April - May - Summer 2012 Issue - Maryland Institute College of Art
Transcription
April - May - Summer 2012 Issue - Maryland Institute College of Art
NEWS, EVENTS, & EXHIBITIONS April–May–Summer ’12 MARYLAND INSTITUTE COLLEGE OF ART THE UNTOLD STORIES OF IRAQI REFUGEES ALUMNA/FACULTY MEMBER CHRONICLES PLIGHT THROUGH PHOTOGRAPHY SPECIAL FOCUS: FILM ALUMNUS CREATES NEW BALTIMORE LANDMARK LOVE CONNECTIONS HARD AT WORK: JOSEPH SHEPPARD ’53 CREATES ICONIC STATUE CENTEROFFOR CAREER DEVELOPMENT BASEBALL LEGEND BROOKS ROBINSON ON CAMPUS SPECIAL FOCUS: GLOBAL REACH BEZALEL ON TOUR / UNDER COVER / SIGNALTO.NOISE MFA THESIS I, II, & III / & MORE SMALL BUSINESS SHOWCASE ART & SCIENCE FUSION MICA ON STYLE FASHION-FORWARD STUDENTS, ALUMNI, & EVENTS ON CAMPUS COMMENCEMENT EXHIBITION & ARTWALK MFA THESIS EXHIBITIONS FAT PIG & REASONS TO BE PRETTY Find up-to-date event details and expanded information at fyi.mica.edu. Find up-to-date event details and expanded information at fyi.mica.edu. NEWS EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS MICA Venues Main Building 1300 W. Mount Royal Ave. Brown Center 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave. COMMUNITY AND SOCIAL ENGAGEMENT Sophomore Creates Colorful Menagerie at Zoo 14 MICA Community Offers Summer Activities for City Youth 21 Fox Building 1303 W. Mount Royal Ave. Bunting Center 1401 W. Mount Royal Ave. INNOVATION Art and Science Fusion 10 National Endowment for the Arts Funds Ceramics Residency 11 Senior Send-Off 27 The Gateway 1601 W. Mount Royal Ave. GLOBAL Alumni Making a Global Impact 6 Summer Travel Intensives Reach Around the Globe 12 MICA’s Art Education Impact Spreads Worldwide 16 April MFA Thesis I Through 5/4 MICA Welcomes New Associate Dean 11 Now on Shelves: New Books by MICA Faculty & Alumni 15 What’s in a Name? 19 Environmental Design Classes Help Public Understand History 20 Artists Inspired by Appalachia 22 Student & Departmental Exhibitions Small Business Showcase 4 Alumnus Captures Baseball Legend in Bronze 9 FX Network Picks Up Alumna’s Web Series 13 MICA Makes a Splash in Miami 25 Alumni as Style Makers 34 (this page) Daniel Shea ’07, Removing Mountains, 2007. (Story, page 22) (cover) Image from the unveiling of baseball legend Brooks Robinson’s statue, sculpted by Joseph Sheppard ’53, just northwest of Camden Yards in Baltimore (Image courtesy Maroon PR and the Babe Ruth Birthplace Foundation). (Story, page 9) 38 45 4/2 Lecture: Wangechi Mutu 42 4/3 Lecture: Gary Graham 42 4/5-4/15 Fat Pig and reasons to be pretty 36 4/6-4/15 MFA Thesis II 38 4/9 Lecture: Lisa Sanditz 42 4/11-4/25 Amalie Rothschild ’34: Vestments 41 32 43 4/18 Lecture: Alicia Volk 43 4/18 Lecture: Lee Mingwei 44 4/20 Vestments Tour & Lecture 41 4/20 Caribbean Carnival 45 4/20-4/27 MA in Social Design Thesis Show 39 4/20-4/29 MFA Thesis III 38 4/21 Milquetoast: Experimental Fashion Event Showcase Live! 32 43 45 4/23 Lecture: John Zinsser 4/16 Lecture: Post Typography 4/19 4/22 4/13-4/14 Transcend: Annual Benefit Fashion Show Animation and the Language of Classical Indian Dance 44 Lecture: Candy Chang 44 4/25-5/16 MFA in Community Arts Thesis Exhibition 39 4/25 Projector Performance: Sandra Gibson & Luis Recoder 45 4/27 Last Blast Jewelry Center at Meadow Mill 3600 Clipper Mill Road 5/5 4/19 Through 4/1 CONNECTIONS ALUMNI Dolphin Building 100 Dolphin St. May 45 MICA Masters Benefit Art Sale 29 5/10 ArtWalk 29 5/11-5/14 2012 Commencement Exhibition 29 39 Summer MICA Gallery Hours Monday through Saturday, 10 am–5 pm Sunday, noon–5 pm Closed major holidays MICA PLACE Hours 6/1-6/20 Staff Exhibition Studio Center 131 W. North Ave. MICA PLACE 814 N. Collington Ave. 5/24-6/13 Community Art Collaborative Exhibition Mount Royal Station 1400 Cathedral St. 40 By appointment; contact Kristy Taylor at 410.225.2254 or [email protected] 6/28-7/14 MFA in Studio Art Thesis Exhibition 40 7/6-7/13 Second- and Third-Year MFA in Studio Art Exhibition Twitter: @mica_news 40 7/20-8/5 2012 Janet & Walter Sondheim Artscape Prize Semifinalists 46 7/25-7/27 MA in Art Education Thesis Exhibition facebook.com/mica.edu YouTube: MICAmultimedia 41 Flickr: MICAmultimedia 8/9-8/16 School for Professional & Continuing Studies Student Exhibition 41 mica.edu/googleplus President: Fred Lazarus IV Vice President of Advancement: Michael Franco, EdD Associate Vice President of Institutional Communications: Cedric Mobley Editors: Jessica Weglein, Libby Zay, Lorri Angelloz Contributing Editors: Tamara Holmes, Murjani Sowell Designer: Mike Weikert ’05 Thank you for your support of MICA and its programs! MICA’s exhibitions and public programs receive generous support from the Robert and Jane Meyerhoff Special Programs Endowment; the Amalie Rothschild ’34 Residency Program Endowment; The Rouse Company Endowment; the Richard Kalter Endowment; the Wm. O. Steinmetz ’50 Designer in Residence Endowment; the Rosetta, Samson, and Sadie B. Feldman Endowment; the Maryland State Arts Council, an agency dedicated to cultivating a vibrant cultural community where the arts thrive; and the generous contributors to MICA’s Annual Fund. BBOX—Betty • Bill • Black Box—is named for Betty Cooke ’46 and Bill Steinmetz ’50. Although every effort is made to ensure the completeness and accuracy of Juxtapositions, information does change. We suggest you confirm event details by checking MICA’s website at mica.edu, where you will also find driving directions and a campus map. Events and exhibitions are free and open to the public, unless otherwise noted. To request disability accommodations, call 410-225-2416 or email [email protected]. For more information, to adjust your subscription options, or to submit story ideas or comments, email [email protected] or call 410-225-2300. © 2012 Maryland Institute College of Art 04 ALUMNI ALUMNI Small Business Showcase R|S Design It comes as no surprise that many members of the MICA community showcase their creative and artistic talents through their own small businesses and product lines. These enterprises are often the heart of communities, and their support leads to increased jobs and tourism in their neighborhoods. Below, several MICA alumni detail the inspiration behind their small businesses and share a few words of wisdom for those looking to step out on their own. Eau Claire, Wisconsin / rsdesign.co Rachel Schimelman ’04 Mother Made Hannah Brancato ’07 ’10 ’11 and Julia Di Bussolo ’06 ’07 Baltimore, Maryland / mothermadebaltimore.com Founded in East Baltimore by alumnae Hannah Brancato ’07 ’10 ’11 and Julia Di Bussolo ’06 ’07 along with community members Netta Chaney, Laurel Ash, and Natasha Miller, Mother Made is a cooperatively operated program that produces reusable textile products, such as shopping bags and hand-dyed napkins. Armed with eco-friendly merchandise, the women are producing a positive effect in their neighborhoods and the environment by offering alternatives to the usage of plastic and paper, thus reducing the amount of trash and litter these items leave behind. The founders made it their mission to promote financial independence through job training for single mothers, who create and sell the products. Di Bussolo came up with the concept of Mother Made after hearing about the effectiveness of women-run businesses and microloans in Rwanda. “The mothers I work with in East Baltimore are strong, courageous, and creative. Why are we not investing more in the empowerment of women in the United States?” Earning an MFA in Community Arts, Brancato already understood how important community engagement is. “As an artist, my goal is to make art and culture that lends itself to grassroots community development and that highlights powerful women. So when I heard about Mother Made starting, I was excited to use my skills to help get the business off the ground.” And what pearl of wisdom do the founders offer future business owners who want to make an impact? “Business owners should consider the broad social implications of their company, their product, and their brand.” Branding identity for Human Design by Rachel Schimelman ’04. The idea of a design business came to Rachel Schimelman ’04 during her sophomore year, but it didn’t become a reality until she graduated. “I’ve always been interested in controlling my own destiny, having the ability to make the key decisions and a schedule that fits me as an artist and designer,” she said. Her business, R|S Design, offers design and photographic services, priding itself on high quality, reasonable prices, and fast turnaround. The services run a spectrum from headshots for actors and musicians to photography for functions and weddings to website and print design. Schimelman credits her time at MICA positively as an influence for her choice to start a business. “Without my peers, teachers, and the quality education I received, I wouldn’t be the artist I am today.” And if she could give some words of wisdom? “Expect to work a lot because for the first few years you’ll want to take on anything that comes your way,” she said. “And you may end up working two jobs—one that pays the bills and your dream job. But eventually, the bill-paying job and your dream job become one.” Baltimore Print Studios Kyle Van Horn ’03 and Kim Bentley ’08 Baltimore, Maryland / baltimoreprintstudios.com Reusable textile product from Mother Made. Kim Bentley ’08 and Kyle Van Horn ’03 inside Baltimore Print Studios. StudioSwan After watching MICA produce talented graduates year after year who were looking for a place to print, Kyle Van Horn ’03 and Kim Bentley ’08 decided to open up Baltimore Print Studios in the city’s Station North Arts & Entertainment District. “The department has grown so much in the past few years that it’s difficult for alumni to come back into the [Printmaking Department] to continue producing work,” shares Van Horn, who is also a manager in the printmaking studio at MICA. “We just set out to create a studio that had the equipment we wanted to use and thought others would like to as well.” The shop is stocked with the items needed for letterpress and screenprinting for those who are well versed. And for those who aren’t, the pair offers classes and workshops to aid on the printmaking journey. For those looking to create their own career path, Van Horn and Bentley have some very simple advice: “Find the thing you love to do and figure out how to make that your job. And work with people that excel where you fall short.” Small Oak Press and Bindery Gail Foster ’78 Carrie Tuccio ’10 Chattahoochee Hills, Georgia / studioswan.com New York, New York / smalloakpress.etsy.com After graduating from MICA, alumna Gail Foster ’78 went on to get her MFA at Parsons The New School for Design. With her husband, Tom Swanston, she started a profitable gallery and art advisory business hosting exhibitions and selling commissions and artwork for a number of clients, including faculty member Raoul Middleman and his wife, Ruth. However, despite their successes, the couple yearned to return to the studio. After much thought and conversation, the pair decided to go for their dreams. They opened up StudioSwan and haven’t looked back once in 23 years. In addition to the support of her husband, Foster credits her time at MICA with helping to drive her down this path. “The classroom and studio experiences focused me on the independent mind and heart required to be an artist. Also, the faculty demonstrated that the life of an artist was a good and righteous one—a life well lived to be pursued as much as possible.” For future entrepreneurs, Foster offers this bit of advice: “Don’t forget that as an artist, you must live your work, persistently.” She added some words of wisdom from Buddha that she lives by: “All that we are is the result of what we have thought. The mind is everything. What we think, we become.” Journals designed by Carrie Tuccio ’10. Businesses are often started in pursuit of extra income based on a hobby or talent, but some begin during a time of necessity. “I started making journals and sketchbooks to sell about a year ago when I was laid off from my job in a fine arts screenprinting studio,” Carrie Tuccio ’10 began. “I had started purchasing some basic screenprinting equipment with the idea of setting up a small home studio for personal creative work.” The idea blossomed into Small Oak Press and Bindery. Tuccio uses traditional binding techniques and tools, and inspiration from the herbs growing in her kitchen for the cover designs. For Tuccio, many factors went into her creations; the most notable is the convenience factor of the sketchbooks. “Being transient myself, I like to keep my journals and sketchbooks at a good travel size. That way, you never miss an idea or a chance to sketch!” The skills she acquired at MICA combined with opportunities to meet and learn from other artists helped shape her drive and confidence. “Those experiences drove me to believe that I can make it on my own.” Tuccio believes that flexibility is the key to running a small business. “The advantage of being a creative person is that you can re-imagine your products and services to meet the needs of your clients. It’s a different kind of challenge, but I have learned an incredible amount from having to push my skill set and my limits to fit my clients’ vision of what they want.” For more information on MICA-owned small businesses, visit www.mica.edu/shop. Gail Foster ’78, Forward, charcoal on paper, 2008. 05 06 GLOBAL Alumni Making a Global Impact While it’s clear that MICA artists and designers have made their mark in Baltimore, many have also applied their talents to improve communities overseas. Here is a sampling of success stories that highlights the power of MICA’s global reach. Jenny Sidhu Mullins ’09 A 2010-2011 recipient of a Fulbright Scholarship, alumna Jenny Sidhu Mullins used her fellowship to work in India, researching spiritual tourism and Buddhist painting techniques. “I learned different ways of making and viewing art as a part of an artist’s life,” she said. “For example, in the case of a thangka painting [a Tibetan silk painting with embroidery], each painting is seen as a sort of meditation.” With interests in both eastern and western culture, as well as work that questions cultural stereotypes, Mullins found herself gravitating toward spiritual locales such as Amma The Hugging Saint in Kerala and the home of the Dalai Lama in exile at McLeod Ganj. In the process, she learned that master painters in India often used art to preserve their culture. “Rather than exploring and commenting on contemporary culture, they attempted to hold onto traditions from the past that are quickly becoming extinct,” she said. “Every day was very much an adventure,” she said. She also enjoyed the many new relationships she cultivated and credits MICA for helping her learn the value of an artistic network. “My experience at MICA was invaluable,” she said. “Having a network of artists and two years to clarify my work in a boiler pot atmosphere was essential in getting to where I am today.” Having received her MFA from MICA, Mullins’ work is exhibited internationally and was recently added to the American Embassy in Mumbai’s permanent collection. She is now based in Washington, DC. Gabriel Albin ’04 After graduating from MICA with a degree in general fine arts, Gabriel Albin joined the Peace Corps “to break out of the norms of American life and see how I could travel and contribute to other communities,” he said. He landed in Cameroon, West Africa, working with the local government to train teachers in information technology. But he didn’t neglect his art. He performed illustration and design work for local youth development projects and taught art classes to high school students. “I really saw my time in Cameroon as a time of inspiration,” he said. “I’ve made many photographs and sketches, and now in the studio back in America, I’ve been reflecting on my experiences and my work.” His time in Cameroon wasn’t without challenges. He worked hard to break communication barriers and adjust to cultural differences, but his MICA education taught him the art of perseverance. “What I learned at MICA was that challenges are there to be overcome, and there are many solutions to be discovered along the way,” he said. “And I can’t overemphasize the creative outlook and ability to see art in anything that I developed during my time at MICA.” (this page top to bottom) Jenny Sidhu Mullins ’09 in her studio in Kerala, India; An image reflecting the beauty Gabriel Albin ’04 found in Mount Cameroon, an active volcano in Cameroon; Royal guards at the Chefferie de Bamenjoun, West Region, Cameroon by Gabriel Albin. (opposite page top to bottom) Haya Sehgal ’99, Haa; Stephanie McKee ’10 provides art instruction to inmates in Durban, South Africa; Preparation for Social Action training center located in Jinja, Uganda. GLOBAL Haya Sehgal ’99 Graphic design alumna Haya Sehgal returned to her home country, Pakistan, eight years ago with her art education in tow. “MICA gave me a thorough and well-rounded educational experience. I felt that it not only completely disciplined me and helped me explore and develop my creative skills, but also helped me mature as a person.” Those skills came in handy as Sehgal took a job at the International School in her hometown of Karachi as a visual arts instructor. She worked primarily with 11- to 16-yearold students. “I had a very open-minded administration, and they let me design my own curriculum,” she said. “I concentrated