College of Art + Design
College Personnel Ken Carpenter, Interim Dean Tom Sofranko, Associate Dean Rod Parker, Director School of Art
Schools and Departments School of Architecture School of Art School of Landscape Architecture Department of Interior Design
Jori Erdman, Director School of Architecture
Degree Programs
Vision And Mission
T.L. Ritchie, Chair Department of Interior Design
Bachelor of Architecture 5 years/162 credits
Van Cox, Interim Director Robert Reich School of Landscape Architecture
Bachelor of Fine Art 4 years/120 credits
Faculty
Bachelor of Interior Design 4 years/135 credits
The College of Art +Design is Louisiana’s foremost school for fine arts, art history, and the design professions. As such, the college’s vision is to be recognized nationally for the creative force of its faculty and for educating artists and designers who attain the highest level of professional achievement and leadership. The College’s mission is to educate a diverse population of students in a teaching and learning community that produces artists, designers, and scholars who, through their creative work, contribute to making a better world. At the same time that the work of our faculty addresses the concerns of our global community, it helps strengthen the roles of artists and designers everywhere.
Total Full Time Equivalent 69.4 School of Architecture 18.0 School of Art 31.4 School of Landscape Architecture 14.0 Department of Interior Design 6.0
Bachelor of Landscape Architecture 5 years/159 credits Master of Architecture 3.5 years/98 credits Master of Fine Art 3 years/60 credits Master of Art – Art History 3 years/60 credits Master of Landscape Architecture 3 years/96 credtits
Dean’s Message Goals + Objectives Highlights
3 4 8
School of Architecture
10
School of Art
12
Department of Interior Design
14
School of Landscape Architecture
18
2010–2011 CoA+D Lecture Series
20
Exhibitions
26
Student Awards
28
Faculty Highlights
34
Faculty Accomplishments
36
Faculty Awards
37
Faculty Roster
38
New Faculty
40
Faculty Retirements
41
Sponsored Research
42
Development
46
Funding Opportunities
48
Endowment & Non-Endowment Totals
50
Gifts
52
Dean’s Message As we go to press, the high-stakes debate in Washington rages over raising the debt ceiling just days before our nation could begin defaulting on its loans. The one thing we all seem to agree upon these days is our level of disgust with the discord in Washington. How is it that our elected officials are unable to work together? Working together is something we see as crucial in the College of Art +Design. Teachers work together to design and redesign curricula. Students and teachers work together in the classroom, and students work with each other on team projects every semester. In fact, when we have put together teams of students from our various programs to work on a design competition, they seemed to have no preconceptions about the limits of their contribution, each sharing ideas freely about architecture, art, landscape architecture and interior design, no matter their field. The bottom line is, collaboration is who we are and what we do here. Even when we disagree. Collaboration is certainly not unique to the college. Today’s contemporary design offices include architects, landscape architects, interior designers, preservationists, and environmentalists, as well as artists doing large scale site pieces or signature lobby works. To be successful, all of these professionals must be able to collaborate. Our College is blessed in that we have all of these players under one roof.
That said, it’s easy for us to have interdisciplinary programs, such as the College’s Coastal Sustainability Studio (CSS), a group of engineers, scientists, and designers at LSU under the direction of Assistant Professor–Research Jeff Carney. CSS works across disciplines on issues affecting the Louisiana coast, and this year, it was named the 2011 Place Research Award winner by The Environmental Design Research Association (EDRA), an international organization based in Virginia. Another of our very important interdisciplinary programs is the Arts, Visualization Advanced Technologies and Research (AVATAR) Initiative. Begun through the collaboration of a music professor and an art professor, AVATAR’s research and creative projects will center on Intelligent and Responsive Systems and Collaborative Digital Media Art in visual, musical and literary forms. At the moment, AVATAR is in the process of hiring six high profile interdisciplinary scholar/artists dedicated to the study of digital media. This year, we will benefit by having two of those new AVATAR faculty teaching half time in the School of Art. A major opportunity is also on our horizon that will give all of our students both an interdisciplinary as well as an international experience during their time in the College of Art +Design (and learning from other cultures is something we would like to give all of our graduates).
Last summer, we had 24 students studying in Rome with Assistant Professor Kristi Dykema (Landscape Architecture). Next year we will double that number , with both landscape architecture and architecture students working together in a shared facility with Kristi and Assistant Professor Frank Melendez (Architecture). From there it won’t be too big a step to include students from across the college and extend the stay to a full semester. The opportunity is only matched by the major challenge of making the program financially feasible for all our CoA+D students, but we will get there. On a final sad note, the College lost an important colleague last summer. Julian White, a retired professor of architecture, and the first black faculty member at LSU, died after a long battle with cancer. From 1971 to 2003, Julian represented the very best of teachers in the School of Architecture. He expected a lot of himself and no less of his students. While he suffered many indignities in his life, Julian never lost his dignity. He was a dear friend, and we will miss him.
Ken Carpenter Interim Dean
Dean’s Message
2–3
With the implementation of the University’s strategic plan, LSU Flagship 2020, the College of Art +Design has focused its GOALS in the areas of: Discovery: Pushing our limits to generate and instill professional knowledge in the fields of Art, Architecture, Landscape Architecture and Interior Design through transformative research and creative activities that address contemporary and enduring issues. Learning: Finding a context for the future to enhance a faculty-led and student-centered learning environment that develops engaged citizens and enlightened leaders. Diversity: Strengthening the intellectual environment by broadening the cultural diversity of the College of Art +Design to promote understanding others. Engagement: Promoting engagement of faculty, staff, and students in reaching out to transform communities. Productivity: Doing more with what we have.
This is a sampling of our ensuing objectives: • Broaden our national recognition as leaders in our disciplines
• Increase minority representation within the College
• Create new knowledge, insights, and interests in art and design
• Increase understanding and appreciation of diversity issues as they affect the various disciplines
• Encourage interdisciplinary activity across the College • Develop an international perspective • Improve physical facilities
• Increase civic/community contributions by individuals • Increase class involvement in civic/community activity • Improve our resource management
Goals + Objectives
4–5
Here is how we are already meeting some of our objectives:
Develop an international perspective. Eleven countries are currently represented by international students in the College of Art +Design, and recent service learning projects have taken students and faculty to a rural township near Cape Town, South Africa and an earthquake-devastated town in Haiti. Here at home, students and faculty in the College participated in Global Vision, an exhibition at LSU, alongside their counterparts at Kyoto Seika University in Japan.
Encourage interdisciplinary activity across the College.
Increase minority representation within the College.
The College of Art +Design’s two year old Coastal Sustainability Studio (CSS) was recently the 2011 Place Research Winner by The Environmental Design Research Association (EDRA), an international, interdisciplinary organization in McLean, Virginia, founded by design professionals, social scientists, students, educators, and facility managers. The CSS is a multidisciplinary group of engineers, scientists, and designers at LSU that works on issues affecting the Louisiana coast.
The College of Art +Design had a 38% increase in minority enrollment over the past four years. Additionally, 60% of African American Art +Design students were honored at the 2011 Black Scholars Awards Program, and The National Organization of Minority Architects (NOMA) named the student chapter in the LSU School of Architecture as 2010 Student Chapter of the Year.
FYI: Graduate enrollment in the College of Art+ Design has increased 22% over the last four years. Dean’s Message
2–3
Students at LSU’s College of Art +Design learn about art and design, and they live it. The school brings together talented faculty, specialized concentration areas, outstanding gallery spaces and a connection to the community to create dynamic programs that are ranked among the best in the nation. Here, professors challenge students to examine contemporary issues and the world around them through visual art, and they work on real-world projects for clients, community organizations and planning agencies through the school. Our graduates are prepared to act and think creatively because the faculty values inquiry over training, and nurtures a spirit of risk taking. On the following pages, we highlight some of the learning experiences from the past year that reflect the strength and success of our programs, faculty, and students.
Highlights
8–9
Awards Minority Architecture Students at LSU Win National Award The National Organization of Minority Architects (NOMA) has named the student chapter in the LSU School of Architecture as 2010 Student Chapter of the Year at the annual NOMA conference in Boston. The LSU chapter received the award due to its impressive growth, diversity, and commitment to community service. The NOMA board was also impressed with a high school mentorship program the student chapter developed and hosts on campus each spring.
Founded 1971, it has an increasingly influential voice, promoting the quality and excellence of minority design professionals. There are NOMA Chapters in all parts of the country, increasing recognition on colleges and university campuses and providing greater access to government policy makers.
LSU Student Architecture Journal Wins 2011 Douglas Haskell Award by New York-Based Non-profit
The LSU NOMAS Chapter, which had just five charter members when it was formed in 2005, currently has 23 members, including President Elizabeth Galan, a thirdyear student in the School.
The LSU student architecture journal, Contexture: Freshly Cut, led by Student Editors Kristen Kelsch and Jonathan LeJune, won the 2011 Douglas Haskell Award for Student Architecture Journals. The $1,000 award was given by the Center for Architecture Foundation, a New York based nonprofit organization.
NOMA is a national organization dedicated to the development and advancement of minority architects.
The committee called the writing in the journal crisp, and said it avoided using jargon and covered topics that
Service Learning were clearly of interest to the writers. “I hope that young editors are in training already and that they will carry on this proud tradition,” Linn said. The award money will go toward producing the 2011, Contexture: Creole as well as supporting future issues. The Center for Architecture Foundation is dedicated to promoting a broader appreciation of the built environment through educational programs and scholarship. Its Douglas Haskell Award was founded to encourage student journalism on architecture, planning and related subjects, and to foster regard for intelligent criticism among future professionals. The winning issue of Contexture can be downloaded at: http://www.design. lsu.edu/Architecture/PDFs/Contexture%20 Freshly%20Cut.pdf.
Architecture Students Design and Build Solar Pavilion in Old South Baton Rouge
by summer’s end. For more information, visit ymcadesignbuild.blogspot.com.
