SPRING 2017 | VOLUME 5 | ISSUE 2
AMERICA IN 1917-1918
100TH
ANNIVERSARY
FEATURED EXHIBITION: OVER HERE! OVER HERE! PAGE 13
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PEOPLE OF MUAM: BRIDGET GARNAI PAGE 7
DOCENT FEATURE: LINDA WILLIAMS PAGE 9
TRENDING NOW: HATCHED BABY PAGE 10
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From the Editor
IN THIS ISSUE
Happy New Year! During this cold and sometimes dreary month of January—I hope that you will find the stories and listings of exhibitions, programs and events offered inside this issue great motivation to venture out into the cold and explore the Visual Arts at Miami. The Spring semester at the Art Museum is always exciting for me because it is when we have the most students connected by way of the capstone and student response exhibitions. Even more exciting is the fact that all three exhibitions are connected through the common theme related to the 100th anniversary of the United States’ entry into World War I (WWI). Also happening during the Spring semester will be the unveiling of a new temporary sculpture in the park and the airing of a television series featuring the Art Museum and some of it’s collection. You will have to follow us on Facebook and check in regularly to learn more… Inside this issue I hope you enjoy learning about our exhibitions and programs, meeting one of our many magnificent docents and getting to know one of our interns. As with each issue we are happy to provide an at-a-glance picture of the plethora of fabulous visual arts exhibitions, programs and events at Miami University. I encourage you to use the schedule to plan on attending something once a week or more. Plenty of opportunities exist—ENJOY the Visual Arts at Miami and may your 2017 be Happy and Blessed! Sincerely,
From the Director About the Art Museum Department of Art Faculty & Alumni Exhibition From the Collection: Conservation at Work People of MUAM: Bridget Garnai Docents for Education Docent Feature: Linda Williams Trending: Hatching Baby~New Year Chocolate Meltdown Spring 2017 Art Museum Exhibitions: War Time Edition Hiestand Happenings: Hiestand Galleries In the Cage: Gage Gallery Contemporary Art Lecture Series McGuffey Moments Exhibitions & Programs at a Glance
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About the Magazine Visual Arts at Miami (VAAM) is a bi-annual publication of the Miami University Art Museum (MUAM) showcasing visual arts at Miami University for members and the arts community. Distributed in print inside the Journal News and Oxford Press prior to the Fall and Spring semesters, Visual Arts at Miami also is available digitally through the Art Museum’s website at www.MiamiOH.edu/ArtMuseum/Publications. Check the back cover for a map detail, contact information and hours. Editor, Sherri Krazl Printed by Cox Media Group
SHERRI KRAZL, EDITOR MARKETING/COMMUNICATIONS
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On the cover: Armistice Day, Oxford Ohio, November 1918 Frank Snyder (American, 1875-1958) Photo reproduction, Miami University
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From the Director November 11, 1918: Armistice Day in Oxford “The eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month” World War I often has been referred to as “the war to end all wars.” It was originally called The Great War, since at the time it was inconceivable that there would ever be a World War II. The end of The Great War was eagerly anticipated by the American public, which had sacrificed much blood, lives and treasure. 320,000 Americans were killed or wounded during the conflict. The U.S. spent some $20 billion on the war effort, equivalent to nearly $400 billion in current dollars. In the late afternoon of Sunday, November 10, 1918 an extra edition of the Hamilton Evening Journal was published. It arrived in Oxford just an hour after it was printed. With it came word that the Armistice had been signed and that the Great War was at an end. Celebrations began the next morning, coinciding with the formal cessation of the conflict, at the “eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month.” Miami University and Oxford College cancelled classes. (There is no indication that Western College did so.) The Journal reported that “students marched through the streets with flags, tin pans and every sort of noise producing paraphernalia.” Flags were displayed throughout the town. The afternoon parade was more organized, leading from the public school at West Spring Street to High Street and the west park. It included a drum corps, the G.A.R. (Great American Revolution) Home Guards, Red Cross Women’s Relief Corps, Miami University band, U.S. Army officers, Miami University battalions, including the S.A.T.C. (Student Army Training Corps), with children from the public school
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and the William Holmes McGuffey school, together with scores of automobiles, many decorated with flags and streamers, snaking along behind. Frank R. Snyder, Oxford’s leading photographer, was on hand that day, and took photographs of the two processions from his top floor studio in the Mansion House at the corner of High and Main Streets. (Today the original building is gone, twice replaced by commercial eateries, most recently Chipotle.) In the featured image, Snyder captures the dramatic scene of more than two dozen women proudly carrying an oversized American flag along High Street. It is an evocative reminder of the price Americans paid for their participation in the European conflict. We look forward to seeing you this Spring! Feel free to call [(513) 529-2232], email (ArtMuseum@MiamiOH. edu) and/or sign our comments book in the entryway. Sincerely,
ROBERT S. WICKS DIRECTOR | MIAMI UNIVERSITY ART MUSEUM
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The Miami University Art Museum, completed in 1978, was designed by Walter Netsch of Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, Chicago, and is situated on three acres of scenic sculpture park grounds. It houses five galleries of changing exhibitions and a growing permanent collection of more than 17,000 artworks. MUAM is accredited by the American Alliance of Museums (AAM) and is a proud member of the North American Reciprocal Museum Association (NARM).
Where is the Art Museum on Campus? For starters, you can’t miss the large, industrial red sculpture on the front lawn. MUAM is also just an 8-minute walk from the Armstrong Student Center, diagonally across from Tappan Hall, at the intersection of S. Patterson Ave. and Chestnut St., right when you enter Oxford off of State Route 27.
What can the Art Museum do for Students? Lots of things! MUAM is a great place to see diverse exhibitions and study outstanding works of art. You also can work, intern, volunteer, join the Art Museum Student Organization (AMSO) and attend lectures and social events.
What can the Art Museum do for the Public? The Art Museum and Sculpture Park is FREE & OPEN to ALL and is an excellent venue for exploring arts and culture from around the world. Membership in support of programs and exhibitions is available at varying levels. Each offers a higher level of engagement with the museum via special-invitation-only events and special programs. More information on our member program is available on our web site via the Members link.