on the conceptual and developmental stages in every project so the students learned to focus on why they had created something rather than only the finished product.” Since leaving the International School, Sehgal has shown her work at exhibitions, including solo shows that took place in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates in November 2009 and Pakistan last May. Her paintings often feature Islamic themes and concepts, and she enjoys creating abstract art and calligraphy in abstract styles. Her work also reflects her experience and cultural wisdom she’s attained by living and working in both the United States and Pakistan. “I loved working in both countries,” she said. “Both experiences have been life changing in a very positive manner.” Stephanie McKee ’10 While working on her BFA in painting in 2010, Stephanie McKee took part in the SIT Study Abroad program, which offers undergraduate students opportunities to study overseas. That led her to Durban, South Africa, where she participated in a program called Social and Political Reconciliation and taught inmates painting and fine art to help them prepare to reintegrate into society. “The prisons don’t orchestrate a lot of programs, and they rely on outside stakeholders to provide what inmates need, especially psychologically and emotionally,” she said. “So art gives them an activity in their day, it helps stop the erosion of the mind that happens from being incarcerated, and it helps restore their relationships with their families.” In 2011, McKee became a recipient of exchange program provider World Learning’s Alice Rowan Swanson Fellowship, which allowed her to return to South Africa, once again bringing art to prisoners in South Africa’s KwaZulu-Natal Province. “I feel like I was made to be an artist, and I feel like I was put on this earth to make it a better place,” she said. Her work with prisoners allowed her to do both. McKee credits MICA with sparking her love for community engagement. “I began freshman year with a community arts class called Finding Baltimore,” she said. “I think MICA’s drive to get their students involved in the Baltimore community is what led me to do the work I did in South Africa.” Ruth Enslow ’09 Ruth Enslow grew up with the idea that the world is one country and everyone plays a part in making it prosper. So it’s little wonder the New Zealand native and environmental design graduate would end up living and working in Uganda, where she was asked to use her architectural skills to create a training center for a youth-based distance learning program called Preparation for Social Action. She worked with a construction engineer and received advice from an architect to put her plans into action. Currently, two dormitories and a dining hall are in use with provisions for more buildings to come in the future. “Working in another country with a supportive network allowed me to do an unimaginable project,” she said. Her MICA thesis helped to prepare her for this role. “My thesis ended with a model of my own on a constructed space that can be both constructive and instructive,” she explained. Today she’s proud of what she’s sparked: a training facility settled on a hill overlooking Lake Victoria. With a love for education, Enslow also plans to spend the next year teaching at a homeschooling center. In most of her activities, she focuses on expanding the knowledge of those around her. “In some ways, [the] success in providing a space to explore and generate knowledge reminds me of my positive experiences at MICA,” she said. Story continues on next page. 07 08 GLOBAL ALUMNI Robert Janz ’64 Since graduating from the Rinehart School of Sculpture in 1964, Robert Janz has had a long and varied international art career. It started with a Fulbright fellowship in Spain just after graduation, which Janz said “was a brilliant beginning.” After some time in London, he found himself completing a Deutscher Akademischer Austausch-Dienst (DAAD) fellowship in Berlin, where he counts among his many milestones the ability to draw on the Berlin Wall long before it came down. From there, his work has led him to complete residencies in places such as Guernsey, Puerto Rico, Ireland, and France, as well as many locations in the United States. The 79 year old was on the road for six months last year completing a residency at the Centre Culturel Irelandais in Paris and an exhibition at the Peppercanister Gallery in Dublin. “Although I sell work in Berlin and Ireland, the work I enjoy doing the most tends to be ephemeral—my specialty is transitory work,” said Janz, whose recent projects have involved a series of drawings with water on rock while in Ireland and the rearrangement of a series of chairs during his residency in Paris. This spring, Janz will make history as the first artist invited to have a second solo show at the John David Mooney Foundation International Currents Gallery in Chicago. Titled Slow Kinetics, the exhibition explores aspects of motion, change, and transience through the subtle arrangement and rearrangement of paper shapes throughout the duration of the exhibition. Keep up with the progress of Slow Kinetics on his blog, slowkinetics.blogspot.com. (top to bottom) All work by Robert Janz ‘64. Janz arranges chairs for his Chaises Paris series; Photo of the Slow Kinetics series in progress. MICA Masters Benefit Art Sale and Reception Saturday, May 5th noon to 4:00 PM Graduate Studio Center, 131 W. North Avenue Browse and buy affordable works of art from trailblazing graduate students and visit their studio spaces. See artwork from students in the Mount Royal School of Art, Hoffberger School of Painting, Rinehart School of Sculpture, MFA in Graphic Design, MFA in Photographic & Electronic Media, and Post-Baccalaureate Certificate in Fine Arts programs. Enjoy this rare opportunity to visit the studios and facilities of the College’s graduate programs. Learn more at fyi.mica.edu A percentage of the proceeds will support a graduate-specific scholarship. Alumnus Captures Baseball Legend in Bronze During his career as a third baseman for the baltimore orioles, Brooks Robinson won 16 Gold Gloves and set Major League Baseball records for games, putouts, assists, chances, double plays, and fielding percentage. A recently completed statue of the Hall of Famer, by Joseph Sheppard ’53, is Baltimore’s newest landmark. Located outside Oriole Park at Camden Yards at the intersection of the Baltimore-Washington Parkway and Washington Boulevard, it is the “gateway to downtown” for traffic arriving into the city from the south. The nine-foot bronze statue features a bright gold painted glove and may be one of the first in the world to have a quick response (QR) code attached that allows visitors to access more information from a smart phone. It was gifted to the city by the Dorothy L. and Henry A. Rosenberg Jr. Foundation and the Babe Ruth Birthplace Foundation. Among the speakers at the dedication ceremony were Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley, U.S. Senator Barbara Mikulski, and Baseball Hall of Fame President Jeff Idelson. Sheppard, a MICA alumnus and former instructor, is the creator of sculptures and paintings featured in the collections of the National Portrait Gallery, The Baltimore Museum of Art, and the Carnegie Museum of Art, among others. His portraits include that of Pope Benedetto XVI, which hangs in Vatican City, and of President and Mrs. George H.W. Bush, which can be seen at the George Bush Presidential Library. He also designed the Holocaust Memorial in Baltimore and other noted works of art. Joseph Sheppard ’53 at the dedication ceremony for the Brooks Robinson statue (Photo by Bill Hughes). Ravens Linebacker Selects Alumnus for T-Shirt Design Brian Propst, jr. ’10 recently designed the official “Ball So Hard University” apparel for Baltimore Ravens linebacker Terrell Suggs, who created a national sensation when he announced the fictional university as his alma mater in an NBC graphic during a televised game on November 6, 2011. Propst, who majored in painting with a studio concentration in illustration while at MICA, is no stranger to sports. He won the 2003 Maryland State Championship in wrestling at 145 pounds and went on to wrestle as a collegiate athlete. After a motorcycle accident ended his wrestling hopes, Propst made his way to MICA. Today, he says his most personal works are related to his background as an athlete, as he uses competition to convey his interests in spirituality and humanity. The apparel can be found at tsizzle55.com. Ravens linebacker Terrell Suggs with Brian Propst, Jr. ’10 (Photo by SportStar Designs). 09 10 INNOVATION CONNECTIONS Jeanne Quinn, Everything Is Not As It Seems, porcelain, wire, paint, electrical hardware, 2009. MICA hosted a meeting in the fall in relation to the formation of a proposed Network for Sciences, Engineering, Arts, and Design. Art and Science Fusion With a recent National Science Foundation grant, MICA has taken leadership in the formation of a proposed Network for Sciences, Engineering, Arts, and Design (NSEAD). The long-term initiative, in partnership with Texas A&M University and University of North Carolina, aims to develop a national network structure that will act as the leading advocate for collaboration among the arts, design, sciences, and engineering fields, fostering innovation, research, and learning that impact community sustainability and economic growth. NSEAD, which is scheduled to launch this summer, will advocate for research and creative work, learning and education, partnerships, innovation, and economic development across academia, nonprofit organizations, industries, and funders. The national network aims to serve in the following capacities: development of the emerging research community; collaboration and project matchmaking facilitation; expertise referrals; largescale, cross-institutional collaborations; forums to share best practices in STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics) learning; and philanthropic opportunities for a wide array of organizations. In recent decades, the rapid evolution of computational media and technologies has enabled an emerging field of collaborative and cross-disciplinary practices that combines the skills and knowledge of scientists and artists. As physicists and engineers have developed new imaging techniques, visual artists experimented with the innovative expressive potentials they enabled, often influencing further development of these technologies. Visual artists and musicians created computer languages and algorithms while pushing technologies for composing and recording in fields of software engineering, artificial intelligence, graphics, and visualization. In addition, an entire ecosystem of academic programs, research conferences, gallery exhibitions, museum programs, and municipal events has emerged through such groundbreaking investigations. For years, MICA has played a leading role in the discussion and development of collaborative practice, research, and education in art and science. The National Endowment for the Arts recently granted $25,000 to fund the Creative Residency in Ceramics and New Technologies project, headed by Ceramics Department Chair David East (see more on page 11). In February, Gunalan Nadarajan, vice provost for research and graduate studies at MICA, co-organized and presented at an American Association for the Advancement of Science conference on the challenges and potential of developing art and science collaborations for a globalized innovation-driven economy. “We are mindful that the United States’ progress and competitive edge in the global economy rely upon forward thinking and transformative efforts that integrate the sciences with the arts and humanities. Expanding and amplifying the intersections of the sciences and arts in our country are critical to this success,” said Nadarajan. “NSEAD will operationalize these creative intersections by developing a pilot network to support transdisciplinary, collaborative work, bridging STEM research with creative practices in the arts.” National Endowment for the Arts Funds Ceramics Residency Recently, MICA was awarded a $25,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) that will fund the Creative Residency in Ceramics and New Technologies project. Headed by Ceramics Department Chair David East, the residency will host a group of five nationallyand internationally-known ceramics artists for three weeks at MICA from Sunday, June 3 to Sunday, June 24. The overall goals of the project are to enable ceramic artists to gain valuable experience in a range of new digital fabrication technologies and provide a forum for the general public that will ignite a renewed interest in ceramics. “I am thrilled and honored to receive this support from the NEA to continue my work on the initiative,” said East upon hearing the news. “This grant will enable MICA to continue developing its leadership role in ceramics and new technologies and will support a group of leaders in the field in exploring the potential of these new methods of working, as well as future pedagogy and programs within the MICA community.” Under the leadership of East, the project team consists of ceramic artists Neil Forrest, Rory MacDonald, Julie York, and Jeanne Quinn. The group will focus its time in residence on works that explore new methods of working and engage in critical dialogue about the effect and importance of these new tools. Following the residency will be exhibitions of the works created and a symposium, tentatively scheduled for late fall 2012, that will be hosted on campus. MICA Welcomes New Associate Dean for Student Health & Wellness In March, MICA welcomed Bryant K. Ford, PhD, as the new associate dean for student health & wellness. The associate dean’s role is to provide leadership for offices within the Student Affairs Division related to health and wellness, including student health, student counseling, and the new MICA Fitness facility. With a wealth of experience as Dartmouth College’s director of health promotion and staff psychologist, Ford is ready for the task. He is beginning his tenure as a “sponge soaking up all the information” he can about the campus and its healthcare views and needs so he can best fill this new role and lead MICA’s expanding and comprehensive care for its community. Ford expressed his admiration for the students’ academic abilities and dedication to interpersonal development, and plans to start a student health advisory committee so students can continually have a voice about their care. 11 12 GLOBAL GLOBAL Summer Travel Intensives Carry Students and Lifelong Learners Around the Globe MICA’s Summer Travel Intensives immerse students and lifelong learners in places of great aesthetic, cultural, and historical resonance and offer the unique opportunity to study with MICA faculty and earn college credit. And, as many participants discover, the intensives also enable them to grow both personally and professionally—not only as artists and designers, but as citizens of the world. As Tracy Jacobs, director of marketing and enrollment development at the College’s School for Professional and Continuing Studies, explains, “One of the most rewarding aspects of my job is hearing students who participated in an intensive explain how the program impacted them as an artist and as a person. Sometimes, studying in the program is a key transformational experience that affects them when they return to school. For others, it’s a confidence builder, giving them the courage to be a world traveler and more. Many don’t realize going in just how meaningful short-term study with MICA faculty can be.” In 2012, students of all backgrounds are invited to take part in Summer Travel Intensives held in New York City; Turkey; São Tomé and Príncipe; Berlin, Germany; Sorrento, Italy; Seoul, South Korea; Greece; Cetamura, Italy; and Nicaragua. New York City / Sunday, May 13–Friday, June 8 Open to rising sophomores through second-year graduate students, the New York City intensive allows participants to visit galleries and museums, meet curators and practicing artists, and immerse themselves in the vibrant culture of the city—while they live in Manhattan and work in their own studio space in Brooklyn’s DUMBO (Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass) neighborhood. surrounding region while living on campus with Korean National University of Art (K’ARTS) students. Greece / Wednesday, June 27–Saturday, July 7 The K-12 Artist Teacher Greek Island Workshop begins in Athens where students are immersed in Greek art and mythology. Participants then move on to the island of Skiathos, where they begin their own studio investigations in a retreat-like setting at Studio Mirovili, situated in a contemporary villa overlooking olive groves and the Aegean Sea. Cetamura, Italy / Thursday, June 28–Saturday, July 28 MICA’s Cetamura program offers the opportunity to follow the processes of excavation and conservation of archaeological artifacts. Students will work at the archaeological site of Cetamura in the Chianti Mountains of Tuscany. Nicaragua / Thursday, July 5–Saturday, August 4 Participants explore the mountainside city of Estelí and partner with Casa de Cultura, a center for promotion and exhibition of art and culture, and build relationships with artists, art collectives, and community organizations. Then they travel to Limay, an isolated village with a wealth of