Co-curated by School of Art Professor John Carson and Lugene Bruno, Worlds Within is on view at the Miller Gallery from September 23 to November 12 and at the Hunt Botanical Institute from September 22 to December 15.
Shannon Ebner’s work examines the dormant language and passive symbolism of everyday life by drawing upon poetics, political rhetoric, and concrete modes of communication embedded in the landscape.
Senior Samantha Mack’s exhibition “Messy” will be on view at Ellis Gallery from October 9-14, with an opening reception on October 9 from 4:30 to 6:30pm.
The School of Art’s Kraus Distinguished Visiting Professor of Art, Erin Cosgrove, creates narrative satiric art that is packed with historical and esoteric content and spread across multiple media.
Composition for the unrealized Governor’s Palace is a multi-channel audio work divided between loudspeakers, headphones, and the movement of the listener.
Upon coming across a home video that presents both his pregnant mother and the artist as a newborn, MFA Candidate Gary Swartzel acts as a drag character of his mother in order to queer his existence prior to birth.
Capturing the past through a lens of make-believe and revision, "6 or 7 Souls" is a collection of paintings that we see as an attempt to “reincarnate” via portraiture, or through spaces once inhabited.
Hadi Tabatabai presents a new original installation in the College of Fine Art Great Hall for the wats:ON? Festival. The installation will open on November 2 with a reception at 5:00pm, followed by a talk with the artist in Kresge Theatre at 6:00pm.
The Frame Gallery presents "Polis," an exhibition of the winners of the Grindroz prize, a stipend to support summer research in Europe by a music or architecture student.
"Body Drift" is an immersive audiovisual performance that uses video-driven animation and multi-channel sound to examine the subtle shifts that take place in the development and degradation of sensory perception.