| Jun 19, 2009, 8:00 PM Millennium Park Opening of UNStudio Burnham Pavilion in Millennium Park |
| Experience the lighting program developed by Daniel Sauter, Assistant Professor of Electronic Visualization, at the public opening of UNStudio's Burnham Pavilion in Millennium Park. The Burnham pavilions, designed by Ben van Berkel (UNStudio, Amsterdam) and Zaha Hadid (London) represent the centerpieces of the Burnham Plan Centennial, installed from June 19 until October 31 2009 on the South Chase Promenade (next to the bridge leading into the Modern Wing of the Art Institute). "At night, UNStudio’s pavilion becomes a responsive architecture with LED lights that change color and pattern. These lights will be in constant flux as the number of visitors to the pavilion changes. Programmatically the pavilion invites people to gather, walk around and through the space—to explore and observe." Find more info at the Burnham Centennial website The Grant Park Symphony and Chorus will premier a new work composed by Michael Torke called Plans at the Jay Pritzker Pavilion in Millennium Park, beginning at 6:30p. Join Pavilion architects for a symposium from 2:00 - 3:30 pm at the Art Institute (free admission, limited seating) Designing Architects: UNStudio of Amsterdam (Ben van Berkel, Caroline Bos with Christian Veddeler, Wouter de Jonge and Hans-Peter Nuenning, Iona Sulea) Architect of Record: Garofalo Arcitects, Inc. Fabricator: Third Coast Construction Interactive Lighting Concept: Daniel Sauter School of Architecture: University of Illinois at Chicago Structural Engineer: Rockey Structures [ more info ]
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| May 08, 2009, 6:30 PM UIC Innovation Center UIC Design BFA Show Graphic Design :: Industrial Design :: Electronic Visualization |
| Students graduating from our BFA programs in Graphic Design, Industrial Design, and Electronic Visualization will hold their year-end exhibitions from 6:30-9:00 on Friday, May 8th at the UIC Innovation Center :: 1240 W. Harrison Street. Please join us to celebrate the talented class of 2009.
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| Apr 25, 2009, 5:00 PM The Post Family Gallery UIC Graphic Design MFA Thesis Show |
| Banan Al-Ansari Jungjin Kim Susannah Kim Anna Leithauser Students graduating from the UIC Graduate Program in Graphic Design will exhibit their thesis projects on Saturday, April 25th from 5-8p at the Post Family Gallery, 1821 W. Hubbard Street, Chicago. [ more info ]
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| Apr 21, 2009, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 UIC Design Lecture Series :: Paul Hatch Naked Design 2.0: Understanding the visual perception of objects |
| Paul Hatch, director at TEAMS Design in Chicago, has a particular interest in visual brand language, design for international target markets and increasing value/perception ratios. He will discuss understanding the visual perception of objects and how this relates to the act of designing. TEAMS Design is an international industrial design firm with innovative product design processes that take concepts from research through development, into manufacture. [ more info ]
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| Apr 21, 2009, 9:00 AM IBHE Site Review |
| UIC is honored to welcome five professors-representing several of the country's leading schools of art and design-who will be reviewing our programs on behalf of the UIC Office of Programs and Academic Assessment and the Illinois Board of Higher Education (IBHE). Eric Anderson Associate Professor of Industrial Design School of Design Carnegie Mellon University www.design.cmu.edu Oscar Fernandez Associate Professor of Graphic Design School of Design University of Cincinnati www.daap.uc.edu Amy Hauft Professor and Chair of Sculpture Department School of the Arts Virginia Commonwealth University www.vcu.edu/arts David Raskin, PhD Associate Professor Department of Art History, Theory, and Criticism School of the Art Institute of Chicago www.saic.edu Christopher Vice Chair, Department of Visual Communications Herron School of Art and Design Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis www.herron.iupui.edu
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| Apr 17, 2009, 5:00 PM Great Space UIC Art BFA Show Studio Arts :: Moving Image :: Photography |
| Students graduating from our BFA programs in Studio Arts, Moving Image, and Photography will hold their year-end exhibitions in the Great Space on the 5th Floor of Art and Design Hall (400 S. Peoria) from April 17 through April 22. The Opening Reception will be held from 5-8p on Friday, April 17th.
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| Apr 17, 2009, 1:00 PM CVRA, A&A #3304 Fabian Winkler Graduate Workshop: Light Modulators |
| Light's exceptional opportunities for artistic expression lie in its potential to create new, artificial realities and to transform objects and environments visually and ideologically. This workshop is a laboratory for the experimental exploration of light and shadows. We will build light modulators, simple structures that modulate (i.e. reflect, absorb and diffuse) rays of light and observe their changing appearance in different light situations. The laboratory features two configurable lighting environments: one with an orbiting light source, the other one with additive color mixing possibilities. Furthermore, the workshop briefly introduces strategies for interactive lighting control using Max/MSP software and the DMX communication protocol. Fabian Winkler is an Assistant Professor of Visual and Performing Arts at Purdue University. In his interactive installations and video works he explores the aesthetic potential and the cultural implications of seemingly well-known artifacts through the use of new technologies. Winkler's art practice is transdisciplinary, located at the intersections of the moving image, spatial structures and robotics. The workshop is open to graduate students from all areas within the School of Art + Design. Due to the limited amount of participants, please RSVP to Alejandro Borsani at aborsa2@uic.edu The workshop is hosted by the Electronic Visualization program. [ more info ]
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| Apr 16, 2009, 3:00 PM Reserve Reading Room: Richard J. Daley Library The Image of Research Awards Ceremony & Exhibition Opening Reception |
| The Image of Research, an exhibit organized by the Graduate College and the University Library to showcase the breadth and diversity of graduate research at UIC, will open with an awards ceremony to honor competition winners. Winners and finalists from the School of Art and Design are MFA students Banan Al-Ansari (Graphic Design), Ted Davis (GD Basel), Adam Farcus (Studio Arts), Heejoo Kim (EV), Julio Obelleiro (EV), Zhen Xie (ID). Pictured is the 2nd place entry, Typographic Cities, by Banan Al-Ansari. Typographic Cities, relates to Al-Ansari's thesis research which explores the combination of Arabic and Latin typography. Her work seeks to define methods that visually harmonize and increase the communication efficiency of radically different typographic systems. [ more info ]
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| Apr 15, 2009, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 MFA Thesis Exhibitions April 14-18 |
| Charlie Deets Maria Gaspar Chris Tourre John-Paul Wolforth Reception on WED April 15 from 5-8pm at Gallery 400 Pictured (installation view) Rick Gribenas: Take Me In. MFA Thesis Exhibition, Gallery 400, November - December 2006 We celebrate the brilliant life and achievement of our colleague Rick Gribenas, who died on March 17, 2009, after a long illness. http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09079/956969-122.stm
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| Apr 08, 2009, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 MFA Thesis Exhibitions April 7-11 |
| Jeremiah Hulsebos-Spofford Jesse McLean Ryan Murray Reception on Wednesday, April 8, from 5-8pm at Gallery 400 Pictured (installation view) Rick Gribenas: Take Me In. MFA Thesis Exhibition, Gallery 400, November - December 2006 We celebrate the brilliant life and achievement of our colleague Rick Gribenas, who died on March 17, 2009, after a long illness. http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09079/956969-122.stm
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| Apr 01, 2009, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 MFA Thesis Exhibitions March 31-April 4 |
| Adam Farcus Nicholas Kashian Erica Moore Jose Velazco Reception on WED April 1 from 5-8pm at Gallery 400 Pictured (installation view) Rick Gribenas: Take Me In. MFA Thesis Exhibition, Gallery 400, November - December 2006 We celebrate the brilliant life and achievement of our colleague Rick Gribenas, who died on March 17, 2009, after a long illness. http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09079/956969-122.stm
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| Apr 01, 2009, 9:00 AM UIC Innovation Center Eyebeam Workshops |
| Eyebeam is an art and technology center that provides a fertile context and state-of-the-art tools for digital research and experimentation. It is a lively incubator of creativity and thought, where artists and technologists actively engage with culture, addressing the issues and concerns of our time. Eyebeam challenges convention, celebrates the hack, educates the next generation, encourages collaboration, freely offers its contributions to the community, and invites the public to share in a spirit of openness: open source, open content and open distribution. The Eyebeam Roadshow is a collaboration between UIC Electronic Visualization and Columbia College. Introduction to Open Frameworks Wednesday, April 1st :: UIC Innovation Center 9a-1p OpenFrameworks is a C++ library for creative coding created by Eyebeam R and D fellow, Zachary Lieberman and Theo Watson. It has been used by artists such as Golan Levin, the Graffiti Research Lab, and Jonathan Harris, and is excellent for everything from sound synthesis to computer vision to 3D to physical computing projects. It has a very active and growing community of users and contributors and is quickly moving towards a 1.0 release. For more information about the library, check out http://www.openframeworks.cc/ and http://www.openframeworks.cc/documentation Instructors: Jeff Crouse and Friedrich Kirschner. Prerequisites: some knowledge of C++, Java, or Processing. Making Something Super Wednesday, April 1st :: UIC Innovation Center 9a-1p How do you create an art piece using technology? What's an arduino, why are infrared sensors used, how do you make something move? Ayah Bdeir will be leading a workshop where we take participants' ideas and develop them from idea to sketch to design to buying parts to reality. We will be looking at projects from wearable computing, interactive art, kinetic sculptures, robotic furniture, and discuss how they were made, and how to learn from them. Participants will then propose ideas for projects, and we will critique them and discussing old and new tools, machines and technologies that will help the participants making their projects happen. Instructor: Ayah Bdeir Prerequisites: participants are encouraged to bring project ideas to the workshop. iPhone Apps Wednesday, April 1st :: UIC Innovation Center 1:30-5p The Apple iPhone scooped up 11.6% of the smartphone market since it's introduction --that's 2.3 million US mobile subscribers. In the first 60 days of the App Store, 100 million apps were sold. It would just be ridiculous not to get in on this frighteningly high adoption rate, right? In this workshop, we will learn how to make iPhone apps using MobileFrameworks, an openFrameworks-based starter kit for iPhone. We will learn how to access the accelerometer and draw and animate on the screen. If we are lucky, we will even get a chance to transfer one of our creations to an actual iPhone. Instructor: Jeff Crouse. Prerequisites: some knowledge of C++, Java, or Processing. Urban Exploration and Prospecting Wednesday, April 1st :: UIC Innovation Center 1:30-5p Learn how to navigate through wild urban spaces, abandoned buildings, and how to get rich off industrial waste and pollution. In the process we'll redefine wilderness, and get your nature on. Led by an Alaskan wilderness guide and urban skeptic. Instructor: Jon Cors. Dirt Style Wednesday, April 1st :: UIC Innovation Center 1:30-5p Steve Lambert and Jeff Crouse will teach you to eschew flashy modern design tools in favor of a rougher, simpler aesthetic sensibility known as Dirt Style. Hands-on activities will include 1) making kick-ass animated GIFs; 2) re-learning HTML tags you thought were dead and buried; 3) exploring the myriad uses of explosions in video editing, web design, presentations, and just about anything else you can think of. Instructors: Jeff Crouse, Requirements: Laptop with Adobe Creative Suite. [ more info ]
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| Mar 18, 2009, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 MFA Thesis Exhibitions March 17-21 |
| Adam Grossi Faheem Majeed Mary Robnett Steve Zieverink Reception on WED March 18 from 5-8pm at Gallery 400
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| Mar 17, 2009, 6:00 PM UIC Innovation Center Public Lecture Charlie Cannon |
| Charlie Cannon received a Masters of Architecture (MArch I) from Harvard University Graduate School of Design and a Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology from Wesleyan University. As a Senior Design Critic at the Rhode Island School of Design, Cannon currently holds a joint appointment in Industrial Design and Landscape Architecture where he has taught in RISDs Innovation Studio series since its founding in 1999. Responsible for curriculum development and outreach, Cannons interdisciplinary studio was established to examine large-scale environmental and infrastructure problems. Open to students throughout the university, the program seeks to shift the attention of the design disciplines to present day concerns and to engage with a larger public. The Innovation Studio model involves projects that must first be defined in order to be solved. Before joining the RISD faculty, Cannon taught at Columbia University, Roger Williams University, and Boston Architectural Center. In 2008, he participated as Design Critic in the Harvard University Department of Landscape Architecture. Cannons research and practice activities center on energy, water, conservation, education, and economic development.