Hours
Museum Staff
Tuesday–Friday: 10 AM–5 PM Saturday: 12–5 PM Closed: Sunday, Monday, national holidays, university closures, and during installation (more info on website.) Closures: March 18 & 25
Dr. Robert S. Wicks, Director
FREE & OPEN TO ALL!
Mark DeGennaro, Preparator/ Operations Manager
Website MiamiOH.edu/ArtMuseum Location & Contact 801 S. Patterson Ave. Oxford, OH 45056 (513) 529-2232 ArtMuseum@MiamiOH.edu
Debbie Caudill, Senior Program Assistant/Security Cynthia Collins, Curator of Education
Sue Gambrell, Program Associate Sherri Krazl, Marketing/Communications Jason E. Shaiman, Curator of Exhibitions Laura Stewart, Collections Manager/ Registrar
/MIAMIUNIVERSITYARTMUSEUM
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@MIAMIU-ARTMUSEUM ART MUSEUM
@MIAMIOHARTMUSEUM
Visual Arts at Miami
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AUG 29–DEC 16
FALL 2017 EXHIBITION
DEPARTMENT OF ART FACULTY & ALUMNI EXHIBITION
DOUGLASS, MCKIE AND FARMER GALLERIES By Jason E. Shaiman Thanks to the continued support of the Department of Art, Hiestand Galleries and the Office of the Dean for the College of Creative Arts, the Miami University Art Museum is pleased to again host the presentation of our art faculty in this quadrennial exhibition. Continuing a tradition for the past few exhibitions, the work of current faculty is shown alongside the work of emeritus faculty who forged the way for today’s fine art educators at Miami University.
ABOVE AND CLOCKWISE: Ditch Lilies and Butterflies; Bob Wolfe, Emeritus Professor We Took The Stars; Tim Parsley, 2013 Alumnus MFA, Studio Art (Painting) 4 a.m.; Andrea Barone, 2008 Alumna BFA, Studio Art (Painting & Metals) Memento Mori Series: Form with Fungus (Blackening Polypore); Susan Ewing, Emeritus Professor
Also featured in the exhibition are works produced by alumni who were nominated by Department of Art faculty. Works by the alumni were juried into the exhibition. The jurors for selection of alumni works include Annie Dell’Aria, Art History Professor of Contemporary Art, Miami University; Roscoe Wilson, Studio Art Professor and Chair of the Department of Humanities and Creative Arts, Miami University, Hamilton; and Jason E. Shaiman, Curator of Exhibitions, Miami University Art Museum. The integration of faculty and alumni art in the galleries of the Art Museum illustrates the rich heritage of quality, both in terms of teaching and artistic production. This exhibition presents a wide variety of art forms including sculpture, painting, ceramics, photography, digital video, printmaking, collage and mixed media works. Visitors to the Art Museum will have an opportunity to see the work of familiar and notso-familiar artists, while exploring the vast array of art making practices and the continual growth of the visual arts at Miami University.
Letterpress Hemisphere; Erin Beckloff, Assistant Professor Graphic Design Lydia; Jon Masuo Yamashiro, Associate Professor Studio Art
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Conservation at Work For more information about developing class projects around MUAM collections, visit the Art Museum’s faculty pages via MiamiOh.edu/Art-Museum.
FROM THE COLLECTION LAURA STEWART, COLLECTIONS MANAGER/REGISTRAR
In Spring of 2015, Cincinnati conservator Michael Ruzga worked on Blue Spell by Hans Hofmann. The painting needed to be cleaned as well as conserved. Ruzga spent approximately 60 hours with the painting, bringing it back to its current vibrancy. Many of the Art Museum’s members were able to meet Ruzga at the annual members’ meeting that year. Questions they asked included practical information for personal collections as well as information about Hofmann’s materials and technique. This March, Ruzga will be back on the Oxford campus to clean a 16th century Italian oil on panel painting attributed to Francesco Bissolo. The image is a classic Renaissance rendering of the Madonna and Child. With the help of chemistry professor Dr. Andre Sommer, Ruzga will be researching information about the layers of paint, among other things, before he embarks on the cleaning program.
MEET THE CONSERVATOR PROGRAMS CONSERVATION CONVERSATION PUBLIC PROGRAM MON, MAR 13 | 10 AM
CONSERVATION AT WORK FACULTY & STUDENT PROGRAM MON, MAR 13 | 12–1:30 PM
ART MUSEUM AUDITORIUM
ART MUSEUM AUDITORIUM
The public is invited to converse with Cincinnati conservator Michael Ruzga at the Art Museum as he works on a 16th century Italian oil painting. Formerly Chief Conservator of the Taft Museum of Art, Ruzga has treated numerous paintings over the past twenty years, including works by Rembrandt, Renoir, Bouguereau and others.
Faculty and Students curious about professional opportunities in the field of conservation are encouraged to drop in on Michael Ruzga, Director and Head of Conservation at Fine Arts Conservation, Inc., as he works on a 16th century Italian oil painting in the Art Museum’s collection. Learn about conservation career paths, watch a demonstration, ask questions. Lunch available beginning at 11:40; students should stop by as their schedules permit. Co-sponsored by the Office of Career Services
Co-sponsored by Miami University Art Museum Docent Program
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Visual Arts at Miami
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Garnai Poised for the Field... PEOPLE OF MUAM SHERRI KRAZL, MARKETING/ COMMUNICATIONS
A senior Art & Architecture History major with minors in Arts Management and Museums & Society, Bridget Garnai has been an actively engaged member of the Miami University Art Museum since day one of her Miami career. Discovering her affinity for art and history during her high school years, she took a college course to see if it was something she wanted to major in and decided, yes. “I have always loved going to museums with my family—something that we did a lot. I really liked learning about the artists and how the artwork relates to history,” she shared. A lengthy chat with Art History professor emeritus Dr. Ann Wicks on Arts Day helped her decide on Miami (her Mom’s alma mater). “She spent a lot of time with us and I could tell she really cared about the program and the students.” Bridget was excited about all of the faculty that she met and also that Miami had its own Art Museum. Her first interaction with the Art Museum was at the lawn party, one of the museum’s signature fall events welcoming students to campus and celebrating the new exhibitions. She heard of the lawn party at MegaFair where she signed up to join the Art Museum Student Organization (AMSO) which she has led as president for the last two years. She also has completed several internships at the Art Museum. Through these experiences she has been able to work with the staff in all areas. Currently, she is completing a year-long Arts Management internship and is managing the student blog [blogs.MiamiOH.edu/art-museum]. During the fall, she was part of the Art History Capstone class that put together Advance/Retreat: Prints and the Great War. This past summer she also interned at the Cincinnati Art Museum. As for next steps after graduation—knowing that she wants to work in a museum—she has been applying to museum studies graduate programs.
