Author: Rick O'Toole

Chronicle of Higher Education: Employers Value Humanities Grads with Digital Skills

According to a recent article in the Chronicle of Higher Education, prospective employers highly value humanities graduates, in fields like art history and English, who also have digital skills, like building and maintaining websites and managing social media.

One career counselor interviewed noted, “For several years now, I have been meeting with the center’s faculty members, students, and internship directors to learn what they are hearing from employers about our students. Again and again they hear potential employers say things like, ‘We like liberal-arts graduates. They are curious and creative, they write well, they can do research, they are quick learners, and they are good critical thinkers.’ The best of them have the ‘ability to synthesize and distill large amounts of information.’ And ‘we especially need individuals who are good storytellers—who can convey the mission of our organization in a variety of forms.'”

Click here to see the full article.

 

Wall Street Journal: Art Grads Enjoy High Earnings and Career Satisfaction, Low Unemployment

The Wall Stree Journal recently reported the results of a 2011 Georgetown University study showing that the unemployment rate in the first two years for those graduating with bachelor of fine arts degree is 7.8%, dropping to 4.5% for those out of school longer. The median income is $42,000.

“Artists’ income is comparable to other liberal-arts majors,” noted Anthony Carnevale, director of Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce. “They do a little better than psychology majors, since counseling and social work is a very low-wage occupation.”

http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304402104579149060054918936

Contemporary Art Galleries Exhibition “Display” Explores Marketing as Art

February 3 through April 14

Contemporary Art Galleries  University Of Connecticut

 

Artist Reception & DISPLAY AS MARKETING Symposium April 14 4pm – 7pm

Martin Basher + Gabriele Beveridge + Dike Blair + Josephine Meckseper + Mika Tajima

Display Press Release 

 

DISPLAY: MARKETING AS ART features works that illustrate, engage, and challenge the visual language of commercialism. It is both about the seductive nature of effective product display and a critique concerning last year’s record-breaking auction prices. A $142 million price tag for a work of art blatantly marginalizes the significance of the artist’s original intent. DISPLAY challenges the viewer to inspect the blurring of lines that separate art and commodity. This initial idea was developed from the overwhelming sensory experiences one has upon entering high-end stores such as Barneys, Bergdorf Goodman, or Madison Avenue’s elite boutiques. 

 

 The work of the five artists presented here echoes and appropriates the visual language and materials associated with fashionable product display to different ends. The artists fabricate their creative commentaries utilizing chrome fixtures and shelving, reflective materials and mirrors, various types of display panels, and colorfully packaged objects. Their works follow the rich tradition of removing an object or material from its normal context and putting it into an art specific context. The recontextualisation of everyday objects became a hallmark of the 20th century beginning with Picasso’s and Braque’s Synthetic Cubism, followed by Duchamp’s experimentations with “ready-mades.” Since then, the trend to employ found objects and embed them with new meaning has gone through numerous cycles. The seven installations presented here are part of that continuum, referencing art history while adding new perspectives. 

 

Each of these sculptures employs images never meant to stand on their own, but rather to expand the iconography created by the artists to be incorporated into their more encompassing art content. Where Herman Miller’s iconic cubicles are transformed into un-enterable minimalist cubes, every work likewise includes and incorporates materialistic objects such as Noguchi lamps and modernist furniture. 

 

This exhibition has been made possible through the generous support of Walbridge Capital and Kristi Ann Matus.

 

For more information: 860. 486. 1511

CROSSTALK @ CAG

CROSSTALK @ CAG

University of Connecticut, Storrs Campus

Week one – Jesper Just – Nov. 4 to Nov. 10

Week two – Clinton Watkins – Nov. 11 to Nov.17

Week three – The Complaint Choir: Tokyo Nov. 18 to Nov. 24

Week four – Janet Biggs Nov. 25 to Dec. 13

Daily Campus: The UConn Experience is a Unique One for an Art Major

Caitlyn Hanlon is a 7th-semester fine arts major, focusing on photography.

Her classes start around 9:30 a.m., just like most students. She takes two different types of classes, normal lectures, like Chinese contemporary art history and then studio courses, like photography or drawing. Her studio classes last three hours.

Time management, Hanlon said, is an important aspect of an art student’s life.