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| Mar 12, 2009, 6:00 PM UIC Innovation Center Linda Pulik Public Lecture |
| Linda Pulik received a Master of Design in Human-Centered Product Design from the Illinois Institute of Technology, Institute of Design; and a Bachelor of Science in Cellular, Molecular & Microbial Biology from the University of Calgary. With an interest in social impact work, Pulik founded Bao Design Lab, a nonprofit organization focused on designing affordable medical devices for clinics & hospitals in the developing world. Her activities in social impact work include design studies in Malawi, Uganda, and South Africa; a workshop with First Data/Western Union, Humana & Whirlpool Corporation that produced 39 new design concepts for emerging Mexican markets; and work with Ntl Progressive Health Network, Johannesburg, to develop health education material on HIC/ AIDs for people with limited English. Pulik has worked as a Design Consultant to Honeywell in Bangalore, India, and as Research Lead at PDT in Chicago. She currently teaches product design courses at the Institute of Design and she has presented research papers at Sustainable Design to Save the Earth, Bangkok; CII-NID Design Summit, Bangalore; MX Design, Mexico City; and About, With, and For, IIT ID, Chicago.
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| Mar 07, 2009, 8:00 AM Hotel InterContinental Chicago Future History 3 AIGA International Design Education Conference |
| A project of AIGA, sponsored by Adobe Systems, and hosted by the UIC School of Art and Design, FH3 will explore global curricular challenges and innovations, and their relationship to traditional frameworks of design education. Conference chair: Associate Professor Linda Bracamontes Roeger, Programming Co-Chairs: Assistant Professor Joerg Becker and Assistant Professor Sharon Oiga. FutureHistory begins with a keynote address by WJT Mitchell, scholar and theorist of media, visual art, and literature and Professor of English and Art History at the University of Chicago. Mitchell is associated with the emergent fields of visual culture and iconology and editor of the interdisciplinary journal, Critical Inquiry, a quarterly devoted to critical theory in the arts and human sciences. Featured speakers include: Sheila Levrant de Bretteville, graphic designer, artist and educator and Director of the Yale Graduate Program in Graphic Design. Kenya Hara, representative to the Nippon Design Center Inc., Professor at Musashino Art University, author of Designing Design, and consultant to the Nagano Winter Olympic Games and Muji; Gerard Hadders, co-founder of the magazine and design group Hard Werken, and founder with Jan van Toorn of the design department of the Jan van Eyck Akademie in Maastricht, The Netherlands; Ewan Lentjes, Associate Professor of Art, Culture & Economy, a shared initiative of the Municipality of Arnhem, HAN University of Applied Sciences, and the ArtEZ Institute of Arts; and Meredith Davis, Professor and Director of the Master of Graphic Design Program at North Carolina State University. Authors of papers selected for presentation on the subject of Design Research: Sean Bolan, University of Washington; Heidi Cies, Syracuse University; Kelly Costello, Institute of Design at the Illinois Institute of Technology; Stephanie Cunningham, Florida Atlantic University; Michael R. Gibson, University of North Texas; Michael Renner, The Basel School of Design; and Stacie Rohrbach, Carnegie Mellon University. Authors of projects selected for presentation on the subject of MFA Thesis: Karen Kwan, York University, Toronto; Valentina Miosuro, North Carolina State University; and Leilah Rampa, University of Illinois at Chicago. Authors of papers selected for presentation on the subject of Undergraduate Curriculum: Leslie Becker, California College of Arts; Michael Eppelheimer, Kansas City Art Institute; Lee Vander Kooi, Indiana University Herron School; John Luttropp and Anthony Inciong, Montclair State University; Ben Meyer and Renee Seward, University of Cincinnati; Terry Morris and William Rainey, Harper College; Angela Rodgers, St. Edward's University; Martha Scotford, North Carolina State University. [ more info ]
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| Mar 05, 2009, 6:00 PM UIC Innovation Center Alex Lobos Public Lecture |
| Alex Lobos received his MFA in Industrial Design from the University of Notre Dame and his Bachelor of Industrial Design from Universidad Rafael Landivar in Guatemala City. He has worked as an Industrial Designer for General Electric in Louisville, Kentucky, where he worked in the Home Appliances division and in academic collaboration with Carnegie Mellon University. As a Design Advisor for the Instituto de Investigacion de Diseno in Guatemala City, Lobos formed a connection between the design community and the Guatemmalan Prison System whereby designers and inmates worked together in the developing and selling furniture products. Lobos is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor at UIUC where he teaches at all levels in the industrial design program. He also taught for 7 years at the Universidad Rafael Landivar where he was named professor of the Year in 2001. In 2002, Lobos was awarded a Fullbright Scholarship. He says of his academic research: "My current design research addresses a vartiation of user-centered design that focuses on the multiple contexts that users experience in their daily lives. I like to call this research context-adaptive design."
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| Feb 24, 2009, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 Design Lecture Series Jonathan Shaun and Elizabeth Redmond |
| Speaking on Design, Business and Sustainability, Jonathan Shaun of 3.Zero, and Elizabeth Redmond, independent sustainability consultant, discuss the goals and challenges of creating a sustainable Chicago. Shaun is one of Chicago's foremost designers and retailers of cutting edge, sustainable apparel, accessories, and furniture. His most recent project is Contact, a retail showroom and conscious event space in Wicker Park. Redmond, since spring 2007, has worked with a start-up company called Ecolect that helps professionals in design-influenced fields learn about and source sustainable materials. [ more info ]
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| Feb 17, 2009, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 Voices Lecture Series C.E.B. Reas |
| Media artist Reas makes both conceptually and perceptually driven works that explore process and abstraction. His installations, photographs, video and interactive works are informed by systems theory, biology, artificial life, and information patterns. In 2001, Reas and designer Ben Fry initiated Processing.org, an open source programming language and environment for creating images, animation, and interaction. This ongoing project is documented in Processing: A Programming Handbook for Visual Designers and Artists (MIT Press). Reas has exhibited and screened his work internationally in galleries and museums including P.S.1, New York; Institute for Contemporary Art, London; Institute for Contemporary Art, Boston; Laboral, Gijon, Spain; Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, New York; the Fabric Workshop and Museum, Philadelphia; and the National Museum for Art, Architecture and Design, Oslo. He is associate professor and chair of Design | Media Arts at UCLA. His lecture is presented in collaboration with Interactive Arts & Media at Columbia College. [ more info ]
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| Feb 03, 2009, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 Design Lecture Series Paul M. Murray |
| 'The Power of One: How You Can Embrace and Communicate the Environmental Ethic' Paul M. Murray is the Director of Environmental Safety and Sustainability at Herman Miller, Inc., a leading voice for increasing corporate environmental responsibility. Herman Miller, Inc. exemplifies how good business and environmental stewardship can go hand-in-hand. Murray lectures nationwide, communicating the message of corporate environmental responsibility to business’ and academic audiences. [ more info ]
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| Jan 28, 2009, 2:00 PM Office of the School of Art and Design MFA Information Session and School Tour |
| If you are interested in graduate study in the UIC School of Art and Design and want to learn more, please join professor Jennifer Reeder, Director of Graduate Studies, and Erin Brady, Graduate Advisor, for an information session and tour of the studios of our graduate programs in Studio Arts, Photography, Moving Image, Graphic Design, Industrial Design, and Electronic Visualization. Please meet at the Office of the School of Art an Design located at: 929 West Harrison Street in room 106 Jefferson Hall Chicago IL, 60607
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| Jan 16, 2009, 9:00 AM Erik Peterson: Project Snow Machine |
| Project Snow Machine is an urban intervention that borrows from the typology of municipal forms (signposts, signpost anchors, and parking meters) and recodes them to build a new public space. Divorced from the bonds of bureaucratic functionality, however, the Snow Machines designate a slightly subversive space for play, or quite possibly, battle. Erik Peterson is a current graduate student at the School of Art and Design. Snow Machine locations: -UIC, one block east, and half-block north of Art and Design Hall (400 S. Peoria) -Wicker Park, on the corner of Haddon and Hermitage -Experimental Station, near the elementary school's playground
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| Jan 15, 2009, 9:00 AM Erik Peterson: Project Snow Machine |
| Project Snow Machine is an urban intervention that borrows from the typology of municipal forms (signposts, signpost anchors, and parking meters) and recodes them to build a new public space. Divorced from the bonds of bureaucratic functionality, however, the Snow Machines designate a slightly subversive space for play, or quite possibly, battle. Erik Peterson is a current graduate student at the School of Art and Design. Snow Machine locations: -UIC, one block east, and half-block north of Art and Design Hall (400 S. Peoria) -Wicker Park, on the corner of Haddon and Hermitage -Experimental Station, near the elementary school's playground
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| Dec 12, 2008, 6:00 PM UIC Art and Design Hall Jim Zimpel : Range BFA Thesis Exhibitions in Studio Arts |
| My installations and sculptures function in the blurred realm of the seemingly authentic, the regulated imaginary and the mundane grandiose. Range aims to tap into the realm of Manifest Destiny and the historical and lasting psychological impacts of western expansion. The work will reference carnival shooting galleries, desolate western landscapes, Hollywood westerns, American landscape painting devices and the remnants and romanticism of American frontier gun culture. As in Niagara, completed in spring of 2008, I wish to continue utilizing mixed scale, vantage point, perspective, controlled positioning of a viewer, dioramas, and mechanical facsimile to replicate the grandeur of familiar natural phenomena. Ultimately, it is my intent to present an elaborately staged, yet ultimately pathetic, realization of an experience. December 11 - 13, 2008 Reception: Friday, December 12, 6 - 10 pm 4th Floor Sculpture Space Art + Design Hall, 400 South Peoria at Van Buren
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| Dec 12, 2008, 10:00 AM Art + Architecture Building Main Entrance MFA Final Critiques Electronic Visualization |
| Final graduate critiques for students in Electronic Visualization will be held in the Center for Virtual Reality in the Arts room 3304, in the Art and Architecture Building from 10:00-6:00 on Friday, December 12th. Guest critics: Paul Catanese and Paul Klein
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| Dec 12, 2008, 5:00 PM Great Space MFA Open Studios |
| MFA students in Moving Image, Photography, and Studio Arts will host informal Open Studios on Friday, December 12th from 5-7p in the Great Space of Art Design Hall. Please join us to celebrate the accomplishments of the Fall 2008 semester.
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| Dec 12, 2008, 6:00 PM Strand Design Industrial Design Fall Semester Opening | |
| Please join us for an evening of fun... featuring select work from UIC's sophomore and junior Industrial Design classes. Friday, December 12, 6 - 10 pm Strand Design 1008 W. Randolph St. Chicago, IL 60607
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| Dec 09, 2008, 9:00 AM Art + Architecture Building Main Entrance MFA Final Critiques Graphic Design |
| Final graduate critiques for students in Graphic Design will be held in room 2410 of the Art and Architecture Building, from 9:00-2:00 on Tuesday, December 9th, and Thursday, December 11th.
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| Dec 09, 2008, 9:00 AM Great Space MFA Final Critiques Studio Arts, Moving Image, Photography |
| Final graduate critiques for students in Studio Arts, Moving Image and Photography will be held in the Art and Design Hall, 400 S Peoria, in Great Space 5th Floor, from 9:00-3:30 from Tuesday, December 9th through Friday, December 12th. Guest critics: Tuesday, Ben Nicholson; Wednesday, Kathryn Hixson; Thursday, Tom Gunning; Friday, Theaster Gates.
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| Dec 09, 2008, 9:00 AM Art + Architecture Building Main Entrance MFA Final Critiques Industrial Design |
| Final graduate critiques for students in Industrial Design will be held in the Center for Virtual Reality in the Arts room 3304, in the Art and Architecture Building from 9:00-11:30 on Tuesday, December 9th.
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| Dec 05, 2008, 6:00 PM UIC Art and Design Hall BFA Open Studios |
| The School of Art & Design invites you to visit the work of senior undergraduates in Studio Arts, Photography, and the Moving Image. Students will be there with their work to answer your questions, as will a host of other members of the UIC community. Upon arrival at 400 South Peoria, you will be guided to the appropriate locations in the building. Refreshments will be served! NOTE: We welcome your participation in our canned-food drive to benefit the Greater Chicago Food Depository: please contribute at least one item of nonperishable canned or packaged food for the holidays!