The LSU School of Architecture has partnered with the Center for Planning Excellence, the Baranco Clark YMCA and Baton Rouge Community College in a student project at the YMCA in Old South Baton Rouge. The project was to design and build an outdoor solar-powered pavilion with landscaping located in the YMCA’s yard, adjacent to the YMCA’s playground and field. The pavilion will serve YMCA members and the local community as a shaded place in which to hold after-school and summer activities, including plays and workshops. The pavilion was designed by LSU architecture students Steven Armstrong, Marc Berard, Megan Harris and Stacy Palczynski, with the assistance of Associate Professor of Architecture Jim Sullivan. During the spring semester, the students met with members of the YMCA to design the pavilion and began its construction at the start of summer. The project was completed Highlights
10–11
Tributes School of Art Assistant Professor of Photography Jeremiah Ariaz’s work is featured in Exploring Color Photography (Elsevier/Focal Press, 2011) by Robert Hirsch. The photographs come from Ariaz’s most recent series of photographs, “Tucumcari.” As a student of photography at Kansas City Art Institute, Ariaz studied the history of photography through Robert Hirsch’s renowned, Seizing the Light: A History of Photography. “It’s a thrill to be included in Hirsch’s latest book alongside photographers such as Richard Misrach, Bill Owens, and Andreas Gursky whom I greatly admire,” he says. Ariaz’s work explores the tension between nature and the consequence of Manifest Destiny’s impulse to dominate the land. He has exhibited, delivered papers, and spoken about his work both nationally and internationally. Parts of his series, “Reconsidering Landscape” was included in the 2008 Focal Press book, Light and Lens: Photography in the Digital Age. To view more of Ariaz’s images, visit www.jeremiahariaz.com. School of Art Associate Professor Ed Smith was the
featured artist in The Southern Review’s winter 2011 issue. Smith’s work, which deals with the boundaries at which nature and man collide, has been exhibited at P.S.1 in Long Island City, New York, Whitney Art Works in Portland, Maine, Dartmouth College in Hanover New Hampshire, The Walter Anderson Museum in Ocean Springs, Mississippi, and the Contemporary Art Center in New Orleans. His concern for the environment began when he signed on as a crew member at age 17 for the Fund for Animals conservation ship, The Sea Shepherd, on a mission to rescue Harbor Seals in Canada. Smith has taught in the College of Art +Design for 13 years. He had a solo show at Soren Christensen Gallery in New Orleans (which represents him) last month, and will have another at the Cape Cod Museum of Art in Dennis, Massachusetts in 2013. Ed Smith’s paintings in the current issue of The Southern Review are so good, I woke up at 3 a.m. to see them again. – New Orleans Photographer Frank Relle on his blog, http://frankrelle.blogspot.com/2011/03
Outreach
Service Learning
In April, College of Art +Design Photography Professor Thomas Neff presented a gallery talk at the Louisiana State Museum at the Presbytere, in New Orleans. The lecture was part of an exhibition of his work Holding Out and Hanging On: Surviving Hurricane Katrina. Neff volunteered in New Orleans after the storm and recorded his experiences using a large-format camera and traditional printing techniques. Fourteen gelatin silver prints by Neff were on view. Following his talk, Neff signed copies of his book, Holding Out and Hanging On: Surviving Hurricane Katrina.
The Knock Knock Children’s Museum in Baton Rouge will use a logo designed by a student in Director Rod Parker’s studio class.
LSU art students and alumni participated with dozens of artists around the world in The Great Oil Leak of 2010 Poster Project, a collaborative effort using art to help Gulf Coast fisherman devastated by the BP oil spill. The project included more than forty original posters which were shown at exhibitions statewide, with proceeds benefitting Gulf Aid of Acadiana. To view the posters, visit: www.thegreatoilleak.com.
Scott Hodgin’s Art 4555 class designed a sign for Connections for Life, a nonprofit that assists women just released from prison with transitional housing. The sign can be viewed on their Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/pages/ Connections-For-Life/116464468388910. Students in the Graphic Design Student Office (GDSO) worked on a collaborative project with LSU Department of Oceanography. Under the direction of Courtney Barr, students designed exhibition graphics, promotional materials and a website for the Art +Design Into the Abyss Student Art Competition. This interdisciplinary project challenged students to creatively interpret discoveries about marine biodiversity. Winning student entries and the accompanying lecture series can be viewed at: www.intotheabyss.org. Highlights
12–13
Awards LSU Design Students Take First Place in 2010 Interior Design Education Video Competition LSU Interior Design Students Leigh Hardy, Ryan Weilenman, Sarah Tull, Alyse Lambert, Colette DeJean won first place in the 2010 Interior Design Education Video Competition. The winners were announced during the Interior Design Educators Council’s (IDEC) annual conference in Denver, Colorado. “It feels great to be part of a program that can compete and win on an international level,” said Faculty Advisor Danielle Johnson. The LSU team’s winning video, “Interior Design & Healthcare,” incorporated stunning visuals with soothing music to educate viewers on a seven stage interior design process. Judges commented that the video was relevant, imaginative, informative, and an “on target
explanation of how professional interior design impacts healthcare.” IDEC partnered with the National Council of Interior Design Qualification (NCIDQ), Council for Interior Design Accreditation (CIDA), American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers (AAHID), and Interiors & Sources magazine to host the competition. More than 25 videos were submitted for consideration by a panel of judges from IDEC, AAHID, CIDA and NCIDQ. Winning videos received cash prizes along with recognition in an issue of Interiors & Sources magazine and on sponsoring organizations’ websites. IDEC is an international organization with the mission of advancing interior design education, scholarship and service. Founded in 1963, IDEC has more than 750 members. The winning video can be seen online at http:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=IRpHPK5eTL0
Interior Design Students and Faculty win International Interior Design Association Awards Two LSU Interior Design students and two Interior Design faculty recently won awards at the International Interior Design Association’s (IIDA) Delta Regional Chapter Awards in New Orleans. The Delta Regional Chapter includes interior designers in Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi. Professional-in-Residence Matthew Edmonds and Instructor Tracy Burns, both principals of Commercial Design Interiors (CDI), placed in three of 16 categories. CDI won the Award of Excellence in Hospitality Design for “The Body Café” for which café owners requested a design that combined the social scene of a coffee shop, the niche market of a health conscious café, and the wellness products of a life supplement store. CDI also won an Award of Recognition in Institutional Design for
Service Learning NAS JRB Credit Union, and an Award of Excellence in Residential Design for a vacation home in Orange Beach.
ID Students Design Drug Treatment Center for Baton Rouge
Students Christine Diggs, and Beverly Gaudin, respectively won an Award of Excellence for “Immense Networks” and an Award of Recognition for “Baton Rouge Art & Cultural Center.” Diggs was inspired by the sleek design of the classic children’s toy the Slinky to design the office space for a young IT Firm. Gaudin’s project creates a cultural center in downtown Baton Rouge.
Last fall, 39 students from the junior interior design studio worked collaboratively on a service-learning project with the Baton Rouge Area Alcohol and Drug Center (BRAADC), designing a new and expanded treatment center for the in-patient facility. With an extensive waiting list of more than 100 patients, BRAADC is planning to move from its existing facility on Florida Boulevard to a larger building across the street that will be donated by the city of Baton Rouge. In anticipation of the move, design students came up with dozens of innovative ideas for a dorm-like facility with a contemporary feel that would include space for 70 in-patient beds, 100 outpatient beds, office space for counselors and employees, and adequate back-of-house service spaces. In late November, five of the students presented their conceptual designs at a BRAADC event, “Giving Thanks: Attitudes of Gratitude” at the Shaw Center for the Arts in downtown
Baton Rouge. But BRAADC officials were impressed with all of the students’ designs and hope to incorporate many of their suggestions and ideas into their final plans for the facility. “Designing for BRAADC made me realize the importance of being able to design for all different types of people; especially those with special needs,” said Angie Portier, a student from Baton Rouge. “Working on a service-learning project teaches the impact of good design on people’s lives and the community.”
FYI: This year, Interior Design students made up 10% of LSU’s Distinguished Communicator graduates. The LSU Distinguished Communicator certification is a unique program that helps students elevate their skills in all areas of communication including writing, speaking, visual presentations and technological communication. Highlights
14–15
FYI: Our incoming freshman class this year had an average ACT score of 25.
FYI: Eighteen College of Art + Design students in their sophomore year or higher have maintained aperfect 4.0 GPA.
Dean’s Message
2–3
Awards Associate Professor and Landscape Architect Lake Douglas’s book, Public Spaces, Private Gardens (released May 2011 by LSU Press) recently won two prestigious publication awards. The Foundation for Landscape Studies in New York City awarded the book $5,000 for its annual David R. Coffin Publication Grant. Named in honor of the late professor of architecture at Princeton University and pioneer scholar of landscape and garden history, the David R. Coffin Publication Grant is awarded annually to an author or publisher of an English-language book-inprogress that advances scholarship in the field of garden history and landscape studies. The New York City based J.M. Kaplan Fund awarded the book $5,000 through its Furthermore Grant in Publishing. The Furthermore program concentrates on nonfiction book publishing about cities; natural and historic resources; art, architecture, and design; cultural history; and civil liberties and other public
issues of the day. Both grants support the book’s production costs. Public Spaces, Private Gardens is the first in-depth examination of New Orleans’ landscape history. In it, Douglas employs written accounts, archival data, historic photographs, lithographs, maps, and city planning documents— many of which have never before been published—to explore public and private outdoor spaces in New Orleans and those who shaped them.
Service Learning The LSU Robert Reich School of Landscape Architecture engaged a group of students last year in a planning and design project to help rebuild a coastal city in Haiti devastated in the 2010 earthquake. The 15 students worked on the project throughout the fall semester in their urban design studio, under the direction of Associate Professor Austin Allen, who led them on a site visit to Haiti in late October. The group spent seven days in Haiti, primarily in the badly-damaged historic district of Jacmel, a city on the Caribbean coast. The thrust of the students’ project was to focus on urban design strategies for the Jacmel historic district which has been recognized by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site. In recent years, Jacmel has evolved into something of an arts district, though its history stretches back to the Colonial Age of Exploration, when it was a major hub of Haiti’s coffee and indigo export businesses.
On their visit, the students stayed in a hotel within the historic district site of the studio that was damaged during the January earthquake, so they could better understand the challenges and realities of rebuilding in the area. They were joined by graduate landscape architecture students from Morgan State University, in Baltimore, who collaborated with them on the project. Austin and the students worked closely with the Jacmel mayor’s office on the project, as well as the Port of Jacmel, the Ministry of Tourism for the city, and several private property owners. The project was facilitated by the Louisiana/Haiti Sustainable Village Project, an organization created in the aftermath of the earthquake. “The idea behind the organization was not so much to create another non-profit relief agency,” said Allen, who was the School’s Inaugural Marie Bickham Endowed Chair and has since joined the School’s faculty officially. “Rather, it was to share with Haitians the lessons learned four and a half years after Katrina.”
FYI: The LSU Robert Reich School of Landscape Architecture has the best undergraduate program in the nation, according to national rankings released by Design Intelligence, the leading journal of the design professions. The School’s graduate program is ranked No. 2, according to the results of the 2010 survey. The School has consistently ranked among the Top 5 programs in the country since the rankings were devised nearly a decade ago.