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Bridget is passionate about her work and has great things to say about the role the Art Museum has played in her studies, “The Miami University Art Museum is an important part of campus. The museum really enriches the things that I learn about in my classes. It is an important space to think about and do different things. I even like how the building looks so different than the rest of campus. That really sets the stage for different things to happen—space to be creative and have new and unique experiences that can’t happen in other places.” Preparing to graduate in the spring, her advice for other Miami students is to, “take advantage of every lecture (especially at the Art Museum), that is one of the most rewarding things to attend on campus. I think I could count the one’s that I have missed on one hand.” She especially enjoys meeting and hearing from the artists who have presented over the years. Her most inspiring advice is this, “Don’t be afraid to be a nerd about stuff that you love.”
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Docents & Miami Students EDUCATION AT MUAM CYNTHIA COLLINS, CURATOR OF EDUCATION
Approximately one-hundred and twenty Miami students enrolled in Western Studies 122 Art Across the Curriculum were challenged to select a “great work of artistic expression,” from genres including photography, sculpture, painting and contemporary art. Docents, volunteer tour guides, who typically engage elementary school and community groups, found themselves in the company of undergraduate students, composed primarily of first-years and sophomores. Docents eagerly provided students with an introduction to each gallery, sharing nuances about the exhibitions that weren’t readily apparent to the naked eye. For instance, in the Winter in Jeju-do exhibition the photograph titled View from Sandbanga Temple Grotto at Sunset (2012), a centuries old tree was cut
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down due to a massive pine disease outbreak. The photograph serves as evidence of the tree’s existence. The students were required to write brief responses following their museum visit answering the question as to “why the art or artifact qualifies as artwork?” This experience offered docents additional opportunities to share their knowledge with students and to aid students’ ability to engage with visual art. The art museum is recruiting volunteers who have an interest in art. No previous experience is necessary to become a docent—a love of art, enthusiasm and an interest in working with all age groups are the characteristics we’re looking for in volunteers. For more information about becoming a volunteer, please contact Cynthia Collins, Curator of Education, at collinc5@miamioh.edu or call (513) 529-2243.
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Interactions DOCENT FEATURE SHERRI KRAZL, MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS
A docent since 2001, Linda Williams always has enjoyed visiting art museums, being an active member of the community and learning new things. Born in Chicago, but raised in Columbus, she and her husband of nearly 50 years, Jack, are both graduates of the Ohio State University. She feels the secret to their success is to be part of a caring family— something that means a lot to both of them. Jack’s work allowed their family to live all over the place, including Washington D.C., California, Atlanta (where their two daughters Melissa and Michelle were raised), Germany, St. Louis and New York, before settling here in Oxford in 2000. Highlights of Linda’s many residences include being a docent at Atlanta’s High Museum of Art and a year-long Art History class in New York. The course included an intense week-long residency program in a Vanderbilt mansion where the participants attended museums, programs and discussed their experiences. In addition to her Art Museum activities, Linda also volunteers for the McGuffey Museum, the Oxford Community Art Center, and the hospital’s gift shop. She is a member of the Audubon Society, the Oxford Garden Club, the League of Women Voters and the Current Events Club. She loves the outdoors and stays very active birding and gardening as well as swimming, biking and yoga. Specific to her experiences at the Art Museum, she loves to learn and to interact with the people and the art, and especially loves leading children’s activities—tours, Adventures in Art and Art Explorers. “One of the best tours I gave was a group of third and fourth graders. I often have them gather around on the floor to discuss a work of art; this particular piece was a washing machine with a rope squeezed tightly around it. It was so interesting to hear those kids—they aren’t afraid to say what they are thinking!” She also enjoys doing presentations for the Institute for Learning in Retirement. “The more you learn about something—the more you can appreciate it!” Volume 5, Issue 2 | Spring 2017
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She has many favorites in the museum’s collection, but, “if there was a fire, I would run straight for Hans Hofmann’s Blue Spell to save it. It’s so colorful and large and it’s so fun to talk with people about it, to see what they think.” Not able to narrow down any one particular type of art that she likes most, she learned some types of art that initially weren’t her favorites but grew on her, either through learning about them by doing her own research or by taking classes. Her message to others who may not know about the Art Museum is, “You MUST go because we are so fortunate to have it… the exhibitions change every semester so you should go regularly to experience new things each visit. And you will know it when you see the large red sculpture out front.” Linda is a cancer survivor and believes to enjoy life you should be sure to have an “ahhh” experience each and every day. “See something beautiful every day - whether it’s a sunset or a child playing, or art in a museum.”
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Hatched Baby~New Year TRENDING NOW BRIDGET GARNAI, ARTS MANAGEMENT INTERN
The Miami University Art Museum is welcoming 2017 with the arrival of a new piece of artwork in the Sculpture Park, a temporary loan from German artist Wolfgang Auer. His piece, titled Hatched Baby, is quite fitting for the 9-foot tall royal blue infant poking its head out of a cracked white egg. Read more about Auer’s art on the Art Museum student blog (blogs.MiamiOh.edu/art-museum). Be on the lookout for our newest addition to arrive on a new pad near the front entrance of the museum in January. One of the museum’s New Year’s Resolutions is to share more sculpture in the Art Museum Sculpture Park. The museum is developing a rotating sculpture initiative in partnership with City of Sculpture, the Fitton Center for Creative Arts, and Pyramid Hill Sculpture Park, so new pieces can be shared with Miami University’s campus and the Oxford community through periodic rotations of artwork. Hatched Baby made quite a stir during its time at the Fitton Center for Creative Arts in Hamilton, Ohio, from October 2015 to September 2016. Visitors to the Fitton Center enjoyed taking selfies and photos with Auer’s fiberglass and resin sculpture, and visitors to the MUAM Sculpture Park are welcome to do the same, using #BlueBabyMiamiOH when sharing pictures with Hatched Baby on social media. I encourage you to make it your New Year’s Resolution to engage with the arts at Miami! Visit the Art Museum to see Hatched Baby and the rest of the exciting artwork on display. Enjoy an entertaining theatre production, dance performance, or concert. View an exhibition of innovative student artwork at MUAM or in Hiestand Galleries. The opportunities are endless to connect with the amazing art in our own backyard! For a comprehensive list of visual arts events, see pages 26-27 and for a full list of arts events at Miami, visit the College of Creative Arts webpage (MiamiOh.edu/CCA).
