News from Prof. Kambli!

Bigimage3
Priya Kambli, Me (Inoculation), 2008 (archival inkjet print)

In honor of International Women's Day (March 8, 2012) Prof. Priya Kambli (Studio Art:  Photography) has been selected by the editors of the Lens Culture, an on-line magazine and weblog as one of "55 remarkable female photographers who are making the world a better place".  You can see their page on Prof. Kambli here

Also this month, Prof. Kambli's internationally recognized body of work, Color Falls Down, will be exhibited by the Houston Center for Photography from March 9 – April 22, 2012;  the exhibition will also feature an artist's talk by Prof. Kambli.  These events are part of Houston's FotoFest 2012, the 14th Biennial of Photography and Photo-related Art.  FotoFest is one of the oldest celebrations of photography in the world, and is the biggest and most long-lived such festival in the United States.

Congratulations, Prof. Kambli!

Art history alumna update

We just received this update from alumna Taylor (Klein) Worley (BA, Art History, 2009) on the great things she's been up to:

I am currently in my 4th of 6 semesters with Emporia State University pursuing a Masters in Library Science and Information Technology as well as a Certificate in Archival Studies. I am currently interning with Operation Breakthrough, an non-profit organization formed in 1969 by two Catholic Sisters through St. Vincent’s Catholic School. The organization takes care of over 500 needy children daily from the metropolitan Kansas City Missouri area. They focus on early education and after school programs as well as providing necessary health services for the children and their families. They operate through both public and private funding but are not affiliated with any specific organization. My role is to work with two other students and take approximately 40 years of photographs, slides, negatives, and documents and create a workable collection for authors, journalists, and the employees of Operation Breakthrough to use. A large part of my role is to weed out the unnecessary items from the collection, develop a working finding aid, and to select and implement the necessary software (databases, finding aids, websites, etc.) to keep the archive running in the future. As far as career plans I am looking to work with a museum, historical organization, or special collections department in an academic library. I am looking to stay west of the Mississippi, though those plans are up in the air right now. I am also considering future graduate studies in Art History or Preservation as well as a dual JD/PhD in Library Science to pursue Law Librarianship.

Congratulations, Taylor!

If you are an alum and have news for us, please drop us an e-mail at art@truman.edu OR fill out this form

Congratulations students

Congratulations to the following students, each of whom had at least one (and in many cases more than one) artwork chosen by the juror, Prof. Armin Mühsam (Missouri State University) to be included in the Annual Juried Student Art Competition.  As a reminder, that exhibition will be up in the Gallery until Friday, April 6th.

Adam McMichael, Aerin Melvin, Albert McCormick, Alexandra Olson, Allison Sissom, Alyssa Vannoy, Amanda Bell, Andrea Hock, Andrea Linskey, Andy Doering, Anna Christian, Antonia Brister, Arayna White, Ashley Buhmann, Carley Robison, Carly Winchell, Cate Chaney, Daniel Riekena, Danielle Naeger, Danielle Tobar, Emily Frierdich, Emma Dunlap, Emma Howard, Emma Roeder, Erica Robertson, Jake Wittrock, Jonathan Moeller, Kat Klebenow, Katharyn Sutton, Katie Brewer, Kristine Campbell, Kyle Pappalardo, Lauren Radix, Lauren Thomeczek, Linh Dao, Lona Moody, Mason Einspahr, Meghan Doil, Rebecca Fels, Rebecca Greiner, Reina Koyano, Sam Meisenbacher, Sarah Harford, Shannon Spickler, Shawn Griffin, and Zhaoli Ge

Congratulations everyone!

Art Department student researched and designed website featured by Missouri Department of State

The website researched, written, and designed by Truman State University Art Department students has been featured on the Missouri Department of State's Missouri Digital Heritage website.  Congratulations to all the students (now alumni) who were involved in that project!

For more on the original project, please click here.

Congrats to Art alum!

Congratulations to alumna (Studio Art) Kayla (Goff) Knox who has started the graduate program at Eastern University in Philadelphia working towards a Masters in Urban Studies with an emphasis in Transformational Art! Kayla had this to say about her program:  "With this degree I can work in inner cities, or internationally, teaching art but not art for arts sake. I would teach students academics, social skills, and other things like that all the while using art as the means."

