2016 Student Art Exhibition

2016_Student_Exhibition_WEBbanner

2016 Annual Student Art Exhibition

Opening Reception:
Thursday, April 28, 5-7pm
Free Parking in the Cherry St. garage, all levels

Exhibition dates:
April 28 through July 29, 2016

We are pleased to announce the 2016 UMKC Student Art Exhibition, featuring works by 24 graduate and undergraduate artists. All currently enrolled students at UMKC were eligible to submit work across a variety of media, including painting, photography, sculpture, printmaking, graphic design, video, and performance. Scholarship awards will be presented during the opening reception, Thursday, April 28 at 6pm.

Michael Schonhoff served as the juror for the 2016 UMKC Student Exhibition. Schonhoff’s creative practice includes artist, curator, musician, and arts professional. He earned his MFA in Visual Art at the State University of New York at Buffalo and his BFA from Iowa State University where he was awarded the Helen Breseford/Frances Seeds Scholarship in Art. Currently, he serves as Assistant Curator, Community Outreach and Exhibition Management, at the H&R Block Artspace at the Kansas City Art Institute.

Andrew McIlvaine, Putting Up Walls, Oil on Board Mounted to Wood
Benjamin Cotrrell, 10:26, Photograph
Benjamin Cotrrell, 10:26, Photograph
Stacey Sharpe, Osage Landscape, Wool, nylon, cotton, beads, and wood

Andy Julo: Trip the Light Fantastic

TriptheLight_webbanner

Andy Julo: Trip the Light Fantastic

Opening Reception:
Thursday, April 7, 5-7pm
Free Parking in the Cherry St. garage, levels 5 & 6

Exhibition Dates:
April 4 – April 22, 2016

Trip the Light Fantastic offers images that oscillate between realms of presence and absence, night and day, belief and unbelief, sacred and profane. Julo’s work weaves together the symbolic content, codes, ritual and multi-sensorial dramas of Roman Catholicism with contemporary cultural themes. This multimedia exhibition features a range of works that explore how objects are created or selected, imbued with meaning, and ultimately inform our perceptions. The collapsing of both organic and synthetic forms creates a realm for viewers to expand their own definitions of sacred space, time and movement.

Research for Trip the Light Fantastic was funded in part by the UMKC School of Graduate Studies Grant Program.

Piviale_Dorato_Julo
Andy Julo, Piviale Dorato
12933086_10153652936548160_6878899266769197806_n
Andy Julo, Light from Light, Digital Photograph,plaster, Honey Locust thorns, silk flowers, and enamel, 2015
981152_10153652936563160_7501525286820027862_o
Andy Julo, PAX, Cyanotype, 2016 Palm and Cellophane Triptych, Cyanotype, 2015-2016

NCECA 2016: Man and Made

MANandMADE_webbanner

NCECA 2016: Man and Made

Monday, March 7 – Saturday, March 19, 2016
UMKC Gallery of Art, Fine Arts Building 203
5015 Holmes St, KCMO 64110
Free parking in the Cherry Street garage, levels 5 & 6

The UMKC Gallery of Art is proud to host two exhibitions as a part of the 2016 National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) conference this year hosted in Kansas City. Now in its fiftieth year, NCECA promotes and improves the ceramic arts through education, community building, research, and creative inspiration. Each exhibition features talented ceramics artists whose work challenges the boundaries regarding how ceramics are created and how they inform us.

Man and Made

Opening reception: Thursday, March 17 from 5:00-7:00pm

They say we are a product of our environment. But couldn’t it be said that the reverse is also true? While the world in which we grow shapes us as individuals, we are continuously constructing, manipulating, and reforming it so that it better suits our needs. Therefore, the influence we have on our surroundings comes full circle, impacting us in the end.

MAN and MADE features a broad spectrum of contemporary ceramic sculptors whose work bridges the worlds of anatomy and architecture. This exhibition features work by: Brian Harper, Peter Christian Johnson, Lindsay Pichaske, Mallory Wetherell, Tyler Lotz, Matt Ziemke, Amanda Salov, and Lauren Gallaspy. MAN and MADE was curated by Mallory Wetherell, Assistant Professor of Ceramics and Sculpture at the University of Nebraska at Kearney.

Body-Mind Entente

BodyMIND_banner

Body-Mind Entente: Exhibition and Panel Discussion

Curated by the Graduate Art History Association

Exhibition Dates: January 21 – February 26, 2016
Opening Reception: Thursday, January 21, 5:00 – 7:00 pm
Panel Discussion: Thursday, February 11, 6:00 – 7:30 pm

UMKC Gallery of Art, Fine Arts Building 203
5015 Holmes St, KCMO 64110
Free parking in the Cherry Street garage, levels 5 & 6

Body-Mind Entente features multimedia artworks that explore the relationship between body and mind, perception and cognition, consciousness and spirituality. It looks into the biological and cultural factors that shape our existence, enabling us to develop singular identities while simultaneously sharing many features and modes of behavior with others. This exhibition opens a dialogue between art and cognitive sciences by unveiling significant crossovers between artists and scientists’ objects of inquiry. The contemporary artists whose work is included in Body-Mind Entente approach pivotal questions about how people perceive, think, and build a sense of identity in relation to others. The exhibition shows that aesthetics play an important role in heightening self-consciousness and triggering reflection on the interdependence between body and mind.