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| Dec 05, 2008, 6:00 PM UIC Art and Design Hall Sabrina Barnes : Boundaries BFA Thesis Exhibition in Photography |
| My recent photographs appear as abstracted compositions of geographical maps. These places exist in an altered state -- they are the combination of the imaginary and interpretations of the physical world. Layers of scanned textures and gradients are used to create these images. The texture, the composition and how they interact spatially within the frame may lead a viewer to believe that they are familiar. The use of traditional darkroom techniques in combination with filters offered in my digital imaging program leads to the tension within these images. The resulting maps, in part, record what cannot be seen and hold a distant relationship to the physical world. December 1 - 5, 2008 Reception: Friday, December 5, 6 - 9 pm GBU Gallery - 5th Floor Art + Design Hall, 400 South Peoria at Van Buren
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| Dec 05, 2008, 6:00 PM UIC Art and Design Hall Kristin Cavanaugh : Urochromatic BFA Thesis Exhibition in Studio Arts |
| In my most recent work, Urochromatic, an individual palette of oil colors has been determined, according to the sole positive results, from a dipstick urinalysis test, to then create a painted portrait. The litmus paper yields differing color values specified to the percentage or presence of such substances such as protein, blood, or glucose. Focusing on urine, a taboo in society, will address its own social construction. Medium and portraiture is important and specific to Urochromatic; the physical action of painting a physical appearance marks and projects the bodily makeup of a person onto the outer surface, reflecting what is found within, revealing factual truth. December 1 - 5, 2008 Reception: Friday, December 5, 6 - 9 pm GBU Gallery - 5th Floor Art + Design Hall, 400 South Peoria at Van Buren
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| Dec 03, 2008, 2:00 PM Office of the School of Art and Design MFA Information Session and School Tour |
| If you are interested in graduate study in the UIC School of Art and Design and want to learn more, please join professor Jennifer Reeder, Director of Graduate Studies, and Erin Brady, Graduate Advisor, for an information session and tour of the studios of our graduate programs in Studio Arts, Photography, Moving Image, Graphic Design, Industrial Design, and Electronic Visualization. An additional session will be held on Wednesday, January 28th.
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| Nov 27, 2008, 9:00 AM Thanksgiving Break |
| In observance of the Thanksgiving Holiday, the School of Art and Design will be closed on Thursday, November 27th and Friday, November 28th. Pictured is the Jeff Koon's balloon in last year's Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade (Getty Images).
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| Nov 22, 2008, 11:00 AM Great Space Spiral Workshop Show & Community Reception recent work by Chicago teen artists |
| Each fall 100 teen artists from throughout the Chicago area gather on Saturday mornings at Art and Design Hall at the University of Illinois at Chicago to work with student teachers from the UIC Art Education Program to explore contemporary art and to develop artmaking and critical thinking skills. The Workshop is divided into groups organized around themes and techniques. This gives students the opportunity for in-depth investigation of media and themes. Every year the Spiral Workshops culminates in a show and community reception. Typically hundreds of people attend the show--teens, community adults, families, area art teachers and other educators as well as university students and faculty. Spiral student artists don’t just create exercises. They aren’t just practicing to create "real art." Spiral students and faculty work together to make individual art projects and collaborative installations that investigate vital issues for the youth artists and their many communities. Work will also be on view from 9 to 5 on Monday, November 24 and Tuesday, November 25. For additional information contact: Olivia Gude at gude@uic.edu or Jessica Poser at jposer1@uic.edu [ more info ]
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| Nov 19, 2008, 2:00 PM Office of the School of Art and Design MFA Information Session and School Tour |
| If you are interested in graduate study in the UIC School of Art and Design and want to learn more, please join professor Jennifer Reeder, Director of Graduate Studies, and Erin Brady, Graduate Advisor, for an information session and tour of the studios of our graduate programs in Studio Arts, Photography, Moving Image, Graphic Design, Industrial Design, and Electronic Visualization.
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| Nov 12, 2008, 12:00 PM Design Visualization Lab Patrick Lichty - Lecture/Presentation |
| Patrick Lichty is a technologically-based conceptual/performance artist, writer, and independent curator. For much of the past ten years, Patrick Lichty's performance has involved issues including presence/anonymity and critical personae, collaborating with Guillermo Gomez-Pena, Fluxus, Annie Sprinkle, and RTMark. Lichty is the co-founder of Second Front, the rst performance art company in Second Life. He is a collaborator and animator in the activist group, The Yes Men. He is also the Editor-in-Chief of Intelligent Agent Magazine in NYC, in partnership with Whitney Museum of American Art digital arts curator, Christiane Paul. Venues in which Lichty has been involved with solo and collaborative works include the Whitney Biennial, the Venice Bienniale, as well as the International Symposium on the Electronic Arts (ISEA). Further curatorial of note include (re)distributions: Mobile Device and PDA Art and his role as Microcinema International's Mobile Exposure cellphone video festival. His art work has most recently featured in the exhibition, Dreaming of a More Better Future, at the Cleveland Institute of Art with Kevin and Jennifer McCoy and Vito Acconci. Patrick Lichty is currently Professor of interactive Arts and Media at Columbia College Chicago. For this lecture/presentation, Lichty will present the origins, necessities, and benefits ts of collaborative practices in New Media. Art groups such as RTMark, the Yes Men and Second Front will serve as both models and examples. The emergence of the New Media 'Collectives' and its relationship with the distributed nature of contemporary culture will be discussed. Lichty will also show a selection of his recent works, performances, and exhibitions (both independent and collaborative). The Design Visualization Laboratory (DVL) a high-tech computational studio shared by the Electronic Visualization and Industrial Design programs of the UIC School of Art and Design. [ more info ]
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| Nov 05, 2008, 2:00 PM Office of the School of Art and Design MFA Information Session and School Tour |
| If you are interested in graduate study in the UIC School of Art and Design and want to learn more, please join professor Jennifer Reeder, Director of Graduate Studies, and Erin Brady, Graduate Advisor, for an information session and tour of the studios of our graduate programs in Studio Arts, Photography, Moving Image, Graphic Design, Industrial Design, and Electronic Visualization. An additional sessions will be held at 2p on November 19.
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| Oct 29, 2008, 2:00 PM Office of the School of Art and Design MFA Information Session and School Tour |
| If you are interested in graduate study in the UIC School of Art and Design and want to learn more, please join professor Jennifer Reeder, Director of Graduate Studies, and Erin Brady, Graduate Advisor, for an information session and tour of the studios of our graduate programs in Studio Arts, Photography, Moving Image, Graphic Design, Industrial Design, and Electronic Visualization. Additional sessions will be held at 2p on November 5 and November 19.
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| Oct 22, 2008, 6:30 PM Design Visualization Lab Arduino Workshop Design Visualization Laboratory Workshop Series, Session 6 |
| Arduino is an open-source electronics prototyping platform based on exible, easy-to-use hardware and software. It's intended for artists, designers, hobbyists, and anyone interested in creating interactive objects or environments. The Arduino workshop will be held from 6:30-9:30p on Wednesday, October 22nd. Participants are shown and experiment with the Arduino's capabilities and learn the basics of common microcontroller interfacing. Workshops are open to students, faculty, and staff. Class seats are limited, so RSVP to Alejandro Borsani (aborsa2@uic.edu) by October 21th. A laptop with the Arduino Software and drivers installed is required. Please visit http://arduino.cc/en/Guide/HomePage for instructions. The instructor, Alex Killough, received his MFA from the California College of Arts and Crafts with a concentration in Media Arts. He has taught Physical Computing and Interactive Arts at San Francisco State University, The School of the Art Institute Chicago, and UIC. His personal work in generative video, audio, installation, and simulation has been exhibited at various institutions here and abroad. The Design Visualization Laboratory (DVL) is a shared high-tech computational studio operating under the Electronic Visualization and Industrial Design programs. [ more info ]
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| Oct 15, 2008, 2:00 PM Office of the School of Art and Design MFA Information Session and School Tour |
| If you are interested in graduate study in the UIC School of Art and Design and want to learn more, please join professor Jennifer Reeder, Director of Graduate Studies, and Erin Brady, Graduate Advisor, for an information session and tour of the studios of our graduate programs in Studio Arts, Photography, Moving Image, Graphic Design, Industrial Design, and Electronic Visualization. Additional sessions will be held at 2p on October 29, November 5, and November 19.
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| Oct 07, 2008, 6:00 PM UIC Innovation Center UIC Innovation Center: Sustainability Lecture Series How did we get here? |
| John Paul Kusz of the Illinois Institute of Technology will speak about pioneers in the area of sustainability and the relevance of "green design". He will also address a recent history of problematic actions, which continue to occur. John Paul Kusz teaches in IIT's Stuart School of Business and he heads JPKusz Ltd., which develops technologies and strategies aimed at mitigating the negative environmental affects of commerce. Formerly, he directed the product development and product stewardship groups at Safety-Kleen Corporation, an environmental services company. He has authored over 25 articles and presented at national and international conferences, speaking principally on environmental problem-solving through the product design process and organizational change. He served on the U.S. EPA Peer Review Group's Product Life Cycle Assessment Project, on technical committees at the Canadian Standards Association (CSA) and the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), and authored a study for the U.S. Congress Office of Technology Assessment on the correlation of corporate, economic, and environmental trends in the household chemical products industry. He holds 10 U.S. and foreign patents.
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| Sep 23, 2008, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 Casey Caplowe Creative Director and Co-founder of Good magazine |
| Los Angeles-based Caplowe is the creative director and co-founder of GOOD, a company focused on bringing together people, businesses and organizations pushing the world forward. GOOD launched with its magazine in fall of 2006. The magazine was named one of the hottest magazine launches of 2006 by Media Industry Newsletter and Mr. Magazine. GOOD was also nominated for two national magazine awards this year, including one for Overall Design. Now, GOOD is building on the successes of the magazine to expand the company and community through the platforms of web, video, and live events. [ more info ]
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| Aug 27, 2008, 11:00 AM Great Space MFA Welcome |
| Please join us in the Great Space of Art and Design Hall for an informal welcome for new and continuing MFA students, faculty, and staff. Wednesday, August 27, 11:30 am to 1:00 pm.
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| Aug 14, 2008, 5:00 PM UIC Innovation Center Saki Mafundikwa Afrikan Development by Design: Zimbabwe |
| In the industrialized countries, design and development are Siamese twins – the two are intrinsically linked. In the developing world in general, but Afrika in particular, we still have a long way to go. Most Afrikan Governments do not consider design a national priority. The spread of technology and the new media, however, are chipping away at this attitude and there seems to be growing awareness of the importance of design as a tool for development among some of Afrika’s leadership. Design education is the answer as Saki Mafundikwa will illustrate in his hour-long lecture, which will be made available by Podcast. RSVP: uicmoto.innovation@gmail.com Presented by UIC School of Art and Design: Design Anthropology, Motorola, and AIGA Chicago. Saki Mafundikawa is the founder and director of the Zimbabwe Institute of Vigital Arts (ZIVA) a design and new media training college in Harare. He was educated in the USA with a BA in Telecommunications and Fine Arts from Indiana University and an MFA in Graphic Design from Yale University. He worked for a dozen years in New York City as a graphic designer, art director, and design teacher before returning home in 1998. He is the author of the book, “Afrikan Alphabets: the Story of Writing in Africa.”
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| Jun 16, 2008, 9:00 AM Summer session begins |
| Pictured: Yellow Interior, fabric installation in UIC's Art and Design Hall, by Philip Matesic: MFA Studio Arts 2008.
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| May 10, 2008, 7:00 PM UIC College of Architecture and the Arts Commencement Ceremonies | |
| Congratulations to the UIC School of Art and Design BFA and MFA class of 2008! [ more info ]
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| May 09, 2008, 6:00 PM Art + Architecture Building Main Entrance BFA Year End Shows Graphic Design :: Industrial Design :: Electronic Visualization :: Photography |
| Students graduating from our BFA programs in A+A will hold their year-end exhibitions from 6:00-9:00 on Friday, May 9th. Please join us to celebrate the talented class of 2008.