artists, where they collaborate and connect to empower and teach local youth. For more information on MICA’s Summer Travel Intensives, visit mica.edu/summertravel. FX Network Picks Up Alumna’s Web Series Turkey / Friday, May 18–Saturday, June 9 This intensive brings students to Istanbul and Bursa, famous for the production of silks, and to archeological sites along the Aegean coast as they learn about ceramic tiles, textiles, and folk costumes as well as textile production and traditional dyeing and weaving techniques. São Tomé and Príncipe / Friday, May 25–Friday, June 29 The island nation of São Tomé and Príncipe, off the west coast of Africa, is the setting for students as they create illustration or painting projects in preparation for participation as exhibiting artists in the country’s Biennial of Art and Culture. Berlin, Germany / Friday, June 1–Friday, June 22 Students in this intensive will get a behind-the-scenes look at the 7th Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art, visit the studios of artists, have insider discussions with critics and curators of contemporary art, see work in local galleries, and attend lectures and sites associated with the biennale. Sorrento, Italy / Sunday, June 24–Friday, July 20 Students in this program experience southern Italy and develop their artistic voice through plein-air explorations while living in a former monastery overlooking Mount Vesuvius and the Bay of Naples. Seoul, South Korea / Monday, June 25–Friday, July 20 Set in one of Asia’s most dynamic cities, the summer program in Seoul, South Korea allows students to be inspired by this unique city and Abbi Jacobson ’06 and Ilana Glazer (Photo by Eric Michael Pearson). Created by Abbi Jacobson ’06 and Ilana Glazer, Broad City is an offbeat web series centered on the misadventures of two female best friends. The show has developed a cult following online and has received national attention from The Wall Street Journal, Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, and The New York Times. The show also caught the eye of Saturday Night Live and Parks and Recreation star Amy Poehler, who teamed up with Jacobson and Glazer to take the show to television. With Poehler on board as an executive producer, the quirky comedy has received a script commitment from FX for a half-hour series. “We were pretty overwhelmed with excitement,” said Jacobson when asked how she reacted to the news. “It was a pretty surreal time, and we were just on top of the world.” Broad City began in fall 2009, when Jacobson and Glazer were looking to create some new material in video form. “Both of us came to a point where we felt we weren’t creating enough in our own voice. We had a unique dynamic and figured we’d just run with that,” Jacobson said. The duo are both alumnae of the Upright Citizens Brigade Theater in New York and continue to work on individual stand up and improv projects. According to Jacobson, MICA had an influence on the show. “Although I didn’t have the show in mind when I was a student, being in the General Fine Arts Department enabled me to explore various mediums. Minoring in video sparked my interest in the moving image, writing, and acting,” she shared. “My years at MICA allowed me to train myself to have to come up with ideas quickly and figure out how to execute them.” To view a webisode, visit broadcitytheshow.com. 13 14 CONNECTIONS COMMUNITY AND SOCIAL ENGAGEMENT Now on Shelves: New Books by MICA Faculty & Alumni The Changing Face of Portrait Photography: From Daguerreotype to Digital Written by faculty member Shannon Thomas Perich, the associate curator of the Smithsonian’s Photographic History Collection, this richly illustrated volume takes the readers on a journey through the photographic process, uses, and evolution from the mid-19th to the 21st century. For this project, Perich studied nine iconic photographers: Julia Margaret Cameron, Dorothea Lange, Richard Avedon, George K. Warren, Gertrude Käsebier, Nickolas Muray, Henry Horenstein, Lauren Greenfield, and Robert Weingarten. It Can Be Solved By Walking In search of a place of self in an urban ecosystem, faculty member Jennifer Wallace put together this book-length poem and collection of photographs. She began the book in 2009 while working on the documentary film, Inter:View, a conversation about nature and the city. During the journey, she discovered that cities, not often thought of as ecosystems, are bursting with nature as well as human fears and desires. Her writing and photographs attempt to create glimpses of Baltimore that allow her readers to view the city without preconceptions or illusions as to what urban areas are supposed to be. Saidie May: Pioneer of Early 20th-Century Collection Saidie May Pioneer of Early 20th Century Collecting Susan Helen Adler Susan Adler Davis ’79 pens the life and adventures of the Baltimore-born Saidie Adler May and Blanche Adler, her sister. An American expatriate, May lived in Paris from the late 1920s to the beginning of World War II. During this time, she helped artist Marc Chagall escape the Nazi occupation and also became a patron of abstract painter Alfred Julio Jensen. As longtime friends of the arts, she and her sister began acquiring and sending art to US museums while they were abroad and became benefactors to many of them, including The Baltimore Museum of Art. Author and alumna Davis is the great niece of May. Love and Capital: Karl and Jenny Marx and the Birth of a Revolution Mary Gabriel ’84 brings to life the tragic saga of the Marx family in this book that details Karl Marx’s politically obsessed professional life and tumultuous personal life, with his wife Jenny von Westphalen at the helm. While their marriage shared passionate and joyous moments, it was also filled with tragedies of financial despair, infant mortality, and many infidelities—one that produced an illegitimate son. But Gabriel does more than just outline his career and family life. She has shown her readers that without the women in Karl Marx’s life, the revolutionary thinker history knows may not have existed. Sophomore Creates Colorful Menagerie at Zoo ( In 2012, visitors to the Maryland Zoo in Baltimore will no longer walk past a bare, 150-foot concrete wall as they exit the tram that carries visitors to the facility’s major exhibitions. Thanks to MICA student Colleen O’Connor Collins ’14, they’ll instead be greeted by a bevy of vibrant, eye-catching animals gracing a mural that has transformed the once bleak space. Collins worked throughout fall 2011 to complete the mural, which was a project of MICA’s Community Arts Partnership, a program that provides the Baltimore community with enriching art-based educational experiences. Printmaking Faculty Member’s Blog Receives Major Grant Started by faculty member R.L. Tillman, former faculty member Jason Urban, and Amze Emmons, Printeresting is a blog that highlights the ways print serves art and design and how the medium influences pop culture. Founded in 2008 by the trio, the blog is now authored by multiple contributors and is billed as “the thinking person’s favorite online resource for interesting printmaking miscellany.” The dynamic posts range from news to critical commentary. Whether you’re a curious novice or an expert in the field, Printeresting welcomes all and recently was welcomed with some big news. In December, Printeresting was awarded a $30,000 grant from the Arts Writer Grant Program, presented by Creative Capital and The Andy Warhol Foundation in recognition of the team’s past writing and in support of future research. The founders met the news with a mix of pride and humility. “To say that we’re speechless would be an understatement,” the creators wrote in a blog entry. “This grant has been awarded to many great art writers, and we are truly honored to be in such good company.” Amze Emmons, faculty member R.L. Tillman, and former faculty member Jason Urban. 15 16 GLOBAL GLOBAL MICA’s Art Education Impact Spreads Around the World Though MICA’s roots are in Baltimore, members of the MICA art education community are spreading seeds of art-based empowerment across the world. Not only are alumni and faculty members participating in a wide range of art education programs abroad, but the College and the Nathan Cummings Foundation recently sponsored the online publication of the Community Arts Journal, a publication that centers on the historical aspect of organizations and collectives from several regions around the world. Led by Ken Krafchek ’95, graduate director of MICA’s MA and MFA in Community Arts programs, the one-of-a-kind journal stimulates dialogue and supports continued local and national investment in community arts. To read more, visit mica.edu/ communityartsjournal. Following, artists and teachers with ties to MICA detail their experiences overseas. Documentation by local news media of the photojournalism project, Azerbaijan Children’s Shelter, Baku (Photo by Ken Krafchek ’95). Azerbaijan, Eurasia (top to bottom) Karen Carroll, EdD (center) with elementary art teachers; High-school students in Singapore prepare for art exams. Singapore, Asia Karen Carroll, EdD, dean of art education, helped expand MICA’s reach overseas when she spent a month in Singapore last summer as a consultant. While there, she helped the Singapore Teachers’ Academy for the aRts (STAR)—a new initiative by Singapore’s Ministry of Education—to develop art education for the primary and secondary schools in that country. Carroll also did a series of workshops for elementary art teachers and provided advice and counsel regarding all levels of education and teacher preparation. “My role was really to assess where they were at in the development of art education programming in their schools,” Carroll said. A delegation from STAR visited MICA in early March to meet with faculty from the MAT program, observe teachers in Howard County, and consult with Carroll. She envisions many opportunities for collaboration between MICA and the academy in the future. MICA will try to recruit some students from the school, while Singapore will likely recruit some students from MICA as art instructors. Some teachers in Singapore are also thinking about coming to MICA to enroll in a graduate program, and the College is developing a proposal for supporting a Center for Excellence that would become a hub for training teachers. “They want more creativity, and they know they want a more child-centered curriculum. These are things they can develop with some training and support,” Carroll said. “You can talk about community-based art in theory, but its practice really doesn’t come into focus until you go to other places in the world,” said Krafchek. Natalie Tranelli ’10 ’11 and Anne Kotleba ’12 found that out firsthand when they traveled with Krafchek to Azerbaijan earlier this school year to facilitate photography projects in the capital, Baku, and the second-largest city, Ganja. Kotleba, a current MFA in Community Arts student, describes this US Embassy-funded project as “an opportunity to share our community arts philosophy on a greater scale, using photos as a vehicle to lift up the voice of otherwise invisible young people.” In Baku, the group worked with youth from the Azerbaijan Children’s Shelter, many of whom are orphans, refugees, or homeless. “The youth executed a series of self-portraits, and then completed a photojournalism-style project where they told their story from their perspective. They went out into the community and photographed people and places important to them,” said Tranelli, who received her MA and MFA in Community Arts in 2010 and 2011 respectively. In Ganja, they trained college students during the day and then sent them home with cameras to photograph their personal stories. Krafchek conducted monoprint workshops at multiple locations throughout the country while also helping to train the volunteers and youth that worked on Tranelli and Kotleba’s projects. “From my perspective as a teacher, watching these students conduct very complex projects in a new context and succeed was very gratifying. I’m hoping this is a stepping stone to similar initiatives on an ongoing basis.” (top to bottom) Participants of The Art of Solidarity program work on murals; a video lab in Casa de Adolescentes y Jóvenes. Nicaragua, Central America Every summer, MICA students and lifelong learners have the opportunity to travel to Nicaragua for a month-long community arts collaboration with Nicaraguan artists (see page 13 for more). For Maria Gabriela Aldana ’03 ’06, an alumna and Nicaraguan who’s been leading such groups since 2004, “The Art of Solidarity program is a dream come true.” For four weeks, program participants build relationships with over 50 people, including artists, collectives, and community art organizations, while also discussing social and political issues of the day. Both Baltimore-based artists and those in Nicaragua benefit from the program, said Aldana, who earned a general fine arts degree in 2003 and an MA in Community Arts in 2006. “We are all learners and teachers so we work toward common goals with a lot of conversations about our process.” Aldana, the community outreach coordinator for the Creative Alliance at the Patterson, credits MICA with providing some of the inspiration for the program. “MICA gave me new lifetime influences and access to some of the best artists in the world,” she said. “I came in thinking I was some hot and amazing artist and left finding a greater purpose and use for art.” Story continues on next page. 17 18 GLOBAL INNOVATION Graduate Students Transform Construction Site Into Art Gallery When construction crews renovating the Studio Center replaced street-level brick walls with floor-to-ceiling windows, a unique gallery space was born. Dubbed “The Temporary” by MICA’s inaugural MFA in Curatorial Practice class, the exhibition venue exists solely as a window space that allows anyone passing along North Avenue to see the work displayed inside. Curated by the students who gave the gallery its name, The Temporary will have hosted 10 exhibitions before its scheduled demolition in May 2012, when the next phase of Studio Center renovations begins. To learn what is currently on view at The Temporary, visit fyi.mica.edu. Photo taken at the SmART Summer Institute in St. Croix (Photo by Nora Howell ’10). A participant at one of Jaime Bennati’s ’08 ’11 workshops puts the finishing touches on a craft. Brazil, South America Another MICA alumna who is shedding light on the international art scene is Jaime Bennati ’08 ’11, who has spent a lot of time living and working in Brazil. “Since graduating from MICA, I have been interested in work that is created through community involvement,” said Bennati, who received her BFA in sculpture and her MA in teaching. Over the past two years, Bennati has spent more than a year’s worth of time in São Paulo, Belo Horizonte, Ouro Preto, Brasilia, and Rio de Janeiro, where she has family. Late last year, she was awarded a partnership to work with the University Federal of Goiás in Goiânia, Brazil, providing insight to college students and assisting with art exhibitions through an artist grant funded by the Maryland Arts Council. “I was invited to present my work and give the students a perspective about the American art scene as well as talk about my experience going to an art school in the United States,” she said. She found that MICA’s reputation preceded her. “MICA has really established itself as a prestigious school. Many of my friends in Rio in the design department know of the work of MFA in Graphic Design Program Director Ellen Lupton and the school so it is internationally wellknown, which is really honorable.” Bennati is currently working with photo and video classes in Goiânia and has plans to begin teaching techniques to a group of women who meet weekly to create crafts out of recycled materials. Earlier this year, a sculpture Bennati made using bus tickets she collected in Brazil was showcased in a paper show at Goucher College called Paper Shapers. “I think now more than ever I am using my experiences at MICA as a way to expand my career in the art field,” she said. St. Croix, United States Virgin Islands Cynthia Hatfield ’04, an adjunct professor at the University of the Virgin Islands who received an MA in Art Education from MICA, wanted to create a community arts program similar to what she experienced at MICA. She raised funds and started the SmART Summer Institute, a sixweek community arts program that Hatfield said “gave the island’s most gifted teen artists a place to gain skills and build friendships they wouldn’t normally have access to.” Last summer, the program took place at three sites—the Caribbean Museum Center for the Arts, the neighborhood of Mon Bijou, and the University of the Virgin Islands. Joining Hatfield in the yearlong planning of the project were Nora Howell ’10 ’11 and Michelle Faulkner ’10 ’11, both of whom received an MA in Community Arts and an MFA in Community Arts. Through community-centered art experiences, more than 100 of the island’s youths learned new artmaking, problem-solving, and conceptual skills. “The program was designed to use art as both the means and focal point for youth to express themselves as well as the issues that mattered most to them,” Howell said. The friendships forged between the youth, teachers from the island, and MICA students still resonate. “I still get emails updating me on what they’re doing,” Faulkner said. The program’s success was also a testament to MICA’s ability to train art leaders since MICA “gave me the skills, the training, the practical experience, as well as the confidence that I needed to lead my teaching team and the youth at the Caribbean Museum,” Howell said. While the three SmART Institute programs were different, they all built upon MICA’s belief in the power of cultural exchange. “These types of exchanges can lead us to even more effective and transformational approaches to art,” Hatfield said. What’s in a Name? The Pinkards’ history of involvement with MICA mirrors the personal energy the family invests in Baltimore: long-term and impactful. The College was fortunate to have Walter D. Pinkard’s leadership on MICA’s Board of Trustees from 1957 to 1973. His son, Wally Pinkard, followed in his father’s footsteps and served from 1982 to 1990. “[MICA] is one of the very few truly national institutions in Baltimore, the kind of institutional jewel that not many cities can boast of having,” Wally Pinkard said. In May 1998, MICA named the Pinkard Gallery in the Bunting Center in honor of the family’s longterm support. The gallery is primarily used to spotlight faculty through a series of solo shows over the academic year, but the space is also used to showcase the annual thesis, foundation, and commencement exhibitions. 