“It’s hard to organize, very time consuming,” Hanlon said. “Setting up and cleaning up takes a while. I can’t go to Starbucks and read from my textbook, you have to set up, work on your project and then clean up, it takes a lot of time. One has to plan what to do first and when to do it. For example when you are painting with oil you paint for a while, let it dry and work on another project and wait until it dries to continue.”

To read the entire article, visit The Daily Campus.

To learn more about non-majors taking Art & Art History classes here.

UConn Today: Professor Kathyrn Myers – A Journey Through Indian Art at the Benton

For Kathryn Myers, curating the exhibition “Convergence: Contemporary Art from India and the Diaspora” that opens on Oct. 22 at the William Benton Museum of Art was considerably less difficult than the first time she organized an exhibition of art from India nearly a decade ago.

The 2004 exhibition “Masala; Diversity and Democracy in South Asian Art” opened a couple of years after her semester-long Fulbright Fellowship to India in 2002, her third trip to India but the first that allowed her to spend an entire semester immersed in the art and culture of the world’s second largest nation. It also was the first time the professor of art and art history in the School of Fine Arts had the opportunity to curate an exhibition.

“We didn’t have enough grant money to hire curators for each section of the exhibition, so I had to do it myself,” she says. “I had a Provost’s Research Grant, so I could take the semester off to work on it continuously. It was like a crash course in India artI was also able to make a short trip back to India to pick up more works of art. That was the beginning.”

To read the rest of the article, visit UConn Today.

To find out more about the exhibit, visit the Benton Museum of Art.

New Faculty Member Yan Geng Is Teaching Asian Art

Dr. Yan Geng has joined the Art & Art History faculty as a joint appointment between Art History and Asian American Studies.  She is part of a growing cadre of faculty focused on Asia and the Asian diaspora.  Professor Geng’s research focuses on modern and contemporary Chinese art.

“This focus allowed us to hire people who significantly build upon the established field of Asian studies by engaging contemporary and modern questions,” says Cathy Schlund-Vials, associate professor of English and director of the Asian American Studies Institute. “We’re moving from traditional area studies to a more global focus. At the same time, we are expanding the internationalist work of the faculty in Asian American studies, whose work is shaped by considerations of migration, movement, and diaspora.”

Daniel Weiner, vice provost for global affairs, says, “It’s a very exciting time to invest in faculty with expertise pertaining to Asia. It’s also exciting that UConn has an opportunity to construct the study of Asia in a unique way through inclusion of transnational and diasporic studies.”

In Spring 2014, Dr. Geng will teach a course on the painting traditions of China and Japan (ARTH 3740: Far Eastern Painting), and permission numbers are available for this class.  Be sure to look for more of Dr. Geng’s courses in the future!

Art ReStart: Students in Conversation

Art and Art History students participating in  SAIL (Student Artist Initiative for Leadership) with Professor Ray DiCapua are engaged in projects to transform the Department.  They’ve installed a chalkboard mural space in one hallway to host student work, are building an alumni network to enhance professional development, and have begun a series of video conversations, “Art ReStart,” to explore what it means to be an art student: http://vimeo.com/channels/607421

 

 

The SAIL group has approached its mission with energy and creativity.  “In my 30 years of teaching here, I have not witnessed anything quite like this,” notes Professor DiCapua, the group’s faculty mentor.

Faculty and professional staff are visiting with the group and offering advice and support for the different projects.  Stay tuned as the work progresses!

 

Prospective Students Are Invited to Discovery Day, Oct. 14

 

Prospective students and their families are invited to visit the Department on Monday, October 14th, 2014. It’s an ideal day for a visit because high schools typically have a vacation day but UConn doesn’t, so prospective students can see us in action.

The day begins with a 10 am joint session for all prospective students and their families. This one-hour session will feature presentations by the Dean and Assistant Dean as well as professional staff from Admissions and Financial Aid.

At 11 am, prospective students for Art & Art History will have the chance to visit classes, including Drawing I, Basic Studio: Painting, and Aqua Media. Prospective students will then have a casual lunch with current students and faculty in the Arena Gallery, 12-1 pm. At 1 pm, we’ll have special demonstrations in our digital photography and sculpture labs and printmaking studios. Students will have the option of joining a campus tour at 2 pm.