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| Apr 28, 2008, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 Georg Elben on Video Art |
| Georg Elben studied art history, political science and literature in Bonn, Milan and Karlsruhe. Since 1993 he has worked as an art advisor for the German national KfW banking group in Bonn and Berlin building a collection of young German art (catalogue 1998). Since 1995 Elben has published many essays of contemporary art and contributions for catalogues. As a freelance curator he has designed thematically structured exhibitions as well as monographic ones, i.e. solo shows with Christian Jankowski (“Oops!... I did it again”) and Thomas Steffl (“Wer hat Bambi getötet” – “Who killed Bambi?”) at Kunstmuseum Bonn. Elben works as curator for “Edition Bewegte Bilder” at the Sammlung Rheingold in producing video works by David Zink Yi, Corinna Schnitt and Jeanne Faust (Jonathan Horowitz and Erik van Lieshout are upcoming next). They all are presented with a solo show at the Museum Ludwig in Cologne. Since 2004 Georg Elben is the director of Videonale in Bonn and was responsible for "Videonale 10" in 2005 and „Videonale 11 – Festival for Contemporary Video Art “ in 2007 which took place in a specially designed exhibition architecture at Kunstmuseum Bonn and was accompanied by a symposium.
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| Apr 18, 2008, 5:00 PM Great Space Year of the Rat Opening Reception |
| UIC BFA students graduating from our programs in Photography, Moving Image, and Studio Arts will exhibit their works on the 5th floor of Art and Design Hall, 400 S. Peoria Street, on Friday April 18th from 5-8pm with viewing hours April 18-23 from 11am to 5pm.
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| Great Space STUDIO ARTS Information Meeting |
| You Are Invited to Attend An Informational Meeting
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| Apr 08, 2008, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 MFA Thesis Exhibitions in Studio Arts, Photography & Moving Image Nicole Northway, Matt Davis, Philip Matesic, Todd Simeone, Malic Amalya | |
| Opening Reception Wednesday April 9
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| Apr 07, 2008, 5:00 PM Hyde Park Art Center 'Tesseraction' by Hubert Wayne Weldon |
| 'Tesseraction' is a visualization of time expressed as space. Of the four dimensions which control our existence, time is the only one which we cannot perceive with our senses. In this work HPAC has been converted into a a sequence of tesseractic translations deconstructing time and space into it's most basic forms. 'Tesseraction' is part of Drive-By, an exhibition featuring video works by MFA students at the University of Illinois Chicago's School of Art and Design. This exhibition is a collaboration between the HPAC and UIC, and is the culmination of a 2007 seminar course that explored media projection and technology, recent developments in public art, and the relationship between art and location. Led by professor and artist Daniel Sauter, the students created digital works specifically for the Art Center's Jackman Goldwasser Catwalk Gallery. [ more info ]
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| Apr 07, 2008, 6:00 PM Graphic Design MFA Thesis Show |
| Sara Bassick Jeremiah Chiu Dan Elliot Joyce Epolito Renata Graw Christopher Kalis Leilah Rampa Michael Ruberto Jonathan Sangster Gretchen Schulfer [ more info ]
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| Apr 04, 2008, 5:00 PM Great Space Electronic Visualization MFA Thesis Show Stephen Cady |
| Chiasmus is a responsive and dynamically reflective, volumetric projection surface that addresses phenomenological issues of perception, formation of images, and screen dynamics. Opening Reception - Friday April 4 5-9 PM Saturday 12-3
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| Apr 02, 2008, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 MFA Thesis Exhibitions in Studio Arts, Photography & Moving Image Dana Carter, Vincent Dermody, Eric Fleischauer, Marivi Ortiz |
| APRIL 1-5 Dana Carter Vincent Dermody Eric Fleischauer Marivi Ortiz Reception on WED April 2 from 5 - 8pm at Gallery 400 [ more info ]
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| Apr 01, 2008, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 MFA Thesis Exhibitions in Studio Arts, Photography & Moving Image Dana Carter, Eric Fleischauer, Marivi Ortiz, Vincent Dermody | |
| Opening Reception Wednesday April 2
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| Mar 24, 2008, 5:00 PM Hyde Park Art Center 'Phase Pattern' by Philip Matesic, Stephen Zieverink |
| 'Phase Pattern' is a site-specific, architectural composition for the Hyde Park Art Center. The work references and juxtaposes classical ideologies of spirituality and space with modern aesthetics and composition in a projection for the HPAC facade. Utilizing cutting edge technology, the project creates a slowed down, contemplative space for an aural and visual experience both on the interior and exterior of the Hyde Park Art Center. 'Phase Pattern' is part of Drive-By, an exhibition featuring video works by MFA students at the University of Illinois Chicago's School of Art and Design. This exhibition is a collaboration between the HPAC and UIC, and is the culmination of a 2007 seminar course that explored media projection and technology, recent developments in public art, and the relationship between art and location. Led by professor and artist Daniel Sauter, the students created digital works specifically for the Art Center's Jackman Goldwasser Catwalk Gallery. [ more info ]
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| Mar 24, 2008, 9:00 AM Spring Break : March 24-28 |
| This week is spring break at UIC. Instruction resumes on Monday, March 31st. Pictured is a site specific work by Professor Tony Tasset. Installed in 2006, “Magnolias for Pittsburgh" consists of two sculptures of a flowering magnolia tree. Measuring 22' high by 24' wide, cast in bronze from one hand-sculpted replica and realistically hand-painted in urethane enamel, each tree contains approximately 800 flowers. The bronze trees are located in a setting with five real magnolia trees at Seventh Street and Penn Avenue Parklet in Pittsburgh where—for a few days each spring—they look exactly like their real counterparts. [ more info ]
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| Mar 18, 2008, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 MFA Thesis Exhibitions in Studio Arts, Photography & Moving Image Heather Mekkelson, Matthew Jinks, Clare Britt, Luis Sanchez |
| Opening Reception Wednesday March 19
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| Mar 17, 2008, 6:00 PM Michael Rock : 2x4 UIC School of Architecture Lecture |
| Michael Rock is a founding partner and creative director at 2x4 and Professor of Design at the Yale University School of Art. At 2x4, he leads a wide range of projects including strategy for Prada and Condé Nast in collaboration with AMO/Rem Koolhaas. He leads environmental graphics and media design for the Prada New York Epicenter Store and was principal-in-charge of the IIT McCormick Tribune environmental graphics program and the Vitra Branding/New York Headquarters. Previously he was co-founder of Information Incorporated, in Boston. From 1984-91 he was Adjunct Professor of Graphic Design at the Rhode Island School of Design. In addition, he was a fellow at the Jan Van Eyck Akademie in Maastricht, The Netherlands, and a contributing editor and graphic design journalist at I.D. Magazine in New York. His writing on design has appeared in a variety of publications in addition to I.D. including Print, AIGA Journal and the British journal Eye. He holds a B.A. in Humanities from Union College and a M.F.A from the Rhode Island School of Design. He is the recipient of the 1999/2000 Rome Prize in Design from the American Academy in Rome. [ more info ]
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| Mar 12, 2008, 4:00 PM UIC Innovation Center Innovators Lecture with Aaron Marcus Cross-Cultural Issues and Trends in Mobile User Interface Design |
| Aaron Marcus has published, lectured, tutored, and consulted internationally for more than 30 years and has been an invited keynote/plenary speaker at conferences of ACM/SIGCHI, ACMSIGGRAPH, Usability Professionals Association (UPA), and the Human Factors and Ergonomic Society, as well as conferences internationally. He is a visionary thinker, designer, and writer, well-respected in international professional communities associated with Web, user interface, human factors, graphic design, publishing, and desktop software application development. The UIC Innovation Center is a strategic alliance between the UIC colleges of Art and Architecture, Business Administration, and Engineering and corporate sponsors. Space is limited to only 120 people, so RSVP your attendance before March 5th to: uicmoto.innovation@gmail.com [ more info ]
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| Mar 11, 2008, 9:00 AM Design faculty and students deliver final designs Cook County Bureau of Health Services’ |
| School of Art & Design faculty, Dori Tunstall and Sharon Oiga, and students Leilah Rampa, Sara Bassick, Marisa Bueno, and Pang Siu, with assistance of Banan Al-Ansari deliver the final designs for the Cook County Bureau of Health Services’ (CCBHS) Patient Billing and Payment Policy Information System. Sponsored by a Sappi: Ideas that Matter Grant, the complex information design system consists of: 1 Patient Billing and Payment information sign in trilingual English, Spanish, and Polish, 3 Common Hospital Rates signs in trilingual English, Spanish, and Polish, 4 Financial Assistance Programs brochures in bilingual English/Spanish, English/Polish, English/Mandarin Chinese, and English/Arabic) 5 Self-Pay Payment Plan brochures in English, Spanish, Polish, Mandarin Chinese, and Arabic, 1 Limit of Liability application form 1 Limit of Liability ID card 3 Financial Screening Appointment Cards in English, Spanish, and Polish, and 3 Financial Eligibility Screening Questionnaires in English, Spanish, and Polish. Grounded in a patient-centered research process, the team conducted several sets of clinic and hospital site observations, two sets of stakeholder interviews, interview/concept testing with 15 CCBHS patients (including English and Spanish speakers), and usability evaluation testing with 10 CCBHS patients (including English, Spanish, and Polish speakers). Following Tuesday’s presentation to Bureau administrators, the team will assist in training CCBHS staff on the information system and evaluating the impact of the information on patient service satisfaction.
