Rhode Island School of Design’s alumni magazine Spring/summer 2011
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Conversations online, incoming,
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ongoing
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Listen to reflections, opinions, what’s on our readers’ minds
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Look
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at summer stuff, the great outdoors, skin season
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Doing it Differently in a DIY World
True Character
As quintessential RISD makers, Tanya Aguiñiga MFA 05 FD, Jessica Brown MID 09 and Amy Devers MFA 01 FD readily share their commitment to craftsmanship with others.
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Six Degrees updates from clubs, the Alumni Association, Alumni Relations
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Two College Street Maeda’s message, faculty news, a glimpse of studios/ student life now
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Impact news about scholarships, donors, the RISD Annual Fund
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Where We Are class notes and profiles, undergraduate first, graduate second
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Where We Were photos/memories from the past
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Sketchbook sketches, doodles, thoughts, works in progress
28 RISD Vintage 2011 (a very good year) As they wrapped things up this spring, RISD’s newest batch of alums showed that they’re definitely ready for what’s next.
Buck Lewis 81 IL loves bringing characters to life on screen and has created some of the most memorable personas in the Disney, Pixar and DreamWorks inventories.
FINDING YOUR OWN WAY T his is the tim e o f ye ar w he n an yon e w ho
works at a school or has kids of a certain age inevitably thinks about transitions. Every year, all over the world, a select group of students graduates and moves on to a new phase in their lives. At RISD the alumni “body” grows steadily, adding another 650+ people every spring—and every year I find myself thinking about how these new graduates will find their path in life. This issue, like most, is full of stories about how and why various alumni have chosen to do what they do. For some reason, the paths that RISD artists and designers follow to get wherever they want to go strike me as extraordinarily interesting—maybe because they seem so daring, or circuitous, or counterintuitive. No matter what RISD alumni choose to do after graduation, they generally embark on a journey that’s less predictable and infinitely more intriguing than that of the average college grad. Becoming an artist—or a creative professional of any sort—isn’t like going into banking or engineering or retail. There’s no one path, no linear progression. In this issue of RISD XYZ, you’ll find a feature article about three young alums, Tanya Aguiñiga MFA 05 FD, Jessica Brown MID 09 and Amy Devers MFA 01 FD—all designers, all makers and all women who would gladly use a power drill over a hair dryer any day. Their paths have taken them in very different directions, yet each one is living a creatively satisfying life, capitalizing on an innate love of making. And t e aches,
Let us know what you think about this issue: risdxyz@risd.edu.
much of their satisfaction comes from sharing the skills they’ve learned along the way with people who, unlike most artists and designers, aren’t naturally drawn to a DIY approach. The second feature story focuses on Buck Lewis 81 IL , a character designer for animated features who tried out a couple of careers before ending up in Hollywood. In fact, Buck first went into advertising and had made enough money by the time he was 30 to “retire” to a newly purchased farmhouse in Connecticut, with the romantic notion of finding the solitude and space he needed to become a painter— until he took a significant detour. Almost wherever you turn in this issue you’ll notice that RISD alumni are not content to simply follow a predetermined career path or do “what’s expected” to make it. The handful of Class of 2011 graduates highlighted in the third feature seem to know that and are prepared—not to follow a set trajectory or to climb the old-school ladder, but to make their own path. They may meander a bit, but chances are that they, too, will find creative satisfaction. If there’s anything I’ve learned about RISD alumni, it’s that you are a restless bunch, unwilling to accept that you may have to compromise in order to pay the bills. Granted, many alumni may do that at some point, for a period of time. But what’s totally impressive about most RISD grads is that you figure it out. You create alternatives. You find a way to make a living doing what you love.
editor’s message by
Liisa Silander
photo illustration by
Elizabeth Eddins 00 GD
CONTRIBUTORS PUBLISHING DIRECTOR
Becky Bermont EDITOR
Liisa Silander lsilande@risd.edu 401 454 6349 D E S I G N/ P R O D U C T I O N
Kate Blackwell Elizabeth Eddins 00 GD Sarah Rainwater
Listen |
Cover |
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS
Anna Cousins Francie Latour Paula Martiesian 76 PT Liisa Silander D I R E C T O R O F A LU M N I R E L AT I O N S
Christina Hartley 74 IL PRINTING
Lane Press Burlington, VT printed on 70# Sterling Matte, a recycled stock RISD XYZ
Two College Street Providence, Rhode Island 02903-2784 USA Published three times a year by RISD’s Media group, in conjunction with Alumni Relations.
Listen illustration |
Cover | Crystal Ellis MFA 11 SC (crystalroseellis.com) creates evocative works of sculpture in a range of materials—paper, feathers, wood, and lead and monofilament, as in the mesmerizing kinetic piece The Weight of Water (see her website). She’s shown on the cover peering into her egg-shaped papier-mâché piece Echo, which she exhibited this spring in RISD’s 2011 Graduate Thesis Exhibition. Interestingly enough, after graduation Crystal plans to throw her energy into expanding a small design company she founded with two other women called…Egg Collective. You can also see another piece of her pure, white, soft/hard work on page 31. Listen (page 5) | After winning a Fulbright grant to study in Japan, Louie Rigano 10 ID (louierigano.com) has been exploring traditional Japanese aesthetics and design philosophies this year. His goal is to analyze and react to the core tenets of Wabi Sabi as he designs and fabricates functional objects. Louie wrote the Listen piece on page 5 in response to his experiences during and after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, which not only changed the course of his year abroad, but radically altered his understanding of the human spirit. This year Louie has also been posting gorgeous images and writing about his Fulbright year in Japan on his blog: louieinjapan.blogspot.com.
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Sketchbook |
Listen illustration (page 5) | A NYC-based illustrator from Hong Kong, Victo Ngai 10 IL (victo-ngai. com) travels a lot between the two cities—and speaks Cantonese, Mandarin, English and Japanese. Her real name is Ngai Chuen Ching, but since her British kindergarten teachers couldn’t quite handle that, they dubbed her Victoria—which, in turn, baffled her Chinese classmates, who gave up and just went with Victo, which stuck. Just a year out of RISD, she’s freelancing for The New York Times, PLANSPONSOR and The Village Voice, among others. Victo has won awards from Communication Arts, American Illustration, Spectrum, the Society of Illustrators/NY—and the list goes on. She created the illustration to accompany Louie’s Listen article and was inspired by the Namazu, the catfish in Japanese mythology responsible for causing earthquakes. Sketchbook (page 64) | Artist/educator Sarah Haskell 76 TX combines her lifelong love of weaving with teaching people of all ages and abilities to discover the joys of working with thread. She lives in York, ME with her family and spends summers exploring the coast of Maine in her sailboat. Sarah contributed a page from the sketchbook she kept during a salty trip across the Atlantic earlier this year. She regularly exhibits her textiles in local and regional galleries, and though she loves being on the water, her studio is where she finds real meaning. “The interlacement of threads, the meditative quality of weaving, the metaphor of weaving and the truth I face when I am at the loom are my passion.”
Let us know what you think about this issue: risdxyz@risd.edu.
I N I T I A L C R E AT I V E D I R E C T I O N
WellNow Design wellnowdesign.com Criswell Lappin MFA 97 GD Nancy Nowacek Dungjai Pungauthaikan MFA 04 GD O N T H E C OV E R
Echo (2010, papier-mâché, wood, paper)
A D D R E S S U P D AT E S
Postmaster: Send address changes to Office of Advancement Services RISD, Two College Street Providence, RI 02903 USA Or email ksouza@risd.edu
Online, incoming, ongoing
MEAT LOVERS “The winter issue of the magazine is outrageously beautiful. I think it’s the best I’ve ever seen come out of RISD!” Jerry Mischak 73 PT, adjunct faculty, Painting, Providence, RI
It’s a terrific edition, congratulations on such a beautiful and conceptually bold issue. Chris Bardt BArch 83
RISD Professor of Architecture Providence, RI I love the design. It is interesting and well done, and creative. And yet engaging and readable. Content is very good, and above all, the whole thing is well organized, well executed and exciting. Believe me, I ran my own design firm in Boston for 27 yrs, and I don’t throw out compliments too often. But you have created a superb piece of work. And I do know how much effort that takes on everyone’s part. Jack Dickerson 69 GD
Brewster, MA
I really loved the food-themed issue of XYZ! Great reading! Reminded me of a New Yorker or NYTimes magazine issue. Peter Goldberg 88 PT
Pawtucket, RI
The best edition of the magazine that I’ve seen in all the years that I’ve assiduously read it! Congratulations! I don’t know how or where or from whom the idea developed but it really is a winner from all perspectives. Barnet (Bunny) Fain
Before your great food issue I was only aware of a couple of culinarilyinclined RISD alums. Now I feel almost part of a crowd! I’ve worked as a product and surface designer for most of my life, but when I was diagnosed with celiac disease a few years ago, I used my years of home cooking experience to start developing gluten-free recipes. GlutenfreefromNYC is my new online bakery and www.wheatlessand meatless.com is my blog catering to gluten-free vegetarians and vegans. I would love to hear from RISD food people in the NYC area who’d like get together. Who knows how many of us there might be?! Bernice Mast 71 PH
New York, NY
I just got my copy of the XYZ magazine. It looks fabulous!! Thank you so much for asking me to be involved, and for your very thoughtful and generous article about the feast [see Winter 2011, pages 22–23]. I’m truly so honored to be a part of it. It’s so nice to be next to Ciril (who I remember from college) and the other great RISD grads. I think I own a cookbook by Krystina Castella. Go RISD!! I can’t wait to see what the next one will bring! It’s really such a fun and cool publication. Lauren Garfinkel 91 AP
Brooklyn, NY
honorary trustee/former Chairman of the Board Barrington, RI
Follow RISD at twitter.com/risd and facebook.com/risd1877.
All about you. If you don’t yet know about the Strategic National Arts Alumni Project (SNAAP), you may want to check it out. It’s an online initiative aimed at providing a national picture of what alumni of US art schools are doing with their degrees. Run by the Indiana University Center for Postsecondary Research in collaboration with Vanderbilt University’s Curb Center for Art, Enterprise, and Public Policy, SNAAP is modeled after the National Survey of Student Engagement, a more established Indiana Center project that collects data on the level of academic involvement among college students. The SnaapShot section of the SNAAP site presents interesting stats in an easily digestible format that helps frame a picture of art school grads in the US: snaap.iub.edu/snaapshot.
Dear XYZ readers, We really want to hear from more of you about what you do and don’t like about the magazine. So please fill out the short survey at the back of this issue or do it online at www.risd.edu/xyzsurvey. No purchase necessary to take advantage of this extraordinary offer.
spring/summer 2011
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DISAPPOINTMENTS
too small
One of my favorite teachers was the late Dr. David Manzella, chair of the MAT [Master of Arts in Teaching] program. Toward the end of his tenure and after his retirement he made his new studio—a former bakery—into a bread making sculpture facility/ studio, where he and (as I understand it) invited artists/students and friends would also make bread works. He would have been the godfather of this issue and I was rather surprised and disappointed he was not mentioned.
I think that RISD XYZ is a beautifully designed, interesting magazine. But why does the typeface have to be so small and so gray? I know I am not alone with this question.
Perci Chester MAT 68/MFA 69 PT
Minneapolis, MN
Editor’s note: Thanks for the reminder, Perci. I haven’t heard about David’s legendary bakery studio, but we obviously couldn’t pack all the great RISD food stories into a single issue…. Like the year the Class of 1974 baked its design diploma from cookie dough (in the Foundry!), the award-winning Dining + Catering people who are making amazing food at RISD these days and the many professors (current and former) known for being almost as talented in the kitchen as in the studio. Nice work on the XYZ magazine. It is a pleasure to flip through… wish I’d known about the FOOD issue. My firm does mostly food and hospitality work for chefs such as Mario Batali. Among other projects, we’ve designed all of Mario’s award-winning cookbooks and most of the branding for his many restaurants. Douglas Riccardi 84 GD
Brooklyn, NY
Editor’s note: We did run a subtle mention in the Fall issue (page 54) hinting that food was on the horizon for Winter, but we hear you. We’ll attempt to make our intentions clearer in the future. Coming up next: a focus on alumni involved in publishing.
“Like Rome, Providence congregates around seven hills. The two to keep in mind are Federal and College.” from an article citing Providence as “on the shortlist of coolest small cities in the US” in the British newspaper The Telegraph, which also notes that RISD is “responsible… for the city’s vibrant, experimental art scene” (5.14.11)
Gretchen Dow Simpson 61 PT
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WOrds or less
Providence, RI
Editor’s note: Since we use several alumni-designed faces (Antenna, Receiver and Chronicle) at various sizes throughout the issue, I’m not sure which one rubs you the wrong way. But thanks for the feedback. We’ve been trying to be very sensitive to legibility issues and will continue to do so as we tweak our font choices to make the magazine graphically stronger.
PORTABLE DOC FORMAT? Though I’d enjoyed risd views tremendously, RISD XYZ provides us a more mainstream if not elegant experience. Magic happens when image and typography meet thoughtful design, and they are committed to print as is in RISD XYZ. That brand of magic captured me at a very early, impressionable age, and I’ve been at its mercy since. I wonder if there might be an archive where pdfs of each can be obtained as well? I’m no digital junkie, but I make exceptions for certain material. For instance, RISD XYZ.
It was super, super intense. I was so energized. Collection 2011 guest critic
Robert Geller 01 AP remembering his senior crit with Nicole Miller 73 AP , among others
It goes without saying that we aren’t a cookie-cutter publication. Erica Morse 12 GD in her editor’s note after the great new RISD student magazine The All-Nighter (all-nighter.com) signed off for the summer
If the work is good, what does it matter? actor/student/MC/whatever
James Franco MFA 12 DM commenting on media criticism that he’s “spreading himself too thin”
I’m feeling very manly. David Byrne 73 FS after former Florida governor Charlie Crist publicly apologized for failing to get permission to use the song Road to Nowhere in his campaign ad
Christopher Bright
Cranston, RI
Editor’s note: We post current and back issues of RISD XYZ (in PDF format) at www.risd.edu/xyz.
I wanted to fall in love with my profession again. Erika Tarte MFA 11 GD telling Graphic Design USA why she came to RISD
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Keep in touch. Write us at: risdxyz@risd.edu
Readers reflect, write, shout, share what’s on their minds.
LEARNING FROM TRAGIC LOSS I h ad just gotten ou t of the sh ow er an d
had started buttoning my shirt when I felt the initial tremor. I wasn’t too concerned at first, especially as there had been several small earthquakes since I had arrived in seismically active Japan. But by the time I reached the third button the severity of this earthquake was obvious—within roughly five minutes everything in my Tokyo apartment had been completely rearranged.
“It’s difficult to concentrate… in the midst of a national crisis of such magnitude. It was totally terrifying, but I was unhurt. As a Fulbright fellow studying abroad, I immediately realized my parents would be worried, so I Skyped them back in the US to let them know I was safe. Then I followed the news as websites announced with increasing concern when each aftershock would occur, and I would feel it just seconds later. Fortunately, Tokyo suffered virtually no structural damage. Still, since I was studying in a region close enough to the Fukushima nuclear plant to warrant travel warnings, I took the advice of Fulbright Japan and returned to America for a short leave of absence. But in the 10 days before I left, I witnessed a different Tokyo. The night following the earthquake, I walked from my apartment to Shinjuku station—the busiest train station in the world—and stood in the street amidst thousands of people facing three huge LED screens, which usually streamed advertisements but now displayed live news footage of the destruction of not-so-distant coastal cities. We stood in silence monitoring the flow of graphic images and the outpouring of people rushing through the streets toward their homes. The cultural barriers I had been facing by virtue of being an outsider in a foreign country were nullified.
Despite this, it was very hard to even think about my design projects and research. The continuous aftershocks were unnerving, some large enough to pull me out of sleep. Yet the Japanese seemed remarkably unphased. They went to work as always and carried on with everyday routines. Even in the face of such unbelievable loss—loss that I, as a visitor, could never truly comprehend—the people of Japan remained resolute. The month at home in the U.S. allowed me a chance to regroup for the second half of my Fulbright
To submit your own commentary, email risdxyz@risd.edu (subject line: listen).
year, which was almost exactly at the halfway point when the earthquake struck. I had just started an internship in Tokyo a few weeks before and had arranged another one for late spring, both at industrial design firms. This spring I am also working with a traditional woodworking master an hour outside the city and in the summer I will spend a few weeks making ceramics at a Buddhist monastery. While it will be difficult to concentrate on my personal design project in the midst of a national crisis of such magnitude (complicated by radiation concerns from the irreparable power plant), I am deeply gratified to be able to delve into the historic culture of a people with the self-discipline, tenacity and poise to remain intrepid in the face of immeasurable loss and tragedy.
text by
Louie Rigano 10 ID
illustration by
Victo Ngai 10 IL
spring/summer 2011
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The WATER WHISPERER
It’s Summer! Emily Cohen 90 IL
Emily Cohen 90 IL had fun working as a school art teacher for years, but it wasn’t until she taught her own small children to swim—both by age two— that she discovered her true calling. By transferring her creative approach to teaching from the classroom to the pools of sunny southern California, she developed a how-to method for small fry based on “entertaining developmental methods that break down the basic elements of swimming in a simplistic manner,” she explains. Today, she runs The Water Whisperer in Sherman Oaks and Woodland Hills, CA, teaching hundreds of babies, kids and adults to swim every season. Cohen boasts a 98% success rate in getting kids three and up swimming within 10 lessons. Her trick? Push fun, not sheer survival: “Throwing children in immediately and creating scary experiences are not part of The Water Whisperer philosophy.” thewaterwhisperer.com
Roots on the Cape For all his expertise in shaping outdoor environments, George Rockwood “Rocky” Clark BLA 77 admits that nature knows best. At Harwich Gardens by the Sea, the landscaping company he has run on Cape Cod for 30 years, gorgeous perennials provide the starting point for designers with a keen sense of balance between the wild and the manmade. Clark takes particular pride in the habitats he creates to encourage hawks, owls, turtles, rabbits, deer and other native species to thrive. Unmowed fields and a pesticide-free patch of land allow willows, pitch pines, bayberry and red cedars to
Rocky Clark
entice the wild ones to have a hay day. harwichgardensbythesea.com
BLA 77
AND THERE’S
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Jillian Barber 68 CR jillianbarber.com Bring the outdoors in with ceramic seahorses, turtles, lacy fish and jardinières fired in the artist’s Jamestown, RI studio. Inspired by natural beauty, Barber also sculpts masks and is particularly partial to her own Greenman, an ancient symbol of male fertility, rebirth and regeneration.
