SoA Graduation Awards 2011
A number of students are recognized for their achievements as part of graduation each June. Below is a list of the awards presented by the School of Art this year.
de Cillia Graduating with Excellence Award | Undergraduate Student
Steffani Bennett, Art History Division
Kelsey Neal, Art Division, 3D4M
Vu Chu, Design Division, Industrial Design
de Cillia Graduating with Excellence Award | Graduate Student
Agata Morka, Art History Division
Neal Fryett, Art Division, Photomedia
Shweta Grampurohit, Design Division, Interaction Design
Parnassus Teaching with Excellence Award | Graduate Student
Sarah Titus, Art History Division
Gustavo Martinez, Art Division, 3D4M
Nate Landes, Design Division, Interaction Design
Natalie Malone Award | Undergraduate Student
Derek Chan, Design Division, Visual Communication Design
Kenneth L. Striker Scholarship
Outstanding Senior in Visual Communication Design: Jessica Katona
Kenneth L. Striker Scholarship
Outstanding Senior in Design Studies: Lauren Cascio
Irene Schofield Endowed Memorial Scholarship
Outstanding Senior in Industrial Design: Erik Hedberg
Art History has a Dean’s Medalist!
Steffani Bennett completed her Art History bachelor’s degree in March and was recently chosen as the 2011 College of Arts & Sciences Dean’s Medalist for the Arts. She also received the School of Art’s de Cillia Graduating with Excellence Award for an undergraduate student in the Division of Art History and a 2011 Library Research Award from the UW Libraries. As the child of a US diplomat, Bennett was born and raised in East and Southeast Asia, attending international schools in China, Thailand, and Taiwan. Her experiences in those countries fostered a great love of East Asian culture and art, which she studied at the University of Washington. Bennett also broadened her art historical perspective through courses in areas other than Asian art. Professor Susan Casteras said recently, “Steffani’s ability to master new subjects was particularly impressive. Although she had never studied 19th-century art, she produced the most dazzling and brilliant research and insights of the entire class in my seminar on the subject.” After spending a year studying abroad in Kyoto, Japan, and other coursework in Japanese art, culture, and language, Bennett has decided to pursue a PhD in art history with a desire to better understand the complex artistic interactions between Japan and China. Professor Casteras has also said, “She is someone whose incredible potential will undoubtedly be realized in major future contributions to Japanese studies.” Bennett will spend a year solidifying her Chinese language skills before attending graduate school.
VCD winners @aigaseattle
Two seniors in Visual Communication Design, Jessica Katona and Derek Chan, participated in and won at this year’s AIGA Reality Check event on 30 April 2011. Katona’s Archeota, designed in Assistant Professor Annabelle Gould’s “Publication Design” course, won First Prize. It is a magazine documenting personal experiences through writing, photography, and objects. All the articles feature unconventional ways of archiving memories. Chan’s poster, titled Front Page Fingerprint: The New York Times, won Third Prize. It was created in an “Interaction Design” course taught by visiting instructor August de los Reyes. Seen at left, it visualizes the formal elements of the New York Times front page over one month. The proportion of white space, headline size and length, body copy, imagery, and type of color palette are shown for each day.
@artisttrust Fellows Among Us
The sixteen 2011 Fellowships funded by Artist Trust were announced on 19 May 2011. According to their website, these fellowships are awarded “to practicing professional artists of exceptional talent and demonstrated ability. The Fellowship is a merit-based, not a project-based award.” Among this year’s recipients is Painting + Drawing Professor Zhi Lin. He will use this funding to support a new research project titled “Invisible and Unwelcomed People: the 19th Century Chinese American in the Northwest,” in which he will focus on the major anti-Chinese incidents that took place around Puget Sound. In an earlier project, Lin looked at the Chinese who worked on the railroads from California to Wyoming. Three of the other fellowship winners are School of Art alumni: Dan Corson (MFA 1992), Susan Robb (MFA 1995), and Brent Watanabe (BFA 1995).
Students Show Their Research
The 14th Annual Undergraduate Research Symposium took place at the University of Washington on 20 May 2011. Six School of Art students participated. Two of them, both Photomedia students, were double-majors presenting in their non-art fields: Roman Camarda in Microbiology and Brynn MacCoy in Physics. The other four were:
Elizabeth Meyers, Art History, mentored by Professor Patricia Failing; her oral presentation was titled “Christian Dotremont, the Logogrammes and Zen: The Written Word as Visual Art”
Kara Suddock, Art History, mentored by Assistant Professor Sonal Khullar; her poster presentation was titled “The Stupa at Bharhut and The Stupa at Amaravati in the Museum”
Michelle Taylor, Design Studies, mentored by Lecturer Dominic Muren; her poster presentation was titled “Cultural Studies Integration in Design Education: Exploring the Relationship Between Culture and Design”
Morrow Woods, Art History, mentored by Assistant Professor Sonal Khullar; her poster presentation was titled “James Fergusson’s Tree and Serpent Worship and its Influence on Colonial Museums”
Descriptions of each presentation can be found by clicking the links above and then clicking on the presentation title on the resulting webpage.
Social Security @kirklandarts
The new exhibit opening at Kirkland Arts Center on Friday, 03 June 2011, at 6pm includes IVA Professor Lou Cabeen and two alumni: Lauren Grossman (BFA 1983) and Bill Whipple (BFA 1970). Social Security was organized by KAC Exhibitions Director Jayme Yahr (an Art History PhD student) in collaboration with Deborah F. Lawrence. It remains up through Saturday, 02 July 2011.
Lecture: The Waters of Rome
Katherine Rinne is an Adjunct Professor at California College of the Arts and an Associate Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities, University of Virginia. On Tuesday, 31 May 2011, at 3:30pm, she will be speaking about the waters of Rome, which is the subject of a book she recently authored and a major online project. After the lecture, which takes place in room 003 of the Art Building, there will be a reception and book signing.
Train + Intern @henryartgallery
Applications are now being accepted for the 2011-2012 academic year Exhibition Guide Program at the Henry Art Gallery. The deadline is 02 June 2011 at noon, and in-person interviews will take place the following week. Earn credit while being trained by Henry staff, then use what you’ve learned to lead tours there. Full information and an application form are available by talking to Judi Clark in room 104 of the Art Building or emailing her at jclark@uw.edu.
Lecture: Digital Kitchen
Digital Kitchen is an award-winning motion studio based in Seattle. They did the titles for True Blood, Dexter, House, and other shows. DK has a high-profile client list and lots of amazing work to show in a presentation that will take place on Tuesday, 24 May 2011, at 6:30pm. We hope to see Josh Hayward (BFA 2010) as one of the speakers. Please RSVP on the Facebook page for this event, which will be held in room 003 of the Art Building.
Small Works at Prographica
Painting + Drawing Professors David Brody and Zhi Lin, MFA candidates Kimberly Clark and Sean McElroy, Phillip Levine (MFA 1961), Elizabeth Ockwell (BFA 1967), and Vannessa Tran (BFA 2000) all have work in The Small Works Show. The exhibit opens at Prographica in Seattle on Saturday, 21 May 2011, from 2-4pm. The gallery is normally open Wednesday through Saturday from 11am-5pm, and the show remains up through 09 June 2011.