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| Mar 10, 2008, 5:00 PM Hyde Park Art Center 'Newsworthy' by Sara Bassick, Renata Graw, Michael Ruberto, Gretchen Schulfer |
| 'Newsworthy' is an attempt to transform the official news monologue into a community dialogue. Contemporary society is experiencing an information overload from official news sources. Interactive media provide numerous ways for people to express their opinions, but what if that commentary could be expanded on an enormous scale, making everyone really see the voices of the people around them, in real time? Newsworthy gives members of the Hyde Park community, visitors to the Hyde Park Art Center and the general public the chance to have a visual voice and express, in a unique way, what's on their minds. 'Newsworthy' is part of Drive-By, an exhibition featuring video works by MFA students at the University of Illinois Chicago's School of Art and Design. This exhibition is a collaboration between the HPAC and UIC, and is the culmination of a 2007 seminar course that explored media projection and technology, recent developments in public art, and the relationship between art and location. Led by professor and artist Daniel Sauter, the students created digital works specifically for the Art Center's Jackman Goldwasser Catwalk Gallery. [ more info ]
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| Mar 10, 2008, 6:00 PM CVRA, A&A #3304 Design Visualization Laboratory Workshop Series Presents: Session 5 Computer Vision (with Julio Obelleiro) |
| This workshop will introduce how computer vision techniques can be used to create interactive artistic installations. It will cover different interactive techniques with artificial vision using video cameras, motion detection, and position tracking. Attendees will use processing to develop sound and image examples that include real-time manipulation. Workshops are open to students, faculty, and staff. Class seats are limited, so please RSVP to Tesia (tkosma2@uic.edu) by March 8th. Please bring a laptop and, if possible, a video camera. Any type of programming experience is also beneficial. The instructor, Julio Obelleiro, is pursuing a Ph.D. in the Electronic Visualization Laboratory at UIC. He is currently researching new means of interaction based on computer vision and has been working for the last three years as an artificial intelligence programmer. His works have been exhibited in venues such as the Ars Electronica Festival (Austria), 10Years_After (Korea) and La Noche en Blanco (Spain). The Design Visualization Laboratory (DVL) is a shared high-tech computational studio operating under the Electronic Visualization and Industrial Design programs. The 2007/08 DVL Workshop series is organized by Tesia Kosmalski (MFA candidate, EV). [ more info ]
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| Feb 25, 2008, 6:00 PM CVRA, A&A #3304 Design Visualization Laboratory Workshop Series: Session 4 Circuit Bending Workshop (w. Michael Una), 6-9pm |
| This workshop will review the art of both circuit bending and building to create and manipulate electronic sounds and interactive installations. A hands-on introduction to the hacking of existing hardware circuits will be provided. New circuits will also be built to integrate both sound and light sensor inputs. Workshops are open to students, faculty, and staff. Class seats are limited, so please RSVP to Tesia (tkosma2@uic.edu) by February 23th. The instructor, Michael Una, is a Chicago-based artist that integrates traditional musical instruments, handbuilt analog electronics, video processes, digital synthesis, and repurposed objects to build harmonic wave patterns. His work investigates the creation of audiophysical experiences through the relationship of energy, human consciousness and physical space. The Design Visualization Laboratory (DVL) is a shared high-tech computational studio operating under the Electronic Visualization and Industrial Design programs. The 2007/08 DVL Workshop series is organized by Tesia Kosmalski (MFA candidate, EV). [ more info ]
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| Feb 25, 2008, 5:00 PM Hyde Park Art Center 'D R I F T' by Eric Fleischauer, Jesse McLean |
| 'D R I F T' mixes unique and exciting visuals with historically relevant information. Wireless video cameras attached to weather balloons were employed to transmit an expanding view of significant Hyde Park locations, acknowledging the rich, diverse and sometimes hidden history embedded within this neighborhood. 'D R I F T' is part of Drive-By, an exhibition featuring video works by MFA students at the University of Illinois Chicago's School of Art and Design. This exhibition is a collaboration between the HPAC and UIC, and is the culmination of a 2007 seminar course that explored media projection and technology, recent developments in public art, and the relationship between art and location. Led by professor and artist Daniel Sauter, the students created digital works specifically for the Art Center's Jackman Goldwasser Catwalk Gallery. [ more info ]
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| Feb 11, 2008, 5:00 PM Hyde Park Art Center 'You Can be Famous on the Internet' by Adam Trowbridge, Jessica Westbrook |
| 'You Can be Famous on the Internet' features Internet videos pulled from the Web and submitted by ordinary and extraordinary people. The piece considers several perspectives: the concepts of famous, infamous or popular in the Internet realm; how Internet video relates to home movies, home video and snapshots; and how some Internet videos function as folk or outsider art. The phrase "famous on the Internet" denotes the possibility of being famous to a relatively small group while, at the same time, pointing out how ridiculous it is to be "famous" in a medium so filled with absurd channels of communication. 'You Can be Famous on the Internet' is part of Drive-By, an exhibition featuring video works by MFA students at the University of Illinois Chicago's School of Art and Design. This exhibition is a collaboration between the HPAC and UIC, and is the culmination of a 2007 seminar course that explored media projection and technology, recent developments in public art, and the relationship between art and location. Led by professor and artist Daniel Sauter, the students created digital works specifically for the Art Center's Jackman Goldwasser Catwalk Gallery. [ more info ]
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| Feb 11, 2008, 6:00 PM CVRA, A&A #3304 Design Visualization Laboratory Workshop Series, Session 3 A Max/MSP Workshop (w. Benjamin Thorp) |
| This workshop will summarize how to integrate multiple audio, visual and circuit based inputs into final compositions and real-time performances. Attendees will be exposed to Max's visual programming environment and create works with both computer-based and externally produced audio data. Workshops are open to students, faculty, and staff. Class seats are limited, so RSVP to Tesia Kosmalski (tkosma2@uic.edu) by February 9th. A laptop with a free promotional copy of Max/MSP is required (see http://cycling74.com). The instructor, Benjamin Thorp, is pursuing his MFA in Electronic Visualization at UIC. His background includes working with generative systems, creating interactive and responsive sound installations and scoring experimental videos. The Design Visualization Laboratory (DVL) is a shared high-tech computational studio operating under the Electronic Visualization and Industrial Design programs. The 2007/08 DVL Workshop series is organized by Tesia Kosmalski (MFA candidate, EV). [ more info ]
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| Feb 03, 2008, 3:00 PM Hyde Park Art Center Drive-By Joint Opening Reception 3-5 pm |
| Join us for a reception for Hyde Park Art Center's current exhibitions: Drive-By, Kariann Fuqua: On Unstable Ground, Soft Life, Chuck Walker: Through a Glass Darkly. Meet the artists and explore the shows. Drive-By is a collaboration between the HPAC and UIC, and is the culmination of a 2007 seminar course that explored media projection and technology, recent developments in public art, and the relationship between art and location. Led by professor and artist Daniel Sauter, the students created digital works specifically for the Art Center's Jackman Goldwasser Catwalk Gallery. The works selected are by Jeremiah Chiu, Christopher Kalis, Jonathan Sangster, Adam Trowbridge, Jessica Westbrook, Eric Fleischauer, Jesse McLean, Gretchen Schulfer, Sara Bassick, Renata Graw, Michael Ruberto , Steve Zieverink, Philip Matesic, and H. Weldon. Admission to the Art Center is free and open to the public. [ more info ]
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| Jan 28, 2008, 5:00 PM Hyde Park Art Center 'In Motion' by Jeremiah Chiu, Christopher Kalis, Jonathan Sangster |
| Chicago's train lines all lead to the same destination, the Loop. With all the trains heading to the same destination, most of its passengers only experience one view of Chicago from their particular train line. "In Motion" is a video installation on a public building that re-directs attention back to the buildings and people that make up Chicago. By juxtaposing views from five of the different train lines, a moving portrait of the city is created; offering the viewer a unique view of the city. 'In Motion' is part of Drive-By, an exhibition featuring video works by MFA students at the University of Illinois Chicago's School of Art and Design. This exhibition is a collaboration between the HPAC and UIC, and is the culmination of a 2007 seminar course that explored media projection and technology, recent developments in public art, and the relationship between art and location. Led by professor and artist Daniel Sauter, the students created digital works specifically for the Art Center's Jackman Goldwasser Catwalk Gallery. [ more info ]
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| Jan 25, 2008, 5:00 PM Hyde Park Art Center Drive-By Opening Reception |
| Join us for the opening reception for Drive By, an exhibition featuring video works by MFA students at the University of Illinois Chicago's School of Art and Design. This exhibition is a collaboration between the HPAC and UIC, and is the culmination of a 2007 seminar course that explored media projection and technology, recent developments in public art, and the relationship between art and location. Led by professor and artist Daniel Sauter, the students created digital works specifically for the Art Center's Jackman Goldwasser Catwalk Gallery. The works selected are by Jeremiah Chiu, Christopher Kalis, Jonathan Sangster, Adam Trowbridge, Jessica Westbrook, Eric Fleischauer, Jesse McLean, Gretchen Schulfer, Sara Bassick, Renata Graw, Michael Ruberto , Steve Zieverink, Philip Matesic, and H. Weldon. Admission to the Art Center is free and open to the public. [ more info ]
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| Jan 18, 2008, 11:00 AM Meeting Room, AAB #2410 School of Art and Design Faculty + Staff Meeting | |
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| Jan 17, 2008, 5:00 PM Great Space College of Architecture and the Arts New Year Celebration | |
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| Dec 17, 2007, 9:00 AM Happy Holidays |
| The faculty, staff, and students of the UIC School of Art and Design wish you a happy holiday season. Our semester break begins on Monday December, 17th and continues through January 11th. Instruction begins again on Monday, January, 14th 2008. Snowflake greeting by Cliff Krapfl, Adjunct Assistant Professor in Industrial Design, and Tara Kennedy, UIC BFA in Graphic Design, 1999.
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| Dec 13, 2007, 9:00 AM Great Space MFA Final Critiques Studio Arts, Moving Image, Photography |
| Final graduate critiques for students in Studio Arts, Moving Image and Photography will be held in the Art and Design Hall, 400 S Peoria, from 9:00-4:30 from Tuesday, December 11th through Friday, December 14th. Guest critics: Tuesday, painter Anne Harris; Wednesday, art historian, Lori Waxman; Thursday, curator Nicholas Frank; Friday, video artist Steve Reinke.
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| Dec 12, 2007, 9:00 AM MFA Final Critiques Graphic Design |
| Final graduate critiques for students in Graphic Design will be held in room 2410 of the Art and Architecture Building from 9:00-5:00 on Tuesday, December 12th, and Wednesday, December 13th.
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| Dec 11, 2007, 9:00 AM Great Space MFA Final Critiques Studio Arts, Moving Image, Photography |
| Final graduate critiques for students in Studio Arts, Moving Image and Photography will be held in the Art and Design Hall, 400 S Peoria, from 9:00-4:30 from Tuesday, December 11th through Friday, December 14th. Guest critics: Tuesday, painter Anne Harris; Wednesday, art historian, Lori Waxman; Thursday, curator Nicholas Frank; Friday, video artist Steve Reinke.
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| Dec 10, 2007, 9:30 AM MFA Final Critiques EV + ID |
| Final graduate critiques for students in Electronic Visualization and Industrial Design will be held in the Center for Virtual Reality in the Arts, in the Art and Architecture Building from 9:30-6:15 on Monday, December 10th.
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| Nov 30, 2007, 10:00 AM Art + Architecture Building Main Entrance UIC Art + Design Preview Day | |
| The School of Art and Design is hosting information days and tours for prospective undergraduate applicants. This is an opportunity to learn about the BFA degrees, tour the studios, computer labs and workshops and ask questions about the majors. No reservation is necessary.
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| Nov 30, 2007, 2:30 PM CVRA, A&A #3304 Robotics : Legos : An Introduction A workshop hosted by the Design Visualization Lab |
| This workshop will introduce basic robotic concepts using legos as the instrument of instruction. It will provide an understanding of how these mechanics can be used in artistic contexts. Workshops are open to students, faculty, and staff. But class size is limited, so RSVP to Tesia (tkosma2@uic.edu) to let us know you're coming. Workshop supplies will be provided and attendance is free of charge. The instructor, Kevin O'Neill, is a student at UIC who has an extensive background in artificial intelligence and computer science. He currently teaches robotics at After School Matters (ASM) which is a project of Chicago Public Schools (CPS). The Design Visualization Laboratory (DVL) is a shared high-tech computational studio operating under the Electronic Visualization and Industrial Design programs. [ more info ]
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| NetWorking A Performance by artists Anni Holm A Performance by artists Anni Holm |
| NetWorking (http://knittingnetworking.blogspot.com/) is an ongoing knitting installation/performance art piece originally created by Nyok-Mei Wong & Anni Holm in 2006. The NetWorking project is an attempt to physically demonstrate how a network is constructed and constantly changing. The viewers are invited to sit down and knit with the artist, and through dialogue develop their own networks beyond the boundaries of the piece.
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| Nov 13, 2007, 5:30 PM Blitz 3D Workshop |
| This workshop will review general engine design concepts with a simple yet powerful product, Blitz 3D. You will learn how independent games are developed and view other examples of gaming engines like Source Engine, Unreal 2003 and Torque. The workshop is limited to 10 people, so please RSVP to Tesia Kosmalski (tkosma2@uic.com) by November 10th to secure your spot. Attendees should also download the demo before class. Attendance is also free. More about Lindsay Grace: He is a full-time professor in Information Technology disciplines. He teaches at the Digital Media Production, Web Design, Game Design, and Information Technology at the Illinois Institute of Art in Chicago IL. He has also taught at The Design Visualization Laboratory (DVL) is a shared high-tech computational studio operating under the Electronic Visualization and Industrial Design programs. [ more info ]
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| P.A.D* a Performance by artist Chris Roberts |
| Performance Artist and author Chris Roberts (www.manuallabor.org/chrisroberts.html) will be signing his new book, P.A.D. Professional Artist Development, at GBU gallery on the UIC campus. Please join him for the first stop on his book signing tour, followed by a brief Q & A. A limited number of complimentary copies will be available. Chris Roberts is a Chicago artist whose work includes performance, text, and conceptual art theories and practices. *This project is supported by a Community Arts Assistance Program grant from the City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Illinois Arts Council, a state agency.
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| Nov 08, 2007, 6:30 PM GBU: On-Site and Nomadic Reception for on-site project | |
| About the show: Participants collaborate in five small teams to create wall and floor drawings in the space. These five on-site drawings are created within a given area along a floor/wall perimeter of the GBU space. Using only lines and/or silhouettes, each team creates a separate thematic/material composition that incorporates the interstitial space of one group's work and the next. The project is nomadic in nature: knowing where we start (space) and what we start with (materials and themes), without knowing precisely where we will arrive. Please come to see the final stages of this experimental work before it comes down on Thursday, November 8, at night.
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| Oct 26, 2007, 10:00 AM Art + Architecture Building Main Entrance UIC Art + Design Preview Day | |
| The School of Art and Design is hosting information days and tours for prospective undergraduate applicants. This is an opportunity to learn about the BFA degrees, tour the studios, computer labs and workshops and ask questions about the majors. No reservation is necessary.
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| Oct 24, 2007, 5:00 PM UIC MFA Open Studio |
| If you are considering graduate study in art and design, are a friend or graduate of the UIC School of Art and Design, or are simply interested in seeing the work of our programs, please join us for a gathering of alumni, students, faculty and staff at our annual MFA Open Studio. Tour the facilities and meet the faculty and students of our MFA programs in electronic visualization, graphic design, industrial design, moving image, photography, and studio arts. Wed., October 24th from 5:00-10pm Art + Design Hall is located at 400 S Peoria Street Just north of the Halsted/UIC CTA stop. The A+A Building is located at 845 W. Harrison Street Just south of the Halsted/UIC CTA stop. Parking is available in UIC Lot 9 at the corner of Harrison and Morgan streets.