David Stark 91 PT davidstarkdesign.com The modern-day bride doesn’t need a church, a limo or even special shoes (at least not for beach weddings). But flowers are a must. So in To Have and to Hold Stark breaks it all down, petal by petal and season by season, for brides who don’t want to bother with thinking about every last detail.
Botanical Beauties “It is easy to forget that the colonists settled in New York City because of its bounty of natural resources,” noted Wendy Hollender 76 TX in a recent New York Times feature on vanishing urban plants. She, too, first grew roots in Manhattan, living there for 30 years as she built a career around drawing beautifully accurate renderings of plants, primarily through the New York Botanical Garden. Now the botanical illustrator has transplanted herself to a more natural setting: Hollengold Farm in upstate New York, where she conducts botanical drawing workshops, creates fine art
Wendy Hollender
and does commissioned work for clients such as Country
76 TX
Coty and others. Her latest book—Botanical Drawing in Color
Living and Horticulture magazines, Restoration Hardware, (2010, Random House)—offers an approachable how-to guide to capturing the blooming beauty of botany. drawingincolor.com
Pot Happy Plants feel right at home in pots made by Kim Barry 78 SC, owner of Clay Trout Pottery in the seaside town of Mattapoisett, MA. She uses traditional methods to craft each of the hand-thrown vessels, adding embellishments for custom projects. (Wedding centerpieces with the couple’s initials are particularly popular at this time of year.) Clay Trout offers shapes and sizes to suit even the pickiest of plants: delicate Paphiopedilum and Phragmipedium orchids are pampered in narrow, deep pots that accommodate their particular root systems; Cattleya pots have holes for extra aeration. Barry uses several varieties of clay that release moisture at different rates, allowing you to select the very best housing for your favorite greenery. claytroutpottery.com
Lois Brezinski 70 AP
Endless Escape Sometimes you just can’t bear to leave the perfect vacation behind and return to the rat-race—just ask Lois Brezinski 70 AP. Inspired by an “idyllic” getaway in the Cayman Islands, the
Kim Barry 78 SC
one-time owner of a textile design firm in New Jersey decided to make a new life in the Caribbean after getting burnt out on the job. There she pursued her passion for capturing the blissfulness of beachfront living in her vibrant watercolors, and soon discovered that resorts and galleries were eager to display her work. Now settled in Delray Beach, FL, Brezinski runs a brisk business with Cayman Colors, a line of decorative tiles, cards, candles and other products featuring tropical scenes that transport buyers beyond the mainland. loisbrezinskiartworks.com
Aaron Meshon 95 IL risdworks.com In his ode to the Bomb Pop, Aaron Meshon sends us straight back to summers spent scampering curbside at the first jingle of the ice-cream truck. Yet, without adding a single calorie to the mix, his rubber-dipped messenger bag will keep your laptop and other sundry stuff safe and sound.
Paul Loebach 02 ID paulloebach.com Loebach is making a splash again with his high-end Great Camp collection for the Manhattan design store Matter. Inspired by Adirondack furniture, it offers a line made with pieces of lumber that appear to have been whittled by hand—except that it’s a total illusion.
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The Great Outdoors
GEAR OF THE YEAR Toss away the tent poles and lighten your load this summer with NEMO’s nifty inflatable beams. Since founding NEMO Equipment in 2002, inveterate adventurer Cam Brensinger 02 ID has been working nonstop to raise design standards in outdoor equipment. From the get-go, NEMO’s breakthrough AirSupported Technology earned an avalanche of awards and recognition from Popular Science, Time, I.D., iF and others. Almost a decade later, the bright ideas just keep flowing out of the NEMO shop in Nashua, NH: the Sleep Tight Anchor Transfer system tethers tents in precarious positions; the APRI liner raises internal tent temperatures; a Removable Insulated Floor separates sleepers from frosty ground. Most recently NEMO’s Astro/Pillowtop sleeping system earned a 2011 Gear of the Year citation from National Geographic Adventurer and an Editor’s Choice award from Backpacker. nemoequipment.com
Falling in Love “Picking Gravity as my first feature with no film school training was insane,” says Marah Strauch 00 GL. “That said, I didn’t have a choice. It chose me.” As the writer and director of the first full-length documentary about the sport of BASE jumping (freefalling from fixed objects), she has spent five years tracking down and interviewing BASE pioneers and grabbing exhilarating footage shot in the 1970s and ’80s by BASE guru Carl Boenish, wearing a head-mounted camera. She’s also filming modern wingsuit flight and jumps—including along the spectacular rock faces of Norway, where Boenish died on a jump in 1984. But Gravity is not a film about death, outrageous stunts
Marah Strauch 00 GL
or media hype, Strauch emphasizes. It’s “a love story about what it feels like to fall, at first uncontrollably, then willingly, and finally ecstatically.” gravitythefilm.com
Karen Hackenberg 78 PT karenhackenberg.com The ocean is filled with mystery, but humans have the pesky habit of filling it with deadly irony. From a Natural Ice soda can to the sea nymph on a Starbucks plastic cup, Hackenberg’s paintings create a disturbing juxtaposition between Pacific waters and the junk we throw in them.
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Susie Nielsen MFA 05 GD farmprojectspace.com Now is the time to visit farm project space + gallery in Wellfleet, MA, where Nielsen mounts a great line-up of shows during the height of tourist season. A lot of RISD alums are frequent “farmers,” with work by Asya Palatova MFA 04 CR featured through June 14.
Mountain Modern It takes a real appreciation for the great outdoors to design homes that both complement and respect the breathtaking natural landscapes around them. In his 30 years as principal of Charles Cunniffe Architects (CCA) in Aspen, CO, Charles Cunniffe BArch 75 has mastered the art. CCA’s approach involves a “humanistic, socially responsible and technologically sophisticated vision of design”—one that has earned the AIA Colorado West 2010 Firm of the Year designation, along with the 2010 AIA Colorado West People’s Choice Award, a Gold Nugget award of merit and a top spot in CNBC’s list of America’s most impressive ski homes, among many other awards. Natural wood and stone allow CCA residences to harmonize with their surroundings, while expansive windows are strategically placed to enhance the sweeping views. cunniffe.com
Cam Brensinger 02 ID
Jon Naiman 89 PH
When Quidditch Isn’t Enough Bern-based photographer Jon Naiman 89 PH says Hornuss, a 17th-century Swiss hybrid between baseball and golf, is an acquired taste among farm folk, with a “rather small” fan base. Played on thin strips of land between crop fields, the game pits hitters, who whack a small puck—called a hornuss (or “hornet”) for the buzzing sound it makes when flying 300 km/h— far out into a field, against defenders, who use heavy wooden shields on sticks to intercept the hornuss in flight. Naiman’s series Release Form captures the flavor of the Swiss sport and caught the attention of the jurors for Photography Prize 2011, which selected several of his photos Biel, Switzerland.
Charles Cunniffe
jonnaiman.com
BArch 75
for a recent show at Photoforum-PasquArt in
Kevin Cunningham BArch 05 spiraresurfboards.com Last spring we noted that Spirare Surfboards certainly stand out at the shore. This spring Cunningham completed a Kickstarter campaign to begin making artful surfboards from “trash that washes up from the massive drifts of debris in the ocean.”
Tom Weis MID 08 + Shoham Arad MID 08 see-why.org This summer these two RISD classmates are teaming up to offer a new series of design workshops for teens at Weis’ See Why Studios in Rockport, ME. The goal is to show teenagers exactly how the design process works and why it matters.
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Skin Season
PERFECTION “Swimsuit photos were probably the last thing in the world they would have expected me to be doing at RISD,” Bjorn Iooss 03 PH readily admits. But earlier this year shooting skin led to one of the most visible photography gigs on the planet, when his photo of Russian model Irina Shayk was selected from stacks of contenders for the cover of the 2011 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Edition (estimated circulation: 60 million). Iooss had done work for advertising and several VOGUE editions, but had never shot for Sports Illustrated before. On the morning of the shoot on the beach in Maui, he realized he was looking at something potentially special: “It was beautiful. The light had just come up.” And, he adds, “The crazy thing about it was that it was the first morning, the first girl, the first look, and it was perfect.” bjorniooss.com
Stylish Sunscreen The convergence of two major hat-wearing seasons— summer and a royal wedding—makes it a heady time to be Eric Javits 78 PT. Since 1978, when he crafted his first hat to help a friend get noticed at the
Old salts and landlubbers alike can proudly bare summer
door of Studio 54, the millinery and accessories
skin adorned with the work of Duke Riley 95 PT, founder
designer has been synonymous with easy glamour.
Eric Javits
Marked for Life
Performers as diverse as Bette Midler, Alicia Keys, the Rockettes, Madonna and Britney Spears have commis-
78 PT
of East River Tattoo in Brooklyn. He and the other artists on staff specialize in custom designs influenced by maritime folk art, scrimshaw and 19th-century tattoos— think Queequeg, not Kat Von D. Riley’s interest in folk history
sioned special
is more than skin deep: through his projects outside the
editions. Javits hats
tattoo studio, he addresses “forgotten unclaimed frontiers”
have graced the heads
on the edges of urban areas, often where water meets land.
of at least two first
Recent adventures in the name of art include An Invitation
ladies and accentuated
to Lubberland, his attempt to rediscover a river beneath
the runways at Donna
Cleveland that was the site of a booming shantytown during
Karan, Carolina Herrera,
the Depression, and a cross-country journey by freight train
Arnold Scaasi and Bob Mackie shows. For women out enjoying the elements but shy of the sun, Javits invented
to reconstruct the defunct “hobo census” of the US. eastrivertattoo.com dukeriley.info
the popular Squishee: a faux-straw chapeau that springs back into tip-top shape after being stuffed into a suitcase. ericjavits.com
Lara Kurtzman 00 PT kelacalaq.com What do feminist comedian Janeane Garofalo and R&B femme fatale Rihanna have in common? They both go for the irreverence of Kelacala Q, a jewelry line used to accentuate the abundance of bronzed skin in this year’s Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue.
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Jennifer Clinch Guertin 96 PT anchorsteamtattoo.com Nothing celebrates skin like a good tattoo. As owner of Anchor Steam Tattoo Gallery in seaside Newport, RI, Guertin has been perfecting her body art for over a decade. From Nemo to mermaids with Afros, Samurai warriors to Wonder Woman, her portfolio makes an indelible impression.
Tubing Karelle Levy 97 TX believes that no matter what shape you’re in—or what shape you were born with— the beauty of her toobular knit designs will “flatter the shape you have.” Through her Miami-based company Krelwear, she creates knock-out knitwear that is regularly snapped up by such tastemakers as Nicki Minaj, Cameron Diaz, Pink, Alanis Morissette, Christina Ricci and Carmen Electra, among others. And her seamless tubes cover a lot more than just ankles; using the finest yarns (including glow-in-the-dark and UV-reactive ones) she creates fabulously funky skirts, dresses, tanks, sweaters, onesies for the beyond-infancy crowd and—well, courtesy of Karen Carpenter/Sport Illustrated | cover image: courtesy of Bjorn Iooss/Sports Illustrated
basically, anything that can be knit in the round. Levy’s fusion of art and fashion has earned Krelwear growing recognition, including call-outs such as GenArt’s Fresh Faces of Fashion and Daily Candy’s Sweetest Thing Fashion Designer. krelwear.com
Karelle Levy
Sally LaPointe
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Going Gaga So, as all the gossip blogs will tell you, the good news for Sally LaPointe 06 AP is that she is “fast becoming one of Lady Gaga’s favorite designers.” The bad news is that the
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exuberantly outrageous celeb doesn’t always don the designer’s entire outfit. So, yes, she wore a beautifully sexy LaPointe gown to CES, the Consumer Electronics Show in Vegas earlier this year (though who other than the glitterati would opt for evening wear at a trade show?). But when the paparazzi snapped this shot in late-winter NYC, LaPointe could only take credit for half the look (namely, the expert tailoring and sculptural structure for which she’s known). Unlike the celebs who have embraced her work, LaPointe doesn’t actually show much skin in her fall collection. “She’s a smart woman,” noted POSHGLAM, “because New York City in the fall and winter doesn’t lend itself to scantily-clad dressing.”
far right: photo courtesy of INF, Inc.
sallylapointe.com
Evian Zukas-Oguz 98 TX evianzo.com As owner of EvianZO, Evian Zukas-Oguz channels hippy California style to make her hand-dyed silk sarongs, tank tops and other beach-ready wear. Summer never felt so good wafting through a whisper of an indigo silk dress or shimmering off a red and yellow swimsuit.
Sarah Small 01 PH livingpictureprojects.com Plenty of skin marked last month’s debut of Tableau Vivant of the Delirium Constructions, the most recent of Small’s theatrical experiments; 120 performers of all ages, sizes and colors took to the stage in Brooklyn to bring tableaux-style paintings to life in this “live mosaic of humanity.”
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DOING IT
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by Francie Latour
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Meet three designers who share a deep love of materials, a fondness for power tools and the drive to help others discover the joys of working with their hands. H ow ca n you t ell wh en a p h en o m en o n h as b eco m e co m plet ely en t r en c h ed wi t h i n po pular cult ur e?
Earlier this spring Tanya Aguiñiga created an inviting installation of crisscrossed yarns, felted furniture and floating woven pieces for Crossing the Line, her solo show at LA’s Craft and Folk Art Museum.
When it’s got a catchy three-letter acronym that everybody either instantly recognizes or senses they should. Like DIY. DIY is the American middle-class hobby that grew into a philosophical movement that exploded into a national obsession that spawned a billion-dollar media and retail empire. It’s an anti-consumerist subculture and it’s a giant cable network (actually several, including DIY, HGTV and a lucrative chunk of PBS). It’s a way to plan your wedding and it’s the message behind every ad for Lowe’s and Home Depot. More than anything, it’s a highly hyped notion of returning to something the average American vaguely senses has been lost—without knowing exactly what that something is. For three young alumni—one from suburban Michigan, one from rural Kentucky and one from the Mexican border town of Tijuana—DIY was never really any of those things. It wasn’t a trend or something they even identified with a label. For Amy Devers MFA 01 FD, Jessica Brown 09 MID and Tanya Aguiñiga MFA 05 FD, doing it yourself has always been something they craved. From the time they were young, finding a new way to use an old thing was a way of life and a physical impulse—almost an extension of their own hands. They may not have chosen the same materials or had the same motivations: As a teen, Brown once took apart a dresser to make shelving for a stereo out of necessity; at the same age, Devers was doing her hair in wild architectural styles for sheer fun. Aguiñiga made money to buy candy by packaging handmade jewelry in Saran Wrap and selling it door-to-door. Today, their channels of expression are equally varied— making how-to videos, creating floor-to-ceiling installations and bringing imaginative curb appeal to homes. But from a
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shared passion for making and building, these three alums are carving out dynamic careers, blurring the boundary between DIY and craft and elevating the most mundane materials— from obsolete 8-track tapes to impersonal folding chairs to nondescript bathroom tiles—to new heights. “All three of these women demonstrate a high level of informed intellect in their manner of making,” says Professor Rosanne Somerson 76 ID, longtime head of Furniture Design at RISD and now interim provost. “There is a clear sensitivity to materials and process linked to their concept, but they each produce work that simultaneously extends their personal voice and our conceptual understanding.” THE URGE TO TINKER
Amy Devers on the set of the DIY Network show Freeform Furniture (above) and doing an on-camera workshop as a crowd of Koreans looks on in Seoul.