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Saturday, Jan. 14, 2017 1-5 p.m.
Oxford Community Arts Center 10 South College Avenue, Oxford, OH
A creatively delicious fundraiser and friend-raiser to help support the Oxford Community Arts Center and the Miami University Art Museum. Children’s Activities | Chocolate Tastings & Sales Bake Contest | Art Exhibit | Educational Information Live Auction | FUN FOR ALL AGES!
TICKETS: $7 in advance | $10 at door
(Ticket includes admission plus 5 coupons for sample tastings.)
Children 12 & under are admitted free
(Coupons for sample tastings are required for children 12 & under.)
Tickets are available online, at the Oxford Community Arts Center (info@oxarts.org, 513-524-8506), and at the Miami University Art Museum.
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ART MUSEUM
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27TH ANNUAL MIAMI UNIVERSITY PERFORMING ARTS SERIES
2.18.17
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MiamiOH.edu/PerformingArtsWineTasting OR CALL 513-529-6333
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Wartime Edition! JAN 24 - MAY 13
VOLUME 5 | SECTION B
U.S. JOINS GREAT WAR BY JASON E. SHAIMAN, CURATOR OF EXHIBITIONS
The Spring 2017 slate of exhibitions are a unified exploration of themes surrounding the centennial anniversary of the U.S. entry into the Great War. Visitors are first presented with a study of art from around the time of the Great War with the Art History Capstone exhibition, Advance/Retreat: Prints and the Great War. Moving forward, Over Here! Over Here! delves into the U.S. Government’s multifaceted propaganda machine that used the arts to support American engagement in the war. Finally, Conflict & Resolution: A Student Response, not restricted to World War I, offers a look at original artworks by current Miami University students reflecting on what it means to be at war and the quest for peace.
AMERICA IN 1917-1918
100TH
ANNIVERSARY
OVER HERE! OVER HERE! ADVANCE/RETREAT BY JASON E. SHAIMAN
April 6, 2017 marks the 100th anniversary of the day the U.S. declared war against Germany and officially entered its first military conflict not fought on American soil. For 19 months, the U.S. prepared for and was embroiled in a war of immense scale and brutality.
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In the U.S., the Great War became as much of a homefront issue as it was a Western Front affair. No one in America was immune to the effects of the Great War.
BY JASON E. SHAIMAN, PEPPER STETLER AND THE CAPSTONE CLASS
Not all art produced around the time of the Great War served political or propaganda purposes. Some artists reflected on their personal experiences in order to come to terms
Over Here, Over Here! U.S. Propaganda and the Arts of WWI documents the propaganda techniques utilized by federal, state BY JASON E. SHAIMAN and local governments to draw every citizen into the In this fourth annual conflict. On a local level, Student Response as well as national, the Exhibition, Miami dissemination of University students were information on called upon to create original the staging and and diverse commentaries progress of the on the topic of military war was vital. conflict and resolution. The War propaganda was main theme explored during ART MUSEUM employed to increase the Spring 2017 semester the (continued B2) is the 100th anniversary of
with the war or to provide unique commentary on the war and the social climate of the time. Other artists sought refuge from the emotional toll of the war as they looked introspectively and created art with no connection to wartime rhetoric. These three themes (continued B4)
STUDENTS RESPOND U.S. entry into the Great War. However, Conflict & Resolution gave students the freedom to reflect on personal and collective perceptions of how war, not specific to the Great War, is visualized and understood, and how the resulting search for peace can be interpreted. A high percentage of the works included in this 13 (continued B4)
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OVER HERE! OVER HERE! (continued from B1) production of materials, raise money to support the war effort, and boost the enlistment of the military. Propaganda in the form of newspapers, posters, artwork, music, pamphlets, public addresses and newsreels contributed to the public’s understanding of involvement in the war on a collective and personal level. The exhibition features selections from the MUAM collection; the University of South Carolina’s Joseph M. Bruccoli Great War Collection; the National World War I Museum; Miami University and The Western College Memorial Archive Collections; and the collection of Celia Malone Kingsbury.
RELATED PROGRAMS WED, FEB 8 | RECEPTION | 6 PM PROGRAM | 7 PM CELIA KINGSBURY, PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH, UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL MISSOURI World War I propaganda was massive in scope, targeting women and children on the homefront, pressuring them to contribute to the war effort. When women and children were not the target of propaganda, their images were used to encourage men to to enlist. Cookbooks, pamphlets, posters, sheet music, and children’s literature all served as recruiting tools to bring every American citizen into the war effort.
Advance/Retreat: Prints & the Great War
WED, FEB 15 RECEPTION | 6 PM GALLERY TALK | 7 PM Art History studentcurators will share their experiences and lead a discussion about how the exhibition’s theme relates to our contemporary political moment.
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AMERICA IN
For Home and Country: World War I Propaganda on the American Homefront
1917-1918
100TH
ANNIVERSARY
100th Anniversary U.S. entry into WWI
THU, APR 6~RECEPTION | 6 PM PROGRAM | 7 PM VALERIE ELLIOT, MANAGER, SMITH HISTORY REGIONAL LIBRARY JIM BLOUNT, HISTORIAN, CITY OF HAMILTON Join us and local historians as we reflect on this critical moment in American history. Elliot and Blount will tell stories highlighting the Great War’s impact on Oxford and Hamilton, Ohio.