Highlights
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2010-2011 CoA+D Lecture Series Kongjian Yu Kongjian Yu received his Doctor of Design Degree at The Harvard Graduate School of Design in 1995. He is the founder and dean of the Graduate School of Landscape Architecture at Peking University, and the founder and president of Turenscape, an internationally awarded firm with more than 300 professionals. It is one of the first and largest private landscape architecture and architecture firms in China. Dr. Yu is a five-time winner of ASLA (The American Society of Landscape Architects) Honor Awards for his ecologically and culturally sensitive projects, two-time winner of the Architectural Review Award (Commended, Architectural Review, UK). Dr. Yu is the winner of the National Gold Medal of Fine Arts (2004, China). In 2004, Dr. Yu was awarded the Oversea Chinese Pioneer Achievement Medal by the Chinese central government for his overall contribution to the nation. Dr. Yu was the keynote speaker for the 40th and 43rd IFLA World Congress, and the 2006 and 2008 ASLA annual conferences. Dr. Yu publishes widely, including more than 200 papers and 15 books. His current book is The Art of Survival: Recovering Landscape Architecture. His major research interests include the theory and method of landscape architecture and urban planning; the cultural aspect of the landscape; landscape security patterns and ecological infrastructure.
Atsuhiko Mushahi Atsuhiko Musashi was born in Kyoto, Japan. He earned his BFA at the University of Washington and his MFA at the San Francisco Art Institute. He is an accomplished artist with exhibitions in Bulgaria, Poland, Scotland, Taiwan, India, Germany, the U.S. and Japan. Numerous solo exhibitions are to his credit including mounting recent exhibitions at the Art Space Mitsuhasi in Kyoto and the MHS TANAKA Gallery in Nagoya, Japan. He is a member of the Japan Artists Association and the Japan Print Association. Musashi has been a Lecturer and Professor of Art at Kyoto Seika University since 1988. He served as Dean of the Faculty of Fine Arts from 2009, and has just been promoted to Vice President of Kyoto Seika University. KSU is considered one of the top arts and humanities institutions in Japan and especially within the field of printmaking. It also has successfully embraced a “global vision� with respect to cultural exchange among schools and communities. Musashi is an expert on contemporary printmaking, including non-toxic and photopolymer technologies.
Ted Shelton Raised in Chattanooga, Tennessee, Shelton received his Bachelor of Architecture degree from the University of Tennessee. While there, he received the Torchbearer Award, the highest honor bestowed upon undergraduates. Following graduation, Shelton began his architectural internship in Tulsa, Oklahoma while simultaneously earning a Master of Architecture in urban design from the University of Oklahoma. He then practiced in Seattle, Washington with, among other firms, the Miller|Hull Partnership. In 2002, Shelton was named a Fulbright Fellow. During his fellowship in Estonia, he investigated how architecture has been renovated, adapted and reused over the last century in repeated efforts to exert political and cultural influence. He then spent a year at the Martin Centre for Architectural and Urban studies at Cambridge University where he earned a Master of Philosophy in Environmental Design in Architecture. Following a brief stint practicing in Philadelphia, where he also served as an adjunct professor at Temple University, Ted joined the faculty at the University of Tennessee College of Architecture and Design in 2004, where he continues to serve as an assistant professor. Shelton is certified by the National Council of Architectural Registration Boards. He was a 2005 recipient of an Ecological Literacy in Architectural Education Award from the AIA National Committee on the Environment and the TIDES foundation, a 2007 Research for Practice Grant from the AIA National Board Knowledge Committee, and a 2008-09 Collaborative Practice Award from the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture.
Tricia Stuth A native of Wisconsin, Stuth earned both a BS in architectural studies and a Master of Architecture degree from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Following graduation she spent a year teaching at her alma mater as an adjunct instructor while simultaneously beginning her professional internship. After relocating to Seattle, she worked for several years as a project manager for the Miller|Hull Partnership. Stuth completed her internship with time in the offices of Ellis Miller Architects in Cambridge, England and Kieran Timberlake Associates in Philadelphia. While in Philadelphia, she was also an adjunct assistant professor at Temple University. In 2004 she joined the faculty of the College of Architecture and Design at the University of Tennessee where she continues to serve as an assistant professor of architecture. Stuth is licensed in Washington state and is certified by the National Council of Architectural Registration Boards. She is the recipient of the 2008-09 ACSA/AIAS, New Faculty Teaching Award, and the 2010 AIA Young Architects Award. Ted Shelton and Tricia Stuth are co-founders of and partners in the firm, curb, where they work collaboratively on projects that strive to heighten our understanding of place.
Highlights
20–21
Lisa Findley Lisa Findley is a professor and chair of the Bachelor of Architecture Program at CCA, where she teaches design studios and special topic seminars. Findley is a registered architect who writes primarily in public venues to expand the discussion about architecture and its position as a visual and cultural practice in a rapidly changing world. Her architectural education was underpinned by undergraduate work in environmental science and policy as well as political theory. As a result, her reading, research, and writing cross over into many other fields, including cultural geography and anthropology, cultural and postcolonial studies, landscape architecture, natural history, and cartography. She is a frequent participant in conferences related to architecture, geography, and cultural studies. Findley has taught and lectured at universities in Malaysia, Australia, and South Africa as well as throughout the United States. An active architectural journalist, Findley has written for numerous publications. The global scope of her interests are demonstrated in her many writings, including the book Building Change: Architecture, Politics and Cultural Agency, and many book chapters, including “Red and Gold: Two Apartheid Museums and the Politics of Space in the “New” South Africa” and “Architecture and the Representation of Culture: The Tjibaou Cultural Center.” Findley co-edited the Spring 2010 theme issue of the Journal of Architectural Education (JAE), “Changing Asia. She served on the editorial board of the JAE from 2004–10 and as a contributing editor to Architectural Record from 2003–10.
Walter Hood Walter Hood earned his BFA at the University of California and his MLA and MArch at the University of California Berkeley. Hood is a professor and former chair of the Landscape Architecture and Environmental Planning program at the University of California, Berkeley. His research interests include the critical examination and development of specific urban landscape typologies for the American city. Together they reflect and reinforce specific cultural, environmental, and physical complexities of the city and neighborhood landscape. Through his teaching, writing, and practice, Hood advocates the art of “Improvisation” as a design process for making urban landscapes and architecture. He established Walter Hood Designs in 1992, in Oakland, CA. The firm is committed to issues that address the reconstruction of urban landscapes within towns and cities. Hood Design’s approach is multi-dimensional, exploring the role of specific landscape typologies and topologies that together reinforce and re-make landscapes that are specific to place and people architecture. Hood’s projects include the landscape for the de Young Museum in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco and Poplar Street, a green boulevard in the heart of downtown Macon, GA.
Jonathan Segal Jonathan Segal FAIA & Development Company has been awarded six national AIA Honor Awards for their housing work. They have been responsible for the design and development of more than 300 medium to high-density urban residential, mixed use, and live/ work units totaling more than 300,000 square feet of construction. Segal is considered one of downtown San Diego’s most successful and pioneering residential architectural/development companies and has a reputation for providing superior housing at a lower cost than comparable properties. Their focus is exclusively on urban projects, ranging from 80 to 160 dwelling units per acre. Over the last 19 years, Segal has been the recipient of numerous accolades including 24 local, state and national AIA awards for residential and Urban Design.
Guy Nordenson Guy Nordenson is a professor of structural engineering and architecture at Princeton University and a faculty associate of the University Center for Human Values. Nordenson was the structural engineer for the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) expansion in New York, the Jubilee Church in Rome, the Simmons Residence Hall at MIT in Massachusetts, and more than 100 other projects. Nordenson is active in earthquake engineering, including code development, technology transfer, long-range planning for FEMA and the USGS, and research. Nordenson was the first recipient of the American Academy of Arts and Letters Academy Award in Architecture for contributions to architecture by a non-architect in 2003. He has served as Commissioner and Secretary of the New York City Public Design Commission since 2006. His project “On the Water—the NY/NJ Upper Bay” won the 2007 AIA College of Fellows Latrobe Research Prize. The research was published in On the Water | Palisade Bay (Hatje Cantz, Berlin 2010) and served as the inspiration for the MoMA workshop and exhibition “Rising Currents” in 2010. Nordenson was a recipient of the AIA’s 2009 Institute Honors for Collaborative Achievement Award. In 1997, he established Guy Nordenson and Associates (GNA) following a 20 year practice in San Francisco and New York, the last 10 as director of Ove Arup & Partners New York, which he established in 1987. The practice focuses on a number of on-going collaborations with architects. Recently completed projects include the New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York. GNA was also the structural engineer of the MoMA expansion in New York by Taniguchi and Associates with Severud Associates. Current projects include the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington DC with Freelon Adjaye Bond/Smith Group and the Kimbell Art Museum Expansion in Fort Worth with Renzo Piano Building Workshop. GNA has established itself as an effective collaborator in the design process of complex and challenging projects, including the World Trade Center Memorial Slurry Wall Bracing Structure in New York with Davis Brody Bond and Simpson Gumpertz & Heger. Highlights
22–23
Walter Bortolossi Bortolossi is considered the foremost representative of Italian Post-Pop Art, and is known for his kaleidoscopic compositions that critically and ironically dissect the sacred cows of post-industrial societies: mass media, information technology, scientific progress, addictive consumerism, omnipresent entertainment, and the struggles over economic power and globalization. Since 1991, he has exhibited in more than 100 public and private venues around the world. Some examples are “Nuove contaminazini” at the Modern Art Gallery in Udine, “Fine Weather” at the Ludwig Museum of Contemporary Art in Budapest and “Va pensiero” at the Museo Civico in Turin. Some of his works have been purchased by the Modern Art Gallery of Udine and make up part of the permanent collection. Culturally and geographically he regards himself as a Mittel-European. Bortolossi takes the deliriums of Austrian-Italian-Hungarian Jugendstil from the old Secession school to extremes, picking up the distinct sense of the disarming, decadent decoration, but in the place of the golds and the late Bzyantine quotations he places the contradictions of the philosophical and scientific thought of the twentieth century, mixing them with the icons of popular imagery, In contrast with many artists of the same generation who use figurative imagery Bortolossi’s painting is mainly a work of theory, where nothing is left to chance, and where every detail corresponds to a precise choice that must occupy a precise position within each project.
Patricio del Real Patricio del Real’s primary research focuses on the construction of a Latin American imaginary through modern architecture during the early years of the Cold War, and he is currently a PhD candidate in architectural history and theory at Columbia University in New York. He is presently co-editing an anthology titled, Latin American Modern Architectures: Ambiguous Territories, which will be published by Routledge in 2012. Del Real has taught architecture since 1991 at universities throughout the Americas and Europe. In 2001, while teaching at Clemson University, he jointly developed Studio South, a community-based design build program, which received the 2004 ACSA Collaborative Practice Award. He has lectured in Berlin, Montevideo, Paris, Mexico City and Havana, and given seminars at Royal College of Arts in London, England, the Universidad Torcuato di Tella, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, the University of Puerto Rico, and the Cooper Union in New York. In 2004, he co-organized “Inside Havana,” which brought together architecture students from Italy, Spain and Cuba in a two-week long architectural studio in Havana. Del Real has practiced architecture in the United States, Spain and Chile and participated in the International Biennial of Architecture in Havana, Cuba, since its inception. In 2004, he received a Graham Foundation Fellowship to support his ongoing research on contemporary vernacular constructions in Havana, where he has also participated in the construction of informal structures. His essays on issues of modernity in Latin America have appeared in journals such as Radical History Review, AULA, Pasajes, Positions, the Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies and AD: Architectural Design. Before moving to New York for his doctoral work, he served as the Director of the Clemson University Architecture Center in Barcelona, Spain.