This exhibition was curated by the members of the Graduate Art History Association (GAHA), which is a student-driven organization through the UMKC Art & Art History Department. It dedicates itself to fostering professional development in art scholarship. GAHA works with local museums, galleries, and educational institutions to enable students to enter into dialogue with established art professionals.

Artists Featured:
JJ Allen | Emily Connell | Sarabeth Dunton | Diana Heise | Robert Howsare | Nene Humphrey
Maret K. Miller | Molly Murphy | Jodi Lightner & Amber Stene | Miles Neidinger | Patricia Olynyk
Anne Austin Pearce | Jim Sajovic | Jamie Bates Slone | Hong Chun Zhang

Panel Discussion: Exploring Body-Mind Connections

Thursday, February 11, 2016 from 6:00—7:30 pm at the UMKC Gallery of Art

Featured speakers: New York City artist Nene Humphrey, art historian and UMKC faculty member Dr. Cristina Albu, neuroscientist and UMKC faculty member Dr. Nash Boutros, and art history graduate student Tara Karaim as moderator. The discussion will address how the neural basis of perception, along with cultural affiliations, influences aesthetic experience. The program aims to expand the traditional understanding of neuroscience and art by fostering a broader comprehension and appreciation of the qualities of both.

This exhibition and panel discussion was made possible through the generous support of the Department of Art & Art History, the UMKC Gallery of Art, the UMKC Office of Student Involvement, and the Missouri Arts Council.

EXHIBITION:Fawziah Al-Thobaiti MA Thesis Exhibition

Fawziah_banner-620x261

Fawziah Al-Thobaiti MA Thesis Exhibition: Perception is Not Reality

UMKC Gallery of Art

Opening Reception:
Thursday, October 29, 5-7pm
Free Parking in the Cherry St. garage, levels 5 & 6

Exhibition Dates:
October 29 – November 13, 2015

The Saudi Arabian woman has been seen as a mysterious figure draped in black. She is known to be mistreated, to have her rights stolen, and to be the subject of other hurtful depictions. Unfortunately, these images are limited in scope – focusing only on the negative aspects of life in Saudi Arabia. Fawziah Al-Thobaiti was born and raised there, and while studying in the United States, she has witnessed her culture from a critical distance.

Al-Thobaiti combines contemporary typography, illustration and photography with Arabic calligraphy as a means to create works – both digitally and by hand – that depict the real life of today’s Saudi women. These images form a cultural portrait offering viewers insight into the ongoing successes and challenges of Saudi women at present such as: women’s rights, marriage, driving laws, education, achievements abroad, and the misconceptions of some issues that have negatively affected their lives.

Through her M.A. thesis exhibition, Al-Thobaiti has set out to highlight the changes that have assisted Saudi women to gain their rightful positions in society. Al-Thobaiti hopes that her works will continue to give voice to these women via print media and online networks.

Transmissions / Signals

Rosser_Woodfill_banneredit-620x269

Warren Rosser and James Woodfill: Transmissions / Signals

Opening Reception:
Thursday, September 3, 2015, 5—7PM
Free Parking in the Cherry St. garage, levels 5 & 6

Alt. Lecture KC:
Wednesday, September 16 from 7:00-9:00pm in the Gallery
Panelists: Warren Rosser, James Woodfill, David Cateforis, and Rebecca Dubay

Exhibition Dates:
Thursday, September 3 – Friday, October 16, 2015

The UMKC Gallery of Art presents Transmissions / Signals, the most recent work of Warren Rosser and James Woodfill. Built around a discussion of the extended medium of painting, this work brings focus to the expansive definition that both artists have of the discipline.

Transmissions / Signals has taken the form of not only this exhibition, but a book as well, scheduled for release in early September. Together, they examine the history of dialogue between these two artists, starting as a student – teacher relationship in the late 1970’s shortly after Rosser’s addition to the KCAI Faculty, and extending to present day where both teach in the Painting Department at the Kansas City Art Institute.

The alternate paths that each have pursued help frame a discussion about their teaching philosophies as well, building by example a narrative that describes the pedagogical structure of the Painting Department at KCAI, where Rosser has worked to establish a faculty with a vast diversity of intent, and where both bring the professional practice into direct contact with students.

Point to the Center: An Alt. Lecture KC discussion between Rosser, Woodfill, and art history professors David Cateforis and Rebecca Dubay on Wednesday, September 16 from 7:00-9:00pm in the gallery will introduce the collaborative project marking the history of dialogue between the artists. Founded in 2013 by Jessica Borusky, Alt. Lecture KC pairs a local aesthetic producer with someone from outside the city in order to cultivate creative conversation across state lines.

Contact the Gallery for more information.