Picturing Contemporary Warfare: Art in the Age of the Drone
THUR, MAR 2 | 5:306:45 PM ANNIE DELL’ARIA, ASSISTANT PROFESSOR, DEPARTMENT OF ART Explore the practices of contemporary artists who render visible the human experiences often absent from the headlines. Co-sponsored with the Contemporary Art Forum ART MUSEUM
George Creel & the Propaganda Machine
WED, MAR 8 | 5:30 PM JASON E. SHAIMAN, CURATOR OF EXHIBITIONS, MUAM Examine how Creel grew the small agency tasked with promoting positive images of the war to a global advertising giant that helped secure the Allied victory in 1918.
Visual Arts at Miami
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MIAMI UNIVERSITY ART MUSEUM PRESENTS:
SPRING FILM SERIES LOCATION: ART MUSEUM AUDITORIUM
SILENT FILM
WINGS MARCH 30, 7 PM
SERGEANT YORK
SILENT FILM (1919) VERSION
THE LOST BATTALION FEBRUARY 16, 7 PM
(2001) VERSION
THE LOST BATTALION APRIL 13, 7 PM ART MUSEUM FEBRUARY 18, 2 PM
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ADVANCE/RETREAT
(continued from B1)
are the essence of Advance/Retreat. In addition, the exhibition explores the role artists played in producing prints, which could be produced en masse to larger audiences with similar viewpoints about the Great War. The Art History Capstone Exhibition series, developed as a collaboration between the Art Museum and the Art & Architecture History program at Miami University, continues to serve as an incredible resource for students and patrons. Under the guidance of Professor Pepper Stetler (Art History) and Art Museum staff, senior Art & Architecture History Capstone students spent the Fall 2016 semester curating this exhibition of prints from the Art Museum’s permanent collection. The Capstone offered students a crash-course in museology, including instruction in curatorial, collections, education and marketing practices by the art museum staff. Pictured below front to back, left to right: Kate Hanley, Allison Dykes, Bridget Garnai, Rebecca Hughes, Raechel Root, Aaron Brown-Ewing and Joshua Perry.
STUDENTS RESPOND
(continued from B1)
exhibition are prints. This is quite appropriate considering that the vast majority of artworks produced for propaganda purposes during the Great War were in fact prints. Today’s students embark on innovative approaches to art making that blend traditional methods with modern technology. For example, printmaking processes are aided by computer software and lasercutting machines to carve designs into woodblocks, which are then printed. Digital photography has largely replaced film, while technological advancements in printing are now turning computer generated images into carved three-dimensional objects. For the first time, cash awards will be offered to the three best works in the exhibition. The selection of the winners will be cast by electronic votes from visitors to the exhibition. This special recognition of creativity is sponsored by the Miami University Art Museum Membership Association. Congratulations to the student artists whose works are featured in this exhibition: Amanda Adams, Patti Ann Cossel, Hannah Edmonds, Joshua Gabbard, Emma Leising, Alisha Mason, Mackenzie Mettey, Rebekah Mohn, GM Akand Sabik, Billy Simms, Claudia Tommasi, Caroline Ward B4
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801 S. PATTERSON AVE. OXFORD, OH
MIAMIOH.EDU/ARTMUSEUM | (513) 529-2232
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ART MUSEUM
Visual Arts at Miami
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April 8
MeMbership has never b e e n M o r e r e wa r d i n g . . .
Become part of the Art Museum today!
» Reciprocal members gain free/discounted access to over 600 museums in North America
Open House
WED, FEB 8 | 10 AM–6 PM
Author Reception:
CELIA KINGSBURY WED, FEB 8 | 6–7 PM
Author Talk: For Home & Country: World War I Propaganda on the American Homefront WED, FEB 8 | 7–8 PM
» MUAM memberships support programs, exhibitions and member activities
To join or learn more, visit www.Miamioh.edu/artMuseum, call (513) 529-1887, or stop in the MUaM at 801 s. patterson ave
FEB 23 | MAR 30 | APR 27
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HIESTAND HAPPENINGS NORTH GALLERY | SPRING 2017
DEC 15, 2016–FEB 10, 2017 2017 MIAMI UNIVERSITY YOUNG PAINTERS COMPETITION FOR THE $10,000 WILLIAM AND DOROTHY YECK AWARD Juror: Jed Perl, artist, writer and critic, New York, NY
MAR 14–APR 6 BFA CAPSTONE EXHIBITION Department of Art senior studio majors participating in the semester long Capstone course feature their latest visual investigations. RECEPTION FOR THE ARTISTS
Through the generous gift from William (MU ‘36) and Dorothy Yeck of Dayton, Ohio, Miami University has a unique opportunity to assist students and the community at large to develop a critical understanding of painting in the 21st century. The competition winner will be awarded the $10,000 William and Dorothy Yeck Award, and the painting will become part of Miami University’s permanent collection. This year’s competition focuses on representational/realist painting. JUROR LECTURE THURS, JAN 26 | 5:30–6:45 PM ART 100 RECEPTION FOR THE ARTISTS FRI, JAN 27 | 4:30–6 PM AWARD CEREMONY
TUES., MAR 28 | 4:30–5:30 PM
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Whether I am addressing personal issues or capturing shared beliefs about the world, I am fueled by a desire to find order and meaning. Although the narrative of each work varies, the culmination of my work gives physical form to the realm of the mind. [gabiroach.com]
THESIS EXHIBITION RECEPTION FOR THE ARTIST: SAT | APRIL, 22, 4–6 PM
APR 11–16 MEGAN ALYCE TAYLOR My work stems from reactions to both the beauty and brutality of human experience. The constant application and excavation of material across the canvas is an indication of time and loss; physical evidence of the experiential wounds the canvas has collected. These experiences leave a stain, a residue; just beneath the surface, just below the skin. [meganalycetaylor.com]
FRI, JAN 27 | 5:15 PM
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APR 18–25 GABRIELLE ROACH: THE SKY IS FALLING
HIESTAND GALLERIES
MAY 3–10 SAM DORGAN: EVERYTHING I EVER WANTED Reality is fragmentary and frayed, compressed in ambiguity and layers evident in my work. Experiences and feelings are mixed becoming shimmers— investigated through attempts to defamiliarize/familiarize through shapes, forms, and imagery that is a fusion of memory and sensation. Visual Arts at Miami
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401 MAPLE ST, OXFORD, OH 45056 | GALLERIES LOCATED ON 1ST LEVEL MIAMIOH.EDU/HIESTAND-GALLERIES | (513) 529-1883 ANN TAULBEE, DIRECTOR | TAULBEAE@MIAMIOH.EDU ROBERT E. AND MARTHA HULL LEE GALLERY | SPRING 2017
