CoAD Annual Report 2012

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Dean’s Message Goals + Objectives Highlights

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School of Architecture

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School of Art

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Department of Interior Design

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School of Landscape Architecture

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2011-2012 CoA+D Lecture Series

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Exhibitions

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Student Awards

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2011-2012 CoA+D Faculty

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New Faculty

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Sponsored Research

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Development

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Funding Opportunities

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Endowment & Non-Endowment Totals

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Gifts

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Dean’s Message This will be my last dean’s message, and I have resolved not

Surveying Engineering in Greece. He also served as proj-

Dr. Pomeroy received her BA from Bryn Mawr College in

to allow a discussion of financial difficulties to override the

ect architect for the National University of Athens in Greece

Pennsylvania and her MA and PhD from Columbia University

good news of the College. I might easily sound like an alarm-

and remains an architect-partner with Athens-based firm P.A.

in New York. She received a post-doctoral fellowship from

ist, but all of you know the plight of LSU and higher education

Tsolakis-A.I. Zannos and Associates. Alkis is scheduled to offi-

the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art in London

in Louisiana. You don’t need me to elaborate on the subject

cially become the dean of the College in January 2013, but

and is the author of Intrepid Women: Victorian Artists Travel,

again.

will visit the campus this fall to transition into the position. I

published in 2005 by Ashgate Publishing.

First, let me share the very good news that we have a new

will remain interim dean through December.

As you can see, we are in good hands with our accomplished

dean. Alkis P. Tsolakis, professor of architecture and acting

In addition to a new dean, we will soon have Brad Cantrell

new leadership. As I pass the baton to Dean Tsolakis, I must

director of the art department at Drury University in Spring-

as the new director of the Robert Reich School of Landscape

say it has been a great pleasure to represent the faculty and

field, MO, has been selected to serve as the next dean of the

Architecture. Brad is the Emerson Womack Design Profes-

students of this college. I know our students, our faculty,

College of Art and Design. Tsolakis earned his BA from the

sor of Landscape Architecture and graduate coordinator. In

and our administrative leadership will continue to make you

University of Pennsylvania and his MA in Architecture from

January, when he becomes the director, he will have been a

proud of our school, and this publication will continue to give

the University of Oregon. He is registered professionally as

member of the faculty for eight years. Brad received his BS

evidence to that claim.

an architect with Greece’s Ministry of Public Works, and is also

in landscape architecture from the University of Kentucky in

a member of the National Technical Chamber of Greece, the

2001 and his MLA from the Graduate School of Design at

Association of Greek Architects and is an associate member

Harvard in 2003. The school faculty is very supportive of his

of the American Institute of Architects.

appointment, and we are all looking forward to his leadership.

Tsolakis has worked on the architecture faculty at Drury

Jordana Pomeroy took the helm as executive director of the

University since 1987. He was previously a visiting assistant

LSU Museum of Art, on July 2. Pomeroy comes to LSU after

professor at the University of Oregon and was a co-director

serving as chief curator at the National Museum of Women

and instructor at Tulane. Tsolakis has served as an architectural consultant for companies including Bass Pro Shops’ corporate headquarters in Springfield, MO; Atelier for Architecture and Design in Zurich, Switzerland, and E. I. Stambouloglou, Photogammetry and

Please don’t waver in your support to the College of Art + Design at this crucial time. As the newest members of the college administration, I know Dean Talkis, Dr. Pomeroy and Director Contrell will be particularly appreciative of your help and loyalty. It has certainly meant a lot to me. Thank you,

in the Arts in Washington, D.C. While there, she organized numerous exhibitions ranging from “An Imperial Collection: Women Artists from the State Hermitage Museum” in 2003

Ken Carpenter Interim Dean

and “Italian Women Artists from Renaissance to Baroque” in 2007, to “Nordic Cool: Hot Women Designers” in 2004 and “Pressing Ideas: Fifty Years of Women’s Lithographs from Tamarind” in 2010.

Dean’s Message

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Goals + Objectives With the implementation of the University’s strategic plan,

Discovery: Pushing our limits to generate and instill profes-

LSU Flagship 2020, the College of Art +Design has focused

sional knowledge in the fields of art, architecture, land-

its GOALS in the areas of:

scape 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 facultyled and student-centered learning environment that develops engaged citizens and enlightened leaders. Diversity: Strengthening the intellectual environment for our students 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:

t Broaden our national recognition as leaders in our disciplines

t Create new knowledge, insights, and interests in art and design

t Encourage interdisciplinary activity across the College

t Develop an international perspective t Improve physical facilities t Increase minority representation within the College t Increase understanding and appreciation of diversity issues as they affect the various disciplines

t Increase civic/community contributions by individuals t Increase class involvement in civic/community activity t Improve our resource management

Goals + Objectives

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Here is how we are already meeting some of our objectives:

Improve Physical Facilities A $12 million renovation of our Studio Arts Buildings is underway.

Encourage interdisciplinary activity across the College Our Coastal Sustainability Studio (CSS) Received a $600,000 contract to oversee the Office of Community Development’s Resilience Assistance Program post-hurricanes.


Broaden our national recognition

Increase minority representation within the College

The following new hires to the College are nationally recognized in their respective fields:

In the past five years, the number of African American students who are art majors has

Executive Director of the LSU Museum of Art Jordana Pomeroy; Dean Alkis P. Tsolakis

more than doubled. The number of Hispanic/Latino students who are art majors also has nearly tripled.

Goals + Objectives 6-7



Highlights 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

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Accomplishments t The Foundation for Louisiana awarded $25,000 to

t Associate Professor Ursula Emery McClure received

the School of Architecture’s Office of Community

more than $75,000 in grants (including an ATLAS award)

Design and Development (OCDD) to conduct

to investigate the ruins of a 19th century Louisiana

a 10-month public service project and pilot

Fort. Additionally, she and her architecture firm,

study, “Advancing Louisiana Small Town and

Emerymcclure Architecture, were selected as one of 10

Rural Community Development.” The study will

winners of the national Sukkah City STL competition at

take place in northeast Louisiana and explore

Washington University in St. Louis.

new strategic approaches to community design and planning solutions which address common problems in the physical environment related to community health, education, quality of life, and economic prosperity in rural communities. Hospitals, public safety facilities and schools, among other institutions, will be evaluated to see if their physical condition correlates with performance on health, education and economic measures. Schools will also be evaluated to determine which improvements will advance community based education.

t Associate Professor Jim Sullivan’s office, Louisiana Architecture Bureau, won an AIA Louisiana Merit Award for the LA Meets LA Residence.


Accomplishments t LSU saw a 14-position improvement in the ranking of

t In addition to the visiting artists who appeared as part

Best Fine Arts graduate programs since its last ranking

of the College’s visiting lecture series, the School of Art

in the 2013 edition of U.S. News & World Report’s

had the following visiting artists: Christine Baeumler,

America’s Best Graduate Schools, released March 13.

Laura Blereau, Lauren Gallaspy, Jan Gilbert, Julian Reid

t Art History Professor Susan Elizabeth Ryan, PhD, recently won a $50,000 Award to Louisiana Artists and Scholars (also known as an ATLAS Award) for her proposal, “Critical Dressing: The Development of Wearable Technologies as Art and Design.”