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FU RN I TU RE DESI G N
Amy Devers MFA 01
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As distinct as their paths have been, Devers, Aguiñiga and Brown all describe the same gravitational pull towards three-dimensional making. “I started envisioning furniture before I had any idea it was something you could study in school or had any kind of understanding of the physics or mechanics of it,” says Devers, a Los Angeles-based furniture designer/maker who has skyrocketed to DIY fame as a co-host for shows like Trading Spaces, Blog Cabin and the A&E hit Fix This Yard. This year, Devers launched “Hands On,” a homeimprovement advice column for ReadyMade magazine. Recalling her college days and early 20s, Devers says she had a powerful urge to tinker. She was studying the business side of fashion at the Fashion Institute of Technology. But one night, while watching her friends struggle to design a packaging product that would open in a particular way, she became obsessed. “I just couldn’t let it go,” she says. “I got my own cardboard and sat in my dorm room alone playing with it until I figured out how to make it work.” Later, while sharing a tiny apartment with friends in California, she figured out how to make milk-bottle lamps with rudimentary wiring. But her mind was racing far ahead of her hand skills. “I started this mental process of re-engineering all the furniture in our place in my head so that it would be more useful to us,” she says. “I’d think, ‘If this futon was just hollow somehow, then we could still sleep on it but we’d have all this storage underneath.’” Eventually, when Devers got to RISD, her skills would catch up with her ideas. For her graduate thesis project, she designed and built an entire nightclub lounge interior using only bathroom materials; shower fixtures became lamps and vanity pieces became sitting areas. “Everyone else was seeking out the most lavish materials— beautiful upholstery fabrics and exotic woods,“ says Somerson, “and Amy brought in these really mundane materials from Home Depot, which she then repurposed with an incredible level of both craftsmanship and ingenuity.” Like Devers, Aguiñiga was reaching for that same building know-how in her 20s, too, but for very different reasons. In the late ’90s, as part of the Border Art Workshop, a politically engaged arts collaborative in San Diego, she wanted to build spaces that would give migrant squatter communities access to resources and a powerful voice through art. She built those spaces in the tradition of the border neighborhoods around her, cobbled together using nontraditional techniques and discarded materials destined for the
“ All three of these women demonstrate a high level of informed intellect in their manner of making.” Rosanne Somerson 76 ID, professor and interim provost
trash heap. Once, she reclaimed an outdated marble rotunda from a local San Diego museum, sawed it into pieces, drove them down to Mexico and transformed them into church pews. “Where I’m from, you don’t throw anything out. You always made due with what you had,” says Aguiñiga, a furniture designer and artist whose exuberant, handcrafted work has been shown everywhere from Mexico City to Milan. Her work has spanned the gamut from metal and plastic to wood and textiles; in Crossing the Line, her spring solo show at LA’s Craft and Folk Art Museum, she exhibited a room-size installation of crisscrossing yarns and floating woven pieces that enveloped visitors in a cocoon-like environment. Through the Border Art Workshop, Aguiñiga developed the skills she would need to hone her vision in craft. “We built a soccer field. We built a cemetery. We built a sculpting school to teach people to carve gravestones themselves,” Aguiñiga says.
“I had never even used a power drill before, and here I was doing roofing and physically building stuff. That was when I started to think, ‘I want to make furniture. I like working with my hands to make something.’” And though it was a slow road, Aguiñiga began to win the approval of her struggling working-class relatives, who had been counting on her—the family star since kindergarten—to lift them out of poverty through medicine or law. “One of the times Pope John Paul II came to Mexico, we were on the roster of people for him to meet because of all the work we had done for migrant rights,” she says. “Even though my family wasn’t happy with me ‘wasting my brain’ on art, they finally said ‘Well, if the Pope thinks she’s okay, I guess she’s okay.’” From the time Jessica Brown stole her cousin’s toy push saw, the satisfaction of creating and repurposing in 3D was visceral. Her longtime mentor and former high-school art teacher, Glenda Bittner, puts it this way: “She made men’s underwear out of duct tape. She made clothes for her pet rat. Every single solitary assignment I gave Jessica she attacked, like it was the greatest thing there ever was.” Long before Brown knew what sustainability meant, she and her family would do what most people did in their hometown of West Paducah, KY: They recycled, reused and handed down almost everything. Food scraps became cattle feed. Bathtubs became planters. T-shirts became rags. But even in a community of savers, Brown stood out. Once,
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“Every single solitary assignment I gave Jessica she attacked, like it was the greatest thing there ever was.”
after getting a stereo for Christmas, she took a saw, cut out the upper rails of her five-drawer bureau, covered a cardboard slab with some contact paper and then set it on the lower rails—all in a matter of minutes. “I took the stereo and speakers, positioned them into their new home and voilà,” says Brown, who now lives in Providence. “My parents were flabbergasted. One, that I had cut up a bureau they had had for years, and two, that I did it that fast.” Looking back, she says that her parents gave her a precious gift: the freedom to “destroy their house with purpose.” Now Brown dreams of following in Devers’ DIY footsteps: With a TV persona that is a cross between Bob Villa, Bob Barker and ’80s MTV icon Downtown Julie Brown, she has launched four episodes of her YouTube show Let’s Just Make That!, showing viewers how to make kitchen islands or pot racks with the forgotten materials sitting in their basement. She is shopping the idea to several networks. “There’s something about 3D and the fact that I can touch it and it’s tangible,” Brown says. “With painting, I might be able to smell the paint, but I can’t physically go in there and move those shapes and colors around.”
Jessica Brown MID 09 has been tinkering, experimenting and making things since she was a kid—when her parents essentially gave her free reign to “destroy their house with purpose.”
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PLANES OF IDENTITY
For Devers, Aguiñiga and Brown, the journey to becoming designers/makers was marked by their own evolving sense of
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bottom, photo byfar Stephani right: photo Ewens by Xxxxxxxx Xxxxxxxxxxx
Glenda Bittner
As one of the first women to be featured regularly on DIY shows, Devers typically tackled projects with men. Here she’s building a table with Diamond Rio on DIY to the Rescue.
bottom: photo by Belinda Valadez
identity and the lived experience of crossing cultural boundaries—boundaries of ethnicity, nationality, race and gender. Fresh out of San Diego State with a degree in furniture design, Devers got her first job—as a machine shop foreman overseeing a 12-man team that built trade show booths. She quickly realized that before she could be their boss, she first had to prove she could be their equal. “I noticed in my interview that they all came to work in blue Dickies and a white t-shirt,” Devers says. “So on my first day, I came in blue Dickies and a white t-shirt. When something was too heavy for me, I moved tables around and used leverage to manipulate materials. And I just worked. I worked as hard and as long as they did.”
As part of the project Artists Helping Artisans, Aguiñiga worked with artisans in Chiapas, Mexico, who weave fabric using backstrap looms.
But that gender challenge paled in comparison to what Devers would face in the surreal world of television. She broke into TV after hearing about a casting call from a friend of a friend. The criteria were simple: a female who was a skilled builder. No acting experience necessary. “I thought, ‘What the hell. I know how to build. I have rhinestone safety glasses,’ ” says Devers, who landed the part and launched her TV career on the DIY Network’s flagship show, DIY to the Rescue, in 2003. On the one the one hand, Devers says, she was a soughtafter commodity—a telegenic woman and highly skilled builder who knew how to get the content right. On the other hand, she was a novelty—a product audiences would have to buy in order for the show to succeed. “There was a moment in home-improvement TV history where, if you were a woman, you were either the sexy carpenter who didn’t really know what she was doing, or you were the token female,” Devers says. “The network didn’t want either. They hired me because I was the real deal. But they had a deep suspicion that nobody would believe I was the real deal.” These days nobody doubts Devers’ credentials, and she’s developed her own on-camera persona—“relaxed, a little bit of a smart-ass, and bossy in the all-for-the-greater-good kind of way.” But in that first crucial season, producers told her she had to play it safe: “No jokes, no goofiness, no personality. Just the facts. So I was being asked to be myself, but a very conservative version of myself.” If Devers had to straddle invisible boundaries of perception, Aguiñiga straddled boundaries that were geographic and highly policed: Twice a day from the age of 5, she crossed the border from Mexico to attend school in San Diego, where she was born and where her father worked. For years, her Tijuana address was a secret she had to keep from her school and even her closest friends. But as an adult, her body of work—highly tactile, interactive pieces with unexpected combinations of material and form—stands as a powerful visual translation of that experience. “Where we lived was a few blocks away from the border fence. So the drive to school was along this road right next to the border,” says Aguiñiga, who lives and works in LA and won a $50,000 award in 2006 as an inaugural recipient of the prestigious United States Artists Fellowship. “That’s one of the things that made the border super present in my mind always, the difference between me just being able to drive over it and other people having to sacrifice their lives to cross it.”
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“ I’ve always felt guilty about making work that wasn’t functional, because that’s something that people of leisure do.” Tanya Aguiñiga MFA 05 FD
With an instinctive love of materials and a childhood defined by a hyphenated identity, Aguiñiga began to embed her ideas about home, alienation, boundaries and belonging into her furniture designs. Her very first piece at RISD, Embrace Lounge—a daybed with a surface cut out in the shape of a human figure—spoke to an acute need she was feeling at the time: for physical, human contact. Today, Aguiñiga’s sense of identity and place are still evolving. In 2007 she traveled with a younger sister to weaving villages in Chiapas, Mexico to study traditional techniques of backstrap weaving, where women use their own bodies as looms. But success has also meant redefining what it means to exist in two different worlds. “It’s a long process to be okay with someone giving you $50,000. I was never actually prepared for success. I was prepared for struggle,” she says. “I’ve always felt guilty about making work that wasn’t functional, because that’s something that people of leisure do. And now I guess I’m ‘people of leisure.’ I’m still exploring ideas centered around craft and tradition, but in different ways.” On the surface, Jessica Brown might seem to share some common ground with Devers and Aguiñiga. As an AfricanAmerican growing up in rural Kentucky, she knew what it felt like to be a minority in a predominantly white world. As a woman who builds, she knows what it’s like to be female in a predominantly male world. But while Brown has addressed issues of race head-on in her past work, those are not necessarily the forces that have shaped her art. What accelerated Brown on her path was something else entirely, something that made high-school art class not just a fun place to create, but a critical outlet for her survival. In 1997, she was among a group of students who were fired on in a school shooting, injuring five and killing three. She doesn’t talk much about the incident, and the bubbly optimism of her YouTube workshops betrays nothing of the pain she experienced. But in the shooting’s emotional aftermath, art literally saved her. “After the shooting, the art room became my escape, because I decided to not really deal with the… shooting,” she says. The art annex became the place Brown went in the earlymorning hours before school opened, letting herself in with alarm codes she had been given. It was the place teachers sent her as an alternative to detention when she got in trouble. And it was where Brown forged a deep bond with Bittner, her art teacher, who became her mentor and surrogate mother.
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FU RN I TU RE DESI G N
Tanya Aguiñiga MFA 05
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Aguiñiga created Embrace Lounge (top) at RISD, inspired by the need to be held. Later she rescued a set of metal folding chairs from a dumpster and covered them in felt skins, using eye-popping colors inspired by her native Latino culture.
“I have absolutely no doubt Jessica is going to be famous one day,” Bittner says. “I’ve never known anybody braver than she is and I’ve never seen her fail at anything. I’ve seen her detour, but I’ve never seen her fail.” CRAFTING COMMUNITIES
Here’s a coincidence: When you talk to friends of Devers, Aguiñiga or Brown, they inevitably start telling a story that involves one of those women walking into a room. The point of the story is to explain that the room is no longer the same once they’ve entered it. “I took Amy out to dinner last night. We went to a restaurant we’d never been to before, and there was a room in it I wanted to show her,” says Ron Fleming, an LA designer and friend. “There was a big party happening in that room, so I hesitated. But Amy just walked right in and grabbed the guy around the shoulders and said, ‘Hey, happy birthday!’ She’s totally fearless.” These women don’t just want to break new ground, colleagues and friends say. They also passionately want to connect. With an equal mix of personal dedication and largerthan-life personality, they are using their craft to engage audiences and build communities. The infectious enthusiasm they generate around their work has allowed them to bridge divides between high art and domestic crafts, between the average homeowner and the intimidating renovation project, and even between generations of their own families. “My granddad watched me on YouTube and he calls and says, ‘Jess, you don’t know how proud I am. I tried to teach your uncles how to make things, and I always wanted to pass on that legacy,’” says Brown, who first started Let’s Just
Make That! to help her mother in Tennessee tackle basic home projects when Brown was far away. “Hearing that and knowing that brings a whole new level of satisfaction.” Rosanne Somerson recalls being in a room when Aguiñiga demonstrated her process of hand-felting folding chairs. She remembers the entire studio smelling like olive oil and soap, and watching her student lovingly cast the bright wool fibers onto the drab metal. “If you’re in a room with Tanya, you’re happy. She is just naturally connected to people. And actually, I think that’s something all three of these women share,” says Somerson. “They all are incredibly hard workers. But they’re all also really funny, lively inventive people who draw people to them and, in doing that, draw them to new ideas.”
“ They all are incredibly hard workers. But they’re all also really funny, lively, inventive people.”
bottom right: photo by Peter Goldberg 88 PH
Rosanne Somerson 76 ID
Jessica Brown loves transforming trash into something useful, as in the funky key holder she made from an old Neil Diamond 8-track tape. Above: One of the benches Amy Devers has shown viewers how to build on Fix This Yard.
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At RISD Buck Lewis learned to value process—something he now uses to bring memorable characters to life in some of the best animated features made in the US.
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ILLUST R AT I O N
Buck Lewis BFA 81
by Francie Latour I n 1988 B uc k L ewi s f i n ally got ev ery t h i n g h e h ad
ev er wa n t ed. Just shy of 30, he walked away from an award-winning career in advertising and a client roster that included American Express, HBO, IBM and Sony. He fled Manhattan for a Connecticut farmhouse on 100 acres. It had a circa-1750 chimney, a 35-foot-long artist’s studio with vaulted ceilings and offered all the tranquility he would need to answer his true calling: to become a painter. Three months later, he fell into a black hole of depression. “I was one of those people who was like, ‘Someday I’m going to paint. Someday, I’m going to get out of this rat-race with all this commercial bogus bullshit and do something that’s pure,’” Lewis says, with all the idealism of that 29-year-old self coming through in his 52-year-old voice. “I was fortunate enough to reach the point where I could actually get what I wished for, and see what that felt like. And it was scary.” It was scary for a few reasons. One, Lewis found out he wasn’t very skilled as a painter. Even worse, it dawned on him that in this static medium, he had nothing relevant to say. But the worst realization of all came one night when he went to the movies, and settled in to watch the animated classic Who Framed Roger Rabbit? When it was over, he realized that at 30 years old, he had gotten his true calling all wrong. “I could feel the appetite right away, like, ‘I want to do that,’” Lewis recalls. “And as soon as I felt it, I thought, here I am in
bucklewis.com
It took roughly four months of sketching before Po, the unlikely hero in Kung Fu Panda, began to emerge from Lewis’ imagination. Finding the character’s essence required dozens of sketches— until he hit on the contours of Po’s flabby exterior and inner warrior.
a farmhouse in the middle of nowhere. How in the hell am I going to make movies? Other than wallow and read about people who make films, I couldn’t put together how I would do it.” About a month later, in a moment that could’ve been scripted for Hollywood, Disney called. The studio was in a rut with a movie that was in production. They wanted something new, and they’d heard about his whimsical, prize-winning style in the illustration world. “I think they thought, ‘Hey, maybe this guy could do something,’” Lewis says. “So I got invited to play.” Since then, Lewis has been playing in some pretty elite movie company. As a character designer on more than 20 animated features, his blockbuster credits include: Madagascar, Cars, Ratatouille, Bee Movie, Ice Age, Kung Fu Panda, and this year, Gnomeo & Juliet. He has created characters for the titans of animated film, from Pixar to Disney to DreamWorks. And his heroes and anti-heroes are voiced by some of the biggest names in movie-making—Bruce Willis, Owen Wilson, Jerry Seinfeld, Renee Zelleweger. But if his gifts as an illustrator have catapulted him to the top of his field for a second time, you get the feeling that for Lewis, it’s not about the credits. (Sometimes, in the messiness of creative collaboration and the Hollywood tussle over turf and egos, he doesn’t even get full credit for his work.) For him, it’s about the medium itself. His plein-air canvases from the farmhouse may have lacked meaning. But inside his Los Angeles studio, the blank sketchbooks where animated films
“I could feel the appetite right away, like, ‘I want to do that.’” Buck Lewis 81 IL
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When the director of Ice Age turned to Lewis for ideas about how to create depth in a landscape of snowy white tundra, he was treated to a world of moody blues and purples, unexpected shadows and fantastical shapes.