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| Oct 22, 2007, 12:00 AM Exquisite Corpse Suite GBU Exhibition | |
| Opening reception: Wednesday October 24 from 4 to 7pm. For this exhibition the members of the GBU's committee are creating a gallery large Exquisite Corpse that will be reveled in full to the public and the members themselves during the opening reception.
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| Sep 27, 2007, 7:00 PM UIC School of Art + Design: GBU, 5th Floor, Art and Design Hall Worst |
| Join us to celebrate the "worst" of our undergraduate art programs: any media is accepted. Nothing is too bad!
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| Sep 07, 2007, 9:00 AM Meeting Room, AAB #2410 School of Art and Design Faculty Meeting |
| All faculty and staff are invited to attend. Coffee and camaraderie at 9:00. Meeting starts promtly at 9:30. Please join us to meet new colleagues, share accomplishments, discuss pertinent issues, etc.
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| Aug 29, 2007, 11:30 AM Great Space MFA Welcome |
| Please join us in the Great Space of Art and Design Hall for an informal welcome for new and continuing MFA students, faculty, and staff. Wednesday, August 29, 11:30 am to 1:00 pm. Refreshments will be served.
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| Jul 19, 2007, 6:00 PM 2007 Scholarship Benefit UIC College of Architecture and the Arts |
| The UIC College of Architecture and the Arts invites you to celebrate and support our talented student architects, artists, designers, performers and scholars. All Benefit funds are dedicated solely to student scholarships and fellowships. [ more info ]
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| May 11, 2007, 6:00 PM BFA Year End Shows Graphic Design :: Industrial Design :: Electronic Visualization :: Photography | |
| Students graduating from our BFA programs in A+A will hold their year-end exhibitions from 6:00-9:00 on Friday, May 11th. Please join us to celebrate the talented class of 2007!
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| May 04, 2007, 1:00 PM Art and design students to present government policies | |
| As part of the AD502 Design and Governmentality course, art and design students were exposed to the role of designing in public policy formation and implementation for everyday people. Students have now created government policies based on their areas of interest and the role of design. City officials, professors in policy at UIC, and members of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs have been invited. To attend RSVP by by April 27th to etunst (at) uic.edu.
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| Apr 30, 2007, 6:00 PM CVRA, A&A #3304 Craig Stehle Lecture by Industrial Design Faculty Search Finalist |
| Craig S. Stehle received his Masters of Industrial Design from North Carolina State University and his BFA in Communication Arts from East Carolina University. His current practice, Stehle Research and Design, consults on the development of products and services for consumer products, medical devices, and rehabilitation and assistive technology. He has also worked as a designer for Gravity Tank in Chicago, Center for Universal Design in Raleigh and Signal Design in Durham North Carolina. Stehle is currently an adjunct faculty member and professional affiliate of the Institute for Design Engineering and Applications (IDEA) of Northwestern University. His role within the engineering-based IDEA program has been to infuse the curriculum with methods used in industrial design. He developed the first industrial design course offered by Northwestern. He says of his teaching: “My teaching philosophies and materials reflect my diverse experience as a design professional [particularly as it relates] to interdisciplinary projects and human-centered product development.”
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| Apr 26, 2007, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 Sumakshi Singh Lecture by Sculpture Faculty Search Finalist (new time: 5pm) |
| Sumakshi Singh has written of her interest in “art that arrives quietly in unexpected places, that nags at you because of its refusal to reveal immediately, that makes you re-investigate territories taken for granted; ...Using the history and physicality of spaces as a springboard, my work involves interventions that I find or create in and around architectural elements. ...to navigate the lines of tension created between the idea of a space set aside for witnessing cultural activity and its material reality.” Singh’s sculpture and site-specific projects have been presented in solo and curated group gallery and museum exhibitions in New York, Chicago, and Charleston, Texas, Illinois, and Connecticut. She was awarded a Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Award and held a Curatorial Internship in the Department of Prints and Drawings at the Art Institute of Chicago. Singh received an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a BFA from Maharaja Sayajiro University, Baroda, India. She has taught in SAIC’s First Year BFA Program, and the Early College Program; she has also taught at Harold Washington College, Chicago.
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| Apr 25, 2007, 6:00 PM Gallery 400 Dianna Frid Lecture by Sculpture Faculty Search Finalist |
| Dianna Frid has written that her works in sculpture, installation, collages and artist-books, “are material responses to existing images, shapes, and things in the world. In making objects, I stress the relationship of two-dimensional representation to the concreteness of sculpture and hybrid things. I explore this concreteness through a physicality that relies on process as a means to expand and hone a technique, and that fuses the hand-made with formal and thematic concerns.” Frid’s work has been presented in solo and curated group gallery and museum exhibitions in New York, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Washington, DC and Chicago, Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, BC, São Paolo, Ghent, Turin, and Mexico City. She has received an Artadia Award, as well as grants from The Canada Council, The Banff Centre for the Arts, The City of Chicago, and the State of Illinois Arts in Education Program. Frid completed MFA and BFA Degrees at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, following undergraduate course work at Hampshire College. She taught previously at the University of Chicago, and currently holds an appointment as Visiting Assistant Professor in the School of Art and Design, UIC.
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| Apr 23, 2007, 6:00 PM Gallery 400 Beate Geissler Lecture by Photography Faculty Search Finalist |
| Beate Geissler works as a photographer as well as producing performances, installations and video in collaboration with Oliver Sann as “Geissler & Sann.” She has written that her work “is formed by reflections on simulation and representation of this world. The transition from pictorial reality to mise-en-scene has characterized my approach to photography from the very beginning.” Her interests are to be found in “the border between what has happened and what could have happened in order to understand pictures. ...I’m not interested in manipulating pictures; all of the imagery is completely rooted in the visible world.” Geissler is the recipient of the Gunther-Schroff-Stipendium from Zentrum für Kunst und Medien, Karlsruhe. Her work has been presented in solo and group gallery and museum exhibitions, in partnership with Oliver Sann, in Munich, Cologne, Dortmund, Berlin, Winterthur, Graz, Basel, London, and Taipei, among other venues. She has taught photography at the Staatliche Hochschule für Gestaltung , Karsruhe where she also completed the Degree in photography, following study at the Staatliche Fachakadmie für Fotodesign in Munich.
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| Apr 19, 2007, 6:00 PM Ed Osborn Lecture by Sculpture Faculty Search Finalist |
| Ed Osborn works primarily in sound installation, and has also worked with video, performance and developed works for on-line access. He writes that his work “falls between established genres”… “the sound installations usually include a combination of motion and sound that appears organic in nature and has a tangible physical presence.” In in several projects “the sculptural objects generate sound concurrently, their actions driven by a system of internal logic.” Osborn’s work has been presented in solo and curated group exhibitions and performances in the U.S, Canada, Austria, Australia, Finland, France, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Israel, England, South Africa, and New Zealand. He also works with electronic and improvised music, as a soloist and in collaboration with other artists and music ensembles. As a writer, his essays and projects have been included in critical journals, internationally. Grants and awards include: Guggenheim Foundation, Lannan Foundation, Creative Work Fund, and research grants from University of California, Santa Cruz; he held the DAAD Artist-in-Residence, Berlin in 2000. He received an MFA from Mills College, CA and a BA from Wesleyan University, Middleton, CT. He is currently Assistant Professor, University of California, Santa Cruz, and has taught as Guest Lecturer /Visiting Artist at California College of the Arts, University of California, Davis, and Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst, Leipzig, Germany.
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| Apr 18, 2007, 6:00 AM Gallery 400 Pamela Fraser Lecture by Painting Faculty Search Finalist |
| “The subject of my current work in painting is color itself; especially color as a linguistic vehicle for social exchange,” writes Pamela Fraser. “My new paintings utilize color interaction or relationships to underscore the legibility and logic of color systems with their various associations, themes, and rules of use. These works initially developed from my ongoing interest in comparative color theory and in particular from Ludwig Wittgenstein’s Remarks on Color.” Fraser’s paintings and works on paper have been presented in solo and curated group gallery and museum exhibitions nationally—New York, Buffalo, Chicago, Los Angeles—as well as internationally in Cologne, Venice, London, Oslo, Berlin, Stuttgart, Munster, among others. She is the recipient of a Louis Comfort Tiffany Award. Fraser received an MFA in New Genres from UCLA and a BFA from the School of Visual Arts, New York. She currently holds an appointment as Visiting Assistant Professor in the School of Art and Design, UIC, and taught previously at Ohio State University and Northwestern University.
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| Apr 17, 2007, 12:00 AM painting, everyday life, and material culture Pamela Fraser's AD 332 classs thesis Show | |
| Closing party on Thursday, April 19 from 4:00 - 6:00pm
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| Apr 16, 2007, 6:00 PM Kevin Henry Lecture by Industrial Design Faculty Search Finalist |
| Kevin Henry writes on the role of theory in industrial design: “Theory… guides decision making in complex situations and is based on one’s ability to grasp, digest, and internalize ideas into a structured and synchronous belief system. While the public is quick to recognize and celebrate the haptic side of the industrial design profession (sketching, rendering, form giving) as the ultimate sign of creativity, they often fail to realize that it remains subservient to critical thinking. And while the fruits of those hard skills may be most noticeable in the final product, without the soft skills, the product or service would be a shallow exercise in styling.” Kevin Henry is currently a member of the full-time faculty and coordinator of the product design program at Columbia College in Chicago. He has been teaching either as adjunct or full time faculty for over 18 years and presented at IDSA National Educators Conference in 2005. He holds an MFA in Industrial Design from UIC, and an MFA in Sculpture and Time Arts from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He is the winner of the Born Digital Competition sponsored by the Institute for the Future of the Book.
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| Apr 13, 2007, 5:00 PM BFA Thesis Exhibition Opening Reception | |
| UIC BFA students graduating from our programs in Photography, Moving Image, and Studio Arts will exhibit their works in the Great Space and GBU Galleries on the 5th floor of Art and Design Hall, 400 S. Peoria Street, on Friday April 13th from 5-9pm with viewing hours on Saturday, April 14th from noon to 6pm.
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| Apr 12, 2007, 6:00 PM Kevin Wolff Lecture by Painting Faculty Search Finalist |
| Kevin Wolff references the figure in his work as a painter; he writes that he is “compelled to employ the processes of realism—looking, translating, and transforming—in an attempt to locate and manipulate the line between the figurative and the abstract.” Using both photography and sculpture in his process, Wolff writes that “a system of abstraction is revealed through the digestion of the representational—forming a dialogue between the photographic memory of an instant and the accumulative processes and structures of sculpture, painting, and drawing.” Wolff’s paintings and works on paper have been presented in solo and group curated gallery and museum exhibitions in Chicago, New York, Saratoga Springs, Buffalo, Cincinnati, St. Louis, Los Angeles; and in Cologne, Frankfurt, Ghent, Rotterdam, and Montreal. He has received grants and awards from the Illinois Arts Council, Penny McCall Foundation, Art Matters, NY, and the McDowell Colony /residency. Wolff received an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and BFA from Rochester Institute of Technology. He is an Adjunct Associate Professor at the SAIC, and previously taught at Herron School of Art, and as Visiting Artist at Tyler School of Art and Northwestern University.
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| Apr 11, 2007, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 MFA Thesis Exhibitions in Studio Arts, Photography & Moving Image Shannon Benine, Kirsten Leenars, Marie Martino, and Justin Witte |
| April 10-14 Reception: Wednesday, April 11, 5-8 pm In photography and video installation Shannon Benine negotiates the politics of mediation and the private domestic life of people caught in the geographies of war. Kirsten Leenars’ video installation reflects on the frailty of human bonds, the feeling of insecurity that frailty inspires and the desire to be loved. Turning the camera on herself and the gaps, collisions, and complications of her immediate relations, Marie M. Martino explores love, neuroses, and queer identity in a ruminative single-channel video diptych. Straddling abstraction and representation Justin Witte's paintings depict a world where color, surface and pattern serve as visual barriers to hidden narratives. [ more info ]
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| Apr 11, 2007, 6:00 PM Cecil McDonald Lecture by Photography Faculty Search Finalist |
| With regard to his recent project, Domestic Observations and Occurrences, Cecil McDonald has written: “The images in this body of work represent an extended look at the moments and relationships that occur within the domestic environment. ...I’ve constructed the photographs as tableau vivant in order to re-examine the embodiment of the everyday moment. ...This method relocates the reading of the photograph, linking an objective document to an autobiographically infused performance, a staged retelling, privileged by a patriarchal analysis and sensibility.” McDonald’s photographic work has been included in curated group exhibitions in Chicago, New York and Philadelphia, and will be exhibited in the Netherlands this year. He received an Artadia Award in 2006, and was selected for the Joyce Foundation “Midwest Voices & Visions” residency, 2007. He received an MFA from Columbia College Chicago. McDonald currently teaches at Trinity Christian College and is also a Teaching Artist through the Arts Integration Mentorship in partnership with the Center for Community Arts Program, Chicago.