Henson, Kristen Kieffer, Holger Lang, Mary Miss, John Miralles, Emily Morrison, Jeff Rich, Nigel Keith Rolfe, Joseph Sellers, James Richard Sexton, Evan Smith, Sarah Elizabeth Smith, Gunder Varinlioglu, and Linda Weintraub.

t Associate Professor of Painting Kelli Scott Kelley recently won a $32,000 ATLAS Award for her proposal, “Accalia, Girl With Two Dog Faces.”

t Associate Professor Loren Schwerd and Assistant Professor Andy Shaw each won the LSU Tiger Athletic Award – Art + Design Outstanding Teacher Award.

t BFA candidate H. Cole Wiley exhibited a piece at the Ogden Museum in New Orleans. Highlights

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Accomplishments t Interior design students last fall saw campus through

t HGTV star, LSU alumni and Baton Rouge native

the eyes of those with disabilities as part of “Interior

Kenneth Brown shared his interior design expertise

Design at LSU: A Universal Design Experience.” The

with LSU students this year. Brown, the talent behind

project, organized by the Interior Design Student

the successful HGTV show “reDesign” spent his time

Organization was intended to raise the awareness

here encouraging students to open their minds to the

of design students regarding the importance

world beyond Baton Rouge in sharing his knowledge

of the accessibility regulations when designing

and resources with a next generation of designers

buildings. The project engaged all interior design

cultivated at LSU. Brown has designed for celebrities

majors in experiencing accessibility on campus

and big-time developers, and hosted several television

for those using wheelchairs and other assistive

series, including “reDesign,” which ran for eight years

devices. Students said they became more aware of

on HGTV.

designing universally through the project and came to understand the reasons for the development of the codes and regulations as well as insight into the frustrations of peer students with disabilities when navigating campus.

t Interior design students traveled to Manhattan in April with professors for five days of immersion in an urban design world. Students visited award winning firms including: David Easton, Material ConneXion, Perkins + Will and Tillotson Design Associates where they got an insider’s perspective and visited with LSU alumni working in New York City.


Accomplishments t The Robert Reich School of Landscape

t Landscape Architecture Faculty won top ASLA awards

Architecture’s undergraduate program was once

and LA Students won five national ASLA awards, the

again recognized as the top program in the country

most of any university with students submitting work.

by DesignIntelligence, a leading journal of the design professions. The School’s graduate program placed second behind only Harvard University. The School was also ranked second nationally by leaders of the various disciplines for being among their most admired undergraduate landscape architecture programs.

t The LSU Hilltop Arboretum is moving forward with plans for its new education facility, complete with indigenous plantings and a natural hydration system. The architectural drawings for the 2,050-square-foot structure, named for donor Imo Brown, were revised for LEED Certification and released for construction bids.

t Landscape Architecture Professor Bruce Sharky took five landscape architecture and two architecture students to Alaska for two weeks to learn about planning and design of visitor facilities in remote areas of Denali National Park and Wrangell-St.Elias National Park. Students stayed with families and visited museums and projects designed by local landscape architects.

t Professor Max Conrad’s memoir, Landscape Architecture and New Orleans: Room for Only One? was published in March. The book recounts the birth of the profession of landscape architecture in Louisiana.

t Professor Lake Douglas’ book, Public Spaces, Private Gardens won the Leila and Kemper Williams Award from the Louisiana Historical Association for “best book on Louisiana history in 2011.” Highlights 12-13



2011-2012 CoA+D Lecture Series Guest Speakers Branko Kolarevic is the associate dean (academic-architecture) at University of Calgary. He holds the Chair in Integrated Design and co-directs the Laboratory for Integrative Design. Prior to his appointment at the University of Calgary, he was the Irving Distinguished Visiting Professor at Ball State University in Indiana. He has taught architecture at the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Hong Kong and lectured worldwide on the use of digital technologies in design and production. Kolarevic has authored, edited and co-edited several books, including the recently published Manufacturing Material Effects: Rethinking Design and Making in Architecture (with Kevin Klinger). He is past president of the Association for Computer Aided Design in Architecture (ACADIA) and recipient of the ACADIA 2007 Award for Innovative Research. He holds doctoral and master’s degrees in design from Harvard University and a diploma engineer in architecture degree from the University of Belgrade in the former Yugoslavia.

ThaĂŻsa Way is an associate professor of landscape

architecture and adjunct faculty in architecture at the University of Washington. She has served

as the Enid A. Haupt Fellow at the Smithsonian Institution and a Henry Luce Fellow in American Art as well as receiving awards from the ASLA, Clarence Stein Institute, and the Graham Foundation. Her book, Unbounded Practice: Women and Landscape Architecture in the Early Twentieth Century (UVa, 2009) was acknowledged by the J.B. Jackson Book Award of the Landscape Studies Foundation. She received her BS in Conservation and Natural Resources from the University of California Berkley, a Masters of Architectural History from the University of Virginia and a PhD in Architecture from Cornell University. Dr. Way is interested in how historic narratives shape alternative views and perspectives of landscape architecture and urban design.

Highlights

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2011-2012 CoA+D Lecture Series Lori Ryker teaches, designs, and writes about architecture from Livingston, Montana. She is the executive director and founder of Artemis Institute, a not for profit that focuses on helping people understand the relationship between nature and culture. Through Artemis Institute she teaches a semester long college level program called Remote Studio to design students, which focuses on creativity, environmental responsibility, and personal empowerment. Dr. Ryker is the author Off The Grid: Modern Homes + Alternative Energy and Off The Grid Homes. She is also the principal and founder of studioryker , a design studio that focuses on design projects from jewelry to building and research projects. Dr. Ryker received a BED from Texas A& M University, Master of Architecture from Harvard Graduate School of Design, and a PhD from Texas A& M University. She currently holds the title of Marie M. Bickham Endowed Chair in the Robert Reich School of Landscape Architecture.

Seth Curcio is an artist, curator and publisher based in San Francisco. From 2005-2009, he served as curator and director of Redux Contemporary Art Center, an experimental non-profit gallery, studio, and education space. In October of 2006, he co-founded DailyServing.com, an international online publication dedicated to contemporary art. He continues to serve as publisher and editor-in-chief. Curcio is the program manager for the Pilara Foundation’s Pier 24 Photography in San Francisco. Pier 24 is the largest exhibition venue in the United States dedicated solely to the presentation of photography and video. His writings regularly appear in Beautiful/Decay magazine, and he is a resident studio artist at Queens Nails Projects in San Francisco’s Mission District.

Julie Henson is a visual artist and arts writer based in San Francisco. She serves as the Managing Editor of DailyServing.com, helping to curate the site’s content and fueling DailyServing’s social media. Henson received her MFA from California College of the Arts and graduated from the College of Charleston in 2005 with a double major in Art History and Studio Practice. She also writes for The Huffington Post and Beautiful/Decay magazine, in addition to working as the editor on two recent DailyServing book projects: The Sun Machine is Coming Down, featuring the work of Matt Philips and Josef Kristofolletti, and Broken, Beaten and Buried, featuring the work of DALEK.


Howard Chaykin. Over the course of his four decades in American comics, Chaykin has been hailed as a visionary storyteller and an aesthetic innovator whose sophisticated, ambitious work continues to redefine the boundaries of the medium. Chaykin made an indelible mark on the comics scene in the 1980s with his American Flagg! series, an award-winning comic that blended lurid pulp thrills and biting political satire and introduced a new visual language to comics, based on his experience as an advertising artist and paperback cover designer. Chaykin’s distinctive approach to the medium has been featured in comics offering unique takes on familiar characters such as Batman and Captain America as well as in more personal works such as his Time2 graphic novels or the recent Dominic Fortune. Chaykin’s lecture will include topics such as the role of graphic design in narrative, the evolution of the comics industry, and his own career as a trailblazing creator.