Exhibitions Glassell Gallery
Design Commons
Shaw Center for the Arts, 100 Lafayette St., Baton Rouge, LA 70801
Louisiana State University, College of Art + Design 104 Design Building, Baton Rouge, LA 70803
Shawn Foreman Quantum Landscapes August 10–22, 2010
MFA Thesis Exhibition by Allison Regan Houses Move Houses Speak May 3 – 7, 2011
MFA Thesis Exhibition by Carter Perrilliat Communication in Today’s Network April 11 – 15, 2011
Robert Hausey A Life’s Work September 4 – October 16, 2010
MFA Thesis Exhibition by Kyle Bauer Course Over Ground May 3 – 7, 2011
Works by Melody Guichet with Carlyle Wolfe and Jacob Botter The Landscape and the Artist October 29 – February 13, 2011
MFA Thesis Exhibition by Shannon Kolvitz The Quiet May 10 – 14, 2011
MFA Thesis Exhibition by Phil Winfield Designing Graphic Design History: Teaching for the 21st Century Classroom April 25 – 29, 2011
Walter Bortolossi All That Happened Had to Happen February 19 – March 27, 2011 MFA Thesis exhibition by May Babcock The Latent Landscape April 5 – 9, 2011 MFA Thesis Exhibition by Adrienne Lynch wiggle veil (or, love needs objects) April 12 – 16, 2011 MFA Thesis Exhibition by Andrew Gilliatt Enumerate/Construct April 26 – 30, 2011 MFA Thesis Exhibition by Katie Knoeringer Mesmerized: One Cat Trampoline April 26 – 30, 2011
MFA Thesis Exhibition by Kelly C. Tate Of Reality: A Society of Selves May 10 – 14, 2011 MFA Thesis Exhibition by Kitty Pheney Inside Out May 17 – 21, 2011 Mon Doux Coton: Paintings by Saliha Staib June 4–30, 2011 10th Annual Summer Invitational July 9 – August 7, 2011 BFA Student Exhibition December 6–16, 2011
Art+Design Into the Abyss: Student Art Competition April 25 – 29, 2011
Foster Gallery Louisiana State University, 111 Foster Hall, Baton Rouge, LA 70803
Global Vision: Prints From Kyoto Seika University October 1 – November 19, 2010 Dr. David Eagleman The Art of Perception October 8, 2010 BFA Student Exhibition December 7–17, 2010 School of Art Faculty Show Recent Work January 24 – February 25, 2011 Eek! Get This Art Exhibit Off the Wall March 11 – 31, 2011 An MFA Thesis Exhibition by Brooke Cassady (and you?) communiPLAYtion getting our hands dirty together April 4–6, 2011
An MFA Thesis Exhibition by Kit French Island Hunting: Charting island occurrences around Baton Rouge and beyond April 25 – 29, 2011 An MFA Thesis Exhibition by Isoko Onodera Myths and Realities April 25 – 29, 2011 MFA Thesis Exhibition by Rebecca Kreisler A Matter of Time May 2 – 6, 2011 MFA Thesis Exhibition by Hannah Campbell Trials & Tributaries, Myth and Disaster in Southern Louisiana May 2 – 6, 2011 BFA Student Exhibition Colors and Textures May 10–20, 2011
MFA Thesis exhibition by Jessie Hornbrook Vessel Manifest April 11 – 15, 2011
Dean’s Message 2–3 Highlights 26–27
Dean’s Medals School of Architecture Jonathan Allen LeJune, undergraduate Nicole Reed, graduate School of Art Zachary Paul Cummings, undergraduate Phillip Winfield, graduate Department of Interior Design Dusti Kay Randall, undergraduate School of Landscape Architecture John Alex Ramirez, undergraduate Paul Toenjes, graduate
School of Architecture Scholarships Robert Sprague, Jr. Memorial Scholarship Shawn Christopher Mitchel Terry Devine Memorial Scholarship Alexander Logan Klein The Harvey Scholarship Ivan O’Garro Tiger Athletic Foundation Scholarship Ryan Michael Bertucci Kim-Trang Nguyen William Brockway Scholarship Kim-Trang Nguyen Percy Roberts Scholarship Kim-Trang Nguyen Robert Wesley Pennington, Jr. Torre Scholarship in Architecture Cody Michael Blanchard John Royce DeLord Tracy Cooper Leadership Award Elizabeth Marie Galan Page Southernland Page Scholarship LaQuinton Antwain Nimox School of Architecture Academic Achievement Erica Michelle Geromini Jessica Leigh Wasiloski Student Service Certificate Jonathan Allen LeJune Elizabeth Marie Galan Jonathan Henry House Matthew Satter AIAS Teaching Award Dr. Jason Shih
Inter-College/School Awards and Recognition
National/International Awards and Recognition
Competitions
Competitions
OJ Baker Jury: Steve Dumez, Nick Marshall, Michael McClure 1st John Philip Mouton 2nd Cody Michael Blanchard 3rd John Royce DeLord HM Laura Kathryn Martin Erica Michelle Geromini Acme Brick Jury: Chenevert Architects: Dyke Chenevert; Melissa Pourciau; Ray Tse; David Wiesendanger 1st BEDO Brick Shawn Christopher Mitchel John Royce DeLord 2nd LA Bagasse Brick Jessica Leigh Wasiloski Sarah Elizabeth Gravois 3rd Global Brick Laura Kathryn Martin Adrienne Claire Trahan HM—The Carnivorous Brick Cody Michael Blanchard Jordan Everett Crawford HM—Re[FUSE] Brick Michael Anthony Trahan Alexander Logan Klein
SuckerPunch Competition Guy Alexander Avellone Scholarships
PreCast Concrete Association Scholarship Cody Michael Blanchard
Highlights
28–29
School of Art Awards (*indicates book award)
AIA Henry Adams Medal AIA Henry Adams Certificate AIA Henry Adams Medal (GRAD) AIA Henry Adams Certificate (GRAD) Alpha Rho Chi Medal ARCC King Medal Technology Awards (Undergrad)* Technology Awards (GRAD)* R. W. Heck History Award* Digital Media*
Scholarships James Joseph Legeai, III Channing Bryce Risher Mallory Scott McKnight Jonathan Allen LeJune Laura Renae Meador James Joseph Legeai, III Mallory Scott McKnight (Moe) David Paul Allain (Bell) Jill Angelique Guillory (Moe) Erica Michelle Geromini Randy Allen Crowe (Kolarevic)
Year Level Design Awards:
Second year & Michael Robinson Scholarship* Brendan John Boudreau (Piano) Third year & Michael Robinson Scholarship* John Royce DeLord (Details) Fourth year & Michael Robinson Scholarship* Kim-Trang Nguyen (Scarpa) Fifth year & Michael Robinson Scholarship* Jonathan Allen LeJune (Braham) Grad. 1st Year & SoA Academic Achievement* Elizabeth Garland Dyer (Patkau) Grad. 2nd Year & SoA Academic Achievement * Benjamin John Buehrle (Scarpa) Grad. 3rd Year & SoA Academic Achievement* Channing Bryce Risher (Allied Works)
Archie Bray Foundation Summer Residency Scholarship Andrew Gilliat Baton Rouge Art League Undergraduate Art Scholarship Emily E. LaCour Sarah D. Phillips Charles Craig International Travel Award Meghan M. Singleton J. Kenneth Edmiston Scholarship Hope Amico Joe Bova Scholarship for Summer Study Rogerta Massuch Holly Shinn Miriam Barranger Memorial Scholarship Jami L. Toston Museum of Art Scholarship Adrianna Speer Scholarship to attend New York Studio School Summer Program Leo Madriz Emily E. LaCour Sarah D. Phillips School of Art General Scholarship Kyle Baker Kara Breaux Soleil Casas Uriel Echavarria Peter Giuffria Arrie A. Kain Emily E. LaCour Garrett Landry Meichi Lee Sarah D. Phillips Torre Scholarship in Art Dana V. Statton
Awards Aardvark Clay Purchase Award Andrew Gilliatt ADDY Awards, 2011, District 7 Regionals Gold Student ADDY LSU School of Art Identity, designed by GDSO Art Directors: Courtney Barr, Phil Winfield Graphic Designers: David Achee, Kyle Baker, Peter Giuffria, Garrett Landry, Melinda Thiessen, Eddie Laviolette Silver Student ADDY Peter Cagnolatti Uriel Echavarria Kyle Baker Nick LeBlanc Noel Guillory Jennifer Ator Best of Show Overall, Local LSU Advertising and Graphic Design Students Student Best of Show, Local David Achee Gold Student ADDY, Local David Achee Kyle Baker Peter Cagnolatti Ginger Dippel Uriel Echavarria Garrett Landry Eddie Laviolette Maggie Normand Kourtney McCloskey Jordan Pope Melinda Thiessen Phil Winfield American In-House Design Awards, Graphic Design USA magazine LSU School of Art Identity, designed by GDSO Art Directors: Courtney Barr, Phil Winfield Graphic Designers: David Achee, Kyle Baker, Peter Giuffria, Garrett Landry, Melinda Thiessen, Eddie Laviolette
Certificate of Achievement (LSU Black Faculty and Staff Caucus) Jami Toston
Accomplishments
Studio Assistantships
Katie Knoeringer, Arrowmount School of Arts and Crafts Roberta Massuch, Santa Fe Clay
Artist-in-Residencies
Kyle Bauer, Baltimore Clayworks Andrew Gilliatt, Red Lodge Clay Center Competitions
Art+Design Into the Abyss: Student Art Competition School of Art General Scholarship Fund Kara Breaux, 1st Place in Design Meichi Lee, 1st Place in Studio Art Soleil Casas, 2nd Place Kyle Baker, Garrett Landry, Uriel Echavarria and Peter Giuffria, 3rd Place Julia Yarbrough, Honorable Mention Will Haslam, Honorable Mention Invited to present papers
Randolph Damico Caitlin Lennon Dana V. Statton Internships
Ashley Arnold, Town & Country magazine Blair Lockhart, Sports Illustrated Dana V. Statton, National Portrait Gallery Publications
Andrew Gilliatt, Pottery Making Illustrated (cover)
Highlights
30–31
Department of Interior Design Scholarships and Awards Scott Gerard Verret Scholarship Alison Lipps Julia Lauve Lauren Pulling L Vincent Guaccero Memorial Scholarship Maggie Boggs Leslie Gambino Leigh Hardy Angela Portier Alyse Lambert Dixon Smith Scholarship Megan Chopin Undergraduate Student Interior Design Allison Pogue Canal Torre Scholarship in Interior Design Beverly Gaudin M. Dorothy Fletcher Field Studies Fund Christina Grush Carroll Mathews Sustainable Design Award Christine Navarro Tiger Athletic Foundation (GPA) Krista Loup Tiger Athletic Foundation (spec inc) Megan Montgomery
Competitions
ASID 1st Allison Goodman 2nd Francie Abell HM Hasan Ismael Cornerstone (Neocon) Audrecka Breaux
FYI: College of Art +Design student, Johnny Johnson, was honored at the Black Scholars Awards Program for maintaining a perfect 4.0 GPA. Congratulations Johnny!