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| Apr 10, 2007, 6:00 PM Kevin Reeder Lecture by Industrial Design Faculty Search Finalist |
| Currently an Associate Professor of Industrial Design at Georgia Institute of Technology, Kevin Reeder has taught Industrial Design at the college level for more than 15 years. He has taught at Columbus College of Art and Design, Ohio State University, Stanford University, and California College of the Arts. He was bestowed with the Outstanding Teacher Award of 2005 at Georgia Institute of Technology. He holds a Master of Arts from Stanford University and a Bachelor of Science in Industrial Design from Ohio State University. Reeder has been a design consultant since 1987 working with clients such as Apple Computer, Discovery Toys, Lunar Design, Raychem Corporation, Wedge Innovations, and Zephyr Design. He writes of the relationship of design education and practice: “My varied experiences as a practitioner dictate my approach to the classroom. As a practitioner, I have to understand the importance of the user, the development of the budget, the social interactions of the members of the design team, and the physical and emotional demands of the users. Consequently, in the classroom, I construct projects with and overview of reality…discussing with the students the need to understand how products are actually developed and how students need to be self-motivated and willing to communicate their ideas to clients, engineers, and, ultimately the user.”
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| Apr 09, 2007, 6:00 PM Gallery 400 Conor McGrady Lecture by Painting Faculty Search Finalist |
| In describing his work in painting and drawing, Conor McGrady writes: “All of the work that I produce relates to social issues, in particular the nature of power and its impact on the individual and on urban and domestic space. ...The impetus for my practice as a whole is based on situations of violence and military control, largely drawing on, but not confined to, my experience growing up in Northern Ireland.” McGrady’s paintings and works on paper have been presented in solo and group curated gallery and museum exhibitions in Atlanta, San Francisco, Chicago, and New York and internationally in the UK, Italy, Australia, and Ireland. McGrady has received funded support for residencies at Ragdale Foundation and the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council. He is a writer and currently serves on the Editorial Collective of Radical History Review, published by Duke University Press. McGrady received an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and a BA from the University of Northumbria, UK. He has held Visiting Artist and Instructor appointments at Northwestern University, School of Visual Arts, NY, California College of the Arts, and the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
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| Apr 07, 2007, 8:00 PM Chicago Filmmakers MFA Film and Video Screening at Chicago Filmmakers, 5243 N. Clark Street, 2nd Floor |
| UIC School of Art and Design MFA Film and Video Screening at Chicago Filmmakers, 5243 N. Clark Street, 2nd Floor Supervillian, Dennis Hodges, 7min, mini-dv, 2006 Appropriated video that creates an unstable narrative of guilt and condemnation, that repeats and collapses in its portrayal of a nameless perpetrator. Bedouins, Basma Al-Sharif , 11min, mini-dv, 2007 A structuralist video that narrates the story of two girls who disappear off an unnamed shore to find themselves in a kind of pre-apocalyptic village. The Magic Lie, Irena Knezevic, 1min, mini-dv, 2006 A simple spell in the theatre of occult gymnastics: a shadow attempts flight for the first time. Strip, Marie Martino, 15min, mini-dv, 2007 When routine choreographies fail, one must improvise. Disconnect, collision, and entanglement abound in queer and familial love. The Phonological Loop and the Visuospatial Sketchpad, Brandon Alvendia, 5 seconds, mini-dv, 2007 A brief exploration of memory. Coronach, Irena Knezevic, 15 min, mini-dv, 2007 An endless mesmeric seafaring dirge. Last call for all who embark to the Underground Forest where all you know is true and music has no mercy. Interlude, Kirsten Leenaars, 5min, 16mm color with optical sound, 2004 An intimate portrait of the artist’s ninety two year old grandmother who is slowly beginning to loose her grip on time, drifting from one world into another. Moth, Shannon Benine, 2min, HD video, 2006 A negotiation of the politics of mediation and the private domestic life of people caught in the geographies of war. Light is Waiting, Michael Robinson, 11min, mini-dv, 2007 A special episode of television’s Full House devours itself from the inside out, excavating a hypnotic nightmare of a culture lost at sea. With additional works by Isak Berbic, Kenyatta Forbes, Trevor Gainer, and Selina Trepp. Running time: approximately 100min
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| Apr 06, 2007, 7:00 PM MFA Graphic Design Thesis Exhibition |
| Please join us this Friday evening, April 6th, at 7pm in the Art + Architecture building, Room 1100 for the MFA Graphic Design Thesis Exhibition. The thesis candidates and their topics will be: Laura Ferrario Enough of Saudade Dave C. Pabellon Immersing into "the Avenue" Jessica Schnepf The German Influence in Chicago [ more info ]
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| Apr 05, 2007, 6:00 PM Claire Sherman Lecture by Painting Faculty Search Finalist |
| Claire Sherman writes of her work: “With interests ranging from Edmund Burke’s writings on the sublime, to B-horror movie sets, such as Children of the Corn, I use landscape as a vehicle for painting. Image beckons entrance into the world of landscape; paint is used to seduce. Mark serves to exaggerate; color, to attract and entice. At the same time, these fundamentals are executed with a flaw. Image is disrupted by paint.” Sherman’s work has been presented in solo and group gallery exhibitions in Chicago and London. She received an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, after completing the BA, Summa Cum Laude, at the University of Pennsylvania. Sherman is currently Assistant Professor at Knox College in Galesburg.
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| Apr 04, 2007, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 MFA Thesis Exhibitions in Studio Arts, Photography & Moving Image Trevor Gainer, Irena Knezevic, Harold Mendez, and Michael Robinson |
| April 3-7 Reception: Wednesday, April 4, 5-8 pm Through elaborate and arcane sculptural procedures, Trevor Gainer explores the problematics of breaching private and public territories. Using narratives of enchantment, Irena Knezevic's installation evokes a seafaring expedition in which the esoteric and the precise serve as sole navigation tools. In wall drawings and sculptural installations that focus on a melancholy of place, as well as a desire for legibility and distance, Harold Mendez looks for nowhere... as far as he can see. In Michael Robinson’s short new experimental film, futurism and failure consort on the grounds of past World’s Fairs. [ more info ]
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| Apr 04, 2007, 6:00 PM Gallery 400 Hasan Elahi Lecture by Sculpture Faculty Search Finalist |
| Hasan M. Elahi’s current work “engages questions of surveillance, privacy and ownership.” He writes, “the focus of my creative practice has been at the intersection of art and information technology, integrating image databases and other forms of electronic information. I juxtapose the tangible aspects of traditional art practice with the electronic elements of current and developing technologies in order to blur the distinctions between the two realms.” Elahi’s work has been included in solo and curated group exhibitions in New York, Germany, England, and Russia. He has received funding and grant support from The Ford Foundation /Philip Morris, Creative Capital Foundation, DuPont Industries, the West Virginia Cultural Center and the Asociación Artetik Berrikuntzara in Donostia-San Sebastián, Spain. Elahi is currently Assistant Professor at the Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University, and previously taught at the University of South Florida, West Virginia University, and Wanganui School of Design, New Zealand. [ more info ]
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| Apr 01, 2007, 4:30 AM work in progress / open studio 263, 236 |
| julia fish aaron pilat sarah zwerling American Academy in Rome Via Angelo Masina 5 00153 Roma ITALIA
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| Mar 23, 2007, 9:00 AM CVRA, A&A #3304 Design Colloquium Lecture: Fabian Winkler (im)possible worlds |
| This lecture proposes new practices for looking at familiar objects and spaces around us and suggests critical, surprising and sometimes humorous ways to reinterpret and transform them. I will show examples of my own art practice including interactive systems, robotics and site-specific installation. In these works I’ll address issues of audience participation, poly-sensorial immersion, technology’s impact on society and the excavation of forgotten media utopias. [ more info ]
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| Mar 22, 2007, 6:00 PM Gallery 400 Melanie Schiff Lecture by Photography Faculty Search Finalist |
| Melanie Schiff has written that her work is "simultaneously an analytical and contemplative reconsideration of the history of still life and self-portraiture in photography" and that "the moments these works address are quiet and waver on the edge of a constructed poetic narrative and an instant found by chance." Schiff's work in photography has been presented in solo exhibitions in Chicago and Germany and in group shows in Chicago, New York, Miami, Germany and Switzerland. In 2006, she received an Artadia Jury award and was a Resident Fellow at the Atlantic Center the Arts. Schiff received her MFA from UIC in 2002 and her BFA from New York University, Tisch School of the Arts in 1999 and is currently teaching as an Adjunct faculty at the University of Illinois at Chicago, The School of the Art Institute of Chicago and Northwestern University.
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| Mar 21, 2007, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 MFA Thesis Exhibitions in Studio Arts, Photography & Moving Image Basma Al-Sharif, Isak Berbic, Hugo Hernandez, and Dennis Hodges |
| March 20-24 Reception: Wednesday, March 21, 5-8 pm Through image and text, Basma Al-Sharif's work recontextualizes political documents to explore the sustainability of the right of return. In Isak Berbic’s textual, photographic and video works, sardonic gestures interrogate the artifice of national collective memory that poses as meaningful history. Hugo Michel Hernandez's text-based painting, drawings, and installation work alludes to issues of personal history, displacement, language, fantasy, and erasure. Built on strategies of repetition and exhaustion, Dennis Hodges’ sculpture and video work interrogates the formal devices used to construct meaning and impel belief. [ more info ]
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| Mar 20, 2007, 2:00 PM CVRA, A&A #3304 Graduate Workshop: Fabian Winkler Light Modulators |
| Graduate Workshop Tuesday, March 20, 2-5:30 pm + Wed, March 21, 2-5:30 pm Light’s exceptional opportunities for artistic expression lie in its potential to create new, artificial realities and to transform objects and environments visually and ideologically. This workshop is a laboratory for the experimental exploration of light and shadows. We will build light modulators, simple structures that modulate (i.e. reflect, absorb and diffuse) rays of light and observe their changing appearance in different light situations. The laboratory features two configurable lighting environments: one with an orbiting light source, the other one with additive color mixing possibilities. Furthermore, the workshop briefly introduces strategies for interactive lighting control using Max/MSP software and the DMX communication protocol. The workshop is open to graduate students from all areas within the School of Art + Design. Due to the limited amount of participants, please RSVP to Daniel Sauter, dsauter7@uic.edu Tuesday, March 20, 2 pm CVRA, A+A 3304 Graduate Seminar Lecture: “Light as Inter-Medium” We still do not know what exactly light is. It appears immaterial to the human eye, yet it renders our world visible. This lecture investigates the highly ambiguous nature of electric light in different fields: fine art, design, architecture, theater, performance and film. Rather than looking at the use of light in each of the above-mentioned areas separately, I will focus on the mix of practices across different disciplines toward an understanding of light as "inter-medium". Select examples of creative work are used to illustrate some of light’s basic properties and strategies for lighting control, which we will explore experimentally in the following workshop. [ more info ]
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| Mar 19, 2007, 6:00 PM Gallery 400 Joel Wellington Fisher Lecture by Photography Faculty Search Finalist |
| Fisher’s work “aims to investigate individuals versus context; I have been intrigued by the idea of historical tradition as context, especially the notion of identification through individual and societal legacy.” A recent series has traced the locations in and around those sites where the Washington D.C. snipers, John Allen Muhammad and Lee Malvo, committed their crimes. As Fisher writes, “In these often seemingly empty, banal, and ubiquitous spaces, consisting mostly of strip malls and gas stations, a sense of dislocation and alienation is pervasive. Instead of making images merely documenting the sites where the shootings occurred, the work attempts to deconstruct the space consisting of elements left out and existing on the periphery.” Joel Fisher received an MFA from Rhode Island School of Design and a Teaching Certification from Brown University in 2006. He earned a BA with double majors in English and Psychology from the University of New Hampshire in 1997. He is currently completing work and research in Germany, supported by a 2006 Fulbright Fellowship. His photographic work has been exhibited in group shows in Chicago, Boston, and Providence.