Dan Cameron is founder of the not-for-profit organization U.S. Biennial, Inc., and artistic director of Prospect New Orleans, the international biennial of contemporary art produced by U.S. Biennial, which launched in November 2008. From 2007-2010, Cameron also served as director of visual arts for the Contemporary Arts Center, New Orleans, which served as the principal venue for Prospect.1 Cameron was senior curator at the New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York from 1995 to 2006. While at the New Museum, he also organized the group exhibitions “East Village USA” and “Living Inside the Grid.” Cameron currently serves as senior curator for Next Wave Visual Art at Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM), where he has organized an annual exhibition of emerging Brooklyn-based artists since 2002. He is also a member of the graduate faculty of School of Visual Arts (SVA) in New York, where he teaches an MFA symposium each spring.

Linda Weintraub is the founder of Artnow publications, the author of Avant-Guardians: Texlets in Ecology and Art (2006 – ongoing) and has written and co-written numerous other books. She is also a contributor to the international art journal Tema Celeste and lectures frequently on contemporary art and its intersection with ecology. Weintraub served as the first director of the Edith C. Blum Art Institute, Director of the Philip Johnson Art Gallery at Muhlenberg College and served as the Henry R. Luce Professor of Emerging Arts at Oberlin College. She has taught both contemporary art history and studio art and is curator of the nationally touring exhibition, “IS IT ART?” She also co-curated the internationally touring exhibition, Animal. Anima. Animus in 1999 with Marketta Sepalla. Weintraub holds a Master of Fine Arts degree from Rutgers University. Highlights

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2011-2012 CoA+D Lecture Series Kenneth Brown, an interior designer, was born and raised in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. He received a Bachelor of Interior Design degree from Louisiana State University in 1995 and studied both industrial and interior design for a term at Manchester Metropolitan University in Manchester, England. He currently resides in Baton Rouge and Los Angeles, where he is principle of Kenneth Brown Design, Los Angeles, CA. Brown has completed homes for Zac Efron, Vanessa Hudgens, Kristen Bell, Mia Hamm and Nomar Garciaparra. In addition to his residential portfolio, Brown has completed numerous commercial projects such as A. Rudin’s Los Angeles Flagship Showroom, Cedars-Sinai’s Founder’s Room, and hotel collaborations. His broad exposure from his own television shows on Fine Living, TLC and HGTV led MSN.com to offer Brown the role of resident interior design expert. In addition, American Express Open selected Brown to share his success story as part of their ongoing Iconic Open Forum Series. Oprah’s O magazine featured him in her “Live Your Best Life Tour.” He has been named to the top 100 designers by House Beautiful and Western Interiors and has appeared on The Today Show, CNN, Entertainment Tonight, and Good Morning America among others.

Jesús Moroles established himself as a master sculptor with the sculpture plaza for the Edwin A. Ulrich Museum in Wichita, Kansas in 1996. In the tradition of his aesthetic mentor, Isamu Noguchi, Moroles designed and sculpted, a granite landscape comprised of terraced slabs forming a stone river way, a 30 foot long fountain wall and a 30 foot long granite weaving wall. To date, Moroles’ work has been included in more than 130 one-person exhibitions and more than 200 group exhibitions. He has lectured extensively about his work and the issue of public sculpture. His work has been the subject of numerous articles and reviews in ARTNEWS, Arts, Artforum, Newsweek, Time, and The New York Times as well as several books. Born in Corpus Christi, TX in 1950 and educated with a BFA at North Texas State University in Denton, TX, Moroles lives and works in Rockport, TX. His most visible work, “Lapstrake”, a 64 ton, 22 foot tall sculpture for the E.F. Hutton, CBS Plaza in New York City is located across the street from the Museum of Modern Art.

Byron Stigge is associate director of the environment and infrastructure group at Buro Happold North America. Stigge has worked on a wide range of projects around the world including city scale sustainable master planning; innovative approaches to water management; community participation in infrastructure development; LEED Platinum buildings and detailed systems and façade analysis projects. His recent projects include: Orange County Great Park in Irvine, CA; Tellapur city, Hyderabad, India; CSOB Bank, Prague, Czech Republic; Northside Redevelopment Plan, St Louis, MO; Khed SEZ, Pune, India; Genzyme Center, Cambridge MA; Pole, Moscow, Russia; Lavasa, Pune, India; The World Trade Center Competition with “ Team Think”, New York, NY, and Lifestyle Hotel at MGM City Center, Las Vegas, NV.


Marc Tsurumaki is principal and founding partner of Lewis.Tsurumaki.Lewis (LTL Architects PPLC), an award-winning architecture partnership founded in 1997 with Paul Lewis and David J. Lewis and located in New York City. LTL Architects received the 2007 National Design Award from the CooperHewitt National Design Museum, and was selected as one of the six American architectural firms featured in the U.S. Pavilion at the 2004 Venice Architecture Biennale. Their work has been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art in New York as part of the “Rising Currents” exhibition and is featured in the permanent collections of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Heinz Architectural Center at the Carnegie Museum of Art. Tsurumaki is a licensed architect, AIA member and LEED accredited professional and received a BS in Architecture from the University of Virginia and a MA in Architecture from Princeton University. Tsurumaki is currently an adjunct professor of Architecture at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, and has taught at many institutions including Yale University, as a Louis I. Kahn Visiting Professor.

Mary Miss was trained as a sculptor, and her work creates situations emphasizing a site’s history, its ecology, or aspects of the environment that have gone unnoticed. She has collaborated with architects, planners, engineers, ecologists, and public administrators on projects as diverse as creating a temporary memorial around the perimeter of Ground Zero, marking the predicted flood level of Boulder, CO, revealing the history of the Union Square subway station in New York City and turning a sewage treatment plant into a public space. A recipient of multiple awards, her work has been the subject of exhibitions at the Harvard University Art Museum and their Graduate School of Design, Brown University Gallery, and The Institute of Contemporary Art in London, among others. Her work has also been included in exhibitions at the Sculpture Center in New York; the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art; Brandeis Museum’s Rose Art Museum, and at the Tate Modern in London.

Walton Ford attended the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence and graduated in 1982 with a BFA. Blending depictions of natural history with political commentary, Ford’s meticulous paintings satirize the history of colonialism and the continuing impact of slavery and other forms of political oppression on today’s social and environmental landscape. An enthusiast of the watercolors of John James Audubon, Ford celebrates the myth surrounding the renowned naturalist-painter while repositioning him as an infamous anti-hero who killed more animals than he painted. Ford is the recipient of several national awards and honors including a fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. He has been featured in the PBS series Art21, which can be viewed online at: www.pbs.org/art21/artists/walton-ford. His work has been exhibited at the Whitney Museum of American Art at Champion, and the Forum for Contemporary Art in St. Louis, among many other venues. After living in New York City for more than a decade, he relocated his studio to Great Barrington, MA. Highlights

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2011-2012 CoA+D Lecture Series Charles Waldheim, formerly an associate professor and director of the landscape architecture program at the University of Toronto, has lectured on landscape and contemporary urbanism across North America, Europe, and Australasia. He has taught as a visiting faculty member at Harvard University, the University of Michigan, the University of Pennsylvania, and Rice University. He is an honorary member of the Ontario Association of Landscape Architects, and in 2006 was recipient of the Rome Prize Fellowship in Landscape Architecture at the American Academy in Rome. Waldheim’s research focuses on landscape architecture in relation to contemporary urbanism. He coined the term landscape urbanism to describe emerging landscape design practices in the context of North American urbanism. He has written extensively on the topic and edited The Landscape Urbanism Reader (Princeton Architectural Press, 2006), among several other books. He is currently writing the first book-length history of Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport, Chicago O’Hare: A Natural and Cultural History (Chicago: University of Chicago Press).