“The way [Buck] approaches ideas and characters is unusual. And it’s pretty inspiring.” Chris Wedge, director are born allow Lewis to unlock entire worlds. Those worlds can be inner ones—as with Marty, the zebra in Madagascar yearning for a life beyond the city zoo—or outward-looking, as with the long vistas of Ice Age landscapes. “To me, the promise of animation is the way it opens up reflection on the human condition. It’s very much like science fiction in that way,” Lewis says. “You can introduce a world to a viewer—a unique world that you haven’t seen before, but that’s also somehow universal and hugely relatable.” When Lewis dives into those cinematic worlds, his peers in the industry say, the sketches and illustrations that emerge are extraordinary. “When we worked on Ice Age, Buck came up with these shapes you wouldn’t expect for glaciers and these colors you wouldn’t expect to render shadows on snow. He helped create an incredible sense of mood in a landscape people would assume was just going to be white,” says Chris Wedge, the Oscar-winning director best known for Ice Age and whose Blue Sky Studios produced the new film Rio. “The way he approaches ideas and characters is unusual. And it’s pretty inspiring.” This thing called art school
For a lead designer who has produced some of the most memorable characters in some of the most successful
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animated features, Lewis doesn’t sound like someone who’s used to getting his way in Hollywood. He sounds a lot more like someone who always had to find his own way, starting with his blue-collar childhood in West Chester, PA. Except for his art teacher, no one in his small-town environment knew anything about art. As a result, he became known as the kid who hid out in the art room and drew vicious but clearly advanced caricatures of his teachers. As graduation loomed, Lewis found himself facing what he calls his “first big fork in the road:” joining the local chapter of the Pagans, a national biker gang, or going to college. And the latter option held almost no appeal. “I was already at a point where I really wanted to develop my own path in life,” he says. “Any kind of traditional schooling felt too much like a template that I was being handed, that I had to conform to. And that wasn’t interesting to me at all.” At first, he had no idea that kids could do something radical and law-abiding at the same time. Then, Lewis says, he found out about colleges called art schools—and soon applied to every one he could find. After getting accepted to all of them, he didn’t know how to choose, so he went with his gut: RISD. Almost immediately, he gravitated to illustration—a medium that resonated with his blue-collar instincts to work hard, produce and excel by proving yourself technically on paper.
“There was a kind of clarity about illustration, and it was really attractive to me that you couldn’t hide behind any pretense,” he says. “It had nothing to do with what you looked like or your persona or anything else. It just had to do with what you could do.” But even a non-traditional school like RISD has rules, and Lewis, the would-be biker, found himself gravitating to other things beyond the studio—like getting into trouble. He may not hold the record for being called before RISD’s disciplinary board, but with roughly seven appearances in four years, Lewis says if he doesn’t, he’s probably pretty close to whoever does. “How can I put this?” says Carter Goodrich 81 IL, a fellow character designer whose credits include Shrek, Finding Nemo and Despicable Me. “Buck was this sort of wild man; I came from the country in Connecticut with nothing like that kind of background.” But the two became lifelong friends and today live just a couple blocks away from each other in LA. “He didn’t do anything really bad. . . I just think that reckless and fun life got him into trouble now and then at RISD.” Lewis also faced the brutal realization that he would never again be the ace high-school artist whose work blew everyone away. For four years, he worked with peers who were as good or better than him, he says, and professors whose relentless Ratatouille invited audiences into the world of haute cuisine and convinced them to root for an unlikely hero—a rat whose predicament throws light on the human condition. He is precisely the kind of character that drives Lewis’ passion for animated film.
discipline literally transformed him from a kid drawing dragsters to a proficient figurative artist. Yet for all the conflict and self-doubt, Lewis says, there was no better place for him than RISD. “I couldn’t have been in a more perfect place,” he says. “What’s astonishing and formative and useful about RISD is the way it’s all about process. It was all about how you engage creatively. And that answered my original interest in finding my path and my own journey, because process itself—every drawing, every creative experience—is a very powerful kind of journey. I look at process as a way of life, and I couldn’t think of a more valuable thing to take away from school.” Defining good
Lewis’ intensely personal process has become one of his most important calling cards, in editorial illustration, in advertising and especially in animated features. It’s a trait that sets him apart in the world of character design, where survival often means never getting too attached to characters that automatically become the property of a studio, but may never make it to the big screen. “To Buck’s credit, he gets very emotionally involved with it, and the characters become a lot more personal to him,” says Goodrich. “And that’s how it should be.” But the other key to Lewis’s success is much harder to describe. “I’ve seen plenty of folks’ portfolios out here, and they all have a stunning sense of design,” Goodrich says. “But they don’t have that strange element—that something in them that makes the characters believable. Buck’s real strength is that he has great designs but he also has a reality and freshness to his characters. And that’s really hard.” Lewis himself has trouble articulating what it is that makes a character not just well-designed, but vital, though he agrees with Goodrich that it’s about more than technique. “Designing lead characters for animated feature films is kind of a weird super-specialized endeavor,” Lewis says. “As a draftsman, I’m not as phenomenal as other people I encounter on a daily basis. But what I have is access to my own process. If you invite me to work on a story with you, I relate to it completely differently than most other people.”
“To me, the promise of animation is the way it opens up reflection on the human condition.” Buck Lewis 81 IL
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“I started to feel like I could see the character, and then fastened on to it. I went into a zone.” Buck Lewis 81 IL
Where other character designers like to flaunt their technical craftsmanship, Lewis says, he instinctively gravitates towards the inner contours of personality and the universe in which the character lives. “I can’t find my way to a character with technique,” he says. “I go to an emotional place. I find the connection with a character, I learn everything I can about them from the inside out, and then I can create. It has nothing to do with the surface. It has everything to do with the interior.” It took about four months for Lewis to find Po, the unlikely martial-arts hero from Kung Fu Panda. Unlike many projects, where directors come to him with a fully formed concept and storyline, Lewis had a hand in creating Po and his panda world from the ground up. “That was a movie where I was invited by DreamWorks to be part of a kind of informal director’s think tank,” Lewis says. “So I was really engaged at the level of the nucleus of the story.” At that embryonic stage, Lewis already envisioned Po as a lovable, improbable Rocky—guided, challenged and nearly abandoned by his master trainer. It was an homage to the Kung Fu movie genre wrapped in anthropomorphic farce. What followed was a flurry of sketches and iterations of pandas—until he hit on an idea worth pursuing. “I’d get into a series of five or six different renderings and something would emerge where I started to feel like I could see the character, and then I fastened onto it,” he says. “I went into a zone, and I could feel I was hitting him.” The promise of Po slaying his master’s shunned protégé, the evil snow leopard Tai Lung, contained all the elements that drive Lewis to make animated films. “In what other medium could you say, ‘OK, what is the most unlikely hero for Kung Fu fighting you could possibly think of?’” Lewis says. “Well, how about just a big flabby panda bear? Top that! That’s the fun
of animation. And then there’s that Holy Grail element of having this world that has its own logic to it and you can build that out and take viewers on this ride within it.” In 1991, not long after Lewis got his start in character design, Beauty and the Beast became the first animated film to be nominated for an Academy Award for best picture. The last two years have seen back-to-back best-picture nominations for the genre, with Up! (the Pixar film featuring the work of supervising animator Scott Clark 96 IL) in 2010 and Toy Story 3 in 2011. If some people are surprised at the meteoric rise of animation in recent years, Lewis is not. “I think good has a universal definition, beyond just, you know, pyrotechnics,” he says. “With animation, you’ve got a protracted, years-long process where everyone involved is asking over and over and over again, ‘Is this a good idea? Why are we doing this?’ In that kind of process, chances are you’re going to have a story and a movie that can do well.” Inventing new worlds
After working on the best animated features in the industry, what’s next for H.B. Lewis? Perhaps not surprisingly, he now finds himself driven by the element that has long been the
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In addition to designing characters, Lewis longs to tell stories. He has illustrated seven books, including My Penguin Osbert in Love, and is in the process of developing the characters, look and feel (middle image) of his own animated feature, Left Tern.
“With Buck, there’s a hidden artist in there who really understands the emotional structure of a film.” Chris Wedge
key to his animated characters: storytelling. He has already illustrated seven books, including My Penguin Osbert (2008) and My Penguin Osbert in Love (2010). He’s written a graphic novel with his longtime partner, Staci Marengo, and his three children, ages six, four and two, have become his most important critics. “They’re my review team,” Lewis says. “They just respond instantly to stuff, and it’s amazing.” But to hear his colleagues tell it, there’s one place a character designer with Lewis’ sense of narrative is bound to end up: writing and directing his own feature film. “In animated film these days, you’re pretty much dealing with collaboration among specialists. It’s rare that you find artists that can do more than one thing really well,” says Wedge. “With Buck, he excels at his drawing, which he’s obviously known for, but there’s also a hidden artist in there who really understands the emotional structure of a film. He has an amazing ability to invent stories that are charactercentric and emotion-centric.” Lewis puts it more simply. “Once I realized I wanted to do more,” he says, “‘more’ became stories.” And then, without pictures or a sketchbook in hand, he starts to tell a story. It’s a story about a bird, co-created by Lewis and Marengo. She’s a teenager and the oldest daughter in a very large family of terns who migrate year after year from Maine to Florida. And she’s completely bored. “Isabelle, our tern, is just sick of this migrating pattern. She’s seeing her life flash before her eyes, and she yearns for a different outcome,” Lewis says. “And in that moment when she starts to think, ‘What else could there be?’ she fantasizes about staying behind. And her mother, Alice, who is the bird equivalent of a Type-A, PTA mom, she’s got a whole team of families that she’s in charge of when they migrate. They get all the way to Florida, and her daughter is not there.” The project, which Lewis is set to direct and is tentatively titled Left Tern, is the kind of story any parent and child could relate to. But the heart of the conflict—what will the mother bird do?—presents the perfect kind of story for Lewis to tell. “In the bird world, once you migrate, you can’t go back,” he says. “That’s against nature. So it’s great fun and it’s good entertainment. But having those universal emotions embedded in a dilemma from a completely different world? That’s what really attracts me.”
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RIS D
V IN T A GE
2011 ( a
v e r y
g o o d
y e a r )
W h en t h i s y ea r ’s sen i o rs a n d master’s candidates graduate on June 4, the RISD alumni community will welcome 660 newly minted members. In gearing up for the big transition, all graduating students presented final projects this spring. It’s breathtaking stuff, showing the conceptual depth, mastery of materials, personal expression and indescribable appeal of the diverse work emanating from RISD studios. The handful of examples shown here offers a glimpse of work by seniors, followed by grad students.
Rebecca Manson 11 CR r ec en t r eco g n i t i o n : one of 10 students nationwide to win the prestigious 2011 Windgate Fellowship for excellence in craft
a residency and research in Berlin, followed by post-baccalaureate study at California State University, Long Beach
n ext up :
rebexman.com
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JooHee Yoon 11 IL recen t recog n i t i o n : one of two top prizes in the 2011 Society of Illustrators NY competition n ext up: move to New York City to freelance as an editorial illustrator for magazines, newspapers, books and posters ; continue making prints through her new Six Legged Studios
jooheeyoon.com
Avery Reed 11 AP internships at the Metropolitan Opera in NYC and Annex Theater in Seattle, WA
recen t e xpe r i en c e:
find a position as a costume designer so that she can to combine her love of fantasy with her design, illustration, sewing and construction skills
n ext up:
avery-reed.com
“Inspired by the story of La Esmeralda—an operatic adaptation of The Hunchback of Notre Dame—my collection emphasizes the self-mockery and masquerade of the festival of fools scene, uniting the chimerical and frightening elements of the cathedral’s gargoyles with the frivolity of the revelers in the streets below.” Avery Reed 11 AP
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Collin Hatton MFA 11 PT “I strive to make my work represent the world as something folded into itself…. I am interested in the challenge of creating paintings in which anything can be included, but still maintain a sense of logic and purpose. I want to use the fold to access and embrace it all.”
fro m his thesi s state me n t:
next up: preparing for Small Crowd, a show of work by RISD MFA 11 Painting grads at Mixed Greens in NYC, June 16–July 8
williamcollinhatton.com
Lee Patrick Johnson MFA 11 CR r ec ent wo rk: Craftswoman, a one-hour performance piece (based on Paul McCarthy’s Painter) in which he threw air-dry clay, resin, glitter and crystal on a pottery wheel; Column, a collaborative installation piece for Sitings at the RISD Museum rule o f thum b:
“Apply for everything. You can’t lose.”
leepatrickjohnson.com
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Jennifer Cawley MFA 11 PH shown here, archival pigment prints, including Untitled (Airstrip, Vietnam), from the series Re/constructed Narratives of the American War in Vietnam, and Untitled (Michael), from the series War Stories
t h esi s wo r k :
n ext up : work included in Best of the Northeast Masters of Fine Arts exhibition, on view from June 10–September 5 at the Helen Day Art Center in Stowe, VT
feed.risd.edu
“I create light-catching, soft, white, fluid objects that are hollow, empty, isolated, barren, over-worked or tedious. They hold dual messages—of purity and loss, of hard and soft, of weight and weightlessness, of memory and reality, and of hope and experience.” Crystal Ellis MFA 11 SC
Crystal Ellis MFA 11 SC f ro m h er t h esi s stat e me n t: “I grew up on the vast flat plains of Illinois. It was empty out there on the land, by the water, below the sky. My childhood feels like a sunny place, but it wasn’t always. I had my imagination, the spaces under a cricket’s wing or below the belly of a snake, the freedom of a summer day, the small and the big together in an open field, mixed with a myriad of pets, deaths, pseudo science, winter, divorce, work and isolation. Somehow, that is what my work is. I reach in and I empty these things out.” n ext up : keep making art and reinvigorate Egg Collective, a three-person design company she recently helped found
crystalroseellis.com
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Keep connected to RISD through the Alumni Association’s network of 38 clubs around the country and the world.
ENERGIZER IN CHIEF
For architect Jim Leggitt BArch 73, the recession has given him the wiggle room to invest energy in reinvigorating the Denver-based RISD/ Colorado club.
Co lo rad o c l u b l e ad e r
Jim Leggitt BArch 73 talks fast—
rollercoaster fast. Backed by passion and years of study, this Denver-based architect (FAIA), urban planner and author speaks like a gifted professor, his words gaining speed, building momentum, steadily climbing to a dizzying peak. Then the ideas spill out, as he rides the curve at a breakneck pace to make his point. Leggitt is, in fact, a teacher. Like many professionals, he found in the ever-worsening economy the perfect opportunity to start a new career. Two years ago, as head of the international projects division for one of Denver’s leading architectural firms, he was in the middle of a huge master planning project in Dubai. “I was working so hard, always on a plane,” he says. “Then, the projects dried up and everything went belly up overnight.” Today, he has his own firm, Leggitt Studio LLC; a new book, the 2nd edition of Drawing Shortcuts (drawingshortcuts.com); and is teaching prodigiously in various media, both traditional and non. 32
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“I’m 60 years old and I have a new career!” Leggitt exclaims. He teaches drawing classes, holds workshops and presents lectures at AIA conventions. He presents drawing “webinars” on land8lounge.com, an 11,000-member social media site for landscape architects. He has a website, a blog, a Twitter account, and YouTube and Facebook pages—all promoting his unique approach to drawing, which combines the best of technology with hand drawing skills to help people better develop and realize their design concepts.
“I try to keep everyone in contact with each other, talking to each other and having fun.” Leggitt’s latest project is leading the RISD/Colorado club in Denver. “Even closing in on 40 years later, I think of RISD as such a wonderful experience,” Leggitt says. Back then, a 17-year-old Jim and his identical twin brother John Leggitt BArch 73 both applied to RISD—and were so certain of their choice that they applied to no other school. Decades later, he still knows he made the right decision. “I think I reached a point where I want to give back,” Leggitt says. “I don’t really have any need to advance my career, so I am just leading the club for the fun of it.” Before Leggitt got things going a couple of years ago, there was no RISD alumni club in Denver. But in 2009 he wandered into an Alumni Council meeting at a RISD reunion in Providence, listened and soon
Find out more about Jim’s work at jimleggitt.typepad.com + drawingshortcuts.com.
found himself “the go-to guy for RISD alums in Denver.” Today, Leggitt sees his role as energizer in chief. “I look for opportunities to get together, I organize them,” he explains. Last fall the group got together for a successful opening at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Denver. On June 3 the club is having an open studio event hosted by sculptor Patrick Marold 97 ID. And they’re planning a walk through the construction site of the new Clyfford Still Museum led by Chase DeForest MFA 04 FD, an artist/educator who works at the new museum. “I try to keep everyone in contact with each other, talking to each other and having fun,” Leggitt says. “I want to build enthusiasm about RISD in the middle of the country because otherwise we’re so isolated.” – Paula Martiesian 76 PT
Happy Happenings Just like the candy store, the regional clubs supported by Alumni Relations offer something for everyone! Clockwise from top right: 1| In February snow delayed, but didn’t detract from the warmth at the RISD/Philadelphia Valentine’s Party, hosted by Christine Jones 52 IA (shown with Laila Ahmadinejad 01 GD, RISD Philadelphia Club leader, to her left and Christina Hartley 74 IL, director of Alumni Relations and Special Events, to her right). 2| In May RISD/NY alumni got a sneak preview of the
1|
Phillips de Pury contemporary auction and wine tasting at Art Thirst, mingling with alumni from Harvard, Brown, Princeton and Wellesley. 3| Anne Feldmeier Adams MFA 02
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PH hams it up with Olivia Valentine 02 PH, Garth Borovicka 02 PH and Kerry Hagy 02 PH at the RISD/Chicago mid-winter meet-up hosted by Matthew Stone 94 ID at Sandbox Studios. 4| At a February reception held in conjunction with the CAA convention, Jean Graham, director of Community Relations at Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia (where the event took place) connects with Meredith Miller 81 GD and Hannah Milman 82 FAV. 5| Members of the RISD/NY planning committee enjoying the art at Phillips de Pury: Polly Carpenter 77 PT (club co-leader), Chardonnay Pickard 07 IL, Michael Neff 04 PH
DIY TOGETHER RBD: OCT 14–16
(club co-leader) and Joe Borzotta 85 GD.