19 COMMUNITY AND SOCIAL ENGAGEMENT MICA Community Offers Summer Activities for City Youth SUMMER ART CAMP Ad Keep a young person you know intellectually and creatively stimulated this summer. From drawing to painting to photography and everything in between, workshops for students from pre-school to 8th grade are designed to spark creativity, encourage invention, and nurture artistic innovation. Workshops begin June 18, 2012. For more information, visit www.mica.edu/yps Students from John Wilson’s ’68 ’85 environmental design class assemble a cannon for the Maryland Historical Society. Environmental Design Classes Help Public Understand History Since 2004, faculty member John Wilson ’68 ’85 and his environmental design students have been assisting dozens of area museums and historic buildings in realworld community service projects aimed at teaching students the crucial role artists and designers play in the public’s understanding of history. Wilson, who served in the United States Naval Reserve from 1958-62, has been a faculty member at MICA since 1972 and is also a design coordinator for the Naval Academy Business Services Division in Annapolis, Maryland. Under his leadership, students have designed everything from interactive displays to graphic support materials for organizations such as the Federalsburg Historical Society, Caroline County Historical Society, Baltimore Historic Ships, and many more. President of the Maryland Historical Society Burt Kummerow said MICA has been a huge asset to the organization. “The students have shown remarkable talents in analyzing some of the challenges both inside and outside of the 168-year-old museum and library,” he explained. Recently, four students—Leslie Giron ’12, Nicolas Pascual ’13, Kyle Sullivan ’13, and Sol Winer ’13—were tasked with designing a full-scale replica of a shipboard cannon that will be on display at the Baltimore Visitor Center until May, when it finds a permanent home at the Maryland Historical Society. This and other installations are important parts of an exhibition being installed at the museum for the city and state’s bicentennial commemoration that begins in June. “In this time of budget shortfalls, the imaginative help from future designers has not only given the students valuable on-the-job training, but it has given institutions assistance that they might not otherwise be able to afford,” said Kummerow, adding he looks forward to continued work with the College. For the past 15 years, the School for Professional & Continuing Studies has coordinated a partnership with the Parks & People Foundation to provide arts programming for approximately 70 rising second, third, and fourth graders at one branch of the SuperKids Camp—a six-week program designed for Baltimore City Public School students in need of remedial help for reading. As an enrichment partner, MICA writes a grant to secure funding for the camp, hires a site coordinator and six art instructors, and provides a venue for an art exhibition that acts as a capstone for the camp. Campers start the day with breakfast and attend a reading class. After recess, they attend art classes designed to reinforce the reading curriculum. Students rotate on a two-week schedule between three art activities: ceramics, mural painting, and bookmaking. In ceramics, many students are introduced to clay for the first time and learn the importance of the word fragile, while in murals and bookmaking, the students learn several different artmaking techniques and create an array of mini projects. Several field trips and other extra-curricular activities are also woven into the program. “The kids developed a sense of pride in their work and took ownership over what they had accomplished, which was awesome to see,” said Caitlin Kambic ’12, who is currently pursuing her Master of Arts in Teaching (MAT) and has worked with the SuperKids Camp the past two summers. “It was so nice to come into camp each day and see how excited the kids were to work with clay. Most of the campers didn’t have clay experience, and sometimes had no art experience,” she said, adding that she was lucky to have taught a medium she is so passionate about. Eric Allard ’10 ’11 had just received his MAT and was looking for a summer job when he heard about the position for a bookmaking instructor. “Coming out of the MAT program I was completely ready to handle the students and had no trouble adjusting to the way the camp was run,” he said. “Because of the broad knowledge I received through MICA classes, I was able to teach bookmaking without a problem, despite never actually taking a class on the subject while in school.” Since finishing his work with the SuperKids Camp last summer, Allard has gone on to work with developmentally delayed children in a special needs preschool in Owings Mills, Maryland. Kambic hopes to volunteer with the SuperKids Camp program again in the future. Students from the SuperKids camp at their capstone exhibition at MICA. 21 22 CONNECTIONS CONNECTIONS Artists Inspired by Appalachia Aaron McIntosh Whether the Appalachian region is considered “home sweet home” or other pursuits have led them to the mountains, these MICA staff, faculty, and alumni have taken inspiration from one of America’s most forgotten regions. “For me, being from Appalachia is defined more by family, culture, and tradition than by geography,” said Fiber Department faculty member Aaron McIntosh, who grew up in the Appalachian mountains of East Tennessee. “I come from a family of quilters, tinkerers, hobbyists, and hoarders,” he said, adding that his family’s Depression-era frugality left them reluctant to throw anything away. “Discarded materials make up a base of my visual vocabulary, including piles of moldy fabric, yellowed newspapers, canning jars, rusty tools, and other relics.” “Often in my work I begin by looking at a traditional art form, object, or artifact from my upbringing or family lore that has stuck with me through the years and then find ways to insert my own contemporary voice,” McIntosh said. “For instance, in a recent set of works I took traditional quilt patterns and embedded large images of desirable men into the piecing. This contrast of subjects subverts the surface meanings we bring to quilts—that they’re purely decorative, homespun objects of women’s adoration.” McIntosh’s teaching experience also includes positions at Virginia Commonwealth University and James Madison University. “MICA is the first school I’ve taught at where I’ve felt comfortable creating entire projects that revolve around narrative,” he said, adding that the final project in his Pattern/Digital Print course involved students pairing up to swap stories, and then translating those stories into patterned cloth and creating an object commemorating their partner’s story. “The results were fantastic, the students really enjoyed the exchange, and we all learned something about everyone’s background.” aaronmcintosh.com Rachel Sitkin ’02 rachelsitkin.com (top to bottom) All artwork by Rachel Sitkin ‘02. So This is West Virginia, gouache on paper, 2009; Logan, WV, gouache on paper, 2009. Staff member and MICA alumna Rachel Sitkin ’02 is a landscape painter who was inspired to begin exploring industrial, residential, and agricultural geometries after reading Alan Weisman’s The World Without Us, a novel that explores the idea of how our planet would respond without the presence of humans. After researching the region, she applied for a small grant to travel to West Virginia to see the mines firsthand. “With the workers’ conditions and lax environmental laws in mind, I expected to be disgusted by what I saw when I made that first visit,” Sitkin said. “But the enormity of the mines and the graceful, sweeping curves dug out of the hillside were just so impressive and beautiful as a representation of our ability to manipulate our surroundings. I found that work that addressed this dichotomy added a depth that was lacking in a didactic approach that merely reiterated what we are ‘supposed’ to think about environmental devastation.” In her projects Surface Mining and So This is West Virginia, Sitkin depicts the outcome of human presence on the landscape—what she sees as the simultaneous beauty and destruction humans are capable of. Her work has been featured in New American Paintings, City Paper, and Style magazine, among others, and she has shown throughout the mid-Atlantic region as well as in Lima, Peru and Cortona, Italy. “I learned so much at MICA, most importantly the value of research in creating a new body of work and sparking ideas,” said Sitkin, who is now an assistant director of career development at the College. “The technical skills I learned enabled me to clearly and sensitively render these unique landscapes, but more importantly the confidence and work ethic I acquired during my time as a student prepared me to have a long and versatile career as an artist,” she said. “I know that if I have a sincere interest and drive, I can realize most any project I dream of.” Aaron McIntosh, Bedroom Buddies, 2010. James Veenstra ’87 Jackson Martin ’07 jacksonmartin.com “Growing up in Appalachia has had everything to do with shaping my work, but I’ve only come to realize this in the last few years,” said Jackson Martin ’07, who lived on a commune on the very edge of the region until age 10. The insight he gained as a child is immediately evident in the Rinehart School of Sculpture graduate’s installation and sculptural works, which blend the natural elegance of organic materials with the finite modernity of man-made mediums. Among other accolades, Martin’s work was chosen by the Frederick Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park in downtown Grand Rapids, Michigan for display during ArtPrize 2010, and he was invited to install one of his works in the sculpture park at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York. His work was also featured in Sculpture magazine in both 2008 and 2009. Martin now lives with his wife and daughter in Charleston, South Carolina where he teaches at the College of Charleston and works for the Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art. He considers the skills he learned at MICA to be the foundation of his ability to be a good teacher and guide. His plans for 2012 include an installation titled Moving Mountains for South Korea’s Jara Island International Baggat Art Exhibition as well as several other shows. “Appalachia will always influence my work because it is at the foundation of who I am, and I will never escape that,” he said. “I look forward to my new surroundings, not because I hope to get away from who I am, but rather because I am excited about how it will merge and meld with what I already bring to the table.” James Veenstra ’87, Hers, mixed media, 2011. Hoffberger School of Painting alumnus James Veenstra ’87 counts southwest Virginia’s scenic beauty as one of his artistic inspirations. In fact, the New Mexico native describes some of his paintings as “Jappalachian,” a mixed media style that takes traditional Japanese painting attributes—such as working in panels—and then adds elements like duct tape around the edges. A teacher at Mountain Empire Community College in Big Stone Gap, Virginia and the nearby University of Virginia’s College at Wise, Veenstra said the term “Jappalachian” was inspired by his students’ interest in Japanese pop culture in lieu of the regional culture. “There is a striking similarity of cloud and mist formations in the valleys here to the Japanese ‘floating world’ paintings so—with my wry sense of humor—I wanted to combine the two cultures.” Besides teaching, Veenstra has worked as a muralist for the past 18 years, with works at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History and Harborplace in Baltimore, plus many other institutions, commercial spaces, and private residences. “Many of the technical skills I learned at MICA and as a commercial muralist, have influenced the way I work,” said Veenstra, who added that studying with peers from other backgrounds and countries was one of the highlights of attending MICA. Daniel Shea ’07 danielpshea.com A drive to find the source of the energy he uses is what first led Daniel Shea ’07 to the coal mining region of Appalachia. “It’s such a bizarre thing, to be so distant from the process behind the light switch,” said Shea, who received the 2007 Meyer Photography Traveling Fellowship from MICA and ended up spending three years documenting the coal industry. “Over the years, the project took on a much different scope as the multiple political and cultural circumstances surrounding modern coal mining practices proved much more interesting,” he said. Shea surveyed the social and political institutions surrounding mountaintop removal for his series Removing Mountains (2007) and later went up river to Ohio to complete a follow-up project, titled Plume (2009-10), which focused on the communities that live in the shadow of coal-fired power plants. The resulting photographs have been extensively exhibited nationally and internationally, and featured in publications including City Paper, Vogue (Korea), and Urbanite, as well as online on NPR’s The Picture Show and Photography for a Greener Planet. Throughout the project, Shea maintained a more sculpture-based studio practice and photographed editorial content for publications such as TIME, Dwell, Wired, The Wall Street Journal, Popular Mechanics, and many more. Shea teaches at Columbia College Chicago and is currently enrolled in an interdisciplinary MFA program at the University of Illinois at Chicago, where he works mostly with sculpture and installation. “I don’t know if I’ll go back to Appalachia anytime soon, but my new work explores the post-industrial ruin, inspired by years of traveling to the region to deal with a massive entity like the coal industry.” (top to bottom) All artwork by Jackson Martin ‘07. Photos from Collapse (All-Purpose), 2010-2011; Threshold, burlap, jute twine, grommets, soil, juniper trees, 2009. Daniel Shea ’07, Removing Mountains, 2007. 