Gary Smith. Formerly an associate professor of landscape design at the University of Delaware, Smith has also served as an adjunct faculty member at the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Texas. His current projects in the design and/or fundraising stages include the new Santa Fe Botanical Garden; the Children’s Garden at the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center in Austin, TX; the Discovery Garden at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden in New York; the Therapeutic Garden at the Birmingham Botanical Gardens in Alabama; and the John C. Wister Rhododendron Garden at Tyler Arboretum in Media, PA. Since 2001, Smith has been working with the staff at Winterthur Museum & Country Estate, in Delaware, on the ongoing restoration of the Winterthur garden. His work has received many awards, including the Gold Medal Award from the Association of Professional Landscape Designers for his Mosaic Garden at the Naples Botanical Garden in Florida. He serves on the ASLA Education Advisory Committee, and is developing an ASLA professional practice network on plants and planting design.

Karsten Harries. Born in Jena, Germany, and trained at Yale University, Karsten Harries is the Brooks and Suzanne Ragen Professor of Philosophy at Yale University. He has also taught at the University of Texas and has twice been a visiting professor at the University of Bonn. Harries has published and lectured widely on Heidegger, early modern philosophy, and the philosophy of art and architecture. He is the author of more than 170 articles and reviews and of five books including The Ethical Function of Architecture (1997), winner of the American Institute of Architects 8th Annual International Architecture Book Award for Criticism. In recent years his teaching and writing has been directed to architects. As an intersection of art and technology, architecture has given him the possibility of exploring concretely what today most interests him: the question of the legitimacy and limits of that objectifying reason that presides over our science and technology. He is currently at work on a book, The End and Origin of Art.


Kate Orff, a registered landscape architect, is an assistant professor at Columbia University where she leads studios and seminars that integrate the earth sciences into the design curriculum. She is the author, with Richard Misrach, of Petrochemcial America, an illustrated book that explores how oil and petrochemicals have transformed the physical form and social dynamics of the American landscape, with a focus on the “cancer alley” region of southern Louisiana. Kate is also co-editor of Gateway: Visions for an Urban National Park. Kate is also a founding principal of SCAPE, a landscape architecture and urban design studio based in Manhattan. She has won local and national design and was named an Elle magazine “Planet Fixer, ”a Dwell magazine “Design Leader” and one of H&G’s “50 for the Future of Design.” Her work has received two National ASLA awards and has appeared in the Museum of Modern Art, the HK/Shenzhen Biennale, and other international exhibits. After graduating from the University of Virginia with distinction, Kate earned a Master of Landscape Architecture degree from the Graduate School of Design at Harvard.

Clare Twomey is a British artist who works with clay in constructing large-scale installations, sculpture and site-specific works. Over the past 10 years she has exhibited at the Tate-UK, Victoria and Albert Museum UK, Crafts Council-UK, Museum of Modern Art Kyoto-Japan. A major exhibition at the Crafts Council in 2003, “Approaching Content,” curated by Jonathan Parsons, saw Clare Twomey’s work take a prominent role contributing to contemporary discussions on clay. In 2004 Twomey’s work was exhibited at the TATE Liverpool’s exhibition “A Secret History of Clay from Gauguin to Gormley.” Twomey has developed affiliations with industry including, Royal Crown Derby, Emerys minerals and Wedgwood. Sarah Weir, Head of Arts and Cultural Strategy for the Olympic Delivery Authority, said in 2006 of Twomeys museum intervention: “Clare is challenging the boundaries of ceramic practice through a temporary installation which will allow the audience to take away their own personal piece of the art work”.

Kenneth Frampton

is a British architect, critic, historian and the Ware Professor of Architecture at the Graduate School of Architecture,

Planning, and Preservation at Columbia University, NY. He studied architecture at Guildford School of Art and the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London. Frampton has also taught at Princeton University and the Bartlett School of Architecture in London. He has been a member of the faculty at Columbia University since 1972, and that same year he became a fellow of the Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies in New York and a co-founding editor of its magazine, Oppositions. Frampton is well known for his writing on twentieth-century architecture. His books include Modern Architecture: A Critical History (1980; revised 1985, 1992 and 2007) and Studies in Tectonic Culture (1995). Frampton achieved great prominence and influence in architectural education with his essay “Towards a Critical Regionalism” (1983). Highlights

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Glassell Gallery Shaw Center for the Arts, 100 Lafayette St., Baton Rouge, LA 70801

URBANATURE Andy Shaw and Mary Louise Carter Works in Porcelain September 10 –October 14, 2011 Christine Baeumler Amazon Visions, Vanishing Acts: A multimedia installation October 28 – December 9, 2011 8 Fluid Ounces: A National Juried Ceramic Cup Show January 25 – February 25, 2012 On and Off the Wall (Encaustic Printmaking) March 10 – April 5, 2012 David Williams MFA Thesis Show Printmaking (Tied to Southern Graphics Conference in New Orleans) April 14-18, 2012 Michael Secor and Margaux Hymel MFA Thesis Show Painting April 21-25, 2012 Mercedes Jelinek and Dana Statton MFA Thesis Show Photography April 28 – May 1, 2012 Danielle Burns MFA Thesis Show Printmaking May 5-11, 2012 Dreamcatching: 11th Annual Summer Invitational Art Exhibition June 15-August 3, 2012


Foster Gallery Louisiana State University, 111 Foster Hall, Baton Rouge, LA 70803

Grad Student Show September 20 – October 21, 2011 Christina Johnson MFA Thesis Show: Unveiled Pandemonium October 31 – November 11, 2011 BFA Show December 6-16, 2011 Art Unbound: URBANATURE Juried Student Art Show LSU Press & LSU School of Art February 3-17 2012 LSU School of Art Faculty Exhibition

Salma Hasan and Megan Singleton MFA Thesis Show: Painting and Sculpture April 16-20, 2012 Joshua George and Matt Henderson MFA Thesis Show: Painting and Printmaking April 24 – May 1, 2012 BFA Senior Show May 8-18, 2012 Design Commons Yvonne Cao MFA Thesis Show January 30 – February 3, 2012

Recent Work March 7-30, 2012

Highlights

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Dean’s Medals Architecture Kim-Trang Nguyen, undergraduate Benjamin John Buehrle, graduate

Art Hope Amico, undergraduate Megan Singleton, graduate

Interior Design Allison Pogue Canal, undergraduate

Landscape Architecture Martin Moser, undergraduate Peter Summerlin, graduate

Highlights

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School of Architecture Scholarships Robert Sprague, Jr. Memorial Scholarship

School of Architecture Merit Award

Digital Media

Christine Nguyen

Elizabeth Galan

Kevin Nguyen

Kaitlyn Kehoe

Breton Smith

Terry Devine Memorial Scholarship

Awards

Year Level Design Awards:

Brendan Boudreau

OJ Baker Competition

1st year:

The Harvey Scholarship

Jury: Lori Ryker, Mark Hash

Victoria Cutrer

Shawn Mitchel

1st: Steven Armstrong

Andrew Derouen

Cody Blanchard

2nd: Jeanette Feinberg

Casey Broussard

Tiger Athletic Fund Scholarship

3rd: Susan Naquin

Marc Skidmore

John Royce DeLord

Honorable Mention: Carolina Rodriguez

2nd year & Michael D. Robinson Scholarship:

Erica Geromini

Honorable Mention: Annette Couvillon

Chris Doiron

Shawn Mitchell

AIA Henry Adams Medal

3rd year:

William Brockway Scholarship

Kim-Trang Nguyen

Brendan Boudreau

Annette Couvillon

AIA Henry Adams Certificate

4th year & Michael D. Robinson Scholarship:

Percy Roberts Scholarship

Natasha P. Thibodeaux

Megan Williams

John Royce DeLord

AIA Henry Adams Medal (GRAD)

5th year & Michael D. Robinson Scholarship: Jessica Ochoa

Daniel Shaffer

Benjamin Buehrle

Torre Scholarship in Architecture

AIA Henry Adams Certificate (GRAD)