There is no cost for this day – attendees are asked to RSVP to
SFAOffice@uconn.edu with their contact information and area of interest.

 

 

 

AAH Convocation: Brave New Art World

Featuring “Two Coats of Paint” art blogger and artist Sharon Butler and New Zealand multimedia artist Shigeyuki Kihara, this panel will explore the contemporary art world from two perspectives.  What are the emerging trends in contemporary art? How can young artists get their work shown?  How does social media affect what happens in art? Sharon Butler is a long-time commentator on and participant in the New York art scene, and Shigeyuki Kihara is a visitor to New York, currently serving as artist-in-residence at the International Studio and Curatorial Program in Brooklyn.  Kihara has exhibited recently at the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa; the Trondheim Museum, Norway; and the Utah Museum of Fine Arts.  Butler is represented by Pocket Utopia gallery in New York, and has exhibited at Real Art Ways in Hartford and Season in Seattle, WA.

“Brave New Art World” will take place Thursday, September 19, at 6 pm.  This event is co-sponsored by the Department of Art and Art History and the William Benton Museum of Art, with the generous support of the Gene and Georgia Mittelman Lecture Fund.  It is free and open to the public.  All Art and Art History students are required to attend.

Visiting Artists Megan and Murray McMillan Presentation – September 12 at 3:30 PM

Department of Art and Art History
Visiting Artists
Megan and Murray McMillan

September 12, 2013
Presentation: 3:30pm, Arena Gallery

Megan and Murray McMillan produce interrelated video, installations, and photographs that delve into the nature of performance and the history of representation. Their process begins with large, sculptural sets that serve as the site and material for short videos of choreographed movements of actors and friends, gallery installations, and photographs. The notion of performance is front and center in these works in both subject matter and their impressive, large-scale gallery installations that double as sets. In each project, the distinction between ‘real’ performance and ‘staged’ performance is blurred.

For more information on their work, visit meganandmurraymcmillan.com.

El Instituto and AAH Co-sponsored Visiting Artist Favianna Rodriguez, February 18-20

Art and Art History was pleased to co-sponsor Visiting Artist Favianna Rodriguez with El Instituto (Latin American and Puerto Rican/Latino Studies) in February 2013. Rodriguez conducted printmaking and poster workshops and spoke with students across campus during her visit in the newly renovated Bishop Center Studios.

Favianna Rodriguez is a celebrated printmaker and digital artist based in Oakland, California. Using high-contrast colors and vivid figures, her composites reflect literal and imaginative migration, global community, and interdependence.

Rodriguez is renown for her vibrant posters dealing with issues such as war, immigration, globalization, and social movements. By creating lasting popular symbols – where each work is the multiplicand and its location the multiplier – her work interposes private and public space, as the art viewer becomes the participant carrying art beyond the borders of the museum.

Rodriguez has lectured widely on the use of art in civic engagement and the work of artists who, like herself, are bridging the community and museum, the local and international. Rodriguez’s has worked closely with artists in Mexico, Europe, and Japan, and her works appear in collections at Bellas Artes (Mexico City), The Glasgow Print Studio (Glasgow, Scotland), and Los Angeles County Museum of Art (Los Angeles).

Latina magazine recently published this interview with Rodriguez.

Rodriguez has exhibited at Museo del Barrio (New York); de Young Museum (San Francisco); Mexican Fine Arts Center (Chicago); Yerba Buena Center for the Arts (San Francisco); Sol Gallery (Providence, RI); Huntington Museum and Galería Sin Fronteras (Austin, TX); and internationally at the House of Love & Dissent (Rome), Parco Museum (Tokyo), as well as in England, Belgium, and Mexico. She was a 2005 artist-in-residence at San Francisco’s prestigious de Young Museum, a 2007-2008 artist-in-residence at Kala Art Institute (Berkeley, CA), and received a 2006 Sea Change Residency from the Gaea Foundation (Provincetown, MA). Rodriguez is recipient of a 2005 award from the Center for the Study of Political Graphics.