3|
Robyn Ericsson BArch 86 and Isaac
Regelson BArch 86 began thinking
5|
4|
above: photo #3 by Kyle Henderson BArch 99
50TH IN MOTION @ 50TH At her 50th RISD reunion, Linda DeHart 51 AP (dehartart .com) will present Colors In Motion: The Human Journey, a meditative digital media piece that includes 1,000 of her watercolor paintings synchronized with 10 musical scores. The DVD is used for healing purposes in hospitals, senior centers and elsewhere. DeHart’s work will be screened at RISD by Design on Saturday, October 15, running from 1:30–4:30 pm in the Tap Room, which is still in Memorial Hall (though the building itself has been fully renovated). For clubs and contacts in your area go to risd.edu/alumni.
about their 25th reunion as soon as their 20th one was over, surveying classmates post-event to find out what worked. Eric Meier 86 IL confirms that when he ran into Isaac at RISD Commencement last year, “he only really wanted to talk to me about our next reunion, which was kinda funny, but great.” OK, so maybe not everyone is as motivated as these two party planning pros, but you can’t have a good reunion during RISD by Design weekend (October 14–16) without people willing to organize it and others wanting to come. For their 25th, the Regel/Eric/ sons are planning Friday night drinks at a downtown bar, Saturday and Sunday brunches at The Met (refectory), a campus tour and a Saturday night pizza and drinks deal somewhere on campus, like Woods-Gerry or the Tap Room. (And at their 20th, the fun continued ’til 3 am on Saturday!) So, go ahead: start rebuilding your creative connections by requesting a list of phone numbers and email addresses and encouraging people to attend. Contact Claire Robinson at crobinso@ risd.edu or 401 454 6379 to get going.
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NEW NETWORKING TOOL SALEN SELECTED FOR 2011 ALUMNI AWARD
As a designer, Katie Salen MFA 92 GD became so fascinated with the logic and coherence of video games that she realized they have potential for helping kids to learn. She’s now testing that theory through an experimental NYC school called Quest2Learn.
At RISD’s Commencement ceremony on June 4, the Alumni Council will recognize Katie Salen MFA 92 GD with its 2011 Art and Education Award. For the past decade, this multifaceted artist and designer has been playing and designing games, using everything from karaoke ice cream trucks to giant inflatables to demonstrate the power of games as tools for innovation and learning (see Fall 2010 issue of RISD XYZ). “I became fascinated with the way that video games construct worlds,” Salen says in explaining how a pastime became a passion. “They literally start to create a kind of logic and a coherence to what you can do in that space, through the design of rules.” And as a designer, she adds, “games have become a tool to help me figure out how to design things that aren’t games.” Salen’s ever-expanding expertise led to the seminal gaming design book Rules of Play, which she co-authored, and to positions at MIT and Parsons,
where she now teaches. It also inspired her to found Institute of Play, a nonprofit that stakes it claim on the idea that gamer intelligence is not only essential to 21st-century learning, but also makes us better risk-takers, problem-solvers, collaborators and engaged citizens. In 2009 Institute of Play launched its boldest venture yet: Quest2Learn, a New York City public school organized around gaming principles and digital culture. Since then Salen’s radical model for what a school can be has commanded the attention of politicians, teachers, philanthropists and education-reform advocates across the country. With $1.1 million in funding from The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and a $2.6-million grant pending from The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Quest2Learn is changing the conversation about how a nation’s failing education system can reach a generation of digital kids. “When I was at RISD, I was really intrigued by this notion of: How do you begin to ask questions about the role of design in the world?” Salen says. “I don’t feel like I was trained as a graphic designer. I feel like I was trained as a design thinker.”
The new alumni online directory is a great tool to help you connect with each other, submit news and information about what you’re up to and share opportunities —about jobs, exhibitions, residencies, etc. Log in to the directory at www.risd.edu/alumni to: • update your own personal information (contact, address, family ties) • customize your own directory landing page • search a comprehensive database on alumni • search for or post job listings via ArtWorks • register for RISD events The new directory also allows you to submit to class notes listings online, meaning your posts will be immediately accessible to fellow alumni who are logged in to the directory. The early spring launch of the new directory— which is in iModules, a content management system used by a lot of colleges and universities—was a preliminary step towards creating a new, more useful and informative alumni site. That process will continue over the next few months as we work with a group of alumni advisors to rethink the approach and create a flexible site that also works as a strong corollary and complement to RISD XYZ.
PRESIDENTIAL TRANSITION, ALUMNI-STYLE Meghan Reilly Michaud 01 GD, who has been a member of the Alumni Council since she graduated and has served as vice president since 2009, is assuming the Council presidency from Nat Hesse 76 SC when his two-year term ends in June. As a student, she was an active member of the Student Alliance, the undergraduate governing group, and served as president in 2000. After practicing as a graphic designer for several years, Meghan earned an MAE from Salem [MA] State University and became a National Board Certified Teacher in 2009. She now teaches fine arts at Andover [MA] High School and freelances for corporate and nonprofit clients as principal of Visual Identity Studio. 34
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Hoopla Re: Hamilton In June alumni in the New England area are gathering to celebrate the late great Robert Hamilton 39 PT, a well-loved RISD professor from 1945–82, at a show of his work and a screening of a documentary about him. The event takes place on Saturday, June 11 at the Center for Maine Contemporary Art in Rockport, where the exhibition Robert Hamilton: the Last Paintings runs from May 28 through July 10. His painting Nine Giraffes (from the collection of Karen and David Estey 64 PT) is shown above. For more information, contact pbrown@risd.edu or cmcanow.org.
risdoids belong together Dawn Grattan BArch 92 + Justin Kerr 90 GD
risd sweethearts (We got more than our degrees at RISD!)
Inseparable Since Foundation Year
above right: photo by Valerie Ann Kitchin
Katy Dika 03 AP + Paul Osimo 03 ID
Paul and I met our very first day at RISD—back in 1999. We were both assigned rooms on (everpopular) floor 4 in Homer. Through a strange twist of fate, we not only lived down the hall from one another, but were also assigned the same Foundation section our first semester and had all of our classes together. No matter how different from one another we may have seemed, we were destined to be great friends, especially after pulling our very first RISD all-nighter together for a Mark Milloff 2D assignment. Paul joined The Nads hockey team (and still plays with them today!) and I became a dedicated,
card-carrying, pleated-skirt-wearing “Jockstrap,” never missing a game. A few years went by and before we knew it we were totally inseparable. After graduation, Paul heroically waited for me back home while I buzzed around the other side of the planet during my Thomas J. Watson year abroad. He even scraped up enough money for a month-long visit, braving March Fly bites and Bull Ant stings to be with me in Australia. About three years ago we finally bought our first house together on the West Side of Providence, where we now live with our two dogs, Cocoa and Nilla. I work at the RISD Nature Lab and Paul is the head designer for a juvenile products company in nearby Mass. We’re currently spending all of our free time planning our wedding at the end of July, which will be at what is still one of our favorite RISD spots—Tillinghast Farm in Barrington.
For clubs and contacts in your area go to risd.edu/alumni.
I first met Justin at the “Spaghetti That Ate Providence” party he and his roommate Bill hosted (complete with custom invitations). My roommate invited me and I didn’t know anyone, but in true starving student tradition, I went anyway ’cause it was a free meal—and a good excuse not to spend the night in the studio working. When I arrived at the party, Justin was making name tags, and noticing that he was kind of handsome and funny, I tried to position myself in the dining area so that he would sit next to me. We spent a pleasant evening laughing at each other’s bon mots, and parted ways. After a few weeks we started dating and a year and a half later, we were married at Manning Chapel on the Brown University campus. It was very important for us to ride in the ’58 DeSoto limousine Justin had found; design-wise, a contemporary stretch limo would just not do. His skills also came in handy when we realized the night before the ceremony that we had forgotten the wedding program and he was in the hotel room hand-lettering our program and discussing paper choices with me. I think it’s a good thing for RISDoids to marry other RISDoids. Justin and I have been known to discuss color in depth while our non-art school friends look at us as if we’re over-analyzing Jell-O. I don’t think any mere mortal (non-RISDoid) would be able to sympathize with a spouse complaining about the overuse of Trajan as a font. Once you go to RISD, you look at the world in a whole different way. What started out as a chance meeting at a spaghetti dinner has blossomed into six children (our “performance art” pieces) and 20 years of wedded bliss. These days, I’m no longer focusing on architecture; my days are now consumed by babies and baking. Justin is still working in his field doing web design—and even our kids have started to notice bad letter-spacing. –Dawn Grattan Kerr BArch 92
–Katy Dika 03 AP spring/summer 2011
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summer 2011
summer is alive with possibilities at risd
• Pre-College Program
• Summer Institute For Graphic Design Studies
• Summer Studies
• Textiles Summer Institute
• Career re:Design Program
• Study Abroad Programs
• Continuing Education Summer Term
Registration is happening right now.
risd.edu/summer
continuing education
RISD Continuing Education 345 South Main Street, 2nd floor Providence, RI 02903 800 364-7473 (press 2) | 401 454-6200
Process. It’s something art and life share in common. by the time they graduate , RISD students have learned to internalize the creative process. They’ve gained amazing lifelong skills and the ability to see more clearly and see the big picture.
You can become part of the RISD process by investing in the next generation of creative leaders. And you can make a huge difference by simply planning ahead.
To discover the impact of gift planning—which is itself part of the process of thinking about your life and legacy—contact Louise Olson at 401 454-6323 or email giftplanning@risd.edu.
risd.edu/giftplanning
A glimpse of what’s happening at the heart of campus — with the president, students, faculty and staff.
ADDING ART TO THE NATIONAL DEBATE message by
John Maeda
RISD’s President
Above: In Making It Understandable, a Wintersession studio taught by adjunct faculty member Lindsay Kinkade MFA 10 GD, students leveraged the power of visual communication to help explain the intricacies of healthcare reform legislation. Far right: Kinkade (middle) is flanked by fellow faculty members Susan Doyle 81 IL/MFA 98 PT and Khipra Nichols BID 78 at one of the Make It Better panel discussions.
As I w rote last fall , I a m exc i t ed t h at
Rhode Island Congressman Jim Langevin (RI–02) has introduced a resolution to officially turn STEM to STEAM. In other words, he’s actively advocating for the need to incorporate the Arts and design into national education policies that emphasize Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) as key subject areas in our nation’s schools. In Representative Langevin’s own words, House Resolution 1702 posits that: Art and design advance the understanding of STEM learning and collaboration. In classrooms and laboratories across the country, the innovative practices of art and design play an essential role in improving STEM education and advancing STEM research. To build on this, Rep. Langevin is hosting a Congressional briefing in Washington, DC on June 22 to get the word out to other members of Congress and garner support for STEAM. The briefing is open to the public and will include a diverse set of speakers talking about why the arts and design are indispensible to creating innovation in America. I will be among them, representing RISD and making a case for the value of art and design education—and the creative thinking it fosters—in our 21st-century drive to push the bounds of human endeavor. We recently created some STEAM of our own on campus, with generous support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Interim Dean of Fine Arts Deborah Bright and Architecture Critic
Follow President Maeda at our.risd.edu + twitter.com/johnmaeda
Brian Goldberg MArch 00 led the effort to organize Make It Better, a symposium in March that looked at how artists and designers can help improve healthcare delivery, public health and everyday wellness through their extraordinary powers of communicating information and emotion, among other things. We were pleased to welcome two key healthcare leaders on the national scene—Dr. Howard Koh, Assistant Secretary for Health at the US Department of Health and Human Services, and Donna Garland, associate director for communication at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. As keynote speakers, each one presented much to think about as we continue this vital discussion. We were also joined by Rhode Island Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, who wisely observed that, “Engineers and designers together created the automotive dashboard. This type of innovative, cross-industry collaboration is long overdue in our healthcare system.” So, we’ve been generating some steam behind STEAM this spring and hope to build on that momentum. You can see video highlights from the symposium at risd.cc/risdmakeitbetter and also find out more about some of the health-related studios RISD has been running. If you’re in the DC area, please join us at the Congressional briefing on June 22. And stay tuned as RISD continues to engage in the national debate about healthcare and other issues that can benefit from the input of our creative community. For more information on the Make It Better symposium, go to risd.cc/risdmakeitbetter. For information on the Congressional briefing on June 22, contact Kirtley Fisher at kirtley.fisher@mail. house.gov or call 202 225-2735.
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Silkscreening for Japan In response to the March 12 earthquake and tsunami in Japan, RISD students Sakura Bready 12 TX and Minami Otake 13 TX (both from Japan) led a crew of volunteers in a day of screenprinting t-shirts to sell to benefit relief efforts. Faculty member Gina Gregorio 92 TX helped organize the effort and reached out to alumni to help defray the cost of supplies. “The day was extraordinary in its spirit of support and community,” notes Professor Anais Missakian 84 TX, longtime head of the Textiles department and the newly appointed interim dean of Fine Arts.
GRADS GET KIT OF PARTS
SALUTING THE CLASS OF 2011 Approximately 660 students are becoming bona fide alumni as they collect their hard-earned degrees at RISD’s June 4 Commencement ceremony, which takes place at the Rhode Island Convention Center. Honorary degrees are being presented to three special guests who have made significant contributions to the worlds of art, design and education: national design leader Bill Moggridge, philosopher and aesthetics expert Arnold Berleant and public/conceptual artist Mierle Ukeles. Moggridge, who is also the keynote speaker at the ceremony, is the director of the Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum in Manhattan. A visionary interaction designer, he wrote Designing Interactions and is one of the first people to integrate human factors into computer design. As a philosopher, musician and leading figure in the field of aesthetics, Berleant has taken all three 38
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of these disciplines in new directions by asking fundamental questions about the nature of beauty in art, the natural world and our built environment. A lifelong academic, he now edits the online journal Contemporary Aesthetics and has written seven books, including, most recently, Sensibility and Sense: The Aesthetic Transformation of the Human World (2010). The action-oriented public art Ukeles has been making since the 1960s—when she released her well-known Manifesto for Maintenance Art, 1969!—has transformed such mundane routines as cleaning, serving and maintenance into radical art statements. Her installations, performances and public art pieces have been exhibited across the country and around the world, and since 1977 Ukeles has served as the official, unsalaried artistin-residence at NYC’s Department of Sanitation.
RISD is again giving graduates an Artrepreneur Kit, a practical parting gift to help them explore entrepreneurial possibilities. As part of the kit, Etsy is awarding the first-ever Etsy RISD Fellowship to the 2011 grad whose shop on the recently launched RISD Team Page shows the most promise. The winner will receive a $1,500 grant to attend an Etsy-sponsored summit on small business and sustainability in Berlin, Germany. Square, Inc. is offering graduating students the ability to process credit card payments anywhere via a small square card reader that plugs into a mobile phone input jack. New grads will also get free six-month accounts to Prosite, Behance’s newly launched online portfolio site, and 2GB accounts from YouSendIt that are free for three months, followed by discounted service fees. “With our Artrepreneur Kit, we are providing new grads with just a few of the online tools and resources that can help launch their work in the public spectrum,” notes President John Maeda. “It’s just one way to help them make a living in whatever way they choose.”
MFA PROGRAMS TOP LIST For the third year running, RISD topped the US News & World Report rankings for the best Fine Art Schools, which assess graduate programs throughout the country. In earning the top spot, it edged out both Yale and the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. In specialty categories, RISD earned a #1 ranking in graphic design, glass and interior design; placed #2 in industrial design, metals/jewelry and printmaking; and #3 in ceramics, multimedia, painting, photography and sculpture. The rankings—determined solely based on results from peer assessment surveys—are published on the US News education website and also appear in the 2012 edition of the book Best Graduate Schools.
Fun Furniture at ICFF In mid-May a dozen Furniture Design students showcased their work in the high-profile International Contemporary Furniture Fair (ICFF) in New York. Called Recyclable Composites, their show featured benches, tables, chairs and light fixtures made with Twintex®, a flexible glass-fiber filament that offers an environmentally friendly alternative to conventional composites. Eun San Ernie Lee 12 FD experimented with the properties of Twintex to create a feeling of “fluffiness” in his playful Perm Chair, and since Twintex is malleable until baked, Alexandra Snook MFA 11 FD actually knit her Saddle Stool.
Showtime
JAPANESE LANTERNS AT NYC BENEFIT In April students from the Wintersession course Architectonics joined their instructor, New Yorkbased architect Aki Ishida, at the Japan Society in New York City for a benefit to raise funds for the Society’s Earthquake Relief Fund. They installed a collaboratively designed piece and ran a full-day workshop to help visitors add to it. Inspired by traditional Japanese festivals, the Luminous Washi Lantern project explored the use of light and shadow in Japanese architecture and celebrated the ephemeral, fleeting nature of materials traditionally used in Japanese rituals. The group synthesized designs by Adria Boynton BArch 15, Fernando Diaz Smith 13 ID and Timothy Dobday BArch 15 to develop the site-specific piece installed in the Japan Society’s skylit lobby. Ishida was pleased that students helped with Japanese relief efforts in sharing their “special convergence of interest in Japan and in teaching the public about design.”