Graduate 1st Year & SoA Academic Achievement:

Erica Geromini

Claire Nuesslein

Alyce Howe Graduate 2nd Year & SoA Academic Achievement:

Brendan Boudreau

Alpha Rho Chi Medal

Tracy Cooper Leadership Award

Elizabeth Galan

Elizabeth Dyer

Annette Couvillon

ARCC King Medal

Graduate 3rd Year & SoA Academic Achievement:

PageSoutherlandPage Scholarship

Michael Johnson

Christopher Peoples

Alexander Klein

Technology Award

Robert Kleinschmidt Memorial Scholarship

Natasha P. Thibodeaux

Alexander Klein

Christine Leech

Thomas B. Smith Memorial Scholarship

R. W. Heck History Award

Lydia Frazier

Shawn Mitchel

Jeffrey C. Landis Travel Scholarship Lindsay Boley


School of Art

Department of Interior Design

Scholarships

Scholarships

J Kenneth Edmiston Scholarship

Scott Gerard Verret Scholarship

Roland Parker

Mengdie Zhou

Miriam Barranger Memorial Scholarship

Monica Caire

Wade M. Tullier

L Vincent Guaccero Memorial Scholarship

School of Art General Scholarship

Austin Stukins

Caitlin Lennon

Dixon Smith Educational Scholarship

Torre Scholarship in Art

Madeline Drone

Aime Weissinger

Undergraduate Student Interior Design

Alfred C Glassell, Jr. Distinguished

Lauren Pulling

Scholarship for the Arts

Torre Scholarship in Interior Design

Tabitha Austin

Brenna Baumy

Ronald E. McNair Scholarship

M. Dorothy Fletcher Field Studies Fund

Derrick Lathan

Ryan Weilenman

Torre Scholarship in Art

Alyssa Smith

Dana V. Statton

Awards Tiger Athletic Foundation (TAF) Awards Bristie Smith Aime Weissinger

Awards Carroll Mathews Sustainable Design Award Allison Canal Andrea M. Daugherty Memorial Travel Award in Interior Design Alyssa Smith TAF ID Award Christina Grush Beverly Gaudin Angela Portier

Highlights

26-27


Robert Reich School of Landscape Architecture Scholarships Academic Achievement/Scholarship (highest GPA)

Design Implementation & Technology (excellence in

BLA: Martin Moser

design implementation and technology demonstrated thru

MLA: Yue Guan

relevant courses & studio work)

Peter Summerlin Leadership (demonstrated skills and success as studio class

BLA:

Brennan Dedon

MLA: Devon Boutte

leader(s) in respective programs)

History and Theory (excellence in history and theory dem-

BLA: Eric Thomas (2nd year)

onstrated thru relevant courses)

Sean Passler (3rd year)

BLA:

Luke Venable (4th year)

MLA: Devon Boutte

Josh Brooks (5th year)

Natural Systems/Environmental (excellence in natural sys-

MLA: Lydia Gikas (1st year)

Martin Moser

tems/environmental emphasis demonstrated thru research,

Audrey Cropp (2nd year)

design, planning or relevant courses & studio work)

Peter Summerlin (3rd year)

BLA:

Studio Design (evidence in design demonstrated thru

Greg Trahan

MLA: Peter Summerlin

studio performance & other related activities)

Representation (excellence in representation demonstrat-

BLA: Chad Caletka

ed thru rep’n. courses & studio work)

MLA: Yuting Jiang

BLA: Josh Brooks

Peter Summerlin

Chad Caletka MLA: Devon Boutte Best Capstone/Thesis Project (highest excellence in the process, product and presentation of a Capstone Project) BLA:

Josh Brooks Martin Moser

MLA: Peter Summerlin

Awards Awards for MLA Only: Teaching (excellence in teaching as observed by faculty members, student evaluations & prepared course materials) Peter Summerlin Awards for BLA or MLA: Service (excellence in service demonstrated by assistance provided to the School, College, University, community, or profession) BLA: Josh Brooks MLA: Michael Petty Director’s Award(s) BLA: Josh Brooks MLA: Michael Petty Hilltop Award (Peggy Coates) Josh Brooks ASLA Awards for both BLA and MLA: ASLA (Undergraduate) Josh Brooks Bethany Campbell Peter Ciepluch Brennan Dedon Martin Moser Tucker Tremblay ASLA (Graduate) Michael Petty Peter Summerlin


LA Student Scholarships Scholarships and Awards Atwell Champion

Helen Reich Memorial Scholarship

Torre Design Scholarship

Alexandria Davis

Donguk Lee

Bradley Odom

LA Endowment Fund Amy Norval Charles Benton Darren Sharkey Elizabeth Boudreaux Eric Thomas John “Chip� Beyt Kyle Lynch Miles Hamaker Meagan Roussel

Erin Percevault Elizabeth Hwangbo

Kay Ward Seale Memorial

James Mann

Kevin Latuske

Kossen Miller Matthew Seibert Peter Graves Amanda Beerens

Baton Rouge Garden Club

Lydia Gikas

Wes Gentry

Xueyao Wei ASLA Louisiana Chapter

Sarah Smith

Alexandria Davis

Tanner Perrin Taylor Jacobsen Wes Gentry Matthew Quitzau Stephanie Main Matthew Williams Allison Rizzato Wang Li Andy Hart Kevin Latusek

Charles Brett Davis

Charles Brett Davis

Ryan Steib Stephen Luna

Robert Reich Travel Award Justine Holzman

Weiner/Reich Scholarship Anjelica Sifuentes Landscape Architecture General Scholarship Fund

Edward & Yvonne Harvey Scholarship

Charles Brett Davis

Eric Thomas

Matthew Seibert

Luke Love Ryan Steib Amy Lyn McGuire Jamie Yousten Justine Holzman Peter Graves Charles Brett Davis Claudio Golombek William E. Hornsey/Woods & Water Luke Love

Highlights

28-29


Architecture

+

Bertolini, C. David

Associate Professor & Grad Coordinator

Bosworth, Frank

Professor

Carpenter, Kenneth

Professor & Interim Dean

Cuddeback, Marsha

Professional in Residence & Director

Desmond, Michael

Professor

Doran, Will

Professional in Residence

Emery McClure, Ursula

Associate Professor

Erdman, Jori

Professor & Director

Kelsch, Kristen

Instructor

Legeai, James

Instructor

Lipscomb, Rick

Professional in Residence (gratis)