As a teacher, Rodriguez has conducted workshops and presentations at Loyola Marymount University (Los Angeles), El Faro de Oriente (Mexico), de Young Museum (San Francisco), the Habana Hip Hop Festival (Habana, Cuba), as well as Williams College and The Commonwealth Club. In 2003, she co-founded the Taller Tupac Amaru printing studio to foster resurgence in the screenprinting medium. She is co-founder of the EastSide Arts Alliance (ESAA) and Visual Element, both programs dedicated to training young artists in the tradition of muralism. She is additionally co-founder and president of Tumis Inc., a bilingual design studio helping to integrate art with emerging technologies.

Rodriguez is co-editor of Reproduce and Revolt! with internationally renowned stencil artist and art critic Josh MacPhee (Soft Skull Press, 2008). Her artwork also appears in The Design of Dissent (Rockport Publishers, 2006), Peace Signs: The Anti-War Movement Illustrated (Edition Olms, 2004), and The Triumph of Our Communities: Four Decades of Mexican Art (Bilingual Review Press, 2005).

Professor Olu Oguibe Receives Prestigious Arts Award

Professor Olu Oguibe will be one of three Connecticut artists receiving the prestigious Governor’s Arts Award for 2013.

Established in 1978, the Connecticut Arts Awards recognize remarkable individuals and organizations for excellence and lifetime achievement in the arts. Since 1978, more than 140 artists, arts organizations, patrons, businesses and individuals have been honored for their dedication to the arts and culture in Connecticut.

Two other Connecticut residents will be honored this year along with Professor Oguibe: poet, essayist, playwright Elizabeth Alexander of Hamden, chairwoman of the African-American studies department at Yale University; and saxophonist, composer, bandleader Jimmy Greene of Newtown, assistant professor of music and assistant coordinator of jazz studies at Western Connecticut State University.

Governor Dannel P. Malloy will present the awards on June 15 at 6:30 p.m. on the New Haven Green, as part of the International Festival for Arts & Ideas.

For this year’s selection, a list of more than 100 names were assembled by the staff of the Office of the Arts from past nominations received as well as new ones. The arts council of about 20 members reviews nominations make their recommendations. The final selection is approved by the Governor’s office.

Previous UConn recipients of this award include puppeteer Frank Ballard and the Benton Museum of Art.

MFA Alum Patrick Earle Hammie is Building a National Reputation as an Artist and Educator

Patrick Earl Hammie (MFA Painting, 2008) is an assistant professor at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, and exhibits his work widely. He recently shared some thoughts about his MFA experience and the challenges of building a career as an artist and educator:

What were the most valuable aspects of your graduate education here at UConn? How did the MFA program prepare you for success as an artist and teacher?

Having the space and time at UConn to develop artistically and cognitively in a safe and stimulating environment was crucial in my development as an artist. It allowed me the distance from which to reconsider my work and development, and to put in a numerous amount of studio hours without the lure of distraction.

Being in close proximity to New York and frequent trips there through seminars were important in developing a mental sketch of the art world that I wanted to participate in, as well as reinforcing my own sense of artists’ values and aesthetics.

Having access to a diverse group of faculty and peers was invaluable. It provided me with the experience of seeing how other problem solvers with diverse media backgrounds addressed and critiqued formal, humanistic, and conceptual concerns within their work and mine. Similarly, being in close quarters with the art historians provided me with a different critical context from which to consider the grand narrative of Art and how I could situate myself within it.

Access to lecturers and visiting artists opened up new dialogues around content and criticisms and provided me with behavioral models that demonstrated what practicing artists and scholars looked and sounded like outside of the UConn faculty.

The opportunities that I had to teach undergraduate courses allowed me to hone pedagogical skills and strategies that would help me to define a teaching philosophy, ask questions about my studio practice, and be competitive among other candidates in the job market.

Through interactions with faculty, staff, grads and undergrads, I learned how to collaborate with others and how to navigate academic politics and various personalities. While not typically forefronted, these valuable and sometimes difficult lessons still serve me in forming collegial and rewarding relationships in academia and the art world.

What have you been doing since graduating?