DEC 15, 2016–FEB 7, 2017 ANNIE EWASKIO: ARKTOS The 2016 William and Dorothy Yeck Young Painters Competition winner shares her latest studio works in, Arktos. Ewaskio’s oil paintings continue strange journeys through multilayered eras of Arctic exploration. The settings are reachable only in our imaginations, or the Internet – supernatural spaces, many of which have been completely altered either by material objects within them or by far-away activity. The artist wishes to thank The Arctic Circle Residency, the Jerome Foundation, the Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, and the William and Dorothy Yeck Family Foundation for supporting the process of creating this show. [annieewaskio.com]
FEB 14–MAR 9 LARSON / SHINDELMAN: GEOLOCATION Geolocation uses publicly available embedded GPS information in Twitter updates to track the locations of user posts and make photographs to mark the location in the real world. The act of making a photograph anchors and memorializes the ephemeral online data in the real world and questions the expectations of privacy surrounding social networks. Marni Shindelman, (MU ’99), half of the collaborative group, Larson /Shindelman, will be in residence in the Department of Art, February 14–16. She is currently head of the Photography Department at the Lamar Dodd School of Art at the University of Georgia. [larson-shindelman.com]
GALLERY TALK FRI, JAN 27 | 3:30–4:30 PM
RECEPTION FOR THE ARTISTS
RECEPTION FOR THE ARTIST
THU, FEB 16 | 4–5 PM
4:30–6 PM
LECTURE THU, FEB 16 | 5:30 PM ART 100
GALLERY HOURS: MON–FRI: 9 AM–4:30 PM Other hours available by appointment GALLERY CLOSURES: DURING INSTALLATION & JAN GALLERIES 1–6, JAN 13, 16 & 20, MARCH 20–26,HIESTAND MAY 16–AUG 28 Volume 5, Issue 2 | Spring 2017
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APR 18–25 BILLY SIMMS: CRAFTOWNE Craftowne: a visual novel is a series of pieces that weds text and images/sculptures to create a narrative of a planned suburban community based on an actual town in Maryland outside of Washington, DC during the ‘70s and ‘80s and the impact on me as a person and artist. [billysimmsart.wordpress.com] RECEPTION FOR THE ARTIST SAT | APR 22, 4–6 PM
MAY 3–10 OLUMUYIWA OYEDARE: THE UNDERLYING THROES OF WEALTH This work is a conceptual reflection and the metaphorical narrative of the anguish of the people living in the oilproducing communities of the Niger Delta area of Nigeria. 19
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IN THE CAGE
CAGE GALLERY Alumni Hall, Lower Level 350 E. Spring St. Oxford, OH 45056 MiamiOH.edu/cca/academics/arch-id
FEB 20–MAR 4 THE RESIDENCY PROGRAM: OTR JAN 23–FEB 3 HWY. 15: WHEN STRANGERS VISIT A video installation of disparate landscapes, and human geographies along two routes named Highway 15.
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The Residency Program integrates Miami coursework with community engagement and active citizenship, offering a substantial way for students to build relationships and trust with the Over-the-Rhine (Cincinnati) community. The program thereby resists the notion that communities are mere laboratories for learning on the part of students and teachers. This is because students don’t just study a neighborhood, they actually become part of it. As a result, students are transformed in powerful and long-lasting ways.
CAGE GALLERY
Visual Arts at Miami
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SPRING 2017
MARY ROGERO, INTERIM CHAIR Department of Architecture + Interior Design 101 Alumni Hall | (513) 529-7210 ArchID@MiamiOH.edu
MAR 6–24 UTOPIA REMAINS
MAR 27–APR 8 WELCOME TO LOHI
For the first half of the nineteenth century, Ohio was a hotbed of utopian activity, both secular and religious. Ohio was the frontier, and there were some very serious reactions to industrialization, persecution, and general awakenings (great and otherwise) at play. This exhibition of photographs represent a search for the residual effect of these communal experiments.
Welcome to LoHi, a place where Low Energy and High Performance go hand-in-hand to create sustainable living communities. This exhibit showcases Miami University student designs for energy-positive, regenerative buildings that boldly aim to lower carbon emissions by creating more renewable energy annually than they consume. Projects are from the graduate architecture comprehensive studio and an interdisciplinary design team of students in architecture + interior design, experience design, mechanical + manufacturing engineering, electrical + computer engineering, business, and sustainability.
While intentional communities still exist, “utopia” is more of a thought exercise than a reality, a way to expose what lacks, and a way to play with what is possible. That many of these utopian communities failed is informative, that they existed at all is substantial. Utopian thought can go wrong, we know, but it does not mean that the very human impulse towards creating something a bit better, be ignored. Roll, then, on.
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CAGE GALLERY
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CONTEMPORARY ART
T H U R S D AY S 5 : 3 0 – 6 : 4 5 P M | A R T B U I L D I N G , R O O M 1 0 0 (unless otherwise noted)
JAN 26 JED PERL: 2017 YOUNG PAINTERS COMPETITION JUROR AUTHORITY AND FREEDOM Author of New Art City, a 2005 New York Times Notable Book, Jed Perl is a regular contributor to The New York Review of Books, and was an art critic for Vogue and The New Republic. Perl is now writing the first fulllength biography of the sculptor Alexander Calder. Perl is the recipient of an award from the Guggenheim Foundation, and has appeared on Charlie Rose, CNN and National Public Radio. Perl teaches at The New School in New York City.
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FEB 2 ZEKE LEONARD: MAKE THINGS THAT MAKE THE MUSIC MAKE THE CHANGE Furniture designer and maker living in Syracuse, New York, Zeke Leonard’s former career as a theatrical set designer was a continuous cycle of making beautiful things and then putting them in the trash. Now I am trying to reverse that process, by taking cast-off objects and making them into beautiful things. I work on commission, using locally found objects and materials to create one-of-akind pieces that will live on for generations. [zekeleonard.com]
FEB 16 MARNI SHINDELMAN: GEOLOCATION
FEB 23 EMILY HANAKO MOMOHARA
Marni Shindelman (‘99) will discuss how she memorializes ephemeral online data in the real world, while questioning privacy surrounding social networks. Her project, Geolocation, includes photographs she makes to mark the location of publicly available GPS information in Twitter. Her collaborative work is in the collection of the High Museum in (Atlanta) and the Museum of Fine Arts Houston. She is an Assistant Professor of Art at the University of Georgia, where she chairs the Photography and Graphic Design areas.