Melendez, Frank

Assistant Professor

Pitts, Micheal

Associate Professor

Sattler, Meredith

Assistant Professor

Shih, Jason

Professor

Sofranko, Thomas

Associate Professor & Associate Dean

Sullivan, James

Associate Professor & Undergraduate Coordinator

Xanamane, Phanat

Professional in Residence

Zwirn, Robert

Professor


Art Ariaz, Jeremiah

Assistant Professor

Hodgin, G. Scott

Instructor

Arp, Kimberly

Professor

Hornbrook, Jesse

Instructor

Baggett, Lynne

Professor

Jiang, Yu

Instructor

Barr, Courtney

Assistant Professor

Kelley, Kelli Scott

Associate Professor

Beaman, James

Instructor

Koptcho, Leslie

Professor

Botter, Jacob

Instructor

Livaudais, Larry

Instructor

Bower, Gerald

Professor

Loch Elvert, Regina

Instructor

Brosseau, Mark

Instructor

Malveto, John

Associate Professor

Brumfield, Tiffanie

Instructor

McClay, Malcolm

Associate Professor

Cameron, Daniel

Instructor

Morris, Matthew

Instructor

Celentano, Denyce

Associate Professor &

Neff, Thomas

Professor & Graduate

Associate Director

Coordinator

Dean, Paul

Associate Professor

Ortner, Rick

Professor

Harlan, Veni

Instructor

Onodera, Isoka

Instructor

Hentz, Christopher

Professor

Ostrenko, Frederick

Assistant Professor

Hernandez, Luisa

Instructor

Parker, Jacqueline

Instructor

Herster, Margaret

Professional in Residence

Parker, Roderick

Associate Professor & Director

Ryan, Susan

Professor

Sandrock, Johanna

Professional in Residence

Savage, Matthew

Professional in Residence & Assistant Professor

Schwerd, Loren

Associate Professor

Shaw, Andy

Assistant Professor

Smith, Ed

Associate Professor

Spieth, Darius

Associate Professor

Tate, Kelly

Instructor

Walsh, Michaelene

Associate Professor

Winfield, Phil

Instructor

Wreyford, Brad

Instructor

Zucker, Mark

Professor

Highlights

30-31


College of Art + Design Faculty 2011-2012 Interior Design

Landscape Architecture

Budd, Brian

Instructor

Abbey, Dennis

Associate Professor

Brown, Kenneth

Professional in Residence

Allen, Austin

Associate Professor

Burns, Tracy

Professional in Residence

Cantrell, Bradley

Associate Professor & Grad

Caffery, Mary Ann

Instructor

Campbell, John

Instructor

Dunn, Matthew

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

Zou, Jun

Assistant Professor

Coordinator Conrad, Max

Professor

Cox, Van

Professor & Interim Director

Douglas, Lake

Associate Professor & UG Coordinator

Dykema, Kristi

Assistant Professor

Fryling, Charles

Associate Professor

Hall, William

Professional in Residence

Lumpkin, Stephen

Professional in Residence

Marshall, Cathy

Associate Professor

Michaels, Wesley

Associate Professor

Mossop, Elizabeth

Professor

Risk, J. Kevin

Associate Professor

Rodewald Bates, Seth

Professional in Residence

Sharky, Bruce

Professor


New Faculty Professional in Residence and Assistant Professor Matthew Savage (Art History) specializes in the art and architecture of Byzantium, and his primary research investigates architectural developments in Byzantine Constantinople. He received a PhD in 2008 from the University of Vienna, and has recently presented papers in the U.S. at the Byzantine Studies Conference, in the U.K. at the Spring Symposium of the Society for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies, and in Russia at an international conference on the architecture of Byzantium and Kievan Rus’ at the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg. In expanding his interests beyond Byzantium, Dr. Savage served from 2008-10 at the University of Vienna as the Coordinator for a large trans-disciplinary research network funded by the Austrian Science Fund that investigates the cultural history of the Western Himalayas after the 8th century.

Assistant Professor Frederick “Derick” Ostrenko (Digital Arts) is a new media artist whose interactive environments focus on revealing hidden networks between people by creating structures for new kinds of expression and discovery. Much of Ostrenko’s work is inspired by a hero’s journey towards transcendence and how such a narrative might relate to a participant’s experience within a digitally augmented environment. His installations have used brainwaves, text messages, live video processing, and electric shock as interfaces for people to explore identity and connect with others. In conjunction with his artistic practice, he has also worked professionally in interactive exhibit fabrication, video production, 3D modeling, and web development. He is a graduate of Rhode Island School of Design where he earned an MFA in Digital+Media.

Highlights

32-33


Sponsored Research

External/Private Sponsorship Highlights

Internal Sponsorship Highlights

US Department of Interior-National Park Service

Foundation for Louisiana

LSU Summer Research Stipend

$5,000

$25,000

$5,000

B. Kennedy

F. Bosworth, M. Cuddeback

La. Division of Administration – Office of Community

National Science Foundation

Development

$180,000 R. Parker

$599,950 J. Carney America’s Wetland Foundation/Chevron La. Department of Culture, Recreation & Tourism $56,340

U. Emery McClure

$21,575

B. Kennedy

$150,000 Coastal Sustainability Studio-Year 3 (2011) Coastal Sustainability Studio (CSS) $20,520

U. Emery McClure (Fort Proctor Project)

M. Sattler


Total External Sponsorships

$1,058,385 Total Internal Sponsorships

$5,000

Highlights

34-35



Highlights

36-37



Development The College of Art+Design’s Development Office had a very

Current and potential donors are stewarded to maximize their

successful year of fundraising in spite of the turbulent finan-

giving to the College and to identify their area of interest. The

cial markets. In its 13th year, the development staff continued

students, faculty and staff appreciate the loyal supporters for

to raise funds in support the College’s various programs.

their continued giving to the College to maintain and exceed

The total value of financial assets in the College as of the

the giving level already achieved.

fiscal year-end is basically unchanged at approximately $13.4

The College is looking forward to the leadership of a new

million. Currently, there is no university fundraising campaign.

dean; Alkis Tsolakis, who begins in January 2013. The devel-

Now more than ever, the College strives to engage and reengage its alumni and to seek their support and to update them on the successful things happening in the College. The

opment staff will be working closely with the new dean, directors and department chair to establish various needs and development fundraising goals to meet their needs.

development staff sends these updates via electronic mail and publishes an annual newsletter in the spring and an annual report in the fall.

Development

48-39


Funding Opportunities 2011-2012 Leadership Fund

Lecture Series

Contributions to the School’s Leadership Fund enhance each program by providing oppor-

The College Art +Design Distinguished Lecture Series Fund seeks funding to bring nation-

tunities for student leadership training, national student professional organization support,

ally and internationally acclaimed architects, interior designers, landscape architects,

and faculty leadership development. Leadership funds are critical for the Schools if they

graphic designers, art historians, as well as fine artists to the LSU campus for the benefit

are to graduate young artists and designers who will guide tomorrow’s professions and to

of students and the general public. The Art +Design lecture series expands the learning

assume leadership roles in their local community. Support for this fund permits students

environment for students by encouraging a spirit of risk taking through the example of

to attend national conferences, participate in leadership training workshops and seminars,

others, exciting an appetite for thinking and nurturing the capacity to create. At the same

and backs unique leadership-related events. These funds also aid faculty development

time, the visiting lecture series reaffirms the College’s land-grant mission while increasing

in the area of leadership and mentoring programs. The Leadership Development Fund

cultural capital through service to the Louisiana arts and cultural community through a

is part of the value-added educational initiative developed by the College to enhance

distinctive public education program. Since its inception in 1999, a total of 126 lectures

student learning experiences and outcomes.

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

Scholarship The College of Art +Design Student Scholarship Fund was established to create scholar-

individuals.

ship awards for both graduate students and undergraduates in the disciplines of archi-

Distinguished Faculty Fund

tecture, art, art history, community design, graphic design, interior design and landscape

Two ingredients make a great school: Outstanding students and faculty. The Distinguished

architecture. Scholarship support has assumed a higher priority for two reasons. One, the

Faculty Fund seeks to provide professorships and a chair to reward outstanding faculty and

College is increasingly competing against other national programs for the very best, high-

to augment our faculty ranks with national and international artists, designers and scholars.

achieving, high school and graduate students; two, expenses are constantly rising for a

t Chair

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.

Income from an endowed chair can supplement the holder’s salary and provide funds for graduate assistants’ salaries, secretarial assistance, course development, essential equipment, scholarly research and travel. Matching is available.

t Distinguished Professorship An endowed, distinguished professorship provides the resources to reward a renowned professor for past academic achievement and enables the professor to pursue research or innovative teaching methods. Matching is available.