23 24 EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS MICA Makes a Splash in Miami MICA Alumni and Faculty Make a Statement During Art Basel 2011 Factory Installed On view through Sunday, May 27 at the Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Factory Installed is an exhibition organized around the idea of installation-based art practice. From a pool of nearly 600 applications, recent alumna Natalia Gonzalez ’11 was one of six artists chosen to work in residence creating brand new site-specific works. Situated in the lower level of the museum, Gonzalez’s installation fills a space atypical for a gallery: a narrow, dark passage with walls of stone. “I made this work with careful observation of the existing elements of the space: the cracks in the floor, the gaps in the walls, the surrounding sounds, and the lighting were taken as a premise,” said the Bolivian-born artist. “I responded to these by incorporating lengths of steel, wire, pulleys, shadows, and automated lights positioned, directed, and orchestrated to a looped sequence. It is the idea of drawing a visual ‘score’ in a specific place.” See more images from the exhibition at mattress.org. Natalia Gonzalez ’11, Light Recordings, steel, automated lights, wire, pulleys, plumb bob, concrete, shadows, 2011. Art Basel is billed as “the most prestigious art show in the Americas.” More than 260 leading galleries and 2,000 artists from North America, Europe, Latin America, Asia, and Africa participated in 2011. MICA alumni and faculty have built a following at Art Basel in Miami over many years, but the College itself made its official presence known for the first time in December 2011. In partnership with New York’s Museum of Arts and Design (MAD) and the Betsy Hotel Foundation, MICA managed to stand out amongst the world’s most talented artists by hosting a packed reception at the Betsy Hotel. The reception was attended by MICA Graduate Dean Emerita Leslie King-Hammond, PhD; Lowery Stokes Sims, PhD, a 1988 MICA honorary degree recipient; trustee Rick Gonzalez, Jr. and his wife; Alumni Council Co-Chair James Rieck ’87 ’03 and his wife Judy Lichtman ’89, Gary Koeppel ’75, Alayna Wool ’05, and other alumni; MICA Vice President for Advancement Michael Franco, EdD; and members of the media. Famed artist Joyce Scott ’70 regaled the crowd by singing several classical, jazz, and rhythm and blues standards. However, the reception was just one of many places to catch MICA alumni. From recent graduates to internationally-known artists with portfolios that span decades, their work could be seen across Miami and Miami Beach at Art Basel and other concurrent showcases. While works by Matt Johnson ’00 and Shinique Smith ’92 ’03 were featured at Art Basel, the detailed skateboards and portraits painted by Jason Bryant ’04 were a highlight of the Aqua show, and a painting by trustee Michele Modell ’10 was prominently displayed at the SCOPE show. Other alumni were part of booths at SCOPE curated by alumni-owned galleries, such as the New York-based Like the Spice Gallery owned by Marisa Sage ’02 and the Baltimore-based Jordan Faye Contemporary, founded by Jordan Faye Block ’05. A painting by Katie Miller ’07 ’11 was among the work by alumni shown at the PULSE show, where Woo Jin Chang ’11 and Dan Gioia ’11 were award winners. Naomi Fisher ’98 performed a special piece at Miami’s Vizcaya Museum and Gardens associated with her Jungle Sweat, Roseate installation, which was covered in Artforum and The New York Times. In all, dozens of alumni were spotlighted in myriad shows during the massive art festival. MICA’s 2011 official presence and strong support for the alumni in the show—evidenced by President Fred Lazarus IV’s visits to shows in the Miami area to see alumni artwork—are a precursor to intensified involvement by the College in Miami Art Basel-related activities in years to come. (top to bottom) Naomi Fisher ’98, Jungle Sweat, Roseate; Joyce Scott ’70 at MICA’s Betsy Hotel reception; Jason Bryant ’04 stands by his work. 25 INNOVATION THE sTory of amErica’s grEaT arT scHool Senior Send-Off MICA’s graduating class exemplifies leadership, creativity, and excellence. Highlighted are just a few students who have made a difference on campus and in their communities, and have their sights set on impacting the greater world. A grAduAtion gift thAt will lAst A lifetime! Allison Eve Samuels (fiber with a photography concentration and gender studies minor) A champion for self-expression Allison Eve Samuels, Try Your Best series, hand embroidery on cotton with interchangeable captions. For Allison Eve Samuels, self-expression is the root of all creativity. So it’s little surprise the fiber major from Croton-on-Hudson, New York has spent much time at MICA ensuring that everyone’s voice is heard. While serving as president of the Student Voice Association, Samuels sat on a number of panels and committees with hopes of helping MICA operate as effectively as possible. “I wanted to build a greater sense of involvement between students and staff and an awareness of what’s going on behind the scenes,” Samuels said. Samuels is also a tireless crusader for sexuality and gender expression. In the fall of 2009, Samuels launched MICArotica, an erotic art and literature publication that features submissions from students, faculty, and staff. “Sexuality, sexual health, and gender expression are issues that really hit close to home for me so this magazine has been a great way to start the discussion on a personal level as opposed to keeping things theoretical,” Samuels said. Samuels’ thesis will also reflect the theme of self-expression. Samuels is creating a mural that will be embroidered with the results of a survey in which people describe how they personally identify themselves. “If more attention is paid to our own understanding of our sexual identities and personal interactions then I believe we would be able to embrace each other and understand each other on a more basic level,” Samuels said. “That’s at the heart of my work at MICA, and that’s what I hope to be doing for the rest of my life in various capacities.” Caitlin Deane (ceramics with a curatorial studies concentration) Schooling others on the virtues of service When Caitlin Deane started her first semester at MICA, she was immediately impressed by the Community Arts Partnership (CAP) program. “In high school I was doing a lot of community service, and I wanted to find a way to blend my love for art with my love of helping other people,” the Bucks County, Pennsylvania native said. Thus began a college career marked by service, as Deane interned in the CAP office and participated in many projects, including a senior citizen art program and a stint teaching art classes at a rehabilitation facility. In 2009, Deane created another forum for giving back when she came up with the idea to start an alternative spring break program. Rather than traipsing to Miami or the Caribbean, students would use their time off to travel throughout the country to participate in community projects. “I really wanted to have a goal to set and bring a new group of students together,” she said. The first year, students worked with Habitat for Humanity in Pennsylvania, and last year they worked with the Youth Service Opportunities Project and the National Coalition for the Homeless in Washington, DC. The ceramics major is weighing future plans with options ranging from teaching community classes to joining AmeriCorps. Regardless of what decision she makes, two things are for sure: She’ll make use of the artistic skills she’s gained at MICA, and “My biggest goal is to be able to help out in whatever community I end up in,” she said. Class of 1907 on Main Building Grand Staircase Making History/Making Art MICA is a great gift at a great 20% discount. This discount is valid through May 31, 2012 only on purchases made online at store.mica.edu or in person at the MICA Store (Mt. Royal Avenue & Dolphin Street). CongrAtulAtions to the ClAss of 2012 –An eXCiting new ChAPter in miCA’s historY! Caitlin Deane, With Legs In, local Maryland clay adobe, 2011. 27 28 INNOVATION Jessica Emily Marx (photography) Turning opportunity into artistic excellence Artwork by Jessica Emily Marx from the Crowns series. For Jessica Emily Marx, the MICA experience has transcended the classroom. Not only has the photography major from Westchester, New York worked as a resident assistant for the past two years, she’s also served as a co-curator of the Wilgus Gallery, a student-run gallery in the Photography Department. If that’s not enough, she’s also taken part in both the Experimental Fashion Event and the Annual Benefit Fashion Show. Why such a busy schedule? “I’ve taken on the mentality of never saying no if there’s an opportunity to do something,” she said. “And that’s helped me have a more optimistic outlook on everything and feel more reassured as an artist.” For her thesis, Marx has created eight different hats out of recycled fabric from her childhood and then photographed them using the original fabric as a background so the hats appear camouflaged. She was then rewarded with the opportunity to showcase that installation in MICA’s Pinkard Gallery in January. Marx has also served as an organizer of The Business of Photography, a daylong event that brought workshops, portfolio reviews, and other activities related to photography to MICA. After graduation, her goal is to become a photographer for an arctic line of cruises because she’s inspired by ice and arctic climates. And her time at MICA has given her the courage to pursue it. “Coming to MICA was completely life-changing,” she said. Ryan Paige Rommel (graphic design) Expanding personal limits through leadership Ryan Paige Rommel’s artist book, Mom’s Advice, encases many loose-leaf prints, each revealing a piece of her mother’s advice for her and her sister. Ryan Paige Rommel understands the power of first impressions. In her role as a student coordinator for MICA’s Orientation Program for the past two years, the graphic design major from Dallas, Texas made it her mission to ensure that new students see MICA in the best light possible. “I have always made sure I soak in the fact that I am around an incredible community of artists,” she said. “So I really encourage any of the new students coming in to soak that up as much as possible, too.” In her role, she’s overseen orientation leader training and helped to coordinate adventure tours, which introduce new students not only to MICA, but to the surrounding city of Baltimore. She also serves as a leadership mentor, dishing out support and a friendly face to underclassmen as needed. When she’s not helping others make the most of their MICA experience, Rommel may be found on the runway. “I’m truly honored to be wearing garments that my peers have put so much time into, and it’s a blast learning how different creative minds work within a major completely opposite of mine,” she said. Rommel also designs custom wedding invitations at a local boutique and intends to apply to letterpress studios that do custom invitations and event design after graduation. While it’s clear that Rommel values giving back, she noted she benefits as much as the students she helps. “Overall, being a student leader has pushed me to become a stronger person. I owe a lot of my happiness to MICA,” she said. Sam Grossman (drawing) Making a difference collaboratively Sam Grossman, from Biopistemology: the Study of Biological Science Vol. 1 (Photo by Erik Puotinen). Sam Grossman arrived at MICA as a shy young man, but the drawing major from Lawrenceville, New Jersey will be graduating as one of the senior class’s most active student leaders. “When I came in as a freshman, I was scared, so I wanted to become an orientation leader to tell freshmen that it’s OK if they’re scared too,” he recalled. In the process, he discovered he had a knack for getting people involved, and he used that skill to benefit a number of organizations on campus. In his sophomore year, he became president of OY!, the Jewish organization on campus. He’s also served as the vice president of the MICA Improv League and been active in MICA’s Student Voice Association. He’s even tried his hand at running a jazz club. Most recently, Grossman has taken part in the Occupy MICA collective, an offshoot of the national movement that concerns itself with issues affecting the country, the city of Baltimore, and MICA. “Every Occupy group describes itself as a group without a leader when in fact it’s a group full of leaders,” Grossman said. “That’s what attracts me to it.” After graduation, Grossman hopes to eventually apply his leadership skills—and what he’s learned at MICA—to the world of alternative education. “What I love about MICA is that in the classrooms there is always some element of critique and discussion,” he said. “I would like to open up a school, and that would be the basis of the classes.” MICA Masters Benefit Art Sale Saturday, May 5, Noon–4 pm Studio Center, 131 W. North Ave. This annual benefit art sale offers a chance to browse and buy affordable works of art from students in the Mount Royal School of Art, Hoffberger School of Painting, Rinehart School of Sculpture, MFA in Graphic Design, MFA in Photographic & Electronic Media, and Post-Baccalaureate Certificate in Fine Arts programs. A percentage of the proceeds from the event will support a graduatespecific scholarship. The sale, which includes a reception, is a rare opportunity to visit the studios and facilities of the College’s graduate programs. ArtWalk 2012 Your support empowers artists and designers who will change the world. Join the growing family of MICA donors by supporting students like Aaron with a tax deductible donation. Simply return the enclosed envelope or donate online at www.mica.edu/give Ad Thursday, May 10, 5–9 pm Campuswide, starting at Cohen Plaza, 1303 W. Mount Royal Ave. Tickets: $25 for exhibition and casual supper Stroll through the MICA galleries, mingle with young artists and fellow art enthusiasts, and discuss the students’ artwork at the preview party for the 2012 Commencement Exhibition. ArtWalk guests can purchase outstanding work by graduating seniors before the exhibition opens to the public at this visually energizing 3K walking tour. In between strolls and after the exhibition closes at 8 pm, guests are invited to relax and enjoy casual dinner fare and have a glass of wine with the student artists. For more information and to purchase tickets online, visit mica.edu/artwalk. 2012 Commencement Exhibition Friday, May 11–Monday, May 14 Campuswide Special Gallery Hours: Friday, 11 am–8 pm; Saturday–Monday, 11 am–5 pm Campuswide Reception: Sunday, May 13, 1:30–5 pm The 2012 Commencement Exhibition highlights works by nearly 400 emerging artists in the undergraduate class of 2012. By transforming the College’s permanent galleries, hallways, classrooms, and open spaces into one expansive gallery space, each student is able to show a substantial body of work. Programs of Study: animation; ceramics; drawing; environmental design; fiber; general fine arts; graphic design; illustration; interaction design and art; interdisciplinary sculpture; humanistic studies; painting; photography; printmaking; and video and film arts. “Receiving a scholarship has brought me much hope and encouragement in my aspirations to become a better artist. Thanks to my scholarship donors, I will be able to do my best and further my abilities.” — Aaron Chung ’13 30 EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS 31 House & Home The National Building Museum in Washington, DC has selected MICA’s Gateway as one of seven residential spaces to be featured in a life-sized film for its House & Home exhibition. The long-term exhibition uses photographs, artifacts, models, and films to show the complex residential landscape of America. For 24 hours, a camera crew captured the inside of The Gateway apartment of students Danny Well ‘14, Lindsay Iredale ‘14, and Gray Lamb ‘14 to make a timelapse film of a day in the life of several MICA students and the spaces they occupy. The film will be projected from floor-to-ceiling as part of the exhibition, which opens on Saturday, April 28. For more information, visit nbm.org. Students Danny Well, Lindsay Iredale, and Gray Lamb inside The Gateway (Photo by Ariel Efron for Local Projects). Tragicomedy Faculty member and alumna Cara Ober ’05 will hold her second solo exhibition with Civilian Art Projects in Washington, DC from Friday, May 11 through Saturday, June 16. The exhibition, Tragicomedy, features new works on canvas and paper that expose cultural rifts between the ideal, the imagined, and everyday reality. Borrowing heavily from classical antiquities and her son’s cache of toys, Ober continues to explore the relationship between iconic images and text, emphasizing overlapping systems of personal and public narration. Learn more at civilianartprojects.com. Cara Ober ’05, Each Time and Grow Up, ink on cut paper. MICA on Fashion At MICA, “fashion” is not limited to what people wear. It is instead an exploration of how fiber and textiles can be used as means of artistic expression and societal engagement. The following page demonstrate a few of the ways MICA students and alumni are making strides in the fashion world. Rise of the Alters by Amelia Stinnette ’12 and Erik Clark ’12 for Transcend (Photo by Derek Blanks ’00). 