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| Mar 14, 2007, 5:00 PM Gallery 400 MFA Thesis Exhibitions in Studio Arts, Photography & Moving Image Brandon Alvendia, Derek Chan, Kenyatta Forbes, and Selina Trepp |
| March 13-17, 2007 Reception: Wednesday, March 14, 5-8 pm Brandon Alvendia's installation of modified salvaged living room furniture extracted from an interaction with a cable television production team explores notions of displacement, authorship and functionality. Derek Chan‚s ephemeral and fluid paintings challenge conventions of representation and abstraction while investigating constructs of place as tied to the self. In an effort to bridge a gap between the past and the future, Kenyatta Forbes explores issues of race and gender in performative video works destabilize social archetypes. Resulting from a collaborative process that yields serendipitous effects, Selina Trepp‚s video installation explores absorption and desire. [ more info ]
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| Mar 09, 2007, 6:00 PM Guest Lecture: Dan Buchner, Vice President Design & Innovation |
| Lecture Title: Design Stories - Making a difference in a country, an industry, and a community. 3 examples of using design to drive development in emerging economies. Friday, March 9th 6:00pm UIC A+A Rm. 1100
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| Dianna Frid Public Lecture | |
| Dianna Frid Public Lecture, Department of Fiber and Material Studies, SAIC Wednesday February 28, 2007 Noon Room 903, Sharp Building, 37 South Wabash
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| Feb 22, 2007, 6:30 PM SolidWorks Workshops | |
| Co-sponsored by UIC, IDSA, and CATI (Computer Aided Technology, Inc.), and hosted by UIC, Prof. Melamed has arranged to have Ed Honda, Senior Engineer and Technical Advisor for CATI to conduct three workshops for hands-on training on this robust 3D CAD solid modeling tool. Workshop #1: Introduction to the tool Thursday, February 22nd Workshop #2: Intermediate problems Thursday, March 8th Workshop #3: Complex geometry Thursday, March 22nd All workshops will be held in A+A, Industrial Design Dept., Room 3320, 6:30 - 8:00pm.
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| Feb 21, 2007, 6:00 PM Gallery 400 Patho-geographies (or, other people’s baggage) Feeltank |
| An investigation of the emotional temperature of the body politic through screenings, public interventions, lectures and on-site creation of works in the gallery. [ more info ]
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| Feb 21, 2007, 6:00 PM Guest Lecture: Stephen Melamed | |
| Stephen Melamed will be giving a guest lecture entitled The Power of Design at the University of Chicago, College of Business, Wed. Feb. 21st
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| Feb 15, 2007, 12:00 AM Phyllis Bramson Group Exhibition "What F Word?" | |
| 546 W. 29th Street NYC
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| Feb 07, 2007, 7:00 PM Gallery 400 Screening: The Captivity Show Film and video program curated by Ben Russell |
| Featuring: Three Legged by John Wood & John Harrison Dipping Sauce by Luther Price Hillbilly Hoose-Gow feat by Tom Emerson The Magic Kingdom by Jim Trainor Trauma Victim by Rob Todd Everyday Bad Dream by Fred Worden Blick by Emily Richardson Mexican Jail Footage by Gordon Ball Exercise #3 by Eva Dransholt Admission is Free. [ more info ]
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| Feb 05, 2007, 5:00 PM Silvia Malagrino: Burnt Oranges Northwestern University, McCormick Tribune Center |
| Burnt Oranges is an experimental documentary, 90 minutes long, about the long-term effects and repercussions, personal and social, of Argentina's 1970's state terrorism. The film is timely. It establishes links between the struggles of the Argentine people, to recover social principles and communal ties, with today's necessity to defend human rights, preserve human dignity, and democratic values. For more information: Lauren Trinker <mailto:lacs@northwestern.edu> (847-491-4793) [ more info ]
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| Feb 02, 2007, 12:00 AM Meet the New You | |
| Meet the New You Des Moines Art Center February 2 – May 2, 2007 Organized by Laura Burkhalter, assistant curator How will our everyday lives be different in 10, 20, or 50 years? The four artists in Meet the New You offer challenging meditations on this question, each presenting his or her unique version of a brave new world. Some works refer to specific scientific advances, while others deal more abstractly with the concepts of progress and perfection. Society’s constant struggle for perfection, for better or worse, is a major theme of the show. Runaway body parts, perfect athletes struggling against unseen forces, and the abstract notion of “paradise” can all be found in Magnus Wallin’s dynamic and disconcerting videos. Photographer Ruud van Empel uses cutting-edge photography and computer technology to populate strangely flawless landscapes with even more strangely flawless children. Another photographer, Sabrina Raaf, creates a world almost exactly like ours—if it weren’t for those changes in gravity. Finally, sculptor Bryan Crockett makes works of haunting beauty that reference classical sculpture as well as scientific advancements. Artists: Bryan Crockett, Ruud van Empel, Sabrina Raaf, and Magnus Wallin
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| Jan 28, 2007, 5:00 PM Melanie Schiff through Jan. 28 |
| Since her solo debut at this gallery, photographer Melanie Schiff (UIC MFA 2002) has moved out of the studio and into the world, trading fussily arranged, evenly lit still lifes for more casual, serendipitous compositions of everyday objects. These photos are hymns to natural light, and the presence of rainbows, beer cans, and a Neil Young LP cover tempts one to characterize her gaze as a stoner’s glassy-eyed fixation. [ more info ]
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| Jan 27, 2007, 6:00 PM Closing Reception, Fraction Workspace |
| Fraction Workspace, a small non profit public arts space noted in NewCity as one of the top five alternative art spaces to see in 2007, is directed by UIC MFA student Clare Britt. The closing reception for Chris Walla "Ha Ha" will be held on January 27th. [ more info ]
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| Jan 16, 2007, 5:00 AM Gallery 400 Captive Audience Curated by Marc Fisher |
| Artists, Participants, and Exhibition Materials: Angelo Chicago County Fair David F. Stephanie Diamond Friends Beyond the Wall Lucky Pierre Mary Patten Phonograph records recorded by inmates and/or in prisons Prison Blues® Prison products designed for inmate use LJ Reynolds Risk-Takers Ltd. S.O. Work Group Stop Prisoner Rape Robert Stroud (“The Birdman of Alcatraz”) An exhibition of artwork, cultural products and industrial design created by, for, about, or in collaboration with people who are imprisoned. From music and spoken word records, drawings, video projects, photographs, posters, written correspondence, movies and stills, to mass produced toothbrushes, jumpsuits, sneakers, and mattresses designed for prisoners, Captive Audience allows visitors to the exhibition to experience the material conditions of prisoners’ lives and review artwork made in, for or about prison life.
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| Jan 13, 2007, 8:00 PM Paul Dickinson: Music for Worms and Compost Opening Reception |
| Paul Dickenson, Moving Image Teaching Associate, will be exhibiting at Hallworks Contemporary Art Center, Buffalo, New York from February 13th-17th. Three small wooden crates, fitted with visible air vents, sit in the gallery alongside a transformer and stereo speakers. Within each crate are hundreds of red worms wallowing in compost. The interior of each crate is fitted with microphones and infrared cameras, broadcasting visual and audio information to the “outside world.” [ more info ]
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| Jan 11, 2007, 6:00 AM Tony Tasset Recent Works | |
| Tony Tasset: Recent Works Price Auditorium, The Art Institute of Chicago (free to students with a valid i.d.)
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| Jan 11, 2007, 6:00 PM Tony Tasset Recent Works |
| The Society for Contemporary Art at the Art Institute of Chicago features the very best in international contemporary art in dialogue withthe museum's rich and varied art-historical legacies. The SCA promotes a better understanding and appreciation of contemporary art through a series of lectures and meetings each year. This lecture by Tony Tasset, UIC Professor of Studio Arts, will provide a thrilling look at his most recent projects. Pictured here is Tasset's sculpture Paul, a larger than life recreation of Paul Bunyan, recently unveiled at the Nathan Manilow Sculpture Garden at Governors State University.
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| Jan 11, 2007, 6:00 PM Pamela Fraser Solo Exhibition |
| Pamela Fraser, Visiting Assistant Professor of Studio Arts, has a solo exhibition featuring a new series of gouache and acrylic works opening in New York on January 11th continuing through February 10th. [ more info ]
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| Jan 01, 2007, 12:00 PM Happy Holidays from the UIC School of Art and Design |
| The faculty staff and students of the UIC School of Art and Design wish you a happy holiday season. Our winter break begins on Monday December, 17th. Instruction begins again on Monday, January, 14th 2008. Snowlake greeting by Cliff Krapfl, Adjucnt Assistant Professor in Graphic Design, and Tara Kennedy, UIC BFA 1999.
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| Dec 29, 2006, 12:00 PM The Yin Yang of Design and Anthropology | |
| On Wednesday, December 29, 2006, Dori Tunstall will give a guest lecture, “The Yin Yang of Design and Anthropology” at Wayne State University and the College of Creative Studies in Detroit, MI. The lecture is part of Wayne State’s effort to create a concentration in Design Anthropology within its Business Anthropology curriculum. Dori is a member of the advisory board for the concentration.
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| Dec 14, 2006, 12:00 PM Dan Peterman: Round Trip | |
| In the suite of projects presented, Peterman launches a speculative ecological dialogue that links a diverse set of materials, processes and references. For example, a wood framed recreation of a Han dynasty funerary object entitled Pigsty/Latrine explores a 2,000 year old model of sanitation and nutrient conservation while simultaneously referencing the contemporary marketing of western wood frame housing to China’s growing middle class.
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| Dec 01, 2006, 6:00 AM Great Space UnderOver UIC School of Art and Design BFA Thesis Show |
| The Great Space Art and Design Hall, 400 N Peoria, 5th floor Please plan to attend what promises to be an excellent and varied show celebrating the work of our new interdisciplinary BFA art curriculum.
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| Nov 30, 2006, 9:00 AM Gallery 400 Tony Tasset Dedication Ceremony for Public Art Installation |
| Wednesday, November 15th 9:00 a.m. Pittsburgh Cultural Trust Dedication ceremony for public art installation by Professor Tony Tasset “Magnolias for Pittsburgh” consists of two sculptures of a flowering magnolia tree. Measuring 22' high by 24' wide, cast in bronze from one hand-sculpted replica and realistically hand-painted in urethane enamel, each tree contains approximately 800 flowers. The bronze trees are located in a setting with five real magnolia trees at Seventh Street and Penn Avenue Parklet in Pittsburgh.
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| Nov 30, 2006, 12:00 PM "The so-called progress of love (even after)" |
| Phyllis Bramson "The so-called progress of love (even after)" Exhibition continuing through December 31 Carl Hammer Gallery 740 North Wells Street
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| Nov 29, 2006, 6:00 AM Great Space Paper View | |
| Thursday November 9th 6-8p GBU Callery: 400 S. Preoria 5th Floor Exhibited works by School of Art and Design BFA students: Kirby Salvador, Greta Bach, Laura Boban, Raphael Barontini, Tazim Salik, Frank Van Duerm, Kimberly Montiel, Christina Gowrylow, Kathryn Ziemba, Carissa Zill, and Derek Dietrich-Miller.
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| Nov 17, 2006, 5:00 AM Gallery 400 "Ghost Still" | |
| Thursday, November 17th 5-7p Betty Rymer Gallery at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago Opening Reception: Negotiated Localities Materious, a design practice co-founded by Stephanie Munson Tharp, Assistant Professor of Industrial Design, will be exhibiting "Ghost Still" in this exhibition curated by Cindy Coleman and Claire Pentecost at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. In wealthier parts of the world access to safe drinking water is largely taken for granted —- we simply turn on the tap or go to the store. The Ghost Still directly addresses the mediated production of our individual water supply, localizing and re-imagining personal responsibility. The exhibition continues through January 5, 2007. 280 South Columbus Drive Gallery Hours: Tuesday-Saturday, 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
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| Nov 09, 2006, 6:00 AM Great Space PAPER VIEW | |
| Thursday November 9th 6-8p GBU Callery: 400 S. Preoria 5th Floor Exhibited works by School of Art and Design BFA students: Kirby Salvador, Greta Bach, Laura Boban, Raphael Barontini, Tazim Salik, Frank Van Duerm, Kimberly Montiel, Christina Gowrylow, Kathryn Ziemba, Carissa Zill, and Derek Dietrich-Miller.
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