Wednesday, October 28, 2009

2009 SECAC Award Winner...

Assistant Professor of Ceramics, Christina West, was recently named the 2009 Southeastern College Art Conference Artist Fellowship recipient. 

The Southeastern College Art Conference (SECAC) is an organization devoted to the promotion of art in higher education through facilitating cooperation among teachers and administrators in universities and colleges‚ professional institutions and the community served by their institutions. The SECAC Fellowship was established in 1981 for the purpose of supporting member artists and to encourage individual creative growth‚ the development of new ideas for exhibitions and creative projects. Through this program‚ SECAC can more completely serve member artists and institutions.

The SECAC Artist Fellowship will go towards sponsoring West's next body of work, What a Doll: The Human Object as Toy.

Christina West joined the School of Art and Design faculty this fall. She received her MFA from the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University in 2006 and her BFA from Siena Heights University in Adrian, MI in 2003. Christina was an artist-in-residence at the Archie Bray Foundation for Ceramic Arts from 2006-07, where she was awarded the Lilian Fellowship. Additionally, Her work has been supported by a grants and fellowships from the New York Foundation for the Arts, the George Sugarman Foundation, and the Mary L. Nohl Artist Fund. During the summer of 2010 Christina will be an artist-in-residence at the Bemis Center for Contemporary Art in Omaha, NE.

For more information:
SECAC website: http://www.secollegeart.org/secac-fellowship.html
Christina West website: cwestsculpture.com

Upcoming faculty show...


DURATIONS
Craig Dongoski, Assistant Professor of Drawing, Painting & Printmaking

Opening Reception: Friday, November 6, 7:00-9:00 PM
Exhibit Dates: November 6-December 11, 2009
Location: Gallery Stokes
  261 Walker Street SW
  Atlanta, GA 30313

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

TAG Workshop Series begins this Thursday!


TAG Workshop Series

Class: Sewing for Beginners
Date: Thursday, October 22, 2009
Time: 5:30 P.M.

TAG, the Textiles Artisans Guild, will host Sewing for Beginners as part of their new once-a-month Workshop Series. Each class will focus on one textile-related subject taught by a Textiles grad student. Classes are free & a great way to learn a new skill!

Sewing for Beginners will be taught by first year Textiles grad student Gillian Morris and includes identification of the sewing machine parts, how to thread, overall usage, and finishing edges on your textile work. Even if you're not taking a Textiles course, you may want to use sewing skills in your own work or simply learn something new.

Classes are open to all students, but space is limited to 8, so reserve your space by emailing Yolanda at ydavis2@student.gsu.edu

Susan Faludi Lecture Coming Up...


Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author Susan Faludi presents this Hellen Ingram Plummer Lecture in conjunction with the exhibition LOSING YOURSELF IN THE 21ST CENTURY, on view in the Welch School of Art and Design Gallery. Faludi is the author of StiffedThe Betrayal of the American Man and Backlash: The Undeclared War Against American Women, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Nonfiction. Her most recent book, The Terror Dream: Fear and Fantasy in Post-9/11 America examines the post-9/11 outpouring in the media, popular culture, and political life.

Date: Monday, November 2, 2009
Time: 7:00 - 9:00 PM
Location: Student Center - Speakers Auditorium

Monday, October 19, 2009

Juried exhibition opportunity...

Picturing Home: Friends of Emory Visual Arts Juried Photography Exhibition

Important Dates:
Entry Deadline: November 3, 2009
Exhibit: December 3, 2009 - January 29, 2010
Opening Reception: December 3, 2009; 5:00-7:00 p.m.
Jurors' Talk: December 3, 2009; 7:00 p.m.

Prospectus available at www.visualarts.emory.edu

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Interior Design Assistant Professor Amy Landsberg Wins 2009 South Atlantic Region AIA Honor Award

On October 3rd, the 2009 South Atlantic Region Convention of the American Institute of Architects honored the best design projects from the states of Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina. Among those selected from over 200 submittals to win the top Honor Award recognitions was The Georgia Tech Power Wrap, an installation that originated in a COA student design workshop led by then Visiting Professor Amy Landesberg, now Assistant Professor of Interior Design at the Ernest G. Welch School of Art & Design. 

"Georgia Tech Power Wrap," designed by Amy Landesberg Architects and Georgia Tech architecture students, encloses and bathes the new electrical substation on the southwest side of campus in a constantly changing light show. When the substation, located near the intersection of Marietta St. and Northside Drive, was due for an update in 2005, Georgia Tech's Planning and Facilities Design & Construction divisions sought ways to improve the site's appearance and make it more a part of the campus. That inquiry resulted in Landesberg's involvement in leading a College of Architecture student workshop where all sorts of proposals materialized, from which a final design gradually emerged.  All agreed that the station equipment should not be hidden, but rather that the views of it should attract interest in this massive node in the electrical grid. The students, including Erik Amir, Nikki Holt, Kiem Ho, Erin Lindley, Bryan Peter, and Nate Stone, presented their exciting design to Georgia Tech and eventually developed it into the built installation.

The 500 foot long enclosure consists of a series of columns supporting dozens of steel panels with slats or louvers. The slats are set at various angles, so that one sees different parts of what's inside, depending on where the viewer is standing. Inside, where high voltage transformers and switches distribute electric power, a pattern of colored lamps illuminates the equipment at night. These LED floodlights are controlled by a computer program, using the same kind of equipment employed for concerts and stage shows. The light show is reprogrammed periodically, and Landesberg hopes that other artists, members of the Georgia Tech community, or even members of the public might eventually be able to propose and execute customized presentations. 

The Power Wrap is a translucent screen, employing a specifically designed fluctuating pattern to filter or sharpen views into the station. The fluctuating pattern strengthens the line of the street by camouflaging the location of four personnel gates and three full-bay, full-height vehicular gates.  At the pedestrian level, pattern creates views into the station that seem alternately closed, partially open and fully open. Light flickers with motion and ominous insulators, buses and transformers come in and out of focus. 

The success of the installation can be measured both in praise the project has received and in surprised stares of those who walk or drive by at night. Georgia Tech Power Wrap also won a prestigious 2007 Award of Merit from the Georgia branch of the American Institute of Architects, a 2008  Award of Excellence from the Atlanta Urban Design Commission, and it was included in the 2007 Year-In-Review of the Americans for the Arts Public Art Network. 

Monday, October 12, 2009

Beyond the Grave, a horror themed art show...


First year Art Education grad student, Alyssa Messinger, co-curated Beyond the Grave, a horror themed art show corresponding to the Atlanta Horror Festival's Buried Alive Film Festival, which Messinger also co-organized with local filmmaker, Blake Myers. Messinger co-curated the art show, which doubled as a wrap-party for the entire film festival, with local artist, Ryan Shuckhart. Many of the featured artists are local to Atlanta, including Shane Morton, Mike Groves, Craig Henderson, Ted Murphy and Annie Stegg. Georgia State University students featured in the show were: Alyssa Messinger, Juliana Berry and Spencer Murrill. The show will hang at The Highlander until October 31, 2009. All pieces are for sale.

The Highlander
931 Monroe Dr NE # C101
Atlanta, GA 30308-1778
(404) 872-0060
www.thehighlanderatlanta.com

The Highlander hours of operation:


Mon: 11:00 am - 3:00 am
Tue: 11:00 am - 3:00 am
Wed: 11:00 am - 3:00 am
Thu: 11:00 am - 3:00 am
Fri: 11:00 am - 3:00 am
Sat: 11:00 am - 3:00 am
Sun: 12:30 pm - Midnight