Robert Reich School of Landscape Architecture Student Awards American Society of Landscape Architects Honor: Will Benge Patrick McGannon Alex Strader Merit: Sara Miller Alex Ramirez Will Tietje ASLA: Graduate Honor: Jessica Carvajal Paul Toenjes Merit: Lance Fulton Shuntaro Yahiro La Best Capstone Project BLA Zane Busbee BLA Will Tietje Director’s Award Petrie Baker Scholarship BLA William Strader MLA Paul Toenjes MLA Jessica Carvajal Leadership BLA Will Benge MLA Micah Hargrove Design BLA Patrick McGannon MLA Yahiro Shuntaro Design Implementation and Technology BLA Alex Ramirez MLA Paul Toenjes History and Theory BLA Kristen Lonon MLA Micah Hargrove
Natural Systems/Environmental BLA Garrett Newton MLA Robert Seeman Representation BLA Zane Busbee MLA Yahiro Shuntaro Service MLA Jessie Carvajal Thesis or Capstone Project MLA Yahiro Shuntaro Teaching MLA Micah Hargrove
Scholarships Andy Hart Travis Termini Atwell Champion Memorial Michael Petty Edward and Yvonne Harvey Scholarship Elsy Interiano Amy McGuire William E. Hornsey/Woods and Waters Chad Caletka Torre Design Scholarship Brennan Dedon Landscape Architecture Endowment Scholarship Kyle Jacobsen Peter Graves Chase Williston Audrey Cropp Charles Davis Travis Termini Luke Love Sarah Smith Martin Moser Elizabeth Boudreaux
Tucker Tremblay Miles Hamaker Brad Odom Ryan Steib Kaitlyn Weimer Kangeun Lee Stephanie Main Jordan Boan Jamie Yousten Helen Reich Memorial Scholarship Xueyao Wei Xue Bai Yuting Jiang Jia Li Hui Tian Li Wang Kyle Jacobsen Spencer McNab Peter Summerlin Matt Siebert LaBash Student Development Award TBA (Fall 2011 award) Robert S. Reich Travel Award Charles Davis Amy Norval Tanner Perrin Neil Odenwald Travel Award Michael Petty Tanner Perrin Seale Scholarship Elsy Interiano Tiger Athletic Foundation Scholarship Amy Norval Joseph Harvey Bethany Campbell
Highlights
32–33
The college continued to advance its research, instruction and service missions through the assistance received from a variety of public and private sector partners. Activities in this reporting period include ongoing and new projects supported by the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), Louisiana Department of Culture, Recreation & Tourism, Center for Planning Excellence (CPEX), Arts Council of Greater Baton Rouge, the National Wildlife Federation, America’s Wetland Foundation/Chevron, and numerous others. The following section highlights notable research, scholarship and creative activities conducted by the faculty and students during 2010-2011.
Faculty Highlights
34–35
Faculty Accomplishments Professor of Landscape Architecture Max Conrad
Chair of Department of Interior Design T.L. Ritchie
Conrad was on a team of landscape architects that took 3rd prize in a competition to design a drainage canal for Jefferson Parish, Louisiana. Jefferson Parish has a system of 340 miles of criss-crossing drainage canals and ditches. Parish President John Young highlighted the importance of drainage canals that attract neighbors, as opposed to being eyesores, saying, “If you visit an area and get lost in its charm and beauty, you are more likely to stay longer or return more quickly.” The firms entering the competition were encouraged to be practical and create a canal that would not adversely affect water flow, or be so elaborate and expensive, that the design could not be implemented. Twelve judges, ranging from landscape architects and engineers to business and finance experts, evaluated the seven finalists and came up with the winners.
Professor Ritchie was appointed to serve on the National Council for Interior Design Qualification’s (NCIDQ) Nominating Committee for 2010. The Nominating Committee is charged with reviewing applicants for the NCIDQ Board of Directors and nominating qualified candidates for election to the Board. “Our volunteer committee members are the backbone of our organization,” says NCIDQ Executive Director Jeffrey F. Kenney. “Their dedication and contribution to our mission of public protection illustrate their commitment to the profession of interior design. We know T.L. will be a wonderful asset to the Nominating Committee.” NCIDQ is an organization of regulatory boards and provincial associations in the United States and Canada whose core purpose is to protect the health, life safety and welfare of the public by establishing standards of competence in the practice of interior design.
Professor of Art Frederick Ortner Painter Frederick Ortner, who teaches in the College of Art & Design, had work chosen for The Prince Street Gallery’s 2011 National Juried Exhibition as well as The First Street Gallery’s 2011 National Juried Show. Both galleries are located in Manhattan. For the Prince Street Gallery’s show this year, 65 works were selected from 923 images submitted nationwide. The juror was William Bailey, a Professor Emeritus at the Yale School of Art, and an artist whose work is represented in the collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Museum of Modern Art.
Instructor of Art Jacqueline Dee Parker Painter and Poet Jacqueline Dee Parker had work chosen for “Spectrum,” a group show at Avis Frank, a contemporary art gallery in Galveston, Texas, as well as “Seeing Music,” a group invitational at the Garden District Gallery in New Orleans. The latter featured the work of artists exploring visual interpretations of music.
Professional in Residence of Architecture Marsha Cuddeback Professor Cuddeback, also director of the Office of Community Design and Development (OCDD), brought a group of students from the LSU College of Art and Design to South Africa as part of a service-learning project in August. Students worked in a rural township south of Cape Town where they used their skills and design expertise to improve the conditions of two preschools. The 17-day program, facilitated by the Office of Community Design and Development (OCDD), brought together students of various levels from the School of Architecture, Robert Reich School of Landscape Architecture and Department of Interior Design, and enabled them to earn course credit in the concentration of community design studies.
Associate Professor of Art History Darius Spieth Professor Spieth, in collaboration with the artist Walter Bortolossi, produced the catalog, All That Happened Had To Happen, which chronicles Bortolossi’s paintings in his first solo US exhibition at the LSU School of Art Glassell Gallery. In addition to showcasing Bortolossi’s work, Professor Spieth’s writing in the catalog explores the coexistence of “high” and “popular” culture, as well as tension between past and present.
Faculty Awards Summer Research Stipends
Courtney Barr Jun Zou
Gold and Silver ADDY Awards Lynne Baggett
Alpha Lambda Delta Freshman Honor Society Award Mark Zucker
AIA-Louisiana Best in Show Ursula Emery–McClure
AIA-Louisiana Postcard Competition Honorable Mention James Sullivan
AIA-Southwest Merit Award Ursula Emery–McClure
AIA-Baton Rouge Rose Award LA meets LA Residence/Coates Residence Addition
Gulf South Summit Outstanding Service Learning Faculty Award Marsha Cuddeback
Jefferson Parish Drainage Canal Design Competition (3rd Place) Max Conrad (team member)
Iraqi War Memorial Competition Entry (Short Listed) Cat Marshall
LSU Tiger Athletic Award Art + Design Outstanding Teacher Award Denyce Celentano Kristi Dykema
Mellon Visiting Fellowship (California Institute of Technology) Darius Spieth
Venice Biennale Design Invitational Ursula Emery–McClure
James Sullivan
American Graphic Design Award Paul Dean
Bead Dreams Exhibition Homemade Bead Award
Chris Hentz (1st Place)
Faculty Highlights
36–37
College of Art + Design Faculty 2010-2011 Architecture
Art
Bertolini, C. David
Associate Professor & Graduate Coordinator
Ariaz, Jeremiah
Assistant Professor
Arp, Kimberly
Professor
Baggett, Lynne
Associate Professor
Barr, Courtney
Assistant Professor
Beaman, James
Instructor
Book, Michael
Professor
Botter, Jacob
Instructor
Bower, Gerald
Professor
Celentano, Denyce
Associate Professor & Associate Director
Crespo, Michael
Professor
Dean, Paul
Associate Professor
Hentz, Christopher
Professor
Herster, Margot
Professional in Residence
Hess, Adam
Instructor
Hodgin, G. Scott
Instructor
Hunter, Kathryn
Instructor
Jiang, Yu
Instructor
Johns, Christopher
Professor
Johnson, Judy
Instructor
Kelley, Kelli Scott
Associate Professor
Koptcho, Leslie
Professor
Bosworth, Frank
Professor
Carpenter, Kenneth
Professor & Interim Dean
Castore, John
Professional in Residence
Chang, Aron
Professional in Residence
Cuddeback, Marsha
Professional in Residence & Director of OCDD
Desmond, Michael
Professor
Doran, Will
Professional in Residence
Emery–McClure, Ursula Associate Professor Erdman, Jori
Professor & Director
Galinski, Andrea
Professional in Residence
Kelsch, Kristen
Professional in Residence
Kennedy, Barrett
Professor
Lettow, Ash
Professional in Residence
Lipscomb, Richard
Professional in Residence
Melendez, Frank
Assistant Professor
Pitts, Michael
Associate Professor
Sattler, Meredith
Assistant Professor
Scriber, Ray
Professional in Residence
Shih, Jason
Professor
Sofranko, Thomas
Associate Professor & Associate Dean
Livaudais, Larry
Instructor
Sullivan, James
Associate Professor & Undergraduate Coordinator
Loch-Elvert, Regina
Instructor
Malveto, John
Associate Professor
Tipton, Ken
Professional in Residence
McClay, Malcolm
Associate Professor
Xanamane, Phanat
Instructor
Miles, Chicory
Instructor
Zwirn, Robert
Professor
Neff, Thomas
Professor & Graduate Coordinator
Ortner, Rick
Professor
Ostrenko, Frederick
Instructor
Parker, Jacqueline
Instructor
Parker, Roderick
Associate Professor & Director
Ryan, Susan
Professor
Savage, Matthew
Instructor
Schwerd, Loren
Assistant Professor
Shaw, Andy
Assistant Professor
Smith, Ed
Associate Professor
Spieth, Darius
Associate Professor
Walsh, Justin
Assistant Professor
Walsh, Michaelene
Associate Professor
Williamson, Laure
Instructor
Wreyford, Brad
Instructor
Zucker, Mark
Professor
Zucker, Susan
Assistant Professor (PT)
Interior Design
Landscape Architecture
Bilbao, Maria
Professional in Residence
Abbey, Dennis
Associate Professor
Blythe, Amanda
Professional in Residence
Allen, Austin
Associate Professor
Budd, Brian
Instructor
Allen, Glenn
Professor & Bickham Chair
Burns, Tracy
Instructor
Caffery, Mary
Instructor
Cantrell, Bradley
Assistant Professor & Graduate Coordinator
Carter, Elizabeth
Instructor
Conrad, Max
Professor
Dunn, Matthew
Associate Professor
Cox, Van
Professor & Interim Director
Douglas, Lake
Associate Professor
Dykema, Kristi
Assistant Professor
Fryling, Charles
Associate Professor
Hall, William
Professional in Residence Associate Professor
Edmonds, Matt
Professional in Residence
Greggio, Susanna
Professional in Residence
Hunt, Kristen
Professional in Residence
Ritchie, T.L.