Since graduating, my ongoing research blends traditions of the Old Masters with contemporary modes of representation, to explore the tension between power and vulnerability. I adopt body language and narrative to reinvent and remix ideal beauty and heroic nudity. My paintings examine how male artists have historically represented themselves and the nude. Perhaps more than any other form of image-making, figurative painting is often read as a mirror of the time in which it is made; the canvas might be uniquely valued as a type of sociohistorical document. In this vein, my portraits are situated in the discourse of contemporary art that investigates constructions of identity, gender politics, and race.

I’ve received several awards that include the Alliance of Artists Communities’ Midwestern Voices & Visions Award, the Tanne Foundation Award and an Award of Excellence from the Zhou B Art Center in Chicago. I’ve exhibited nationally and internationally at venues such as Kathleen Cullen Gallery, Dakshina Chitra Gallery, Real Art Ways, Kunst in der Carlshütte, SoFA Gallery Indiana University, The Painting Center, Manifest Creative Research Gallery, West Gallery at California State University, Jewett Art Gallery at Wellesley College, Stewart Center Gallery at Purdue University and Boseman Gallery at University of North Carolina Wilmington. I’ve lectured at venues that include Skidmore College, Krannert Art Museum, Morehead State University and Northeastern Illinois University.

I’ve participated in a couple of residencies through fellowships and grants at places such as Wellesley College and the John Michael Kohler Art Center. At Wellesley I was provided with a livable sum and stipend for one year so I could dedicate that time to my research and career development. This culminated in my first post-graduate solo exhibition. At Kohler I participated in their Arts/Industry residency program that primarily included the industrial pottery studio at the Kohler Company. There I spent 2 months creating works utilizing the industrial materials and equipment, and was exposed to a body of technical knowledge that enabled me to explore ceramic sculptural forms and concepts not possible in my own studio.

In 2009, I joined the faculty at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign as a tenure-track assistant professor. At UIUC I teach foundational drawing, all levels of painting, life drawing, and graduate seminars and advising.

Any advice for current or future students?

These are some things that have served me well.

In regard to research and creative practice, the majority of successful artists I’ve observed have answered for themselves these questions that Kerry James Marshall stated every artist needs to ask:
Why is the world the way it is, and who says it should be so?
What is this Art thing all about?
What’s at stake?
What do you want as an artist who means to participate in it?
What is it you can do to determine or to guarantee that you achieve the kind of things you set out to achieve for yourself?

In regard to research and teaching, the situation at UConn is unique in that you have direct access to a diverse field of creative practitioners and academics within your peers and professors. Learn as much as you can about the material and conceptual language and concerns specific to your area of focus and understand the communalities with your own area of concentration through informal discussion and critiques. Having the ability to engage in multitude of dialogues involving a spectrum of media will enrich and prepare you for a life as a contemporary artist (even if your practice is medium specific), and make you a more viable candidate for teaching positions that increasingly demand that instructors have specific media and/or conceptual expertise as well as the ability to fluidly and responsibly discourse across media.

You currently have two years in which to complete your degree. Candidates that thrive in this curriculum are self-starters with a deep seriousness of purpose and strong sense of self-identity. That’s not to say that experimentation and self-doubt are not part of the process, they are imperative; I only wish to stress the necessity to contextualize your situation and forefront the need to establish a rigorous and sustainable physical and conceptual work ethic.

Once you graduate, apply for every opportunity, monetary award, open call for juried shows, exhibition proposals and papers, and job prospects that you can reasonably afford. This will help you forge your identity as a practitioner and gain precious experiences only available to those who’ve put themselves out into the world. Be open to the rewards and rejections that will follow.

Respect and invest in your mentors and peers, their companionship can feed your spirit and provide inroads to opportunities that may further your career. As time goes on become more selective and edit your CV to feature the more prestigious moments. Get out into the world and meet people: people you want to be among professionally and those who have access to spaces that you would like to operate within.

In regard to service, learn what it means to be a good citizen first in the university/school and ultimately in the various Art Worlds. Giving back isn’t something you only begin doing once you’ve reached a “certain age.” Involving yourself in curatorial projects, internships, studio assistantships, collaborations, workshops and panel discussions are some of the ways in which to engage with your community, build bridges between yourself and other like-minded people in and outside of your field, and reinvest in the worlds that you participating in.

Lastly, don’t stop working (aggressively) and be ambitious. Remember, it’s hard to see all the progress you’re making while you’re in the forest.