32 EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS on Fashion: This Spring, MICA Goes BeyondMore Fashion Season Additional Programming Each spring, mica goes beyond a typical fashion season to showcase an elevated vision of how design can impact the world. Two headlining events, Transcend, the Annual Benefit Fashion Show, and Milquetoast, an Experimental Fashion Event, will give MICA students the ability to showcase their abilities to create inventive clothing that inspires thought and action. These two distinct shows—both featuring original, purposeful designs—aim to usher in a new view of fashion and offer a fresh perspective on design, proving once again that Baltimore is a center of fashion and design innovation. For more information, visit mica.edu/fashion. Transcend: Milquetoast: Friday, April 13, 9 pm (MICA Community Show) and Saturday, April 14, 8 pm (General Public Show) Brown Center: Falvey Hall, 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave. Tickets: $15 Students; $20 General Public (MICA Community Show: $7 Students; $12 Faculty and Staff), available at the MICA Store, 1200 W. Mount Royal Ave., and store.mica.edu; limited tickets will be sold at the door Saturday, April 21, 6 and 9 pm 2640 (St. John’s Church), 2640 Saint Paul St. Tickets: $5, available at the MICA Store, 1200 W. Mount Royal Ave., and store.mica.edu; limited tickets will be sold at the door for $10 Annual Benefit Fashion Show The 19th annual benefit fashion show, Transcend, is a runway show that will explore the outward manifestation of the unconscious mind. The designers were asked to go beyond the expected and transcend their normal, accepted thought processes and reveal a hidden layer of themselves through their garment making. Transcend allows audience members to walk behind the synaptic workings of the designer’s brains and visually see the manifestations of their inner thoughts and aspirations. People use garments as a means of expressing themselves, choosing to conceal or reveal. Whether this is through the purchase of clothes or breaking the rules of construction, people identify with garments as delicate illustrations that mirror their internal impulses. Through manipulation, clothing becomes the body itself and reveals aspects of a persona. Transcend represents a place that is metaphysical, emotional, and spiritual. These delicate domains manifest in the realm of fashion; they address solutions, challenge the norms, and provide a visual model of unceasing impact. After the show, audience members are invited to mix and mingle with the designers and view an exhibition of fashioninspired photography, illustration, and fiber arts in the lobby of Falvey Hall. Fashion pictorials of the students’ designs captured by celebrity photographer Derek Blanks ’00 will be part of the exhibition. The fashion show is sponsored by the Office of Diversity & Intercultural Development. Designers: Jessica Emily Marx and Alexz Giacobbe, Michelle Kim, Stephanie Santos, Allina Liu, Jordan Matthews, Olivia Taliaferro, Hayley Martell, Samantha Bloom, Evyn Fong and Kurina Sohn, Amelia Stinnette and Erik Clark, and Leanna Pascual Alumni Fashion Panel Friday, March 30, 6-7:30 pm Brown Center: Falvey Hall, 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave. mica will welcome several fashionforward panelists back to the College to speak about their experiences in the industry. This event is sponsored by the The Joseph Meyerhoff Center for Career Development. Experimental Fashion Event Lecture: Gary Graham Tuesday, April 3, 11:30 am Brown Center: Room 320, 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave. At the annual experimental fashion event, artists and designers from the Fiber Department’s Multi Media Event class transform 2640 (St. John’s Church) into a venue for innovative fashion and costume design by pushing the boundaries of fashion and art through live performances and projected video. A capstone for the Experimental Fashion Concentration, the class enrolls students from various departments, including interdisciplinary sculpture, photography, and illustration. Over the course of eight months, students design and craft their own body of work based on the garment, recruit their own models and performers, select music, and choreograph their show. At the same time, the students work collaboratively to produce and promote the event, choosing the site, name, and graphic identity. Students’ work taps into the power of clothing as a semiotic device, communicating constantly shifting ideas and beliefs about the body, social relationships, and the spirit of the times. Their work speaks to the performative nature of fashion and the overlapping of the runway, the stage, and the theater of the streets. See page 42 for more information. Robot Fest Saturday, April 14–Sunday, April 15 National Electronics Museum, 1745 W. Nursery Rd., Linthicum Hts., MD Interactive art and smart fabric projects from students enrolled in smart textiles design courses, offered jointly with The Johns Hopkins University, will be on display at this wearable technology fashion show at the National Electronics Museum (near Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport). For more information, visit robotfest.com. USA Science & Engineering Festival Saturday, April 28–Sunday, April 29 Walter E. Washington Convention Center, 801 Mount Vernon Place, NW, Washington, DC This year, the name Milquetoast (meaning a timid person) was chosen as a counterpoint to the lively event and a tip of the hat to the political climate in this presidential election year. The evening will involve more than 150 people, from designers and their models to participating performers, including roving costumed characters. Music and sound will be provided by DJ J-No and other local musicians. Students from the Wash and Wear and Wearable Technolog y classes Designers: Antonina Clarke, Thea Elisabeth Curley, Naomi Davidoff, Natalie Ebaugh, Giovanni Flores, Morgan Frailey, Alexz Giacobbe, Maya Lisa Akabane Graffagna, Kelsey LaSeur, Jessica Emily Marx, Georgia Caroline Milton, Michela Reina, Stephanie Santos, Anna Strain, Jacqueline Wadowsky, and Katharine Weintraub; graphic design assistance provided by Alex Dougherty (clockwise from top) Let Go by Evyn Fong and Kurina Sohn for Transcend (Photo by Derek Blanks ’00); The Smart Textile Circus by Matthew Reading ’12 is an example of the type of work that will be featured at Robot Fest and the USA Science & Engineering Festival; Cirque d’Armoire (detail) by Naomi Davidoff ’13 for Milquetoast. will hold a fashion show that incorporates fashion design, art, and technology at the USA Science & Engineering Festival, a science exposition in Washington, DC. Every model will not only be wearing an outfit that makes a “fashion statement” but also uses engineering technology, such as microcomputers, LEDs, sensors, motors, and conductive thread. For visitor information, visit usasciencefestival.org. 33 34 ALUMNI ALUMNI MICA Alumni as Style Makers More FashionForward Alumni: Whether they’re designing the next generation of ballerina flats, the first four-year fashion design program in Maryland, or uniforms for soccer teams, these fashion designers are proving MICA alumni have style. Laura Rasmussen ’10 Caroline Cecil ’06 Ballerina flats by LUV Footwear. As design director for LUV Footwear, a startup in San Francisco’s Bay Area set for product launch this spring, Caroline Cecil ’06 uses shoes as a canvas. “Our goal is to use a modern ballerina flat as a work of art. We want it to inspire meaningful ideas around the world,” Cecil explained. Cecil said she is thrilled to work for LUV’s creator, internationally-renowned designer Michael Toschi, who owns several footwear technology patents and has created designs for iconic brands including Nike, Ugg, and Esprit. She’s also eager to get the word out about a oncea-year opportunity for artists and designers to give voice to their art by submitting their work for use on shoes. The top 50 submissions will be showcased on luvfootwear.com, and the top 15 will make up the “Open Call Assortment,” a collection of the LUV ballerina flat that will be sold worldwide. “It’s an amazing opportunity, especially for MICA students. They have the chance to create a work of art and have that work showcased on shoes worn around the world,” she said. Since leaving MICA, Cecil has worked across the country, going from Target Corporation in Minnesota, where she managed the print and pattern design for two categories of the junior girl’s brand, Xhilaration, to Maine, where she worked for the highly creative and acclaimed product/pattern designer, Angela Adams. She later moved to California, where she landed a gig at Levi Strauss & Co. researching the history of men’s workwear in America from the 1800s to the 1950s for the Red Tab brand’s Workwear Collection launch. “My experience in understanding design for a mass audience, understanding that the design has to be both creative and sellable, is why I’m here,” said Cecil. “I’m back working with a global product, but it’s a product with a purpose—and art is at the heart of it.” She continued, “My experience at MICA has helped, too, because at MICA I was taught to indulge in creativity. I was taught to take an idea and work through it... to be deeply considerate about a concept, explore the best physical expression of that idea, create the work, and then stand behind it. In today’s world of surface and product design, understanding this process will set you apart as a designer and design-thinker.” Sally M. DiMarco ’72 Draping Basics by Sally M. DiMarco ’72. (Photo by Fairchild Publications). Long before becoming the program coordinator for Stevenson University’s newly-launched major in fashion design, Sally M. DiMarco ’72 established herself as a well-known figure in Maryland’s fashion world as an educator and author. She led the fashion design program for Baltimore City Community College (BCCC) for more than three decades, and in 2010, she authored Draping Basics, a text adopted by more than 24 colleges and universities across the country. “I left BCCC after 31 years, but never really fully retired,” she noted. “I lectured at colleges and did workshops, and my book came out. Then this opportunity came along. It’s a four-year program, the first in the state of Maryland, and it’s very career oriented, as we’re preparing students to become technical fashion designers. It’s unique as well because we’re teaching students technical fashion design for three markets—men, women, and children. ” With such drive and ambition in the industry, it is no surprise that DiMarco comes from a long line of fashion-forward people. “My family came from Italy, and they were all in the fashion industry as hat designers or menswear designers. I knew from the start what I wanted to do.” “I think there’s more respect for fashion design now, and that’s wonderful. I’m happy that others appreciate the creativity that goes into fashion design, the art that goes into making a dress,” she said. “I still love to paint, but fashion is it for me.” Designs for collegiate soccer jerseys Jenna Pugh ’07 worked on at Under Armour. Jenna Pugh ’07 When Jenna Pugh ’07 began her undergraduate studies at MICA, she was convinced her passion was in painting. “I’ve been sewing since I was in middle school, but I saw it as just a hobby. My art focus was in drawing and painting so naturally I decided to major in painting at MICA,” she said. “But I noticed that I didn’t have the same passion other painting majors had. I was sewing in my free time and waiting until right before a project was due to paint. Something clicked, and I realized where my focus really was.” She switched her major to fiber during her junior year and hasn’t looked back. Today, Pugh is a designer at Under Armour, and her work can be seen on professional and college athletes worldwide. “It’s pretty exciting,” Pugh said. “I used to design soccer products for all of Under Armour, but it’s grown so much that I specialize in design for professional and college soccer teams. I research team histories and traditions, and then I get to interpret those findings every year. There’s a huge retail component as to why teams get new uniforms every year, so it’s fun that I get to constantly try new ideas.” Pugh currently designs for 19 college teams and four professional clubs. “Tottenham Hotspur in the English Premier League will begin wearing Under Armour this summer, and they’re one of the most watched teams in the world. There are followers of their league everywhere so it’s kind of amazing I get to see my work showcased on such a large scale,” Pugh said. “I also had a lot of fun working on uniforms for the soccer team at the University of Maryland. They weren’t tied to a lot of history with their uniforms so they let us be really creative.” She continued, “By switching majors, I had to work really hard to graduate on time. But I did it, and the timing worked out great. I got the job at Under Armour not long after graduation, and I’ve been here long enough to see our department go from 12 people to over 60. I definitely made the right choice.” Laura Rasmussen ’10 is working as a graphic and web designer for Splashlight Studios, a photo and video production studio for the high fashion industry based in New York City’s SoHo neighborhood. The firm’s clients include Louis Vuitton, Christian Dior, Macy’s, ALDO, and Neiman Marcus, among others. Rasmussen designs everything from billboards to websites, and recently created a slew of magazine advertisements as clients prepared to launch their new lines in spring. One of Rasmussen’s more unique roles at Splashlight, however, is her work outside of fashion. As she puts it, “Splashlight sponsors a USF2000 racecar driver, and I manage his website and design the graphics on new cars when he gets them. I even write press releases. It’s kind of different compared to work in fashion, but it’s a lot of fun.” Kandice Levero ’04 MICA graduate and fashion designer Kandice Levero ’04 recently launched Le Vero, a brand of glittering accessories inspired by living in both the United States and her current home—Tokyo, Japan. This spring, the collection was showcased at Tokyo’s 2012 Rooms show, an international trade show featuring the best of Japanese fashion and design. Participation in the show is highly selective, and past exhibitors have launched successful brands after taking part in Rooms. This past fall, items from the Le Vero line were displayed at Daikanyama, Tokyo, where she was able to garner the attention of buyers from shops and department stores. Over summer 2011, Levero visited Baltimore for a fashion shoot at the Senator Theater, highlighting the parts of her collection inspired by the historic theater. 35 36 EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS Spotlight on Rivals of the West, MICA’s Student-Run Performing Arts Team because they see very powerfully. Those students in that first class had a keen ability to visualize a play and act it out.” The performance aspect of the class continued, as students put on the scenes assigned to them wherever they could find space—in an auditorium in Mount Royal Station, in painting studios, and even outside. The creation of the Brown Center, home to Falvey Hall, marked a milestone in performance at MICA, and Shipley took advantage of the opportunity that new space afforded almost immediately. “The first thing we did was we took the scenes we were doing When faculty member Christopher Shipley, PhD came to in class—scenes from 13 different plays—and strung them MICA more than 25 years ago, he was immediately struck by the together artfully. We would perform them publicly at no charge, students he encountered. and the auditorium was almost always packed,” he said. “It was a “MICA wasn’t like the typical undergraduate setting at a great deal of fun, even though it was hard work. We had to learn university, where maybe 20 percent of students know what they what to do about sound and lighting in a space that’s not really want to do when they start. Every student here was committed to a theater space. But our students are problem solvers. You give the work of being an artist,” he explained. “They knew from the them a task, and they make it work.” time they were holding a crayon in each hand during kindergarten Shipley’s class staged full-length plays in Falvey Hall for two that they were an artist. They had a calling. It was remarkable years until the BBOX was built, allowing for more ambitious to me, and it reminded me of my time at The University of stage productions. The Contemporary Drama elective forged the Chicago—a pure kind of experience and a very intellectual one. way for the creation of the current performance offerings. There were no apologies to the commitment to art and the study “Theater is perfect for an art school,” Shipley said. “It is and practice of it. That’s why I fell in love with MICA.” the absolute collaborative experience where everyone can get Shipley earned two degrees from the University of Maryland together and produce something that doesn’t just exist in class and a PhD from The University of Chicago, and came to but is out there in the world where students are soon going to MICA through the College’s efforts to build what would work. And we involve everybody in the production, from staff become a renowned liberal arts program. Currently working members to students to faculty. It’s a way to get together as an for the Humanistic Studies and Foundation departments, the entire community, and it works. It’s project-oriented, which is first elective course he taught was Contemporary Drama. He the way education is going. It fits MICA’s culture.” has taught the class every year since, expanding performance He added, “I’ve had fantastic support at MICA. There is a opportunities over the years to include Rivals of the West, a willingness to be open and subversive and creative. Like our student-run performing arts team that forms annually in his students, we make things work.” course titled The Play’s the Thing. This year, the company will stage two provocative Neil LaBute works, Fat Pig and reasons to be pretty, in MICA’s BBOX. Students across majors will take part in the production through roles that include stage managers, lighting and sound technicians, set design and construction, costumers, prop fabricators, actors, and more. The first such performances under Shipley’s guidance were much simpler. “We started off that first elective class by talking about the play as a repository of ideas. Then, students would put on scenes where they had to direct and act and later write about the experience. I knew from my training that a play doesn’t exist on the page—it has to be performed to be understood, much like music,” he said, adding, “As I taught the course, I realized that MICA students are doers and seers. Artists are deep intellectuals Photo from last year’s performance of Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire (Photo by Rachel Verhaaren ’11). Coming to the This Spring Stage The Gateway: BBOX, 1601 W. Mount Royal Ave. Tickets: $10, students; $15, general admission ($5 discount available for purchasing tickets to both shows) Tickets will be available at the MICA Store (1200 W. Mount Royal Ave. and store.mica.edu), online at Brown Paper Tickets (brownpapertickets.com), and at the door on the day of the event. Who decides what is beautiful—or rather, who is beautiful? What is beauty, after all? Neil LaBute, one of America’s hottest and most controversial young playwrights, takes