Associate Professor & Chair
Tebbutt, Phillip
Associate Professor
Marshall, Cathy
Assistant Professor
Michaels, Wes
Assistant Professor & Undergraduate Coordinator
Mossop, Elizabeth
Professor
Pastorek, Marc
Professional in Residence
Rodewald-Bates, Seth
Professional in Residence
Risk, J. Kevin
Associate Professor
Sharky, Bruce
Professor
Zou, Jun
Dean’s Message 2–3 Faculty Highlights 38–39
New Faculty
Associate Professor Austin Allen (Landscape Architecture) holds a PhD in Mass Communication and an MA in Telecommunications Management from Ohio University and an AB in Landscape Architecture from UC Berkeley. Dr. Allen has extensive experience in planning and design strategies in working towards the recovery of both New Orleans’ Lower Ninth Ward after Hurricane Katrina and post-earthquake recovery efforts in Haiti where he took LSU students on a service learning project in the fall of 2010. He was the recipient of a 2009 American Society of Landscape Architects’ Professional Honors Award for Analysis and Planning. In 2009, he was the Inaugural Bickham Chair in the Robert Reich School of Landscape Architecture at LSU and has since joined as a tenured faculty member. He is also an independent filmmaker and editor. His work includes “Claiming Open Spaces,” a feature length documentary. Dr. Allen’s interests lie in resilience, recovery and regeneration of landscapes and place; urbanism; public space and public media, including film studies. He most recently taught courses integrating communication and film with planning, landscape and urban design theory and practice.
Assistant Professor Frank Melendez (Architecture) holds a Master of Architecture from Yale University, and a Bachelor of Architecture from the University of Arizona. Melendez has taught courses and participated in workshops that focus on Building Information Modeling (BIM), parametric modeling, and digital fabrication in architecture and design at various architecture schools including Yale and Princeton. Melendez previously worked at the office of Frank O. Gehry & Associates in Los Angeles, where he was involved with various projects including The Ray and Maria Stata Center, located on the MIT campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He also served as the Design Director at Urban A&O, an architecture and design firm in New York City, where he was involved in all of the phases of various projects including, The California Academy of Sciences - Steinhart Aquarium in San Francisco.
Assistant Professor Meredith Sattler (Architecture) holds a Master of Architecture and a Master of Environmental Management from Yale University and a Bachelor of Arts from Vassar College. She is a registered LEED AP. Previously, Ms. Sattler worked for Buro Happold Consulting Engineers on projects in Abu-Dhabi, São Paulo, and New York. She is the founder of cambioform, a furniture and environmental design studio. Her work has been exhibited nationally at venues including the Fuller Museum, the Houston Center for Contemporary Craft, and Nissan Design America. Her work has been published in Pad: The Guide to Ultra Living, Flaunt magazine and Martha Stewart Living. Previously, she worked as a set decorator and production manager for the film industry in Hollywood. Her awards include the Henry Luce Foundation Award in Restorative Environmental Design. Sattler has taught courses with a focus on sustainability and environmental impact since coming to LSU.
Faculty Retirements
Michael Book retired after 31 years as a Professor in the photography area of the School of Art. Professor Book works primarily with still life and the landscape, using medium and large format equipment, with both color and black and white materials. In 1994 he became a Fellow of The John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and spent a year photographing along the Mississippi River, producing an exhibition of eighty-five prints. In 2001, Book photographed the length of the Missouri River, and since then has turned his attentions to color materials, still taking the landscape as his subject. In 2007, he photographed the Ohio River, completing his work with the major rivers of America. He exhibits with Sorensen Christensen Gallery in New Orleans, and has published and placed his work in major collections.
Christopher Johns retired after 32 years as a Profes- Barrett Kennedy retired after 21 years as a Professor in the School of Architecture. Designated as an LSU sor in the painting and drawing area of the School of Art. His notable group exhibitions include Southern “Rainmaker” in recognition of his record of sponsored Abstraction (1989) curated by Peter Frank and Abstrac- research and academic scholarship, Kennedy joined the tion in Louisiana (1980) curated by Terrington Calas. LSU faculty with an expertise in historic preservation and emerging information technologies. His work at LSU has His work has been seen at the Contemporary Art Center included the establishment of the Office of Community in New Orleans, the Jan Cicero Gallery in Chicago, the Preservation, an initiative to promote heritage conservaAmerican Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters in tion through education, research, and documentation of New York City, the Peltz Gallery in Milwaukee and at Louisiana’s historic architecture. He was a founder and LA Art Core in Los Angeles. He is represented by The co-director of the LSU/GIS Clearinghouse Cooperative, Baton Rouge Gallery, and by the Perimeter Gallery in which won the Association of American Geographers’ Chicago. He was also represented by the Sylvia Schmidt Meredith Burrill National Award for community service Gallery in New Orleans from 1986-2005. His work can following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. While at LSU, Dr. be found in several public collections including the Charles Wustum Museum of Art in Racine, Wisconsin, Kennedy was involved in more than $3 million of sponsored research projects and published and presented his Continental Bank in Chicago, and Premier Bancorp in research in a variety of national venues. He was instruBaton Rouge. In 1999 he was an artist–in–residence at mental in contributing to the framework for LSU’s the David and Julia White Artists’ Colony in Ciudad nationally recognized service-learning program, and Colon, Costa Rica. Johns has also been a resident fellow believes that experiential learning through community at the Vermont Studio Center. In 1986, he was awarded a summer research grant from Louisiana State Univer- engagement is fundamental to preparing LSU students to become active agents of social, environmental, and sity and in that same year he was also awarded a Visual economic sustainability and vitality. Artists’ Fellowship from the State of Louisiana, Division of the Arts. He received a Visual Artists’ Fellowship from the Southern Arts Federation/National Endowment for the Arts in 1988. Faculty Highlights
40–41
Sponsored Research External/Private Sponsorship Highlights
Internal Sponsorship Highlights
National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) $34,880 F. Bosworth, M. Cuddeback, M. Desmond
LSU Summer Research Stipend $5,000 C. Barr $5,000 J. Zou
Louisiana Department of Culture, Recreation & Tourism $22,602 B. Kennedy Center for Planning Excellence (CPEX) $8,310 F. Bosworth, M. Cuddeback Arts Council of Greater Baton Rouge $3,000 L. Koptcho COMARGE/A.P. Sloan Foundation $50,000 C. Barr Heimbold Foundation $1,500 A. Allen Futhermore Grant (Publication) $1,000 L. Douglas National Wildlife Federation $30,000 J. Carney (Coastal Sustainability Studio) America’s Wetland Foundation/Chevron $300,000 Coastal Sustainability Studio (est. 2009) $150,000 Year 2 (2010) Coastal Sustainability Studio (CSS) $25,000 M. Sattler (Lafitte Project) $25,000 K. Dykema (Lafourche Project)
LSU Campus Federal Teaching Enhancement $700 L. Koptcho $700 K. Dykema $500 J. Zou $500 B. Cantrell $700 S. Ryan $500 V. Cellucci $500 K. Arp Teaching Thesis Directed Publications: Textbooks Published Shorter Works Participation in: Teaching Symposia Presenter Moderator Attending Visiting Critic Tenure Evaluations
21 2 1 10 3 4 8 2
Research & Creative Activity Journal Articles Books Published Books Edited Publications Reviewed Shorter Works Pending Publications Editorial Service Participation in: Presentation/Symposia Presenter Moderator Attending Exhibitions solo group curated
1 2 4 5 14 19 3 37 4 11 49 62 4
Service Professional Organizations Membership Member 48 Chair 8 University Membership Member 30 Chair 3
Total External Sponsorships: $651,292 Total Internal Sponsorships: $13,100
Dean’s Message
2–3
FYI: Sixty-percent of African American College of Art +Design students were honored at the 2011 Black Scholars Awards Program. Twenty-five African American students were honored this year for having GPAs at or above 3.00.
FYI: There are currently 138 graduate students enrolled in Art+ Design (77=female, 61=male).
FYI: There are currently 890 undergraduate students enrolled in Art+Design (568=female, 322=male).
Dean’s Message
2–3
The College of Art +Design’s Development Office had a very successful year of fundraising in spite of the turbulent financial markets. In its 12th year, the development staff continued to raise funds in support of the College’s various programs. The total value of financial assets in the College as of the fiscal year-end is at a record high of approximately $13.9 million. This figure represents a growth of approximately 3.1% over last year’s total value. The College proudly exceeded its goal for the Forever LSU Campaign by 4.3%. Now more than ever, the College strives to engage and reengage its alumni and to seek their support and update them on the successful things happening in the College. The development staff sends these updates via electronic mail and publishes an annual newsletter in the spring and an annual report in the fall.
Last year was an exceptionally good year for donations as reflected by the following numbers: • Lecture Series up by 6.1% • Scholarships up by 4.1% • Miscellaneous Gifts up by 18.9%
The development office staff continues to work with the dean, school directors and department chair to identity alumni and friends who may be able to lend support to the College. Current and potential donors are stewarded to maximize their giving to the College and identify their area of interest. The students, faculty and staff thank the loyal supporters who are helping to maintain and exceed the giving level achieved last year.