Studio Sponsorship The College Art +Design seeks funding for studio sponsorships in all four units of the

The Communication and Writing Center is a resource center for all students in the College

College. Sponsors will be invited to student reviews, to design studios and to work with

to advance their communication skills. The Writing Center is equipped with computers

students. Funding will be used to offset the costs of field trips, publications and printing.

that have special interactive software and it is staffed by writing specialists to augment

The interaction between the students and sponsors will expand the learning environment

classroom activities with special instruction and learning support.

for the students, since they will be interacting and visiting with professionals in their fields.

t Conference Rooms (Each) Dean’s Conference Room

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. 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.

t College Commons (1)

Architecture Conference Room Landscape Architecture Conference Room

t Studios (Each) Art – 12 studios Interior Design – 12 studios Students need new, professional quality workstations with completely networked computer work environments that are secure. They also need to be able to work in the kind of environment they will encounter in professional practice.

The College Commons is a dynamic and versatile learning space that houses symposia and lectures, exhibitions, special projects, and advanced video capability. The College Commons is the hub of the learning environment for students, faculty, and the general community. The Commons is located on the ground floor of the Design Building and opens directly onto the Doc Reich Courtyard.

t Computer Labs (5)

t Classrooms (5) The contemporary classroom is equipped with the latest teaching technology including digital projectors, access to smart boards, and video conferencing capability.

t Dean’s Office Suite t Department Office Suites t Faculty Offices

Computer laboratories are an essential work environment for today’s student. These laboratories supplement the student’s own laptop computers and provide them with access to advanced machines and special applications. The College computer laboratories include the CADGIS Lab plus four satellite facilities in each unit.

t Communication and Writing Center

Deveoplment

40-41


CoA+D Endowment & Non-endowment Total 2011-2012 Architecture

Art

Scholarship/Awards

$ 724,987

Scholarship/Awards

Faculty

$ 212,054

Faculty

Lecture Series Other

Total

$ 11,272 $ 9,865

$ 958,178

Interior Design $ 443,942 $ 34,884

Scholarship/Awards

$ 150,251

Scholarship/Awards

$ 1,221,801

Faculty

$ 112,810

Faculty

$ 1,439,683

Lecture Series

$ 240,974

Lecture Series

Other

$ 490,307

Other

Total

$ 1,210,107

Landscape Architecture

Total

$ 10 $ 8,272

$ 271,343

College of Art + Design Scholarship/Awards Faculty

$0 $ 1,181,353

Lecture Series

$ 833,912

Other

$ 427,714

Total

$ 2,442,979

CADGIS CCS

Total

$ 452 $ 53,912

$ 54,364

Estate Gifts In-Kind Gifts

Total

$ 3,945,283 $ 204,748

$4,150,031

Lecture Series Other

Total

$ 153,268 $ 1,333,793

$ 4,148,545


Grand Total

$13,235,547 Development

42-43


Alumni Gifts We would like to thank all the donors for their support and generosity. The gifts below are from July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012.

1954 Ernest “Ernie” E. Verges

1969 BArch

1955 Larry M. Hubbard

BLA

1958 L.D. Kelleher

BLA

Julius Aronstein, Jr.

BLA

Neil G. Odenwald

MLA

1962 BArch

1963 L.D. Kelleher

BArch

James R. Turner

BLA

1970

MLA

1964 Charles W. Greiner

BLA

Gordon S. Steele

BLA

1967

BLA

Raymond Chin

BLA

Cynthia Boudreaux Redmon

BID

Richard “Rick” P. Lipscomb

BArch

Stephen A. Wilson

BLA

Elizabeth M. Perry

BFA

Mark W. Smith

BLA

BLA

1976

William D. Triggs

BLA

Michael P. Nidoh

BArch

1981

Marcia A. Stevens

BLA

Harry L. Belton

BLA

Rancy Boyd-Snee

BFA

William C. Johnson

BArch

Elizabeth F. Neely

MFA

George H. Weaver, Jr.

MLA

Glenn W. Laird

BLA

1977

Andre P. Neff

BLA

Steve Blaum

BLA

William R. Sweet

BLA

Frank D. Crouch

BArch

Kevin L. Harris

BArch

Anna Calluori Holcombe

MFA

1982

Paul R. Lentz

BArch

Jeanne B. Barousse

BID

George H. Watanabe

BArch

Randolph L. Duzan

BLA

Kimberly w. Fortenberry

BID

Lisa H. Johnson

BArch

Clare C. King

BID

W. Alan Mumford

BLA

Helen C. Schneider

BArch

Mark W. Thomas

BLA

1972 Glenn A. Acomb

BLA

Coleman D. Brown

BArch

Jesse D. Cannon, Jr.

BArch

Charles J. Collins, Jr.

BArch

1978

Van L. Cox

BLA

David M. Funderburk

MLA

Shaun Duncan

BLA

Stephen A. Wilson

MFA

John C. Forbes

BArch

Ben P. Lee

BArch

Charles A. Caplinger III

BLA

Carroll K. Mathews

BID

Lawrence H. Keenan, Jr.

BLA

Adrienne L. Moore

BFA

Danny H. Magee

BArch

1968

1980

Kenneth H. Fowler

Carl L. Burgamy, Jr.

1971

1960

Emmett C. Hinson

1975

James “Jim” E. Furr

1974

1979 Van L. Cox

MFA

Antoinette C. Kearny

BID

Patrick C. Moore

BLA

Davis S. Rhorer

BLA

Jane S. Brooks

BLA

Lisa Rosenbaum

BID

William “ Barry “ Graham

BArch

Louis K. Lancaster

BArch

Tambra W. Shell

BLA

Ronald L. Leone

BArch

Barbara A. Nester

BID

Katina B. Tassopoulos

BID

Robert K. McClaran

BArch

Robert B. Swan

BArch

1983 Danny P. Babin

BArch

Laurie A. Buhrer

BID

Marianne Mumford

BLA

Tim J. Orlando

BLA


1984

1994

Cynthia L. Coco

BFA

Natalie A. Gaidry

BLA

1985 Mary Ann G. Caffery

MLA

Kenneth F. Uhle

MLA

1987 Rancy Boyd-Snee

MFA

Ed Jenkins

BArch

Andrew E. Nahm

BID

1988 MLA

1989 Sally Banttari

MLA

Theodore R. Jack

BLA

Elizabeth “Boo” Thomas

MLA

1990

BArch

BLA

Jeremy D. Martin

BLA

2009 MLA

1997

John W. Milazzo III

MLA

2011

Warren Kron, Jr.

BLA

Susan Cresap

BFA

Judith Verges

MArch

Christian Rinck

MArch

1999

2012

Suzanne B. Herzog

BLA

Brett D. Spearman

BArch

Khemsuda Spearman

BArch

Chad Caletka

BLA

2002 Dudley J. Morales, III

BLA

Daniel W. Solis

BArch

2003 Kelly M. Jackson

BFA

Maia F. Jalenak

MFA

Kathleen M. Barcia-Mumme

BID

Jamie M. Roques

BID

Lawrence Johannesman

MLA

Richmond G. Savoy

MArch

1992

Daniel M. Spiller

2008

1996 Peggy D. Coates

Steven A. Ochsner

2006 BFA

1995 Terri Lewis Stevens

MFA

1986

Gerald W. Wilkerson

Lea C. Roy

2004

Dianna P. Odom

BArch

Mary L. Donalson

March

Pauline A. Robertson

BFA

Peter J. Spera, III

BArch

Krista B. Roche

MFA

Molly M. Welch

BLA

Development

44-45


Gifts from Corporate Sponsors We would like to thank all the donors for their support and generosity. The gifts below are from July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012.

$150,000 +

$1,000+

Greater New Orleans Foundation

Bani Carville Brown Architects Baton Rouge Area Foundation

$10,000+

Stun Design TBG Partners

Tillotson Design Associates, Inc.