Emily Momohara creates photographs and videos that act as metaphoric heirlooms and physical constructions of legacy. She will discuss her work as a crosspollination of Japanese and American culture and her creative process including research, experimentation and inspiration. Momohara received a 2011 Ohio Arts Council excellence grant. In 2016, her work was included in the Chongqing Photography and Video Biennial. She is Associate Professor of Art at the Art Academy of Cincinnati where she heads the photography major.
COLLEGE OF CREATIVE ARTS
Visual Arts at Miami
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LECTURE SERIESSpring 2017 ART 281: CONTEMPORARY ART FORUM
MAR 2 ANNIE DELL’ARIA, PICTURING CONTEMPORARY WARFARE (ART MUSEUM) Annie Dell’Aria, Assistant Professor of Art History, explores the practices of contemporary artists who engage directly with veterans in order to render visible the human experiences often absent from the headlines. Her current book explores the use of moving image media in public art.
MAR 30 JENNIFER FARRELL, PRINT LIKE IT’S 1929 Using a centuries old process to establish the contemporary visual vernacular of letterpress, Jennifer Farrell of Starshaped Press builds elaborate ornamental architecture and characters out of metal and wood type. Farrell will share her research and process used in challenging letterpress conventions and creating a place for 19th century design in the modern day.
APR 6 JESSE RING, STRANGELY FAMILIAR
APR 20 CHRISTIAN SCHMIT, MYSTERIES OF THE MUNDANE
Visiting Professor at the University of Cincinnati, Jesse Ring uses interdisciplinary sculpture practice to approach material as image, and meaning, by transmuting it into representational form. His finished sculptures are composed as scene, still life or collection; intended to present a narrative structure through material, image and space.
Christian Schmit’s work questions if the miniature can express profundity and if unremarkable objects can hold great mystery. Out of found materials, he builds tableaus, dioramas and theatrical models that hopefully are possessed of condensed and complex meaning. His work was recently shown at the Alice F. and Harris K. Weston Gallery. [christiandschmit.com]
APR 27 MARIA SEDA-REEDER
Photo by Joe Lamb
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Independant curator, freelance writer, and adjunct instructor Maria SedaReeder has been working with, and on behalf of artists, for nearly 15 years. She actively pursues a multi-faceted career that allows her to dissect, write about and seek out critical perspectives on our role as consumers and co-creators of visual culture. [nearbycollective.org]
COLLEGE OF CREATIVE ARTS
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McGuffey Museum hours: Thur–Sat: 1–5 PM 401 E. Spring St. Oxford, OH 45056 (513) 529-8380 McGuffeyMuseum@MiamiOH.edu MiamiOH.edu/McGuffey-Museum 24
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MCGUFFEY MUSEUM
Visual Arts at Miami
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Hodgin Work Donated MCGUFFEY MOMENTS STEVE GORDON, ADMINISTRATOR MARSTON DEAN HODGIN, MIAMI UNIVERSITY, AND LANDSCAPE ARTS
Oxford and the Miami University campus are rich in imagery. A seminal figure in capturing the area’s iconic images was the landscape artist Marston Dean Hodgin (19032003). Along with Edwin Fulwider, a Miami colleague and fellow artist, they painted familiar buildings and scenes in the region for nearly 40 years. Together, they left an impressive body of mid-20th century work. Hodgin’s artistic career spanned seven decades. Born in Cambridge, Ohio, Hodgin, a Quaker, graduated from Earlham College. One of his first art exhibitions was in Provincetown, MA, where Hodgin studied and attended classes. In 1927, Hodgin was appointed artistin-residence at Miami; later he established the Department of Art through the support of a Carnegie grant. For Hodgin, “art represented a harmonious interpretation of the physical and spiritual phenomena.” He followed this approach while teaching art history, drawing and painting at Miami. Following retirement from Miami in 1963, Hodgin and his wife Lucy resided in N. Truro, MA. There he attained considerable notoriety for his watercolors of Lower Cape Cod.
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ABOUT THE PAINTING
According to Molly Lampert, the work may depict Hueston Woods. It is signed on the back, “Marston Hodgin 1937.” Cal Conrad, a longtime Oxford resident, believes the view may be looking east across the valley where the Maple Sugar shack is located today. Most likely, the scene was painted in late winter 1937 (February-March) or early winter 1937-1938 (Nov-Dec). January 1937 was unusually mild with no snow but instead brought nearly 15 inches of rain to the region. What resulted was the Ohio River Flood of 1937. Molly Ann Shera Lampert is descended from one of Oxford Township’s pioneer families. Since Molly’s childhood, the painting has been owned by the family. The Hodgins and Sheras were close friends, and their children grew up together, attending McGuffey School. Molly and Tony Hodgin, Marston’s son, graduated together in the last class to attend McGuffey High School. For Molly, the painting evokes beautiful memories of a remote entrance to Hueston Woods, at a specific moment in time. The melting snow suggests the finishing of something.
experience. Molly says, “Sometimes when I looked at the painting, I felt like I was the only person who ever saw that secret entrance to Hueston Woods. Perhaps I was on a Girl Scout hike, or perhaps, as a young adult, I had driven to the woods to work on a problem. The painting hung in our living room, and was an organic part of our family life. It was shrouded in cigar and cigarette smoke at times, or brightened with laughter. To me, the painting is an echo of Oxford and Hueston Woods in a simpler time...a time of family life in the Mile Square and on the Miami campus. I hope the people who enjoy this painting can get a small snapshot of life in Oxford Township, which was a place where nature was right down the road, and one could work out one’s small journeys in peace and beauty.”
But the path which leads the eye to a beautiful blue hillside elicits hope and expectation for a good
McGuffey Museum is grateful to Molly Lampert for her generous donation.