Development
46–47
Funding Opportunities 2010–2011 Leadership Fund
Lecture Series
Contributions to the College’s leadership fund enhance each program by providing opportunities for student leadership training, national student professional organization support, and faculty leadership development. Leadership funds are critical for the Schools if they are to graduate young artists and designers who will guide tomorrow’s professions and assume leadership roles in the local community. Support of this fund permits students to attend national conferences, participate in leadership training workshops and seminars, and supports unique leadership-related events. These funds also support faculty development in the area of leadership and mentoring programs. The Leadership Development Fund is part of the value-added educational initiative developed by the College to enhance student learning experiences and outcomes.
The College Art +Design Distinguished Lecture Series Fund seeks funding to bring nationally and internationally acclaimed architects, interior designers, landscape architects, graphic designers, art historians, as well as fine artists to the LSU campus for the benefit of students and the general public. The Art +Design lecture series expands the learning environment for students by encouraging a spirit of risk taking through the example of others, exciting an appetite for thinking and nurturing the capacity to create. At the same time, the visiting lecture series reaffirms the College’s land-grant mission while increasing cultural capital through service to the Louisiana arts and cultural community through a distinctive public education program. Since its inception in 1999, a total of 126 lectures have been given; with 17 lectures sponsored by the Schools of Architecture, Art and Landscape Architecture and 109 lectures sponsored by alumni, corporations and generous individuals.
Scholarship The College of Art +Design Student Scholarship Fund was established to create scholarship awards for both graduate students and undergraduates in the disciplines of architecture, art, art history, community design, graphic design, interior design and landscape architecture. Scholarship support has assumed a higher priority for two reasons. One, the College is increasingly competing against other national programs for the very best, high-achieving, high school and graduate students; two, expenses are constantly rising for a quality education. Currently, students admitted to the College’s programs exceed the average test scores for entering undergraduates at LSU. This is an indication of the individual Schools’ strength within the university and the value others see in our efforts. However, as we actively recruit National Merit Scholars and other high performing students, we find we cannot be competitive with other institutions in the region because of our limited scholarship resources. If we are to meet our strategic objectives, we will need to offer financial incentives to effectively recruit the very best students. Undergraduate and graduate student scholarships will assist us in meeting our goals. On the average, 148 scholarships are awarded yearly by the College.
Distinguished Faculty Fund
Highschool Career Discovery Workshop
Two ingredients make a great school: outstanding students and creative faculty. The Distinguished Faculty Fund seeks to provide professorships and a chair to reward outstanding faculty and augment our faculty ranks with national and international artists, designers and scholars.
In this workshop, participants will meet professional designers, learn how they work, and learn how they prepared for their careers. As part of the workshop, students will explore design ideas in studios, go on field-trips, attend lectures, and participate in critiques and seminars. Through their experiences, the participants will learn what a design professional does, how they become licensed and the opportunities available in the fields of Architecture and Interior Design. The workshop is sponsored by the School of Architecture, the Department of Interior Design, and the College of Art +Design.
Studio Sponsorship The College Art +Design seeks funding for studio sponsorships in all four units of the College. Sponsors will be invited to student reviews, to design studios and to work with students. Funding will be used to offset the costs of field trips, publications and printing. The interaction between the students and sponsors will expand the learning environment for the students, since they will be interacting and visiting with professionals in their fields.
The workshop is a one week residential program held during the summer. Housing is in the campus dorms and meals are provided the cafeteria for the duration of the workshop. Scholarships are awarded to applicants based on financial need.
Renovation Fund The College Renovation Master Plan identifies rehabilitations to all four College buildings and three adjacent exterior spaces that distinguish the College on campus. Naming opportunities have been identified with spaces in all the buildings. To commemorate the gift, each area will have a stainless steel plaque announcing the donor’s gift. Additionally, each donor’s name will be inscribed on the Renovation Fund plaque housed in the College atrium.
Development
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CoA+D Endowment and Non-Endowment Totals 2011 Architecture
Art
Interior Design
Landscape Architecture
Scholarship/Awards $ 709,781
Scholarship/Awards $ 510,031
Scholarship/Awards $ 142,668
Scholarship/Awards
$ 1,166,888
Faculty
Faculty
$ 177,894
Faculty
Faculty
$ 1,641,897
$ 233,952
$ 124,694
Lecture Series
$ 13,819
Lecture Series
$ 279,627
Lecture Series
$ 10
Other
$ 13,673
Other
$ 512,870
Other
$ 7,354
Total
$ 971,225
Total
$ 1,480,422
Total
$ 274,726
Estate Gifts
$ 3,765,283
College of Art + Design Scholarship/Awards Faculty
$0 $ 1,198,040
Lecture Series
$ 947,428
Other
$ 596,658
Total
$ 2,742,126
CADGIS
$ 452
CCS
$ 119,070
In-Kind Gifts
Total
$ 119,522
Total
$ 204,748
$ 3,970,031
Lecture Series Other Total
$ 124,991 $ 1,375,279
$ 4,309,055
Grand Total $13,867,107
Dean’s Message
2–3
Alumni Gifts We would like to thank all the donors for their support and generosity. The gifts below are from July 1, 2010–June 30, 2011. 1954 Robert C. Green Ernest E. “Ernie” Verges
BLA BArch
1955 Wayne M. Womack
BLA
1960 Neil G. Odenwald
MLA
1961 Max Z. Conrad
BLA
1962 Emmett C. Hinson John P. Ribes William C. Welch
BArch BLA BLA
1967 George T. McConnell, Jr. Nadine Carter Russell Philip A. Thompson
BArch BFA BLA
1968 H. Rowland Jackson
BLA
1969 James R. Turner
BLA
1971 R.A. “Allen” Eskew Andre P. Neff William R. Sweet
BArch MArch 77 BLA BLA
1972 Randall D. Broussard Jesse D. Cannon, Jr. Charles J. Collins, Jr. Van L. Cox Carroll K. Mathews
BArch BArch BArch BLA MFA 79 BID
1973 James G. Howell
BArch
1974 Douglas J. Bourgeois Jane S. Brooks Richard A. Brown Stephen M. Caplinger Dennis J. Duff Julio F. Dumas Louis “Kent” Lancaster Jennifer A. Landry Robert B. Swan
BFA BLA BArch BLA BLA BLA BArch BID BArch
1975 JoAnne Bruser Charles D. Cadenhead JoAnn D. Hymel Stephen A. Wilson
MFA BArch BID BLA MFA 78
1976 William “Bill” S. Reich BLA Percy “Rebel” E. Roberts III BArch George E. Stanziale, Jr. BLA James L. Westcoat, Jr. BLA
1977 Donna L. Caplinger René J. Fransen Edwin L. Gerlach, Jr. Anna Calluori Holcombe J. Ashley Inabnet Paul R. Lentz Stephen J. Rusbar
BID BLA BLA MFA BArch BArch BLA
1978 Wayne P. Bossier BArch Raymond L. Braun BLA Robert B. Burns BLA David M. Funderburk MLA Carol L. Goldsmith BLA Stephen P. Jackson BArch Terry “May” Lewis BLA Douglas P. Reed BLA James “Jim” P. Richards, Jr. BLA Donald A. Shaffer BArch Margaret N. Waring BLA 1979 Dana Nunez Brown Laurie F. Childers Antoniette C. Kearny Keith P. LeBlanc Patrick C. Moore Mark J. Ripple Lisa J. Rosenbaum Tambra W. Shell Drury J. Tallant
BLA BFA BID BLA BLA BArch BID BLA MArch
1980 Raymond Chin Harry F. Dill, Jr. Steven A. Fritts Julius ”Jim” R. Furr Henry T. Rowlan Sharon L. Smith
BLA BLA MLA BLA MLA BArch
1981 Harry L. Belton Kenneth “Ken” W. Tipton, Jr.
BLA BArch
1982 Steve L. Dumez Kim Hartley Hawkins Gary L. Hawkins W. Alan Mumford Peter W. Newton Robert “Steven” Rutledge Helen C. Schneider Sandra L. Tallant
BArch BLA MLA BLA MLA BLA BArch BLA
1983 Cynthia Belisle Laurie A. Buhrer James D.”Jim” Burnett Dohn H. LaBiche Melinda G. Larson Marianne R. Mumford Tim J. Orlando Victor “Trey” F. Trahan, III
BArch BID BLA BArch BLA BLA BLA BArch
1984 Linda M. Barfield Cynthia L. Coco Michael M. Lemm Chad P. Robert William M. Salario Mark D. Scioneaux
BLA BFA BLA BLA BLA BLA
1985 Mary Ann Caffery Jeffrey K. Carbo Sarah W. Lake
MFA BLA MLA
1986 Judy B. Brittenum Steven A. Ochsner Stacey E. Serro
MLA MLA BID
1987 Ann B. Kennedy
MLA
1988 Cynthia A. Maughan
BID
1989 Sally J. Banttari Delois Barnes Claire Walker Kettelkamp Pamela J. Lulich Robin S. Roberts Elizabeth “Boo” Thomas
MLA BLA BLA BLA BArch MLA
1990 Chad D. Danos
BLA
1992 Daniel M. Bruce, Jr. Marion D. Drummond Richard J. Hymel Dianna P. Odom Lisa H. Nice
BArch MLA BLA BArch BArch
1993 Wenfei Feng
MArch
1994 Lea C. Roy
BFA
1995 Heather L. Neyer Bo Sun
BID MLA
1996 Peggy Davis Coates Leah R. Leitson Carolyn R. Lirette Wes Wilkinson
MLA MFA BID MLA
1997 Warren L. Kron, Jr. Judith A. Verges
BLA MArch
1998 Hannah K. Heltz Heath J. Thibodeaux
BID BLA
1999 Scott J. Treadway
BLA
2000 Emil j. Martone
BArch
2001 Rebecca Barber Bradley Robert S. Mellon Emily C. Torrence
BLA BFA BID
2002 Daniel W. Solis
BArch
2003 Kelly M. Jackson Maia F. Jalenak Lacey T. Olivares
BFA MFA BFA
2004 Arrie A. Kain Leigh E. LaFargue Kenneth A. McAshan Alexandra L. Pearson Peter J. Spera, III
BFA MFA 11 MLA MFA BFA BArch
2005 Casey L. Matthes Seth M. Rodewald-Bates
BFA MLA
2006 Madeline Subat Ellis Richard D. Ellis Cody N. Farris Justin K. Lemoine
BLA BLA BArch BLA
2007 Jeanne C. Cresap J. Douglas Detiveaux Israel C. Duke Cara J. Kearns Aaron StPierre June M. Tuma Patricia F. Vining
BFA BID BFA BFA BLA BFA MFA
2008 Carl E. Blyskal William “Austin” Evans
MFA BLA
2009 Margaret E. Bowles Mark S. Crow Jennifer V. Mayer Peter J. Spera, III
BFA BArch MFA BArch
Development
52–53
Gifts from Corporate Sponsors We would like to thank all the donors for their support and generosity. The gifts below are from July 1, 2010–June 30, 2011. $10,000+ Hawkins Partners Landscape Images Torre Design Consortium Ltd. Townscape Studio, Inc. $5,000 + Friends of Hilltop Arboretum Jeffrey K. Carbo, FASLA Landscape Architect & Site Planner National Council of Architectural Registration Boards(NCARB) Reich Associates $2,000+ Art Council of Greater Baton Rouge Dixon Smith Interiors Environmental Resource Management Eskew+Dumez+Ripple Exteriors by Chad Robert, Inc. Exxon Mobil Corporation Newton Landscape Group Reed Hilderbrand Associates, Inc. Tipton Associates, APAC VOA Associates $1,000+ Acme Brick Company AIA-Baton Rouge Chapter Brown+Danos Landdesign, Inc. LaBiche Architectural Group, Inc. Randall D. Broussard Architect, LLC Terry Lewis Landscape Architect Verges Rome Architects WHR Architects, Inc.
