Past Exhibitions: Spring 2007
AU Art Department: Student Exhibitions
Black Masters
Diseño Shakespear
High Fiber
Jules Olitski: Late Sculpture
Laura Amussen: The Facade
Made in America: The Washington Print Club 19th Biennial
Resolutions: New Art from Northern Ireland
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Kelly Ulcak, Ram Pressure
Mixed media on paper
Courtesy the artist
AU Art Department:
Student Exhibitions
Undergraduate Painting, Printmaking, Sculpture, and Design
Presenting work by undergraduate students in the Department of Art.
First-Year MFA Candidates
Featuring painting, drawing, sculpture, and installation by MFA candidates who have just
completed their first year of their two-year MFA program at AU.
MFA Thesis Exhibition
This culminating exhibition of AU’s two-year Master of Fine Arts degree
features abstract and representational painting and sculpture, as well as installation
art (some directly on gallery walls) by Graham Childs, Tom Debari, Ellen Ann
Gallup, Rebecca Johnson, Max Kuller, Kelly Ulcak, David Waddell, Jenny Walton
and Marty Weishaar.
Romare Bearden, The Grey
Cat, 1979
Collage on board
Courtesy Essie Green Galleries
Black Masters
In 1876 an Edward Bannister landscape won the 1876 Centennial Exposition
award for oil painting. Yet not a word appears in most American art histories.
In 2003 the National Gallery’s retrospective of the art of Romare
Bearden became a turning point in the recognition of black artists. This
brief survey exhibition is a sketch of the journey of African-Americans
and their participation in American art. Charles Alston, Edward M. Bannister,
Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Sam Gilliam, John W. Hardrick, Lois Mailou
Jones, Edward M. Porter, William E. Scott, Charles Sebree, Allen Stringfellow,
Henry Ossawa Tanner, Alma Thomas, Mose Tolliver. Sponsored by Hennessy Corportation.
Temaikèn Zoo Wayfinding
System, 2001
Design: Lorenzo Shakespear & Juan Shakespear
Diseño Shakespear
A family-owned design consultancy founded in Argentina by Ronald
Shakespear nearly 50 years ago, Diseño Shakespear is constantly transforming
and evolving. Today, the multidisciplinary design company is run
by Ronald, his daughter Barbara, and his sons Lorenzo and Juan. The
firm specializes in corporate identity programs, corporate architecture,
wayfinding systems, urban furniture design, web and literature design,
and communications strategy. This exhibition groups decades of extraordinary
production like the wayfinding systems for the Buenos Aires Underground,
Temaikèn Zoo, Tren de la Costa, the Buenos Aires City Visual Plan, Public
Hospitals, and more.
Hung Liu, Profile II, 2005
Jacquard tapestry
Courtesy of Magnolia Editions
High Fiber
The history of tapestry encompasses pre-Columbian Inca tunics, Egyptian
Coptic medallions, Chinese kesi of woven silk, Navajo blankets, and Middle
Eastern kilim carpets. Between the third and seventh centuries, tapestry weaving
was introduced by Muslim and Byzantine influences to Western Europe. Subsequent
revivals by the Arts and Crafts movement and the Bauhaus brought
the medium to a 20th century audience. The Magnolia Tapestry Project brings
to the time-honored medium of tapestry a new computerized method that captures
minute details of the artist’s design and allows the artist to maintain
control over the fi nal work. Artists in the exhibition include Squeak Carnwath,
Enrique Chagoya, Chuck Close, Bruce Conner, Rupert Garcia, April Gornik, Hung
Liu, Alan Magee, Ed Moses, Deborah Oropallo, and William Wiley.
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Jules Olitski, Steropes, steel, 2006
Collection of Dr. Cyrus and Myrtle Katzen
Jules Olitski:
Late Sculpture
In collaboration with Colorfield Remix, the largest celebration
of painting ever held in the Washington area, American University
Museum is presenting Jules Olitski’s last major works. His
large scale sculptures from the Cyclops series, 2006, is on loan
from the collection of Dr. Cyrus and Myrtle Katzen.
Laura Amussen
The Petersons, the Entwistles,
and the Winklers (Plastic House)
Mixed media, 2006
Laura Amussen:
The Facade
Baltimore artist Laura Amussen blurs the boundaries between landscape
and architecture, scrambling the distinctions between organic and
synthetic to explore the experience of place: experiences that
are steeped in history, nomadism, nostalgia, alienation, and fantasy.
Martin Lewis, Night in New York, 1932, etching
Made in America:
The Washington Print Club 19th Biennial
Made in America, the 19th Washington Print Club Biennial, features over 100
prints made within the borders of the United States by American artists
or artists working in America. The show is drawn from the collections
of the club’s members. Curated by Baltimore Museum of Art Deputy Director
of Curatorial Affairs, Jay Fisher, the exhibition reflects the range
and diversity of the club’s membership and offers a fascinating look
at printmaking in America.
Willie Doherty, Extracts
from a File, 2000
Photographs mounted on aluminium
Courtesy of the artist & the Kerlin Gallery
Resolutions: New Art from Northern Ireland
Contemporary art in Northern Ireland is hot! “The Troubles” that
raged for twenty-five years are over, and artists are helping to
build a newer world of tolerance, innovation, and intellectual and
aesthetic pleasures. Organized by the Golden Thread Gallery in collaboration
with the Arts Council of Northern Ireland and curated by Jack Rasmussen,
the Resolutions exhibition includes work by Ian Charlesworth, Willie
Doherty, Cian Donnelly, Sara Greavu, Carbon Design, Mike Hogg & Philip
Napier, Brendan Jamison, Sharon Kelly, Susan MacWilliam, Paddy McCann,
Mark McGreevy, Mary McIntyre, Maria McKinney, Simon McWilliams, Darren
Murray, Aisling O’Beirn,
Gail Ritchie, Paul Seawright, Gary Shaw, Dan Shipsides, and Jennifer
Trouton.
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