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VISUAL ARTS AT COLOR KEY: EXHIBITION | RECEPTION | LECTURE | SPECIAL EVENT
DEC 2016 Ewaskio: Arktos 15 Annie Hiestand Galleries, through
JAN CONTINUED
27
Feb 17 Miami University Young 15 2017 Painters Competition for the
$10,000 William and Dorothy Yeck Award Hiestand Galleries, through Feb 10
JAN 23
Hwy. 15: when strangers visit Cage Gallery, through Feb 3
FEB
Ewaskio: Arktos 27 Annie Gallery Talk
Hiestand Galleries, 3:30–4:30 PM
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The Lost Battalion 18 Film: (2001) Residency Program: OTR 20 The Cage Gallery, through
8
Celia Kingsbury: For Home and Country: World War I Propoganda on the American Homefront Art Museum, 6 PM
Hanako Momohara 23 Emily ART 100, 5:30–6:45 PM
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14 15
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Ewaskio: Arktos/ 27 Annie 2017 Miami University Young Painters Competition Hiestand Galleries, 4:30–6PM
Battalion (1919) Art Museum, 7 PM
Open House Art Museum, 10 AM–8 PM
Art Museum, through May 13 Miami University Young Painters Competition ART 100, 5:30–6:45 PM
16 Silent Film: The Lost
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Art Museum, through May 13
26 Jed Perl, Juror Lecture, 2017
ART 100, 5:30–6:45 PM
Zeke Leonard ART 100, 5:30–6:45 PM
& Resolution: 24 Conflict A Student Response
24 Advance/Retreat: Prints and the Great War
16 Larson/Shindelman: Geolocation
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Here! Over Here! 24 Over U.S. Propoganda and
the Arts of WWI Art Museum, through May 13
2017 Miami University Young Painters Competition Awards Ceremony Hiestand Galleries, 5:15 PM
FEB CONTINUED
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Celia Kingsbury: For Home and Country: World War I Propoganda on the American Homefront Art Museum, 7 PM Larson/Shindelman: Geolocation Hiestand Galleries, through March 9 Art & Architecture History Capstone Students: Advance/Retreat: Prints and the Great War Art Museum, 6 PM Art & Architecture History Capstone Students Gallery Talk: Advance/Retreat: Prints and the Great War Art Museum, 7 PM Larson/Shindelman: Geolocation Hiestand Galleries, 4 PM–5 PM
Art Museum, 2 PM
March 4
MAR Dell’Aria Picturing 2 Annie Contemporary Warfare: Art in the Age of the Drone Art Museum, 5:30–6:45 PM
6 Utopia Remains
Cage Gallery, through March 24
8 Jason E. Shaiman: George
Creel and the Propaganda Machine Art Museum, 5:30 PM
Conversation 13 Conservation Art Museum, 10 AM Capstone Exhibition 14 BFA Hiestand Galleries, through April 6
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A GLANCE
Spring 2017
COLOR KEY: EXHIBITION | RECEPTION | LECTURE | SPECIAL EVENT MAR CONTINUED
APR CONTINUED
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Welcome to LoHi Cage Gallery, through April 8
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BFA Capstone Exhibition Hiestand Galleries, 4:30–5:30 PM
Gabrielle Roach: The Sky is Falling Hiestand Galleries, through April 25
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Billy Simms: Craftowne: a visual novel Hiestand Galleries, through April 25
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Christian Schmit: Mysteries of the Mundane ART 100, 5:30–6:45 PM
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Gabrielle Roach: The Sky is Falling/Billy Simms Craftowne: a visual novel Hiestand Galleries, 4–6 PM
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Maria Seda-Reeder ART 100, 5:30–6:45 PM
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Jennifer Farrell: Print Like It’s 1929 ART 100, 5:30–6:45 PM Film: Wings (1929) Art Museum, 7 PM
APR 6 6 6 11
Jesse Ring: Strangely Familiar ART 100, 5:30–6:45 PM Valerie Elliot & Jim Blount: 100th Anniversary U.S. Entrance into WWI Art Museum, 6 PM Valerie Elliot & Jim Blount: 100th Anniversary U.S. Entrance into WWI Art Museum, 7 PM Megan Alyce Taylor Hiestand Galleries, through April 16
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Conflict & Resolution: A Student Response Reception & Awards Ceremony Art Museum, 5–7 PM
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Film: Sergeant York (1941) Art Museum, 7 PM
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ART MUSEUM FUNDRAISER Chocolate Meltdown
Oxford Community Art Center, 1–5 PM SAT., JAN 14 ChocolateMeltdown.com See ad on page 11
PERFORMING ARTS SERIES FUNDRAISER
MAY 3 3
Be Wine!
Millett Hall 7–10 PM
Sam Dorgan: Everything I Ever Wanted Hiestand Galleries, through May 10
SAT., FEB 18
Olumuyiwa Oyedare: The Underlying Throes of Wealth Hiestand Galleries, through May 10
See ad on page 12
MiamiOH.edu/ PerformingArtsWineTasting
CHILDREN/YOUTH PROGRAMS Art Explorers (Ages 3–5) Art Museum, 10 AM–12 PM FEB 23 MAR 30 APR 27
Girl Scouts: Art in 3D Art Museum Call to sign-up at (513) 529-2243 APR 8
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MUSEUM & GALLERY INFO Miami University Art Museum
McGuffey Museum
801 S. Patterson Ave., Oxford, OH 45056 (513) 529-2232 ArtMuseum@MiamiOH.edu MiamiOH.edu/ArtMuseum
401 E. Spring St., Oxford, OH 45056 (513) 529-8380 McGuffeyMuseum@MiamiOH.edu MiamiOH.edu/McGuffey-Museum
Gallery hours:
Museum hours:
Tuesday–Friday: 10 AM–5 PM Saturday: 12–5 PM
Thursday–Saturday: 1–5 PM
Hiestand Galleries
Cage Gallery
401 Maple St., Oxford, OH 45056 (513) 529-1883 sfagallery@MiamiOH.edu MiamiOH.edu/HiestandGalleries
101 Alumni Hall, Oxford, OH 45056 (513) 529-7210 archid@MiamiOH.edu Arts.MiamiOH.edu/architecture-interior-design
Gallery hours:
Gallery hours:
Monday–Friday: 9 AM–4:30 PM
Monday–Friday: 9 AM–5 PM
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