If you are an alum and have news to share, we'd love to hear from you!  Please e-mail us at art@truman.edu.

Gallery Opening Tonight!

We hope to see you at the University Art Gallery (OP 1114) tonight for the opening reception for two great shows!

The Annual Juried Student Art Exhibition will feature works by Truman State University Art students selected by exhibition juror Prof. Armin Mühsam.  Prof. Mühsam, who is Associate Professor of Painting and Drawing at Nortwest Missouri State University in Maryville, Missouri, was invited to jury the show.

At the same time as the Juried Student Art Exhibition, also up in the Gallery will be an exhibition, entitled "Narratives of Inevitability".  This show features Prof. Mühsam's own paintings which deal with "the changing and changed landscape, particularly the face of nature as altered by human intervention".  For Prof. Mühsam's artist's statement and images of some of his paintings, please click here.

Both exhibitions were funded in part by the Missouri Arts Council and are both free and open to the public.  We hope to see you at the reception!

Alumna returns to campus!

IMG_0534
Photo Credit:  Sara Orel

Allison Meadows (BA in Art History, Truman State University, 2008; MSc in Material Anthropology and Museum Ethnology, Oxford University, 2009) returned to campus last week as a guest speaker for the Folklore Colloquium.  In addition to her talk she also presented to several classes about her research on material covered by NAGPRA (the federal Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act) and her work as a Curatorial Assistant at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University.  Allison talked with several students about how to identify and take advantage of opportunities for training in Museum Studies, including how to choose and apply for internships and jobs, what different types of training are needed for different types of jobs, and what academic and co-curricular activities might offer to someone interested in museums as a career path. 

IMG_0543
Allison Meadows speaks to/with students in ART 428: Museums and Collections about training and careers in Museum Studies, on Valentine's Day 2012.  Photo Credit:  Sara Orel

Great Art Events This Week!

This coming week brings two wonderful opportunities to learn about art from Art Department alumnae who have been invited back to campus!

On Tuesday, February 14, alumna Melissa Whitwam (Studio Art, Fibers) has been invited back by Art Department Prof. Julia Karll (also an alumna of the Fibers program at Truman) to conduct a workshop on shibori and natural indigo dyeing.  The workshop will run from 1:30 – 4:20 p.m., with an open potluck from 12:30 – 1:30 p.m., both in the Fibers Studio.  Spots in the workshop are open first to Fibers I students, and then to other Art Department students after that.  Sign up on Prof. Karll's door (OP 2235). 

From Prof. Karll about the workshop:  'Melissa will present her work completed during graduate school and beyond, demonstrate various shibori techniques, explain the natural Indigo dye bath and its upkeep (it's alive!), and participants will have plenty of time to try out the many methods of pattern creation through mechanical resist. We'll be utlizing the book, "Shibori: The Inventive Art of Japanese Shaped Resist Dyeing", by Yoshiko Iwamoto Wada.'

________________________________________

Then, on Wednesday, February 15 (5:30 p.m., OP 2210), alumna Allison Meadows (Art History) will give a talk entitled “Remembering” Identity: Oral history in the twentieth and twenty-first-century museum" as part of the Folklore Minor Colloquium on campus.  The description of her talk follows here:

Oral history has the ability to both engage the museum audience and connect institutions to the communities they represent. This talk will introduce the use of oral history in museum practice more generally, and then focus on the importance of oral history to twenty-first-century cultural and anthropological institutions, Native American communities, and the implementation of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA).

Allison Meadows earned a B.A. in Art History from Truman State University in 2008 and attended the University of Oxford the following year for a M.Sc. in Material Anthropology and Museum Ethnology. Her masters thesis was titled “Authentic Indian Souvenir.” An Investigation into the Issues of Museum Store Product Development and American Indian Material Culture.

While on campus, Ms. Meadows will also be working with Dr. Orel's ART 428 Special Topics in Art History:  Museums and Collecting course.  For more on the great things students in that course have been up to, stay tuned to this blog!

If you are an Art Department alum and would like to let us know what you've been doing, please e-mail us at art@truman.edu