on these beguiling questions in two of his most celebrated plays—Fat Pig and reasons to be pretty. MICA’s student theater company, Rivals of the West, will present both of these critically acclaimed and provocative plays over two weekends this spring. Don’t miss the drama that beauty—or its absence—stirs. Fat Pig Thursday, April 5; Saturday, April 7; Friday, April 13; and Sunday, April 15, 8 pm Fat Pig is the clever but touching story of a stereotypical young professional named Tom who falls in love with a confident, plus-sized librarian named Helen. The play explores how society treats a romance between the two. reasons to be pretty Friday, April 6; Sunday, April 8; Thursday, April 12; and Saturday, April 14, 8 pm (above) Photo from last year’s performance of Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire (Photo by Rachel Verhaaren ’11) (opposite, top) Students rehearse for Fat Pig (Photo by Danny Well ’14). in reasons to be pretty, a cast of four young working class friends and lovers become increasingly dissatisfied with their dead-end lives—and each other. More information is available at rivalsofthewest.org. 37 38 EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS Off the Rails: MFA Thesis Exhibitions Three upcoming exhibitions will feature thesis work from Master of Fine Arts candidates in MICA’s MFA in Graphic Design, Hoffberger School of Painting, Mount Royal School of Art, MFA in Photographic & Electronic Media, and Rinehart School of Sculpture. Fox Building: Decker, Meyerhoff, and Fox 3 galleries, 1303 W. Mount Royal Ave.; Bunting Center: Pinkard Gallery, 1401 W. Mount Royal Ave.; North Avenue Market, 15 W. North Ave. MFA Thesis I Friday, March 23–Sunday, April 1 Reception: Friday, March 23, 5–7 pm Gallery Talk: Tuesday, March 27, 3–5:15 pm, beginning in Decker Gallery; Wednesday, March 28, 1–3:30 pm, beginning in Meyerhoff Gallery MA in Social Design students working in their East Baltimore studio at MICA PLACE. Featuring: Elizabeth Ashe (Mount Royal), Rachel Beamer (Photographic & Electronic Media), Pablo Friday, April 20–Friday, April 27 Bunting Center: Pinkard Gallery, 1401 W. Mount Royal Ave. Reception: Friday, April 27, 5–7 pm MA in Social Design Thesis Show García López (Rinehart), Rachel Held (Rinehart), Alice Hom (Graphic Design), Jin Hwan Kim (Graphic Design), Jenny Kutnow (Graphic Design), Grimm Lee (Mount Royal), Sean McDonough (Hoffberger), Eric Mortensen (Graphic Design), Chelsea Ragan (Mount Royal), Cathleen Sachse (Mount Royal), Aura Seltzer (Graphic Design), Gavin Stewart (Photographic & Electronic Media), Arisha Trifonova (Photographic & Electronic Media), Jeffrey Vincent (Hoffberger), Adam Void (Mount Royal), and Cameron Zotter (Graphic Design) Living and working in East Baltimore, students in the MA in Social Design program are challenged to explore the designer’s role and responsibility in society, produce new ways of thinking, facilitate new institutional collaborations, utilize design to bring about social change, and develop contexts in which their ideas can be sustained. The program implements a project-based curriculum emphasizing learning by doing; extensive studio and field experience creates opportunities to work on collaborative, issue-based projects with a variety of disciplines, organizations, and community members. The thesis show provides a first-hand look at the innovative approaches and ideas for positively impacting communities. MFA Thesis II Friday, April 6–Sunday, April 15 Reception: Friday, April 13, 5–7 pm Gallery Talk: Tuesday, April 10, 3–5:15 pm, beginning in Fox 3 Gallery; Wednesday, April 11, 1–3:45 pm, beginning in Meyerhoff Gallery Featuring: Misha Capecchi (Mount Royal), Micheal Cor (Hoffberger), Noel Cunningham (Graphic Design), Zoe Friedman (Mount Royal), Jessica Gibson (Photographic & Electronic Media), Timothy Hoover (Graphic Design), Julie Horton (Hoffberger), So Hyun An (Photographic & Electronic Media), Abdulmari “Toym” de Leon Imao (Rinehart), Jessica Karle (Graphic Design), Jonathan Latiano (Mount Royal), Aviv Lichter (Graphic Design), Lloyd Lowe (Photographic & Electronic Media), Travis Masingale (Photographic & Electronic Media), Skye McNeill (Graphic Design), Laini Nemett (Hoffberger), Margaret Rogers (Mount Royal), Michal Rotberg (Graphic Design), and Jen Smith (Photographic & Electronic Media) Featuring: Danah Abdulla, Kyla Fullenwider, Leah Harper, Briony Hynson, Remy Peritz, Ben Peterson, Elise Roy, Julie Sayo, and Becky Slogeris Community Art Collaborative Exhibition MFA Thesis III Thursday, May 24–Wednesday, June 13 Fox Building: Fox 3 Gallery, 1303 W. Mount Royal Ave. Reception and Community Festival: Thursday, May 24, 4–7 pm, Cohen Plaza and Fox 3 Gallery, 1303 W. Mount Royal Ave. Community Art Fair: Saturday, June 9, 10 am–2 pm, Cohen Plaza and Fox 3 Gallery, 1303 W. Mount Royal Ave. Friday, April 20–Sunday, April 29 Reception: Friday, April 20, 5–7 pm Gallery Talk: Tuesday, April 24, 3–5:15 pm, beginning in North Avenue Market; Wednesday, April 25, 1-3:45 pm, beginning in Decker Gallery Featuring: Sean Bennett (Mount Royal), Brian Conaty (Mount Royal), Jennifer Coster (Rinehart), Caroline Covington (Rinehart), Madeleine Cutrona (Mount Royal), Jonathan Duff (Mount Royal), Abraham Garcia (Graphic Design), Rolando Gutierrez (Graphic Design), Sung-Hwa Kim (Hoffberger), William Knipscher (Photographic & Electronic Media), Kimberly Alexa Llerena (Photographic & Electronic Media), Clara Kohn Marquez (Graphic Design), Ali Wendy Miller (Hoffberger), Margaret Rorison (Photographic & Electronic Media), Cheyenne Seeley (Mount Royal), Zachary Michael Storm (Mount Royal), Heather Stratton (Photographic & Electronic Media), Aggie Toppins (Graphic Design), and Carly Witmer (Hoffberger) (top to bottom) Jenny Kutnow (MFA Graphic Design), 16 Days, inkjet print; Jeffrey Vincent (Hoffberger), Funeral, acrylic on panel, 2012; Sean Bennett (Mount Royal), more security PLX!, social security card, aluminum, lamp wick, black abs plastic, Plexiglas, MDF and aluminum hardware, 2011; Adam Void (Mount Royal), The Golden West, acrylic, gold leaf, ballpoint pen on nautical print. The community art collaborative (CAC) exhibition will include artwork made by youth in partnership with CAC during the 2011-12 year. During the Community Festival, art activities and performances will be available to the public, while the Community Art Fair will feature a marketplace with art and crafts for sale as well as family-friendly activities. (clockwise from top) Shana R. Goetsch, Beyond Rorschach - Test 18; Anne Kotleba, Be Heard, acrylic on canvas, 2011; Jessica Haywood Wyatt, Wedding Dress. MFA in Community Arts Thesis Exhibition Wednesday, April 25–Wednesday, May 16 MICA PLACE: The Rouse Company Foundation Gallery, 814 N. Collington Ave. Reception: Saturday, May 12, 5–7 pm This thesis exhibition combines the work of students using their own creative voices while investigating the relationship of the citizen artist and art to community building and advocating positive change. The installations are located in the historic East Baltimore neighborhood at MICA PLACE (Programs Linking Art, Culture, and Education). Participating artists: Shana R. Goetsch, Anne Kotleba, and Jessica Haywood Wyatt 39 40 EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS Staff Exhibition Amalie Rothschild ’34: Vestments Friday, June 1–Wednesday, June 20 Fox Building: Decker and Meyerhoff galleries, 1303 W. Mount Royal Ave. Reception: Thursday, June 7, 5–7 pm For the first time in more than 10 years, MICA will present works by its talented staff. Organized by MICA’s Staff Enrichment Council in partnership with the MICA Alumni Association and the Department of Exhibitions, the exhibition will be juried by Mount Royal School of Art alumnus and chairman of the MICA Alumni Council James Rieck ’87 ’03. Tapping into the talent of almost 400 employees—a large percentage of whom are practicing artists and MICA alumni themselves—the exhibition is anticipated to be a rich and varied visual experience. Wednesday, April 11–Wednesday, April 25 Brown Center: Rosenberg Gallery, 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave. Reception and Book Signing: Friday, April 20, 5:30–7:30 pm MICA Staff Exhibition, 2000. Image courtesy of the MICA Archives. MFA in Studio Art Thesis Exhibition L. Chapin Shearer, Cake Box, stoneware, yarn, and found objects. Thursday, June 28–Saturday, July 14 Fox Building: Decker and Meyerhoff galleries, 1303 W. Mount Royal Ave.; Bunting Center: Pinkard Gallery, 1401 W. Mount Royal Ave. Reception: Friday, July 13, 6–8 pm MA in Art Education Thesis Exhibition The summer thesis exhibition for the MFA in Studio Art program will feature the work of nine graduating artists from this unique low-residency program. Designed to expand understanding of contemporary art through research-based studio practice, this interdisciplinary program consists of four intensive six-week summer residencies combined with independent work during the academic year. Areas of concentration include the full range of contemporary art practices. Although the program promotes interdisciplinary approaches to art production, students are encouraged to work in ways most appropriate to their individual research. Wednesday, July 25–Friday, July 27 Bunting Center: Pinkard Gallery, 1401 W. Mount Royal Ave. Jason Andrew Bowles, 5 tools a gift to Bart, mixed media, 2009. During their two summer residencies on MICA’s campus, the art educators enrolled in the MA in Art Education (MAAE) program produce a conceptually related series of artworks. These artworks and the students’ thesis research studies on exhibition at the Pinkard Gallery mark the students’ graduation from the MAAE Program at MICA. Featuring: Rebecca Belleville, Laura Lynn Emberson, John Kildahl, Annette Luycx, L. Chapin Shearer, Linda Whelihan, and Meghan Zanskas School for Professional & Continuing Studies Student Exhibition Featuring: Jason Andrew Bowles, Mark Dixon, Chas Foster, Christian Hali, Patti Meyers, Dianne Pappas, Solange Roberdeau, Bernadine Schroyer, and Bart O’Reilly Second- and Third-Year MFA in Studio Art Exhibition Thursday, August 9–Thursday, August 16 Fox Building: Fox 3 Gallery, 1303 W. Mount Royal Ave. Reception: Thursday, August 16, 5–7 pm Friday, July 6–Friday, July 13 Fox Building: Fox 3 Gallery, 1303 W. Mount Royal Ave. Artwork by David Marion from the 2011 School for Professional & Continuing Studies Student Exhibition. This exhibition includes work by students in MICA’s continuing studies studio courses. The exhibition includes drawing, painting, ceramics, jewelry, photography, printmaking, and sculpture. A native baltimorean, Former trustee Amalie Rothschild ’34 (1916-2001) was an extremely versatile and imaginative artist. This exhibition is of a body of sculptural work based on the form of the liturgical vestment with each piece created out of a unique mixture of materials. Rothschild left behind some 1,500 works—more than 350 of which are in private collections and museums, including the Corcoran Gallery of Art, the Phillips Collection, The Baltimore Museum of Art, the Walters Art Museum, the Honolulu Academy of Arts, and The Israel Museum, Jerusalem. While Rothschild began her career as a painter of regional cityscapes and genre scenes in a figurative style, she soon discovered European modernism which expanded her approach to her work. She became best known for her abstract, geometric works in Plexiglas, aluminum, bronze, bark, handmade cast paper, and particle board, but she also painted using the more traditional mediums of oil, acrylic, and watercolor. Rothschild was a major force in the Maryland art world. She was president of the Maryland Artists’ Union, founded the Baltimore Outdoor Art Festival (1953-1968), co-founded Gallery One (the first co-operative artists’ gallery in Baltimore), co-founded Maryland Art Place, served on the boards of MICA and The Baltimore Museum of Art, and taught at Goucher College as well as the Metropolitan School of Art. Author’s Tour and Lecture Friday, April 20, 1–5:30 pm Brown Center: Rosenberg Gallery, 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave. MICA will celebrate the legacy of Amalie Rothschild ’34 and the publication of the book, Life and Work of Amalie Rothschild, with a tour led by the book’s essayists. Programming will begin with an author’s tour of the exhibition from 1-2 pm, followed by lectures by essayists Percy North (2:15 pm), Susan Isaacs (3:15 pm), and Amalie R. Rothschild (4:15 pm), whose essays appear in the book. The event will be followed by the exhibition reception and book signing. (background) Amalie Rothschild ’34, Hippolyte, aluminum, Plexiglas, gold leaf, chain, 1972. 41 42 EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS Wangechi Mutu Gary Graham Lisa Sanditz Monday, April 2, 10:30 am Brown Center: Room 320, 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave. Tuesday, April 3, 11:30 am Brown Center: Room 320, 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave. Monday, April 9, 10:30 am Brown Center: Room 320, 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave. Wangechi Mutu is a Kenyan artist whose work acts as a commentary of a social and personal nature where the female body functions as a dominant site of engagement and provocation. Her hybrid figures are embedded in unknown landscapes, possessing an abject allure. Reflecting her background, where she acquired a deep sensitivity for material salvaging, recycling, and reclaiming, Mutu’s samples come from printed image sources, including medical diagrams, glossy magazines, anthropology and botany pictures, pornographic materials, and traditional African arts. The artist’s signature aesthetic combines tactile surfaces and fleshy images saturated with physical and conceptual wit, regenerating the narrative and placement of the contemporary African female body. Mutu’s work is included in major collections such as the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and the Deutsche Guggenheim Museum in Berlin. This talk is sponsored by the Hoffberger School of Painting. New York-based Fashion designer Gary Graham’s background in costume and textile design is evident season after season. His collections are rich with casual luxury and a sense of history. Signature prints and jacquards are designed to incorporate visual clues that articulate the underlying themes of each collection. Inspirations for past collections have included fresh reinterpretations of Dust Bowl-era portraits or antique engravings of botanical specimens. His approach is reflected in his trademark fitted jackets, fluid dresses, and knits—all rendered in a rich palette with varied textures, achieved through the meticulous washing and dyeing processes that are associated with his name. Graham’s collections are represented in specialty boutiques and department stores worldwide. He was named a finalist in the 2009 Council of Fashion Designers of America/Vogue Fashion Fund. His talk is part of the Fiber Department’s Mixed Media Series. Lisa Sanditz, a native of Missouri, is an American landscape painter eternally searching for ways to find the sublime in the most unexpected areas. While respecting the traditions of her predecessors, Sanditz has taken a new and inventive path in the realm of landscape painting. Her wildly colorful works function as stylistic and informational quilts, opening doors into strange, polluted, and mysterious impressions of collapsing space. These items teeter between the seductive and the grotesque, but regardless are accessible through the dynamic tension of their design. She embraces despoiled and rotten landscapes and transforms them into picturesque scenes of great beauty and power. Sanditz has taught at Bard College in New York, San Francisco Art Institute, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Rhode Island School of Design, and Minneapolis College of Art and Design. This talk is sponsored by the Hoffberger School of Painting. Post Typography Greatest Misses Monday, April 16, 7 pm Brown Center: Falvey Hall, 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave. Faculty members Nolen Strals ’01 and Bruce Willen ’02 of the Baltimore design studio Post Typography give a behind-the-scenes peek at the design process, illustrated with never-before-seen projects that fell short, missed the mark, or were blown off-target by the fickle winds of client taste. Originally conceived as an avant-garde anti-design movement, Post Typography specializes in graphic design, conceptual typography, and custom lettering/illustration with additional forays into art, apparel, music, curatorial work, design theory, and vandalism. In 2007, Strals and Willen incorporated Post Typography as a full-time design studio, where they continue to work for a variety of clients including The New York Times, U.S. Green Building Council, John Legend & The Roots, and Random House. The studio recently wrote and designed Lettering & Type, a book on lettering and typeface design, published by Princeton Architectural Press. This lecture is sponsored by the Graphic Design Department. Art@Lunch: Alicia Volk, Global Art History, a View from Japanese Modernism Lee Mingwei Wednesday, April 18, 2:15 pm Brown Center: Room 320, 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave. Born in Taiwan and currently living in New York City, Lee Mingwei creates both participatory installations, where strangers can explore issues of trust, intimacy, and