$1,000ADR, Inc. Arnold Landscape Architect Bani, Carville, Brown Architects, Inc. Benchmark Group, LLC Bienville House Center Brown & Scioneaux Office of James Burnett Cadence Caffery Art Gallery Capitol City Produce Charles J. Collins, Jr. , Architect Cockfield Jackson Architects CSRS, Inc. Cindy B. Maughan & Associates Dei Imago, LLC DV Studios Ferris Land Design, LLC Haden-Stanziale Hannah Heltz Interior Design, LLC Hannis T. Bourgeois, LLP Impact Advisors, LLC JRL Design Studios, LLC Julius R. Furr Landscaping Katina Planning + Design Kettelkamp & Kettelkamp Keith LeBlanc Landscape Architecture, Inc. Oscar L. Schoenfelt III, LLC René J. Fransen Landscape Architect Robert E. Forsythe Landscape Architect
Sarah W. Lake Landscape Design Seyler Favaloro Stephen Wilson Stained Glass Trahan Architects, APAC Waring-Braun Landscape, Inc. William Salario Landscape Design, Inc.
FYI: Our average high school GPA for this year’s incoming freshmen class was 3.5.
Gifts from Individual Sponsors We would like to thank all the donors for their support and generosity. The gifts below are from July 1, 2010–June 30, 2011. $300,000+ Sue W. Turner $30,000+ Nadine Carter Russell $10,000+ Gary & Kim Hawkins W. Alan & Marianne R. Mumford Scott W. Purdin & Susan L. Turner Jim P. & Patti Richards John G. Turner & Jerry G. Fischer $5,000+ Marvin E. & Susan M. Borgmeyer Jeffrey ” Jeff ” K. & Wendy Carbo Eugene T. “Trip” Glankler (In Memory) Alma Lee ( In Memory) Tim J. Orlando William “Bill” A. Reich Kevin P. Reilly, Jr & Winifred Reilly Chad P. Robert L.C. “Cary” Saurage Henry N. Saurage (In Memory) Martha T. Smith Thomas B. Smith (In Memory) Kenneth “Ken” W. Tipton, Jr. Roland M. & Kathryn B. “Kay” Toups $2,500+ Marilyn Barbier Steve L. Dumez R.A. “Allen” Eskew Patrick C. Moore Peter W. Newton Heather L. Neyer
Douglas P. Reed Mark J. Ripple Percy “Rebel” E. & Leigh Ann Roberts III Dixon K. Smith Michael D. Robinson & Donald J. Boutté $2,000+ Clark G. Boyce, Jr. Robert L. Galantucci $1,000+ Robert T. & Linda H. Bowsher Randall D. Broussard Dana Nunez Brown Terrell & Mary Kay Brown Max Z. Conrad Chad D. Danos Dr. Robert T. Grissom Dr. Richard & Barbara Hill Dohn H. LaBiche Keith P. LeBlanc Terry M. Lewis Gale F. Linster John W. Milazzo, Jr. Roger H. Ogden Seth M. Rodewald-Bates Bruce G. & Nola Sharky Dr. John A. & Elizabeth “Boo” Thomas Ernest E. “Ernie” Verges Judith A. Verges $1,000Terry P. Adams Joan A. Album Donald A. Arnold
Genevieve Athens Carolyn Baker-McCord Jack R. & Sally J. Banttari Delois Barnes John H. & Aimee O. Bateman Dr. Roby & Barbara Bearden, Jr. Cynthia Belisle Harry L. Belton Carl E. & Susan A. Blyskal Louis J. Jr. & Julianne T. Bonnecaze Randy J. & Carol J. Bonnecaze Wayne P. Bossier Douglas J. Bourgeois Hannis T. Bourgeois Margaret E. Bowles Rebecca B. Bradley Gregory G. Brandl Raymond Braun & Margaret Waring Claudia S. Brian Judy B. Brittenum Jane S. Brooks Patricia E. Brown Richard A. Brown James “Jim” D. Burnett Henry B. III & Joanne Bruser Laurie A. Buhrer Robert B. Burns John H. & Christine H. Burton Charles D. Cadenhead Mary Ann Caffery Jesse D, Jr. & Mary A. Cannon Stephen M. & Donna L. Caplinger Ken & Mary Alice Carpenter Stephen N. & Anne S. Carville Robert R. Casey Laurie F. Childers Raymond & Mei Wan Chin
Catherine Coates Charles H. & Peggy Davis Coates D.W. & Beverly Coates Cynthia L. Coco Charles J. Collins, Jr. Paul J. Connelly Van L. Cox Jeanne C. Cresap Michael P. & Susan E. Cresap Harry J. & Susan S. Crosby Mark S. Crow Sara E. Crow Richard H. Davis Barbara C. Decuir J. Douglas Detiveaux Harry F. Dill, Jr. C.R. “Bob” Dillemuth Marion D. Drummond Dennis J. Duff Isral C. Duke Julio F. Dumas E. Anne Dunn Douglas K. & Mary B. Durnin David F. & Carol H. Dwight Cody N. Farris A. Shelby Easterly III Dorothy B. Eglin Richard D. & Madeline Subat Ellis William “Austin” Evans Seyler Favaloro Wenfei Feng Nina A. Ford Robert E. Forsythe René J. Fransen Steven A. Fritts David M. Funderburk Julius R. Furr Development
54–55
Joseph W. Gary Edwin L., Jr & Trudi Gerlach Barbara G. Gibbs Carol L. Goldsmith Robert C. & Sarah C. Green Marcella W. Hackney Brian J. & Cathy Hales Christopher Hall J.R. Harleson Kyle E. Harms Rufus C. Harris, Jr. Hannah K. Heltz Daniel R. & Polly R. Henderson Mr. Benjamin & Dr. Nancy M. Hillman Robert Hines, Sr. Emmett C. Hinson Anna Calluori Holcombe Margaret G. Holford James G. Howell Mary Jane Howell Michael W. & Eleanor B. Howes JoAnn D. Hymel Richard J. Hymel J. Ashley Inabnet Jim Inzer H. Rowland Jackson Kelly M. Jackson Stephen P. Jackson Maia F. Jalenak Josephine D. James Cheney & Mary T. Joseph Arrie A. Kain Cara J. Kearns Frederic & Antoiniette C. Kearny Ann B. Kennedy Claire Walker Kettelkamp Erica Knott
Warren L. Krons, Jr. Leigh E. LaFargue Sarah W. Lake Louis K. “Kent” Lancaster Jennifer A. Landry Melinda G. Larson Leah R. Leitson Michael M. Lemm Justin K. Lemoine Paul R. Lentz Gale F. Linster Susan D. Lippincott Carolyn R. Lirette Pamela J. Lulich Herbert J., Jr. & Susan Q. Mang Emil J. Martone Robert “Dale” & Carroll K. Mathews Casey L. Matthes Marchita B. Mauck Cindy B. Maughan Jennifer V. Mayer Kenneth A. McAshan George T. McConnell, Jr. Clark N. Mclellan, Jr. Dr. Francis C. & Ann G. McMains Robert S. Mellon John W. Milazzo, Jr. John C. & Frances A. Monroe William & Ann Monroe Melanine C. Montanaro David J. & Elizabeth S. Morgan Herman & Janet Moyse III Daniel E. Mulligan D. Denis & Carolyn Murrell Darwina L. Neal Andre Neff Garrett Newton ( In Honor)
Lisa H. Nice Steven A Ochsner Neil G. & Rebekah L. Odenwald Dianna P. Odom Lacey T. Olivares William G. Palmer Ben H. & Mary L. Peabody Alexandra L. Pearson Edward R. Pramuk (In Honor) John P. Ribes Robin S. Roberts Ronald I. Rodi Suzanne Z. Rollins (In Honor) Brice S. & Susan S. Rolston Lisa T. Rosenbaum Henry T. Rowlan Lea C. Roy Rosalind M. & David S. Rubin Stephen J. Rusbar Robert S. “Steven” Rutledge William M. Salario Richard G. Savoy Helen C. Schneider Oscar L. Schoenfelt III Mark D. Scioneaux Stacey E. Serio Donald A. Shaffer Tambra W. Shell Joseph G. Simmons & Patricia Day Marvin L. Smith Sharon V. Smith Daniel W. Solis Micah Sondersman Covert A. Soulé, Jr. Peter J. Spera, III Aaron St. Pierre Felicia B. Stallard
George E. Stanziale, Jr. Bo Sun Robert B. Swan William R. Sweet Drury J. & Sandra L. Tallant Katina B. Tassopoulas Brownie Taylor Heath J. Thibodeaux Philip A. Thompson Emily C. Torrance Victor F.” Trey” Trahan III Scott J. Treadway June M. Tuma James R. & Meriget Turner Meredith R. Underwood Donna S. Vetter Stafford J. & Susan M. Viator Charles B. & Patricia Vining Van Wade-Day Eve P. Watson (In Memory) Jerry L. & LeEarle H. Watts Alicia M. Weichers Margie Weinreb William C. Welch James L. Westcoat, Jr. Wes Wilkerson Stephen A. Wilson Wayne M. Womack
We are pleased to introduce the 2011 College of Art +Design Annual Report. Once again, the publication was designed by the Graphic Design Student Office (GDSO). These students experience the full process of producing the Annual Report, including meeting with the copy editor and production team, visiting the printer, creating presentations of design concepts for critiques, selecting artwork and following the project through to completion. Our appreciation extends to the GDSO, whose hard work and creativity helped to make this publication possible. The Annual Report was produced with Adobe InDesign CS4. The text is set in 9 pt Minion Pro. It is printed on 80# McCoy Velvet White text. LSU School of Art Graphic Design Student Office Designers: Natalie Del Pino, Eric Olivier Faculty Advisors: Rod Parker, Courtney Barr
COLLEGE OF ART+ DESIGN 102 DESIGN BUILDING 路 BATON ROUGE, LA 70803-7010
Educating to create, invent, transform