For more on these and other stories, go to www.risd.edu.
Half the senior class of FAV majors—the ones in the live action program—posed for this poster shot, but all 31 screened an amazing range of new animated, narrative and documentary work at the senior film show in May. Many of the 2011 films will go on to be screened at festivals around the country and the world—and based on past performance, a lot of these will not only be audience favorites, but will win awards.
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Faculty Newsbites In late April Digital + Media faculty member Catherine D’Ignazio presented The Border Crossed Us, a public art installation at UMass
Diving Warbler with Insect (2011, oil on canvas, 34 x 33") is among the paintings by Professor of Illustration Trent Burleson MFA 76 PT on view through August 17 at the Newport [RI] Art Museum. The Museum will host an opening reception for Trent Burleson: Birds and Other Metaphors on June 10 and the artist will talk about his work at a luncheon on July 26, followed by a demonstration of the chiaroscuro process.
Amherst. The piece divided the campus with a to-scale photo replica of the fence that runs along the border between Mexico and southern Arizona. Erected in 2007 by Homeland Security, the fence now splits the Tohono O’odham Nation—the second largest Native American reservation in the country—in two. D’Ignazio’s sculptural intervention included a sound piece and security poetry that students responded to by texting. Recent work by Leslie Hirst, assistant professor of Foundation Studies, was included in American Artists and Not, a satellite show within the VI Biennale Di Soncino a Marco, held in May in Soncino, Italy. The exhibition featured work by 58 contemporary artists. Professor Anais Missakian 84 TX, who has served as head of the Textiles department since 2004, has been named interim dean of Fine Arts for the 2011–12 academic year. Professor Bill Newkirk 68 GD, head of the Graphic Design department, will serve as interim dean of Architecture + Design during the 2011–12 academic year. Film/Animation/Video Professor Peter O’Neill recently completed Better Places, a 52-minute sequel to his 1981 documentary The Best Place To Live. Both films are about the Hmong community, a group of Laotian refugees who fought alongside the US in the Vietnam War. The sequel looks at the new possibilities for four Hmong families in Providence and was co-directed by Louisa Schein, a Brown graduate who also worked as a translator and community liaison on the original film. Professor Rosanne Somerson 76 ID, longtime head of the Furniture Design Department, has been named interim provost, effective July 1. In late March, Ceramics Department Head Linda Sormin presented Howling Room at Holtegaard Gallery in Copenhagen. She also spoke at a symposium at the Royal Danish Art Academy in conjunction with the show.
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MAJOR ENDORSEMENT Two of the three Rhode Island-based artists who won prestigious MacColl Johnson Fellowships from the Rhode Island Foundation teach at RISD. Professor Ellen Driscoll, head of the Sculpture department, and Assistant Professor of Textiles Liz Collins 91 TX/MFA 99 have been awarded $25,000 each—among the largest no-strings-attached awards given to artists in the US. The fellowships are intended “to fund an artist’s vision or voice” and have been awarded to composers, writers and visual artists every three years since 2005. Driscoll creates sculpture, installations and public art works that reflect her interest in social, racial and environmental justice, with recent studio investigations focused on the architectural and environmental impact of extracting and consuming natural resources. She plans to use her MacColl Fellowship to create outdoor public sculpture involving water. Known for creating innovative textiles, experimental knitwear and dramatic performance art pieces, Collins (see also page 52) will use her fellowship to travel to the Tilburg Museum and Textile Lab in the Netherlands, where she’ll work as an artist in residence this August. During the past five years, she has mounted several Knitting Nation performance pieces in which a team of machine knitters creates large-scale, on-site fabric installations. Building on this work and other experiments, Collins plans to use the fellowship to generate a new body of work that she hopes to show more frequently in galleries and museums.
This spring Interior Architecture Department Head Liliane Wong and Assistant Professor Markus Berger produced the second edition of Int/AR, a handsome journal focused on issues of adaptive reuse of the built environment. Volume 02_Adapting Industrial Structures presents a series of thoughtful articles that look at the challenges of adapting and transforming industrial structures and sites in Europe, South America, the US and China, which is just beginning to adopt the practice. You can order copies of both volumes at intar-journal.risd.edu.
RISD DEAN BECOMES PRESIDENT Dawn Barrett, RISD’s dean of Architecture + Design, has been selected as the next president of Massachusetts College of Art and Design (MassArt) in Boston, effective July 1. During her 10-year tenure as dean, she was instrumental in facilitating curricular and programmatic advances in the division. Barrett first taught in RISD’s Graphic Design department in the early 1990s and just prior to her appointment as dean, she headed of the Department of Design at the Jan van Eyck Akademie in Maastricht, the Netherlands. “Barrett comes to MassArt with an unwavering commitment to advancing the disciplines of art and design,” noted Richard Shea, chairman of the college’s Board of Trustees. “As a designer, faculty member and administrator, she is able to see through multiple lenses and facilitate collaboration among diverse constituencies.”
The RISD Museum helped open the world of art and design to you when you were a student. It’s still here for you. 2011 exhibition highlights Cocktail Culture: Ritual and Invention in American Fashion 1920 – 1980 Jacques Callot and the Baroque Print Newly restored Ancient, Medieval and Early Renaissance galleries Building Blocks: Contemporary Works from the Collection
risdmuseum.org 20% of your Alumni Membership is directed to the Phil Seibert [BFA ’67 IA] Alumni Acquisition Fund, which supports the purchase of works of art by RISD alumni. Join today! Call 401.454.6322 or visit us online at risdmuseum.org/join.
Skateboarders is among the drawings Printmaking faculty member Brian Shure is showing in Shadow Play, a solo show that continues through June 11 at the Museum of Art at the University of Maine in Orono. This is the first time he has exhibited drawings unaccompanied by his paintings and prints. Shure’s work is also on view through June 30 at Lenore Gray Gallery in Providence.
A look at some of the many ways people invest in RISD and support current and future generations of students.
NICOLE MILLER INVESTS IN RISD TALENT
Celebrities such as Lauren Hutton, Beyoncé and Cate Blanchett choose the comfortable and flattering looks for which Nicole Miller 73 AP (shown here on the runway herself) is known.
“RISD-educated designers are far more experimental than at other schools.”
SHE H AS BUILT ONE OF THE MOST
timeless brands in American fashion, with designs worn by iconic beauties from Lauren Hutton to Cate Blanchett to Beyoncé. Now, Nicole Miller 73 AP wants to help up-and-coming RISD designers to realize a vision of their own. After several meetings with President John Maeda to discuss her philanthropic interests, Miller is establishing an eponymous endowed scholarship that builds on her long history of support for her alma mater. “I think RISD has been a little under the radar design-wise, and it really should be brought out into prominence more,” says Miller, a full member of RISD’s Board of Trustees from 1993–98 and an honorary trustee ever since. During the Future by Design capital campaign, she volunteered as one of two national campaign chairs, helping to raise more than $100 million for the school. Miller, who has always maintained a close connection with the Apparel Design department, has chosen to invest in today’s students because RISD was critical to her own development as a designer. “Freshman Foundation alone was so great, so challenging,” she says. “It showed me a methodology, a unique way of thinking about things and a method for taking on challenging projects.” D IST INCTIV E,
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Despite the demands of running a high-profile design business, Miller often hosts class visits to her NYC headquarters and serves as a visiting critic and lecturer. In fact, she has volunteered at RISD since 1987, just a year after opening up her first New York boutique on Madison Avenue. The opening marked a major milestone in Miller’s ascendancy in the fashion world. In 1982, together with business partner and CEO Bud Konheim, she co-founded the Nicole Miller company, launching a label that has expanded far beyond women’s apparel—to handbags, footwear, jewelry, bridal wear and men’s sportswear. Now, with 15 namesake boutiques nationwide and more than 1,000 specialty and department stores carrying her designs, Miller still thinks fondly of Carr Haus, Benefit Street and the studios where students burned the midnight oil. And she can always tell what makes RISD students stand out: “RISD-educated designers are far more experimental than at other schools,” she says. “They really push the boundaries, so you see a lot more innovation. It may not always be the most commercially viable, but school is an important time to be experimental and creative.”
Find out more about Nicole’s work at nicolemiller.com.
Known for the superior cut and construction of her dresses as well as her striking graphic prints, Miller has built her premier label by avoiding trendy fads in favor of designs that are iconic and dramatic at the same time. She has often credited her father, an engineer, and her Parisian-born mother, who gave her an early taste of French style, as influences in the evolution of her signature style. “A lot of my clothes really require a lot of construction and very complex pleating,” she says. “I like things that are a challenge to be made, rather than something that’s simple. The complexity of engineering in the clothing is one of the most fun parts to me.”
photos by Melinda Rainberger 04 FAV
SWAG WITH A DIFFERENCE In Hollywood, SWAG stands for Sealed With a Gift, and usually involves goodie bags filled with luxury freebies celebrities don’t really need. This year RISD launched an altogether different kind of SWAG: Students Who Are Grateful. It’s a campaign to raise awareness about RISD’s Annual Fund, which encourages alumni and parents to help support a portion of the cost of educating each student. “The tuition dollars families pay only covers about 70% of the cost of attendance per academic year,” says Assistant Director of the Annual Fund Kenneth Fonzi, who worked with students to launch the campaign. “If you start spending tuition money on the first day of classes in September, we calculated it would run out by roughly March 16.” Since most students either don’t realize that RISD depends on donations to the Annual Fund to help offset operating costs or what impact those donations have on them, SWAG volunteers—mostly students who are on financial aid themselves—put up posters around campus saying, ‘Imagine that you could not finish this painting” or “that you could not finish developing your film.” For more on giving to RISD, go to www.risd.edu/give.
The awareness campaign culminated in a SWAG event on March 16 that drew about 100 students. Several students had made a roughly seven-foot-tall tree from recyclable materials, and everyone who attended wrote small thank you notes to donors on leaf-shaped paper and then hung them on the tree’s open branches. The awareness campaign was meant to engage students in a different way from the more traditional senior gift model. In the past two years, graduating students have donated funds to start a materials library and support recycling efforts, but enthusiasm for those efforts fell short, in part because of lack of student awareness and in part because the restrictive nature of the gifts meant the funds couldn’t be used for other important needs. “I think SWAG is a model that works well for RISD, as opposed to seniors saying, ‘Hey, let’s buy a bench,’” Fonzi points out. “It’s a way to connect students with donors and remind them of the importance of giving back.”
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underGraduate Class Notes
661 36 new alumni as of 6.4.11
Graphic Design
% of males graduating
department with the most graduating students, along with Illustration (82 each)
Jon Naiman 89 PH
Rachel Schreiber 87 GD
Anne Karpis MAT 83
Victo Ngai 10 IL
Carol Anthony 66 IL Nathalie Jolivert BArch 12
Carlos Cedran 96 PT
1933 441 179 118
Jewel + Pearl
Moon Jung Jang loveliest name in class notes
# of seniors graduating
AE
AP
# of grad students graduating
Arch
CR
DM
relative # of Class of 11 graduates per department
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FAV
FD
earliest class year referenced
cutest risd wannabees in class notes
# of international students graduating
22,261
GD
IL
ID
IA
JM
# of alumni now in risd’s database
LA
PT
PH
PR
SC
TX
William Killen TC and Bill Killen 93 FAV , an RI-based
father-and-son team, worked together to create Killen Studio’s RISD Acrylic Color, a complete student-grade paint system under the RISD label. The line was introduced at the risd:store last fall and has been “extremely well received,” they report. The paints actually originated 20 years ago when Bill challenged his father to create an acrylic paint system superior
Mary (Padykula) Kosowski 49 AP
to what was commercially available; as a result, he used the line William produced
Mary is thrilled that her work will be on view in two shows this summer: one at the Providence Art Club from June 12 – July 1 and the other at the Attleboro [MA] Art Museum from August 12–September 10. The retired teacher lives in Smithfield, RI and is still happily drawing and painting.
throughout his RISD years and has stuck with it ever since.
Helen Webber 63 AE
1960
Helen recently created two murals that “glow like stained glass with back LED lighting” for Coasta Cruise Lines’ new ship Favolosa. She works out of her studio in Exton, PA.
In February Jean Winslow IL* (Lowell, MA) showed work in A Print is a Print is Print, an exhibition at The Brush Gallery in Lowell, MA that was part of a citywide printmaking exposition.
1961
1949 In March Robert Nason PT showed 50 years’ worth of pastel figure studies and portraits at Addison Woolley gallery in Portland, ME, where he lives.
1954 Fabulous Fakes: Jewelry by Kenneth Jay Lane, a retrospective featuring 400 archival pieces by Kenneth Jay Lane AD , ran earlier this year at the Norton Museum of Art in West Palm Beach, FL. The exhibition built on one that originated at the RISD Museum in 2007 by adding approximately 50 pieces dating from the 1960s and ’70s.
1958 David Kelley GD reports from Falmouth, MA that he had “a very satisfying 2010,” with pastel paintings accepted in four national and two regional juried shows, and several first-place awards overall. Two were for family portraits: Grace Dore, a painting of his mother as a young woman, which won the Open Juried National Exhibition at the Cape Cod Art Association, and Aileen, a portrait of his daughter, honored in the Open Summer Juried Exhibition at the new Falmouth [MA] Art Center.
50th Reunion
1959 From 1995 to 2005, Robert Cronin PT (Falls Village, CT;
October 14 – 16, 2011
1963 Two computer-photo montages
robertcroninart.com) worked
by Deena des Rioux IL (NYC)
exclusively on imaginary figure
are included in the fifth edition
paintings. Selections from
of Robert Hirsch’s Exploring
this body of work were shown
Color Photography, which
last winter in Be Mine, a solo
was published by Focal Press
exhibition of “couples paintings”
in January 2011.
at Sanford Smith Fine Art in Great Barrington, MA.
1964 Elizabeth “Chickie” Sommers
In April and May Wendy
Busch AE (Glenburn, ME)
Ingram SC/MAE 77 had an
is completing a large-scale piece
exhibition of Paintings &
titled Inside, Outside at the New
Handmade Paper at the Central
Mexico Scientific Laboratories
Congregational Church in
in Albuquerque. Selected through
Providence, where she lives.
an open national competition,
she took inspiration from both the landscape outside the lab and the hidden landscape of cells to create a work that will fill an entry atrium when it is installed late this summer. “Eleven individually hung, painted, digitally printed and woven units will fill a 65 x 30' space,” Chickie explains. “I have obtained digital plant, animal, human cell images… [and] transferred them to transparent UV acetate. I cut them all into strips and interweave them into the New Mexico landscape.” Elissa (Scott) Della-Piana IL curated and presented Points of Departure, a spring exhibition of non-objective works at her Gallery Della-Piana in Wenham, MA. The show featured works by Michael Pasquale BArch ,
Robert Cipriani 60 GD and Pamela C. Shaw 09 PR .
Work by Eric Engstrom IL (Fairfax, CA) has been featured and reviewed on several blogs recently, including architectsandartisans.com, modenus.com and roamingbydesign.com. As one of the authors of the educational program Prentice Hall High School Math Digital Path, Stuart Murphy IL (Boston) was among the team that earned a 2010 Award of Excellence from Tech & Learning magazine. Stu lives in Boston and continues to be an active member of RISD’s Board of Trustees, serving as vice president. Nancy H. Taplin PT (Warren, VT) showed work in Hello from Vermont, a group exhibition held in February and March at Maison Kasini in Montreal.
Elaine (Mendolia) Longtemps 63 GD Based in Brooklyn, Elaine has been on a roll, exhibiting work in quite a few current and recent juried shows, including: Marylou Hillyer 25th International Juried Show, held in March at the Visual Arts Center of New Jersey in Summit; Green: the Color and the Cause, which continues through September 11 at the Textile Museum in Washington, DC; the invitational exhibition Uncommon Threads: The Fiber Show, March–April at Trenton [NJ] Artworks; Fiber Plus, March–May at the Blue Door Gallery in Yonkers, NY; the National Fiber Directions Exhibition 2011, March–May at The Wichita [KS] Center for the Arts; and Hinoki (right) in The Northeast Regional Juried Fiber Exhibition, April–May at the Rochester [NY] Contemporary Art Center.
To submit updates for class notes, email risdxyz@risd.edu.
spring/summer 2011
45
Jillian Barber 68 CR Doppelganger, one of Jillian’s recent photographs, was included in two recent national juried shows: Spectra 2010 at The Silvermine Guild Arts Center in New Canaan, CT (fall 2010) and Seeing Double at the Attleboro [MA] Arts Museum (summer 2010). Jillian is based in Jamestown, RI.
and boxed collages—from each of the four decades she taught at the college. Maureen is retiring knowing how well we comple-
as the Joanne Toor Cummings
joining forces will benefit both
’50 Professor of Studio Art, and
firms,” says Craig, whose former
has been one of the longest-
firm, DuBose Associates, will
tenured professors at Connecticut
maintain an office in Westerly,
College. Her work is in the
RI under the Tecton name.
collections of museums and
1969 Ed Baranosky PT (Toronto,
Ontario) had two poems included in Lynx XXVI:1
Carol Anthony 66 IL Beloved Paint Brush is among the oil crayon paintings Carol will show in Landscapes of Memory, her next solo exhibition at Gerald Peters Gallery in Sante Fe, where she lives and paints, happily unplugged from the wired world. The show runs from July 8 through August 5.