As associate professor and self-awareness on their own and through director of graduate studies at the one-on-one events, where visitors explore University of Maryland, Alicia Volk’s these issues with the artist himself through research spans a range of mediums and eating, sleeping, walking, and conversing. critical issues in modern and contemporary Mingwei’s projects are often open-ended Japanese art. This lecture will introduce scenarios for everyday interaction that key monuments of Japanese modern take on different forms depending on the art and place them in both domestic participants. Time is central to this process, and international context. The focus as Mingwei’s installations often change will be on oil painter Yorozu Tetsugorō, during the course of an exhibition. who devoted his career to resolving the Mingwei’s exhibitions have been displayed sometimes uneasy relationship between at the Museum of Modern Art in New perceived dichotomies, such as native and York, Whitney Museum of American Art foreign, and past and present—some of in New York, Brooklyn Museum in New the defining challenges of Japanese modern York, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum art. While reflecting upon the recent trends in Boston, Los Angeles County Museum toward global histories of art, this lecture of Art, Museum of Contemporary Art will demonstrate how such developments Cleveland, Museum of Contemporary Art in Japanese modern art both participated Taipei, and Queensland Gallery of Modern in the various discourses of European Art in Australia. He has also been featured modernism and expanded the scope of at biennials in Venice, Lyon, Liverpool, modernism’s possibilities and achievements. Taipei, and Washington, DC, as well as in The Art@Lunch lecture series is organized the Asia Pacific Triennial of contemporary by the Department of Art History, Theory, art. His talk and residency are funded and Criticism with support from the Office by the Mixed Media Lecture Series with of Academic Services. support from the MFA in Curatorial Practice. Wednesday, April 18, 12:30 pm Brown Center: Room 320, 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave. Lisa Sanditz, Deflated Christmas, 2010. Design by Gary Graham (Photo by Alex Antitch). Wangechi Mutu Bruce Willen ’02 and Nolen Strals ’01 of Post Typography. Alicia Volk Lee Mingwei 43 44 EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS Animation and the Language of Classical Indian Dance Candy Chang John Zinsser Thursday, April 19, 7:30 pm Brown Center: Falvey Hall, 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave. Monday, April 23, 10:30 am Brown Center: Room 320, 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave. Thursday, April 19, Noon Main Building: Room 100, 1300 W. Mount Royal Ave. Internationally recognized artist, designer, and urban planner Candy Chang believes the design of our public spaces can better reflect what is important to us as a community and as individuals. Combining street art and graphic design, she transforms simple objects such as stickers, stencils, and chalkboards into powerful tools that spark conversations in public spaces. Chang was named a “Live Your Best Life” Local Hero by Oprah Magazine and has been recognized as a TED Senior Fellow and an Urban Innovation Fellow. In Chang’s talks, she poses new strategies for civic life and inspires listeners to think differently. Through her own life stories, she illustrates how seemingly disparate experiences in countries from Kazakhstan to South Africa to Finland have come together to incite fresh perspectives and form a coherent philosophy. Her provocative and intimate talks explore the power of introspection in public space and what we can learn from our collective wisdom. This lecture is sponsored by the Graphic Design Department. As an abstract painter, John Zinsser has been exhibiting in the United States and Europe for 25 years. In 1987, he co-founded Journal of Contemporary Art, a magazine devoted entirely to interviews with artists and special projects. He has also written extensively for the periodicals Art in America and Flash Art. As a teacher at New School University and New York Academy of Art, Zinsser discusses contemporary art practices within their larger art historical contexts. He invites a wide range of possible readings in his own work, from Freud-based psychology to popular culture sources. In a review of his show, Abstract Memory, that debuted last spring at Larry Becker Contemporary Art in Philadelphia, Robin Rice of the Philadelphia City Paper writes: “Zinsser’s commitment to lush, well-orchestrated accidents reminds us of nature. His use of engineered pigments, silvers, rust primer, and alkyds keeps us in the artifice of civilization.” This talk is sponsored by the Hoffberger School of Painting. Mandakini Trivedi was a professor of dance for almost 10 years at Nalanda Nritya Kala Mahavidyalaya, a premier institution for the performing arts in Mumbai, India. She was initially trained in Mohini Attam by Smt. Kanak Rele, PhD, and received an MFA from Bombay University. Trivedi earned the Central Government Junior Fellowship for research in Mahini Attam, under which she studied dance from several masters in the field. She is an accomplished performer, teacher, and choreographer who is involved in various aspects of dance education and expression. As the creative head of the Nateshvari Dance Gurukul, she is working toward reviving the yogic traditions in Indian dance and creating awareness about the approach to Indian dance as a means of self-evolution. She has authored two books: The Yoga of Indian Dance and Sutras On Dance. This event is sponsored by the Animation Department. Projector Performance: Sandra Gibson & Luis Recoder Departmental Exhibitions Wednesday, April 25, 7 pm Brown Center: Falvey Hall, 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave. Wednesday, March 21–Monday, April 9 Mount Royal Station: Middendorf Gallery Sandra Gibson and Luis Recoder will present a lecture about their work with light and sound that includes a performance using film projectors. In an interview with the artists, art critic and curator Ed Halter said: “In their collaborative film performances, Sandra Gibson and Luis Recoder employ simple mechanical means to hypnotically elaborate ends. Sixteen-mm loops, spray bottles, colored gels, unfocused lenses, and hand-shadows combine, through rehearsed recipes, into slowly mutating light-sculptures: morphing color-fields, angel-white auras, fusing penumbrae, pulsing vertical lines. Built upon occulted rhythms of film projection, their work retains a personal, human scale, even as the viewer succumbs to its transportive powers. Their performances melt the projector’s machine materialism into ethereal experiences.” This event is sponsored by the departments of Interaction Design and Art and Video and Film Arts. Tuesday, April 3–Sunday, April 15 Fox Building: Fox 2 Gallery FIBER PAINTING/GENERAL FINE ARTS SUSIE BRANDT’S FIBER CLASS Wednesday, April 11–Sunday, April 22 Main Building: Main Gallery CERAMICS Thursday, April 12–Thursday, April 26 Mount Royal Station: Middendorf Gallery ILLUSTRATION Thursday, April 12–Sunday, April 29 Brown Center: Brown 3 and 4 galleries SENIOR THESIS Tuesday, April 17–Sunday, April 22 Fox Building: Fox 2 Gallery Student Events Caribbean Carnival Friday, April 20, 3–7 pm Cohen Plaza, 1303 W. Mount Royal Ave. (Rain location: Meyerhoff House: Dining Hall, 140 W. Lafayette Ave.) Caribbean Carnival celebrates the unique culture of the Caribbean islands with literature, music, food, entertainment, and arts and crafts. This event is sponsored by the Office of Diversity & Intercultural Development. Showcase Live! Sunday, April 22, 8–10 pm The Gateway: BBOX, 1601 W. Mount Royal Ave. This student-run event is a culmination of the year’s Coffeehouse programming, where students showcase their talents outside of the realm of visual arts. Now in its ninth year, this event features music, acting, comedy, poetry, and dancing. Last Blast Monday, April 23–Sunday, April 29 Fox Building: Fox 2 Gallery Friday, April 27, 3–7 pm Cohen Plaza, 1303 W. Mount Royal Ave. (Rain location: Meyerhoff House: Dining Hall, 140 W. Lafayette Ave.) Student Exhibitions After a hard year of studies, students can finish off the semester with an afternoon of fun, games, music, and barbeque. This annual MICA tradition is sponsored by the Student Activities Office. GENERAL FINE ARTS HANNAH HILL ’12 (General Fine Arts) Decoration Day Monday, April 2–Friday, May 4 Reception: Friday, April 13, 5–7 pm Gateway: Gallery Two HUNTER SAVOY JAFFE ’14 (Photography) Heartstrings Monday, April 2–Friday, May 4 Reception: Friday, April 13, 5–7 pm Gateway: Gallery One NATHAN MILLER ’12 (Painting) Gilgameshy Sandra Gibson and Luis Recoder (Photo by Christoph Kniel). John Zinsser Monday, April 2–Friday, May 4 Reception: Friday, April 13, 6–8 pm Meyerhoff House: Piano Gallery Theo Willis ’12 (Painting) 1,000 Monday, April 2–Friday, May 4 Reception: Friday, April 13, 6–8 pm Mandakini Trivedi Candy Chang (Photo by Randal Ford). Bunting Center: Student Space Gallery-Pinkard Artwork by Theo Willis. 45 46 EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS ESSAY Artscape 31 Again Makes MICA the Center of Baltimore’s Art World Art School / Art Museum for the 31st time , MICA will serve as anchor for Artscape, the nation’s largest free arts festival, this July. As in past years, crowds of hundreds of thousands are expected to sample art, culture, and cuisine in the streets around campus and in MICA’s galleries. Though originally designed by President Fred Lazarus IV and other city leaders to bring diverse populations of the city together, the festival now draws audiences from all over the globe. As part of its sponsorship for the festival, MICA provides campus space and facilities and hosts exhibitions such as the annual Janet & Walter Sondheim Artscape Prize Semifinalists. The prize is one of the most prestigious cultural awards in Maryland: a $25,000 fellowship. Jurors this year include Brooklynbased multimedia artist Shinique Smith ’03; Jane Hait, co-owner and director of Wallspace Gallery in New York City; and Carlos Basauldo, curator of contemporary art at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. A number of MICA students and alumni, as well as a wide variety of other artists, can be found exhibiting or selling art at the festival. MICA also typically provides programming through various departments, including the MA in Community Arts program, in which graduate students have facilitated artmaking workshops with young children attending the festival. Artscape continues to prove that art enthusiasts span the spectrum of ages, races, genders, and cultural backgrounds. The 2012 festival will take place Friday, July 20–Sunday, July 22. More information about Artscape can be found at artscape.org. 2012 Janet & Walter Sondheim Artscape Prize Semifinalists (top to bottom) Photo by Phylicia Ghee ’10; Photo by Cedric Mobley. Friday, July 20 and Saturday, July 21, 11 am–9 pm; Sunday, August 5, 11 am–8 pm Fox Building: Decker and Meyerhoff galleries, 1303 W. Mount Royal Ave. Reception: Thursday, July 19, 6–9 pm MARK YOUR CALENDAR For the most up-to-date information and additional news, events, and exhibitions as well as videos, photos, artwork, and interactive features, visit Juxtapositions online at fyi.mica.edu. Cornel West, PhD Phyllis Plattner, Skies (detail), oil and gold leaf on linen on panel, 2010. Constitution Day Chronicles of War: Other People’s Pictures Thursday, September 20, 7–9 pm Brown Center: Falvey Hall, 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave. MICA and the American Civil Liberties Union of Maryland commemorate Constitution Day with a free symposium held annually to recognize the ratification of the United States Constitution and continue MICA’s tradition of leadership in raising and exploring important political issues. This year’s symposium is entitled We the People: Freedom of Assembly and Political Speech, and will be headlined by the prominent scholar and activist Cornel West, PhD. October 2012 Bunting Center: Pinkard Gallery, 1401 W. Mount Royal Ave. In Chronicles of War: Other People’s Pictures, faculty member Phyllis Plattner will exhibit altarpiece-shaped, multiple panel, oil, and gold leaf paintings based on art historic imagery and photo journalism. These paintings grow out of the profound impact of her experiences living in foreign cultures, including Mexico and Italy, as well as from her horror at the ubiquity of war in global history. Sign up to receive weekly event or monthly news updates at www.mica.edu/signup. “MICA provides creative fuel for Baltimore.” conversation. Ben Levy ’09, a MICA graduate and curatorial assistant who works in the By Doreen Bolger Prints, Drawings, & Photographs Department, Director, The Baltimore Museum of Art curated MICA’s Senior Print Show last year. When MICA faculty member Trudi Ludwig As I reflect on this particular moment in Johnson chaired the BMA’s Print, Drawing Baltimore, I am struck by how connected we all & Photograph Society (PDPS) from 2008 to are—not just by social networks and handheld 2010, she led an initiative to recruit student devices, but by a thriving arts community with members, whose participation is made a shared set of values and commitments. Recent formal and informal partnerships between MICA affordable by PDPS members who appreciate the students’ presence and perspective. and The Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA) The BMA’s Contemporary Print Fair, demonstrate the impact of this connectivity. When a leading art school and a major museum which brings leading print dealers to Baltimore biennially, has featured MICA work in a variety work together, the results are exponential for of ways—in a dynamic sales booth at two students, for audiences, and for the city. Many talented MICA faculty and graduates recent fairs and this year through the creation of a special Print Fair poster. The poster will are featured in BMA exhibitions, from solo be designed by MICA visiting artist Trenton shows to exhibitions celebrating the Sondheim Prize semifinalists and the Baker Artists Awards. Doyle Hancock using MICA’s Globe Poster MICA students recently co-curated the popular archive, and it will be produced by MICA students. Hancock is also creating a limitedPrint by Print: Series from Dürer to Lichtenstein edition print to benefit both institutions. Don’t exhibition. Two undergraduates—Nick miss his artist’s talk at the Museum or the panel Clifford Simko and Jennifer Tam—interned discussion with the creators of Printeresting, a at the BMA this summer and were among premier blog about printed matters that counts the students who selected the themes and MICA faculty member R.L. Tillman among its works for the exhibition as part of a Johns founders (see page 15 for more information). Hopkins University Museums & Society Program seminar taught by BMA curator Rena Our collaborations reach beyond the physical boundaries of the campus and the Hoisington. This semester Nick is continuing his work by cataloguing photography portfolios. Museum. My MICA colleagues play leadership roles on the boards of organizations dedicated Another MICA intern, Tommy Doyle, is to the common good of the entire arts cataloguing contemporary prints and posting community—Maryland Citizens for the Arts, his favorite discoveries on a tumblr blog. the Greater Baltimore Cultural Alliance, and In 2011, more than 350 students in Station North Arts & Entertainment District. MICA classes met with BMA curators in the This time and effort are a reflection of their Museum’s Print Study Room, where they commitment to community. viewed great examples of prints, drawings, And perhaps most of all, I have the joy of and photographs from the Renaissance to the encountering dozens of talented young MICA present. The BMA’s treasure trove of 65,000 graduates who have chosen to make their way works on paper offers endless possibilities for here in Baltimore, contributing their innovation learning. This includes the extraordinary George to a city that needs their energy and vision. A. Lucas Collection—20,000 works by French MICA provides creative fuel for Baltimore— 19th-century masters—which passed from MICA to the BMA in 1995, and now serves as a visual artists, curators, educators, musicians, foundation for studying art history and artmaking. writers, gallerists, and performers—who are problem solvers and visionaries. The potential The collaboration goes back and forth for the arts and for Baltimore is endless. between the two institutions like an ongoing 47 Maryland Institute College of Art 1300 W. Mount Royal Ave. Baltimore, Maryland 21217 Your love is just not enough. We need you to like us, too. MICA news, event information, artwork, and video delivered straight to you. facebook.com/mica.edu Thursday, May 10th, 2012 5:00 PM – 9:00 PM, campuswide Starting at Cohen Plaza, 1303 W. Mount Royal Ave. TICKETS: $25 for exhibition & casual supper This hot ticket preview party for the 2012 Commencement Exhibition is your only opportunity to see artwork from the world’s most talented emerging young artists, meet the artists, and purchase their work before the show opens to the public. A spectacular 3 kilometers of art installed in 7 buildings along the Mount Royal Cultural Corridor. Purchase tickets online at www.mica.edu/artwalk.