education services company has again featured Truman in its annual college guide, “The Best 378 Colleges.” Only about 15 percent of America’s four-year colleges are profiled in the 2014 edition.

Prof. Kambli Selected for New York Times Portfolio Review

Prof. Priya Kambli (Photography) was one of 160 photographers invited out of a pool of 2,700 photographers by The New York Times for their first New York Portfolio Review, a free two-day gathering in April sponsored by The New York Times Lens Blog. The event featured private critiques, discussions, and workshops on topics ranging from photo editing to grant writing to business practices to finding gallery representation. The review was a chance for a diverse group of 160 photographers to meet with leading photo editors, museum curators, book publishers and gallery owners for
one-on-one portfolio reviews. 

When contacting Prof. Kambli about her selection the authors of the Lens blog wrote:  "We received 2,700 entries for a total of 160 spots over two days, and there was an extraordinary amount of superior work. We had to turn down far more excellent entries than we wanted to — choosing was not easy. Not in the least."

Congratulations, Prof. Kambli!  For more on her work, please see visit her website.

Art History Student Interns at the St. Louis Art Museum

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Photo Credit:  Emily Hagen

Art Department senior Emily Hagen (Art History) received a competitive Curatorial Internship this past summer to work at the St. Louis Art Museum and shared the following about her experiences.

During the internship Emiliy worked one-on-one with the American Art curator, a Truman alum, to conduct research for potential exhibitions, reframe works, and compile a bibliography on a sculpture in the permanent collection.

In addition, the end of June saw the opening of the expansion of the museum. SLAM revealed its new contemporary wing designed by architect David Chipperfield (shown below). Interns were also granted an inside look at the events leading to, and following, the grand opening.

Finally, interns participated in a conceptual art piece by Yoko Ono, called the Wish Tree (shown above). They worked with the Contemporary Art curator to collect and bundle wishes.

Private gallery tours led by curators allowed interns to ask questions and learn from successful art professionals and sessions with other departments, including education, development, and registrar gave an insight into the functions and careers within the museum.

Emily wrote of the experience: "I am endlessly grateful for the opportunity to work as an intern at the St. Louis Art Museum. My experience enlivened my passion for art and has confirmed my desire to work in the art world after graduation."

Congratulations Emily! Students interested in applying for one of these internships should check the St. Louis Art Museum website later this year.

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Visiting Speaker: Bruce Scherting–Exhibition Design

Truman State University Art Department Visiting Speaker Bruce Scherting will give a talk this Thursday, October 24 at 4:30 p.m. in OP 2210.

Prof. Scherting is currently Exhibits Director at the University of Kansas Natural History Museum and Biodiversity Research Center where he works in Exhibit Design, Collaboration, and Interpretation, and teaches classes in Museum Studies.  Previously, he worked for the University of Iowa Natural History Museum as an exhibition designer and developer, and has also worked at the Field Museum and Shedd Aquarium in Chicago.  He holds a BS from Eastern Montana College and an MFA from Southern Illinois University.

In addition to giving a public talk, Prof. Scherting will also be working with students in Dr. Sara Orel's ART 428 Topics in Art History:  Museums and Collecting course, as well as with other students and classes around campus.

We hope to see you at some of these great events!