(February 2011), Plein Air and Voyageurs. In January he offered a demonstration and workshop on acrylic seascape painting at Lucsculpture School & Studios in Toronto.
1966 45th Reunion October 14 – 16, 2011 Clay monoprints by Marsha
were recent paintings and drawings full of “unsettling images of a world gone awry,” depicting post-apocalyptic landscapes and scenes of global warming,
Dowshen PT (Bordentown, NJ)
urban decay, eating disorders,
were on view in April in the
overconsumption and war.
art gallery at Pebble Hill Church
at the end of this academic year
ment each other, we see that
In May Jack Dickerson GD exhibited a large new body of work entitled Crabs of Cape Cod at his own Dickerson Gallery in Brewster, MA. Bruce Helander 69 IL/MFA 72
Selby Minner FS (Rentiesville,
Tim Casey PT* (NYC) had work
in Paper 2011, a winter show of small works on paper at Janet Kurnatowski Gallery in Brooklyn. His piece JV was included in a review of the show on the blog Steven Alexander Journal. Lois Brezinski AP (Delray
.com) invites all RISD alumni to visit her new gallery, Lois Brezinski Artworks in West Palm Beach, FL, to see her own work and the work of other artists. The gallery opening was supported
PT was recently appointed editor-
by a $20,000 grant from the
in-chief of The Art Economist,
city’s Downtown Development
a glossy new monthly magazine
Authority. Lois has had many
process starts with a flattened
Family Portraits, a show by
slab of stoneware clay that
Ben Larrabee PH (Darien, CT;
describes it as a “handsomely
commissioned work can be seen
becomes the ‘canvas.’ Colored
benlarrabee.com), is on view
designed and understandably
at hotels and resorts including
various tools, and inlaid with
Nantucket, MA.
rollers. This is what gives the images their depth, texture, and richness of color. The image is carefully transferred with pressure using a hand roller onto a special non-woven fabric. The process leaves the monoprint archival since the clay is inert and the pigments are permanent and stable. Each clay monoprint is an original.” In April Karen Moss PT
Mary Curtis Ratcliff AE
(Berkeley, CA) had a show titled Encounters with Light in March at Mercury 20 gallery in Oakland, CA.
1968 David Foster BArch and
aimed at art lovers and collectors.
of her paintings published by
In his editor’s message, Bruce
PI Fine Art of Toronto, and her
written” publication that “carefully examines the active careers and financial successes of prominent living artists.” In February he also moderated a panel discussion entitled The Curious Economics of Art at the American International Fine Art Fair, which took place in West Palm Beach, FL, his longtime home.
Craig Saunders BArch recently
Connecticut College recognized
merged their two Hartford, CT-
retiring studio art professor
based architectural firms into
Maureen McCabe SC (Quaker
one, retaining the name of David’s
Hill, CT) with a retrospective
(Brookline, MA) had a solo show
practice: Tecton Architects
exhibition in February. Swan
titled Dissonant Worlds at Fourth
(tectonarchitects.com). “Having
Song featured examples of her
Wall Project in Boston. On view
worked together previously and
art—mixed media assemblages
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OK) is a blues musician with the band Selby and Blues on the Move. Visit dcminnerblues.com for song clips, performance dates, Blues Club nights in Rentiesville, OK, and the annual Dusk Till Dawn Blues Festival, which was founded by her late husband D.C. Minner. Selby
Beach, FL; loisbrezinskiartworks
Moments of Grace: Fine Art
through September 22 at the
40th Reunion October 14 – 16, 2011
1970
1967
Sconset Cafe in Siasconset,
1971 Bernice Mast PH (see page 3)
in Doylestown, PA. Marsha
slips are applied to the slab.
This spring Christy (Bradley) Colebank IL coordinated an exhibition at the Wimberley [TX] United Methodist Church and participated in events at the Wimberley Valley Art League and the New Braunfels [TX] Art League. In March she concurrently exhibited colored pencil drawings at both galleries; called Flying Frog and Song of the Owl, they were a “flash back to Nature Lab days,” she writes.
galleries around the world.
describes her technique: “The
The slips are layered, altered with
Breakers, Palm Beach; Ritz Carlton, Grand Cayman; and Marriott Grand Harbor, Orlando. (see also page 7)
Phyllis Limbacher Tildes 67 IL Will You Be Mine? A Nursery Rhyme Romance, Phyllis’ 18th picture book for Charlesbridge, was released this spring. It’s a compilation of Mother Goose rhymes that, when strung together, create a whimsical love story between a cat and a poodle. Phyllis works out of her studio in Savannah, GA.
year, as a tribute to my late mother,” writes Candy Kugel IL (NYC). “After caring for my mother who suffered a massive stroke in 1994 and then survived with expressive aphasia (the inability to find words) for another 12 1/2 years, I produced and created a 17-minute animated film, It’s Still Me! A Guide for People with Aphasia and Their Loved Ones. The National Aphasia Association (NAA) is distributing it for us
Jennifer Davies 68 IL
and I worked with 4 aphasia
The pieces on view in Jennifer’s recent solo show at City Gallery in New Haven, CT represented a variety of materials and techniques, including layered or woven abaca and kozo fibers, sometimes dipped in a slurry of handmade paper, as well as clay, plaster and earth. Jennifer lives in nearby Branford, CT.
guide I give hints about how to
groups in its creation. In this communicate without words…. I continue to get letters from family members of people with aphasia, saying how much it has meant to them. The NAA just
assembled From Black Town
Diane Tasho TX and Barbara
To Blues Festivals, an exhibit on
Fleischer IL along with faculty
view last winter at the Frisco
members James Fowle and
Depot in Muskogee, OK.
Dean Richardson 56 PT , can
Neal Rantoul PH/MFA 73
(Boston; nealrantoul.com) had two solo shows last fall and winter: Twenty-Five Years at Boston’s Panopticon Gallery in
be seen on YouTube.
1973
got a grant to translate it into Spanish and we will re-record
Jo Ann Secor 73 AE
the voiceover and remake it to
A principal at the Lee H. Skolnick Architecture + Design Partnership in NYC, Jo Ann recently worked on a nontraditional and highly acclaimed design for Summit Elementary School in Casper, WY. The $16.6-million facility features moveable walls, a cross-disciplinary creativity suite and a “village center” that doubles as a public event space. The school grounds house wind turbines that send excess power to another part of the state.
serve this very large community. I love that this film, above all my other work, has made a big difference in people’s lives!”
Brian Dowley PH/MFA 75 FAV
Masters of Studio Glass: Toots
(Cambridge, MA) was director
Zynsky, a survey of the work
November 2010, and Collections
of photography on Dinosaur
of Toots Zynsky GL , is on view
Wars, a documentary about the
at the Griffin Museum’s Digital
at the Corning [NY] Museum
discoveries and feuds of pioneer
Silver Imaging in Belmont, MA
paleontologists Edward Cope
in January and February. He also
and O.C. Marsh. The film aired
was an invited speaker at the
in January on the PBS series
February Yuma Art Symposium
American Experience.
in Arizona. In addition to teaching in the Department
Henry Isaacs PT (Sharon, VT)
of Art + Design at Northeastern
will be offering the third annual
University, Neal serves on the
Islesford [ME] Plein Air
boards of the Photographic
Workshops in September. Visit
Resource Center in Boston and
his website (henryisaacs.com)
the Griffin Museum of Photo-
for more information on the
graphy in Winchester, MA.
three-day painting program.
1972
showed paintings in Scale:
The 1972 film Maiali delle Strade, directed by Barry Koch IL (Nyack, NY) and featuring EHP alumni Rob Saunders IL (Brookline, MA), Jeff Janson* (Rome), Beth Miles GD (Washington, DC), Carlton Fletcher PT (Washington, DC),
and the RISD Museum Board
explains. Students and faculty
of Glass through January 29,
of Governors.
from Webster University [in
2012. The exhibition features her signature filet de verre (glass
1974
Kodachrome from May through
thread) vessels—pieces that
Susan Hacker Stang 71 PH/
December 2010. Susan’s essay
St. Louis, MO] engaged in shooting
MFA 74 recently co-edited a book,
in the book, which includes
and deserved acclaim for their
Kodachrome, End of the Run:
a selection of 69 images from
often extraordinary and always
Photographs from the Final
the Webster project, discusses
unique explorations in color,”
Batches (2011, Webster University
the film’s historical importance,
in the words of the show descrip-
Press), with colleague Bill
its unique scientific formulation
tion. Toots lives in Providence
Barrett. “The book grew out of a
and how the introduction
and is an active member of
discussion in my color photo-
of Kodachrome gave birth to
both RISD’s Board of Trustees
graphy class last spring,” she
modern color photography.
“enjoy a widespread popularity
C. Richard Kattman BLA
Experiencing Size, Surface and Story, a three-person exhibition held in April and May at the Attleboro [MA] Arts Museum. He lives in nearby Holliston, MA. “I thought you might be interested in a project I did last
Chip Simone 67 PH The Resonant Image: Photographs by Chip Simone, which runs at Atlanta’s High Museum of Art from June 18 to November 6, features 64 color photographs, including 11 pieces the museum recently acquired for its photography collection, and presents what Chip describes as “the most intimate images I’ve ever shown, not for what they depict but for what they reveal.” Chip made the photographs in and around Atlanta, where he lives, and in his home state of Massachusetts.
To submit updates for class notes, email risdxyz@risd.edu.
spring/summer 2011
47
Christine Hanlon 76 PT Christine (christinehanlon.com) created the cover and was profiled in the winter 2010–11 issue of Sea History, a publication of the National Maritime Historical Society. She has work in the current show Hobos to Street People: Artists’ Response to Homelessness from the New Deal to the Present, which is traveling around California until 2012. Her painting in the show is from her 1997 MFA thesis exhibition at the Academy of Art University, which was produced as a fundraiser for the Coalition on Homelessness. She also participated in the 22nd Annual Spring Open Studio 2011 at Hunter’s Point Shipyard in San Francisco.
led to growth of the business,
held in February and March at
local community and will also
Pawtucket [RI] Arts Collaborative.
allow him to take on high school apprentices. The Owl Stool was featured in the Furniture Society booth at the March Architectural palette of both washed-out
Digest Home and Design Show in
tones and dense, electric hues,”
New York City.
according to the gallery.
1976
CT since 1978, Karen Rand Anderson CR (karenrand
(Washington, DC), a tour guide at the US Capitol, was selected by PBS.org as its photo of the day. Wendy Hollender TX (see
page 7) Patterns of Love and Beauty, Barbara’s solo site-specific installation with related drawings, continues through June 28 at Artspace in Raleigh, NC. A lecturer in RISD’s Sculpture Department, she recently teamed up with Jeff Poland in RISD’s HPSS Department to teach a spring course called Truths and Consequences, which was supported by a Kyobo Grant for Interdisciplinary and Collaborative Teaching.
1975 Charles Cunniffe BArch (see
page 9) Peter Curran PH helped to organize DECON’11, the biannual conference of the Building Materials Reuse Association (BMRA). Held in May at Yale University, the conference focused on how to make building demolition greener by addressing issues including building material salvage and reuse, deconstruction and workforce development, rebuilding distressed neighborhoods and recycling construction and demolition debris. Paul Housberg PT/MFA 79 GL (Jamestown, RI) was selected to create a series of glass installations for the corridors
48
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of Princeton University’s new Frick Chemistry Laboratory. Bold, large-scale watercolors on paper by film director Gus Van Sant FAV were on view earlier this year in Gus Van Sant / James Franco at Gagosian Gallery in Beverly Hills, CA. The exhibition featured a film called My Own Private River that actor/multitalented media star James Franco MFA 12 DM made from out-takes—mostly focused on River Phoenix—from his friend Gus’ well-known movie My Own Private Idaho. Working from found images, Gus created complementary portraits of young men who recall characters in My Own Private Idaho, “employing brushwork that alternates broad, limpid strokes with an assiduous attention to detail and a varied
After having lived in Stonington,
October 14 – 16, 2011
of Chandini Bachman AP
Barbara Bernstein 75 PR
1977
35th Reunion
On January 11 an AP photo
for The Literary As Muse, a show
which creates more jobs for the
anderson.com) relocated to Providence last fall and reports that she’s “impressed and inspired by the dynamic art scene in the ‘Creative Capital,’ and I have a studio at the 545 Mill in Pawtucket. I received my
George Clark BLA (Harwich,
MA) writes: “Daughter Carolyn got married last summer and Anna will be married this summer. Sons are doing well. Tim is at BC and the hockey team has done awesomely. He is in charge of their communications etc. Keith is at CORO in St.Louis, training future leaders.” See more about his business on page 7. During her artist residency at the Morris Graves Foundation in May, Deborah Gavel IL (Albuquerque, NM) focused on
MFA in 2010 from Johnson State College/Vermont Studio Center;
Geoffrey Warner Studio
my work is 2- and 3-dimensional
(geoffreywarnerstudio.com),
mixed-media. My daughter
the Stonington, ME furniture
Danica Mitchell 15 ID has just
workshop operated by Geoffrey
completed her freshman year in
Warner PH* , has been awarded
the Brown/RISD dual degree
a $25,000 federally funded
program, majoring in Industrial
micro loan/grant to support
Design at RISD and Environ-
expansion. He explains that the
mental Studies at Brown.”
success of his Owl Furniture has
Karen had two pieces selected
Linda MacNeil 76 SC In March Linda was one of five artists throughout the country to earn national recognition as a winner of the 2011 Master of the Medium award, presented by the James Renwick Alliance (a nonprofit affiliated with the Smithsonian’s Renwick Gallery in Washington, DC). Linda lives in Kensington, NH.
In Terza Rima, which ran at Alt/Space LA in Los Angeles, where he lives.
1979 Terry Siebert SC (Bainbridge
Island, WA) has a new website: terrysiebert.com.
1980 David Laferriere IL is working
as a graphic designer at Wheaton College in Norton, MA, where one of his primary responsibilities is handling design and illustration for their alumni magazine.
Sally Mara Sturman 76 PT As a full-time illustrator and part-time fishmonger, Sally (sallymarasturman.com) has embarked on a series of watercolors called Fish Chronicles. “I started doing them last November when hit by a huge wave of claustrophobia, hemmed in by my giant co-workers and impatient customers [at the Brooklyn NY farmers market]!... The paintings are my observations, painted from memory, of the other side of the counter.”
Stacy Jannis Tamerlani FAV
(Silver Spring, MD) let us know that she “completed a computer animation package for the Alzheimer’s Association, and a series of videos for the National Cancer Institute’s Cancer Genome Atlas. I also worked as
and idea.” One of the works from
Education in Bronx, NY, and
the series was also included
her exhibition The Dream
in Couplings at Gallery 110 in
Paintings was shown in December
Seattle, where it won an
and January at Galeria NH in
David Coleman BArch 79
honorable mention from curator
Cartagena, Colombia.
David was recently elected to the College of Fellows of the American Institute of Architects for making “a significant contribution to architecture and society on a national level.” He’s principal of David Coleman Architecture in Seattle, which just launched a new website (davidcoleman.com). The firm’s Zig Zag House was featured in the March–April issue of Design Bureau magazine.
Rock Hushka and a people’s choice award.
SKD, the product design firm where Stuart Karten ID
Valerie Hird PT (Burlington,
(Marina Del Rey, CA) is principal,
VT) created two paintings for
won a 2011 CES Innovations
the new book The Canal of Many
Award for the Hitachi LifeStudio
Colors: A Whimsical Trip Through
digital devices.
the Panama Canal by Carlos Weil. a collage series “using vintage
awards.com), a competition
Her video animation Superheroes
In April David Schoffman PT
stamps, drawings, watercolors
whose mission is to “showcase
was featured in a winter show
showed work in the three-person
and the codes of text messaging,”
the global best digital
at Casita Maria Center for Arts &
exhibition The Gasp Of Love
she says. “Code-Talking is
advertising creative work, the
a continuation of a series
pioneers of the 21st century
of collages I showed in Rota
in creativity, design and
Kenneth Lewis BArch 83
Fortunae last summer.”
advertising communications.”
As an architectural project manager at Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM), Ken oversaw the design of two new buildings for the World Trade Center site in lower Manhattan. He recently gave a talk at RISD about the challenges SOM has faced throughout the five-year process, including designing structures that could withstand future attacks while providing art and inspiration for tenants and visitors. Glass maverick James Carpenter 72 IL collaborated on the project, installing active surfaces that illuminate a wall with blue LEDs as pedestrians walk by.
Last winter Carol Peligian IL (NYC) had a solo show titled Sosomuch at Dean Project in New York City. New paintings by Daniel Rosenbaum PT* (Brooklyn)
were on view this spring in Terra Aerial Visions, a month-long solo show at Yes Gallery in Brooklyn. His canvases focus on real and surreal landscapes presented from soaring heights and incorporating layers of ink on paper or polyester that are then covered with iridescent, metallic and fluorescent acrylic paints. Robert Tucker ID* (NYC)
He recently married Misa Hirai, designer/owner of Hagi Jewelry.