$7,500+

$1,000-

Design Workshop

Jean B. Barousse Design Environmental Resource Management

$5,000 + Bradley , Blewster & Associates

Exxon Mobil Corporation Gensler Kevin Harris Architect, LLC

Coleman Partners Architects NOAA, Coastal Service Center

Landscaping by Steve Blaum, Inc. LA State Board of Architectural Examiners

$2,500+

Post Architects Shell Deer Park Technology Department Shell Oil Products- Reliability Engineering Department

Center for Planning Excellence Eskew+Dumez+Ripple Newton Landscape Group Reich Associates, LLC Reed Hilderbrand Associates, Inc.

Stephen Wilson Stained Glass Tall Timbers Garden Club Textron Inc. Trinity Baptist Church W Design Landscape, Inc. Woodlawn Family Health, LLC


Gifts from Individual Sponsors We would like to thank all the donors for their support and generosity. The gifts below are from July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012.

$150,000 Betty R. Van Norman

$10,000+ Laura F. Lindsay Suzan A. Tillotson Nadine Carter Russell

$7,500+ Kurt D. Culbertson Scott Purdin & Susan Turner Julian T. White (In memory)

$5,000+ Winston “Carroll” & Elise Blewster Carol “Lynn” Bradley Jeffrey “Jeff” K. & Wendy Carbo Robert “Bob” M. Coleman III Gary D. Gilbert Marvin “Buddy” Ragland, Jr. James “Jim” P. & Patti Richards Martha T. Smith Dale M. Songy

Allen Eskew

Tim J. Orlando

Chad Caletka

William “Billy” & Ashley Reich

Seth M. Rodewald-Bates

Jesse D. Cannon, Jr.

Mark Ripple

Travis & Bertha Taylor

Charles A. Caplinger III

Peter W. Newton

Charles “Chuck” R. Sanchez

Raymond Chin

Douglas”Doug” P. Reed Keith P. LeBlanc

Glenn A. Acomb

Chad P. Robert

Julius Aronstein, Jr.

Michael D. Robinson & Donald J. Boutte’

Danny P. Babin

John G. Turner & Jerry G. Fischer

Mary D. Baker

Charles M. Verrett

Jack R. & Sally Banttari

$1,000+ Carl & Susie Blyskal Robert T. & Linda H. Bowsher Earl P. Broussard Randall D. & Mary Broussard Richard A. Brown Ken & Mary Alice Carpenter Henry J. Carville Max Z Conrad Jori A. Erdman

Alma Lee (In honor)

Dr. Robert T. Grissom

Cary Saurage

Dr. Richard & Barbara Hill

H.N. Saurage, Jr. (In honor)

James H. Lesar

Kenneth W. Tipton, Jr. AIA

John W. Milazzo, Jr.

Steve Dumez

Glenn Allen (In memory)

$2,000+

$4,000+

$2,500+

$1,000-

Heather L. Neyer Roger H. Ogden

Kathleen M. Barcia-Mumme Jeanne B. Barousse Jose Barre Dr. Roby & Mrs. Barbara Bearden, Jr. Harry L. Belton Miriam Bensman Ryan Benton Marie Bickham (In memory) Steve Blaum Nancy Bogan Mary Helen Borck Rancy Boyd-Snee Jane S. Brooks Coleman D. Brown Laurie A. Buhrer Carl L. Burgamy, Jr. Mary Ann G. Caffery

Charles & Peggy Coates Cynthia L. Coco Charles J. Collins, Jr. Paul J. Connelly Van L. Cox Neal & Kathy Cramer Roderick D. Cresap Michael & Susan Cresap Michael Crespo (In memory) David & Doreen Cronrath Frank D. Crouch Dr. Renee Daigle Clyde & Van Wade Day Joseph G. Simmons & Patricia Day Mary L. Donalson Lake Douglas, Ph.D Nathan Drake (In memory) Shaun Duncan Randolph L. Duzan Bernice Eaton John C. Forbes Kimberly w. Fortenberry Kenneth H. Fowler Charles F. Fryling, Jr. Development

46-47


David M. Funderburk

Dr. Cheryl A. Kramer

Dianna P. Odom

Peter J. Spera, III

James “Jim” E. Furr

Warren Kron, Jr.

Allen Okchal

Daniel M. Spiller

Natalie A. Gaidry

Glenn W. Laird

William G. Palmer

Saliha Staib

Erica Geromini

Louis K. Lancaster

Rod Parker

Gordon S. Steele

Edmund J. Glenny, II

Ben P. Lee

James M. & Sally W. Pelton

Marcia A. Stevens

Richard H. Goodell

Paul R. Lentz

Elizabeth M. Perry

Terri Lewis Stevens John B. Streit

William “ Barry “ Graham

Ronald L. Leone

Michael I. Petty

Charles W. Greiner

Phil & Mae Lewis

Kitty Pheney (In honor)

Mary Elizabeth Sullivan (In memory)

Honorable & Mrs. Harlin Hale

Richard “Rick” P. Lipscomb

Roberta S. Phillabaum

Gene Suzick

Rhoman J. Hardy

Michael Loveless

Michael Porter

Robert B. Swan

Kevin L. Harris

Danny H. Magee

Raymond “Skipper” G. Post, Jr.

William R. Sweet

Tami E. Head

Jeremy D. Martin

Ed & Mary Pramuk

Katina B. Tassopoulos

Suzanne B. Herzog

Dale & Carroll Mathews

Cynthia Boudreaux Redmon

Tracey L. Teltschik

Benjamin & Dr. Nancy M. Hillman

Robert K. McClaran

Davis S. Rhorer

Mark W. Thomas

Emmett C. Hinson

Dwight & Shelia Cureaux McGehee

Christian Rinck

John & Boo Thomas

Anna Calluori Holcombe

Victoria J. McGibbon

Pauline A. Robertson

Nina Totenberg & H. David Reines Plato Touliatos (In honor)

Larry M. Hubbard

A.J. & Belinda Meek

Krista B. Roche

Christopher Ingersoll

John W. Milazzo III

Jamie M. Roques

William D. Triggs

Theodore R. Jack

Ann S. Monroe

Lisa Rosenbaum

James R. & Meriget Turner

Kelly M. Jackson

Patrick C. Moore

Lea C. Roy

Kenneth F. Uhle

Maia F. Jalenak

Pastor E. Moore

Jayne Rubin

Ernie & Judith Verges

Ed Jenkins

Adrienne L. Moore

Rihmond G. Savoy

Kristen A. Vining

Lawrence Johannesman

Dudley J. Morales, III

Helen C. Schneider

George H. Watanabe

Mary R. Johnson

Daniel E. Mulligan

Susan C. Severance

George H. Weaver, Jr.

William C. & Lisa H. Johnson

Alan & Marianne Mumford

Bruce & Nola Sharky

Molly M. Welch

Morris Kahn

John P. Murrill

Tambra W. Shell

William & Jean Wilcox

Antoinette C. Kearny

Andrew E. Nahm

Oscar L. Shoenfelt III

Gerald W. Wilkerson

Lawrence H. Keenan, Jr.

Elizabeth Neely

Joseph G. Simmons & Patricia Day

Edgar, Elizabeth & Wanda Wilson

L.D. Kelleher

Andre P. Neff

Mark W. Smith

Stephen A. & Claire Wilson

James, Jr. & Mildred Kennedy

Barbara A. Nester

James & Katherine Smith

Ann B. Kennedy

Michael P. Nidoh

Tom & Hester Sofranko

Clare C. King

Steven A. Ochsner

Daniel W. Solis

Dewayne Kneipp

Neil & Rebekah Odenwald

Brett & Khemsuda Spearman


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