1978 In February and March Karen Hackenberg PT (Port
Townsend, WA) had a show
a K-12 outreach coordinator for student programs for the first USA Science & Engineering Festival, and I’m preparing for the 2012 festival.”
1981 30th Reunion October 14 – 16, 2011
1982 On a recent trip to China, Donald Friedlich JM (Madison, WI;
donaldfriedlich.com) delivered lectures at China Academy of Art in Hangzhou, Tsinghau University in Beijing and Shanghai University. He was also a visiting artist at Alberta College of Art and Design in Calgary, Canada. This summer he will be teaching at The Studio of the Corning Museum of Glass and will be the keynote speaker at the annual conference of the International Society of Glass Beadmakers in Louisville, KY.
titled Watershed at Vermillion Gallery in Seattle. In her artist’s statement for the show, she writes: “Beach-found detritus— PETE water bottles, plastic toy animals, and consumer product packages—are the subject and medium of my current artwork. Painting traditionally with oil and gouache, I lovingly and meticulously craft images of trashed commercial beach
is CEO of Global Best Digital
flotsam, creating a provocative
Advertising Awards (digitalad
visual juxtaposition of form
To submit updates for class notes, email risdxyz@risd.edu.
spring/summer 2011
49
Poulin + Morris, the NYC design
In February Eileen Ferara IL
firm where Douglas Morris GD
(Jersey City, NJ) participated
is a principal, recently completed
in 365 Days of Print (365days
environmental graphics and
ofprint.com), an online artist’s
identity design projects for MSG
residency/blog for which artists
Media and Hudson Square
read and interpret the newspaper
Connection, both in NYC, and
through their art. Last year she
the Sephardic Center in Brooklyn.
was one of three artists who
They also designed Building
created a centennial mural for
Connections 2010, the annual
the Greenville firehouse of the
exhibition of the Center for Archi-
Jersey City Fire Department.
tecture Foundation illustrating the benefits of design education.
1986 25th Reunion October 14 – 16, 2011 Manhattan-based interior designer and writer Patrick J. Hamilton GD (NYC) recently
contributed his personal stories to It Gets Better: NYC Designing Men (itgetsbetter.org), a series of videos for teens about growing up gay.
This RI-based sculptor recently completed one of his “most challenging and significant commissions to date”: The Ark at Temple Beth Elohim in Wellesley, MA and the accompanying Yahrzeit Memorial, which includes more than 1,500 names on individually engraved bronze plates. The project involved sensitive spiritual and ceremonial issues along with spatial and architectural needs and a complex fabrication and installation process. Over a five-month period, Peter incorporated more than 4,000 pounds of bronze, a quarried slab of limestone imported from Israel, a custom carved and cast glass panel, a structural steel substructure, upholstery and custom wood veneer panels to create “a spiritually charged design intended to last for generations.”
In March and April Meg Alexander GD showed drawings, sculpture, prints and digital media in New Landscapes, a solo show at Gallery Kayafas in Boston. She lives in nearby Concord, MA. Richard Goulis FAV
(Providence) filmed the videos and Scott Lapham 90 PH (Providence) shot the stills for NetWorks, a series of documentaries about Rhode Island artists that aired on PBS (and is now available on YouTube). Joseph Chazan produced the videos in conjunction with AS220, the Newport Art Museum and Gallery Z; among the RISD alumni profiled are Ben Anderson 84 SC , Leslie Bostrom MFA 85 PT , Daniel Clayman 86 GL, Yizhak Elyashiv MFA 92 JM , Erminio 50
RISDXYZ
Pinque 83 FAV , Kenn Speiser
and McDonald Wright 96 PH .
three shows this spring: Waiting in Memery: Imitation, Memory, and Internet Culture, at MASS MoCA through July 31; OMG! in A Tool is a Mirror at the Hampden
[RI] Arts Center (JAC; jamestown
Gallery Incubator Project Space
artcenter.org) several years ago
at UMASS Amherst, March-April;
to encourage local interest in the
and the installation Free WiFi
arts; the organization recently reached an ambitious fundraising
in RISD’s Illustration Departin On Location: Drawing Every Day, a show at Monstserrat College of Art in Beverly, MA. Ki Ho Park PH/MFA 10
(Barrington, RI; kihoparkphoto. com) showed photography in Everything Must Go, a winter solo show at the University of Vermont in Burlington.
1987
a building. Once remodeling In honor of Women’s History
of the former boat repair garage
Month, Lisa Ann Palombo IL
is complete, they hope the JAC
(Caldwell, NJ; lisapalombo.com)
will become a hub of artistic
gave a lecture on Women
activity in the community.
Impressionists and Myself at Reeves-Reed Arboretum in Summit, NJ in March. The talk was the opening event for Impressions of the Garden, an exhibition of Lisa’s oil-on-linen paintings of garden scenes.
Gender and Activism in a Little Magazine: the Modern Figures of the Masses, a new book by Rachel Schreiber GD , was
released by Ashgate Publishing in February. She completed her PhD in History at the Johns
Kate Petrie BArch and Lizzie
Hopkins University in 2008
Congdon founded the Jamestown
and is currently director of
cock.com) presented an evening of short films and poetry at Furman University in Greenville, SC. Titled An Urban Peacock’s Journey, the program included
NY) recently shot compelling portraits of Pete Seeger, Sheryl Oring, the late Howard Zinn and a dozen other activists profiled in Something to Say—Thoughts on Art and Politics in America (2011, Leapfrog Press), written by her husband Richard Klin.
four of her short films and her
Madeleine Bolger PT* (Norfolk, MA), Karole Nicholson CEC 95 (Attleboro, MA) and Judith Moffat, an instructor in RISD’s Continuing Education division, exhibited together in February at the Norfolk [MA] Public Library.
Brian Kane PT (Cambridge,
MA) has had sculpture work in
Claudia’s nail polish painting Apparition won the Roger King Fine Art Award (for First Place in Painting) in the 2011 Annual Members’ Juried Exhibition at the Newport [RI] Art Museum. The show ran from February to May.
goal, allowing them to purchase
Lily Prince PT (Stone Ridge,
1985
of Autophagy magazine.
Claudia Flynn 84 SC
Council gallery, March–May.
(Simpsonville, SC; urbanpea68 SC , Wendy Wahl MAE 85
for the November 2010 issue
at the Cambridge [MA] Arts
In March Kavita Bali GD
1984
NY) created the cover illustration
Fred Lynch IL , a senior critic
ment, exhibited work last winter
Peter Diepenbrock BID 84
Trine Giaever IL (Piermont,
poem “The Horseman Has Come.”
David Holmes 84 GD David’s painting Welcome to Minneapolis was chosen by the State Department for display at the US embassy in Sarajevo; it was also one of three pieces that he exhibited in the juried realism invitational held in April at Mason Murer Gallery in Atlanta. He recently had a solo show at Robbin Gallery in Robbinsdale, MN. David lives in Minneapolis.
Humanities & Sciences and an associate professor at the California College of the Arts
KEY
in Oakland/San Francisco.
current majors
1988
AP
Lucas Michael: 10 Years in LA,
CR Ceramics
a show of video, sculpture,
DM
photographs and drawings by
Emma Gray HQ gallery. In March Caroline Rufo GD (Needham, MA) and her husband John showed paintings together in Adjacent Rooms,
Suzanne Scripps 89 PT
FD
Suzanne has opened a new gallery in Santa Fe, where she shows her own paintings—like this one, Grand Central Annie (oil on canvas, 36 x 36")—along with sculpture and jewelry.
GD Graphic Design
Public Library.
(Los Angeles) showed ceramic
IA Interior Architecture ID Industrial Design IL Illustration
work in a winter group exhibition at the Los Angeles Museum
JM Jewelry + Metalsmithing
Scott Lindenau BArch 86 recent solo shows: Infinity: The Dreamtime, held in February at Kean University in Union, NJ, and Urban Patterns in April
of Ceramic Art at Acme gallery.
at Manhattanville College in
1989
also included a photographic
Purchase, NY. The exhibitions
Scott established Studio B Architects (studiobarchitects.net) in Aspen, CO in 1991. “In 20 years in practice,” he writes, “I/we have garnered 50 AIA design awards, including the Colorado Young Architect of the Year 2000, AIA Colorado Mentoring Firm of the Year 2003 and AIA Colorado Firm of the Year 2009.” Scott was recently elected to the College of Fellows (FAIA) and will teach a grad studio at the UC-Denver school of architecture this summer.
installation by Karen Gelardi
were included in the exhibition
I’m still a painter. But the food
PT (South Portland, ME), was
River, IL. A four-page spread of
for the Photography Prize 2011
writing has become quite
exhibited in February at Gallery
So Yoon’s Dreamtime paintings
of the Canton of Bern, on view in
important as well.” Check out
was featured in Cabinet
March at PhotoforumPasquArt
both aspects of Peter’s work
Magazine #40 (winter 2010-11),
in Biel, Switzerland, where he
online: barrettart.com and
which was themed “Hair.”
lives (see more on page 8).
acookblog.com.
Four photographs by Jon
1990
Ian Bohorquez PT married
Haledon, NJ) exhibited hair and braid pattern paintings in two
Naiman PH (jonnaiman.com)
NYC-based artist SoHyun Bae PT is excited to announce
her new website: sohyunbae. com. Please check it out and let
Farsad Labbauf BID 87 left: Farsad showed this recent painting in My Super Hero, a group exhibition that opened simultaneously at Morono Kiang Gallery in Los Angeles and Aaran Gallery in Tehran, Iran and was on view at both venues in March. Farsad lives in Jersey City, NJ.
her know what you think. Peter Barrett PT (Woodstock,
NY) writes: “I just got the [XYZ Winter 2011 issue] today, and it looks great. I was a little disappointed, though, that I didn’t know you’d be focusing on food; I’ve been writing a food blog for five years that recently both New York magazine and Michael Ruhlman have mentioned positively. I also have a gig as the food and drink writer for Chronogram, a monthly magazine here in the Hudson Valley. This is all a side project to my art career; first and foremost
Siulam Iliana Fernandes CEC
on May 9, 2009 in Providence.
PR Printmaking SC Sculpture TX Textiles
Ethel’s mixed-media sculptural work was on view earlier this spring in a solo show at OK Harris Gallery in NYC. The artist (ethelpoindexter.com) is based in Vancouver, BC.
LA Landscape Architecture MD Machine Design TC
Textile Chemistry
TE
Textile Engineering
5th-year degree BArch Architecture former 5th-year degrees
is founder and creative director
BGD Graphic Design
of Creative:interactive, Inc.
BID Industrial Design
in Providence, and Siulam is a graphic designer.
BIA Interior Architecture
After working as an art teacher
BLA Landscape Architecture
for years, Emily Cohen IL (Los Angeles) discovered a gift for teaching kids to swim, and has built a successful business called The Water Whisperer (see page 6). “In the off season I work as an illustrator,” she says. “I have a separate art website
master’s degrees MA
Art Education (formerly MAE)
MArch Architecture MAT Teaching MFA
Fine Arts
MID Industrial Design
(lovemily.com) and recently had
MIA Interior Architecture
a drawing published in the new
MLA Landscape Architecture
book The Good, The Bad, and The Barbie (2010, Viking Juvenile).”
OTHER
A recent article in The Sherman
CEC Continuing Education Certificate
Oaks Patch (2.11.2011) described how Emily used her art as
Ethel Poindexter 88 ID
Advertising Design
AE Art + Design Education
They live in Lincoln, RI. Ian
a springboard for swimming.
To submit updates for class notes, email risdxyz@risd.edu.
PT Painting
AD
print of the field project she conducted in June 2010 in Leaf
So Yoon Lym PT (North
PH Photography
former majors
In the Outside, a mixed-media
37-A in Portland, ME.
Furniture Design
GL Glass
an exhibition at the Dover [MA]
Adam Silverman BArch
Digital + Media
FAV Film/Animation/ Video
Lucas Michael ID (NYC), was
on view last winter at the city’s
Apparel Design
Arch Architecture
In April and May Patrick Keesey PT (NYC and Marfa, TX)
FS enrolled for Foundation Studies only * attended RISD, but no degree awarded
showed new drawings and paintings in Fragments & Refractions, a solo show at Blackston gallery in New York City. spring/summer 2011
51
premiered at the Bayerische Staatsoper in Munich in March 2010.
1994 Alyce Santoro CEC (Fort Davis,
TX; alycesantoro.com) exhibited
Marcia Patmos AP was among
at the Marfa [TX] Ballroom as
the dozens of New York-based
part of the spring Texas Biennial.
designers who joined forces for
She is a member of Sonic Dis-
Fashion Girls For Japan: 60+
obedience, a group devoted to
Designers/60+ Rolling Racks,
“works of sonic activism.” In
a designer sample sale to benefit
December their piece WIKILEAKS
Japan Society’s Japan Earthquake
SAMBA—“an ode to freedom
Relief Fund, the Red Cross,
of speech and press in perfor-
and NYC’s Japan Earthquake
mance-art form”—appeared on
and Tsunami Fund. The event
democracynow.org and hit the
took place in April at the
top spot in the UK viral video
Bowery Hotel.
chart. She entered the 2011
1992
with her project The Instant
Recent paintings and large-scale
& Efficient Comprehensive &
drawings by Bo Joseph PT
Synergetic Omni-Solution.
the Sears-Peyton Gallery booth
In February Dan Sousa IL
at the Pulse NY art fair.
(Providence) discussed his
Denyse Schmidt GD
announced her company’s first quilt sewing pattern for the
animation work in a talk at Harvard’s Carpenter Center, interspersing his commentary with screenings of his five films.
McCall Pattern Company. Based
Work by Nakhee Sung PT was
on Denyse Schmidt Quilts’ Spool
on view in April in Within, a solo
design, “the pattern makes it
show at Doosan Gallery in Seoul,
Liz Collins 91 TX/MFA 99
easy to replicate the improvisa-
Korea, where she lives.
Liz (top) and her partner Julie Davids have a son, Winter Edward Collins, who was born at home on December 23, 2009. Liz is an assistant professor of Textiles at RISD and recently received a 2011 MacColl Johnson Fellowship for Visual Art (see page 40). As part of a fall exhibition at ICA Boston called Dance/Draw, she will stage two different, day-long KNITTING NATION events in the magnificent theater space there—on October 30 and November 25.
tional feeling of my design, so no two blocks look alike,” she says.
curated Lucien Aigner: Photo/
gratification, the finished quilt
Story, a major exhibition that
is also available via Denyse
1993 Mark Callahan PR (Athens,
20th Reunion October 14 – 16, 2011
Annette Ferdinandsen JM
GA) is showing work in Memery:
(Clinton Corners, NY) crafts
Imitation, Memory, and Internet
delicate gold, silver and
Culture, a group exhibition that
gemstone jewelry that can now
continues through July 31 at
Katherine Daniels PT (NYC;
be found at Egan Day boutique
MASS MoCA. His work inspires
katherinedaniels.com) showed
in Philadelphia.
work last winter in Veil, a site-specific installation in the Donnell Library windows in NYC, and in the group show An Uncommon Thread at Front Room Gallery in Brooklyn. Chris Eboch PH (Socorro, NM;
chriseboch.com) has had two books for juvenile readers published recently: The Eyes of Pharaoh (2011, CreateSpace), an adventure story set in ancient Egypt, and Rattled (2011, Pig River
Karen Meleney Green SC
“subtle, sedate portraits of popular Internet content that
Weathervanes, a bespoke
are both familiar and uncanny,”
sculpture studio based in
according to the show’s site.
was commissioned to create a monumental 3D copper weathervane of Lady Liberty to celebrate the opening of the American Museum in Britain’s
In March Andrew Crawford SC
(Palm Coast, FL) submitted this good news: “I wanted to share that I am now a Fulbrighter! I was selected by the Fulbright Commission in Ireland and the National College of Art &
sculpture in Forged from Nature, Botanical Garden of Georgia. LEVEL UP, a TV movie David
opened with the unveiling of the
Schneiderman FAV (Sherman
Oaks, CA) co-wrote and coexecutive produced, premieres
Allyson Hollingsworth JM
on the Cartoon Network this fall
name Kris Bock), a suspenseful
(Oakland, CA) had photographs
and will be followed by the
romance that takes place
featured in the program book
series, which will start airing in
in “the dramatic and deadly
accompanying Dialogues
early 2012. An online video game
southwestern desert.”
des Carmélites, an opera that
will be released at the same time.
RISDXYZ
Vanessa (Brawn) Cruz FAV
a solo show at the State
Books; written under the pen
52
Nathan Bond PT and his wife Elisa were each diagnosed with aggressive cancer within days of each other. Find out more at friendsofnathanandelisa. blogspot.com.
(Atlanta, GA) exhibited recent
new Folk Art Gallery, which new weathervane on March 12.
1995 After nearly five years leading the design and user experience of New York Media’s digital products (nymag.com, menupages.com, vulture.com, among others) Ian Adelman ID joined The New York Times this spring as director of Digital Design. In this capacity, he’s working with a team of visual designers, information architects and creative technologists to shape the Times’ multiple digital publishing platforms, including the nytimes.com website and news applications.
new perspectives on popular culture and media through
is the head designer at Greens
England. Last fall the studio
ran earlier this spring at the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum in Lincoln, MA.
Chryssa Udvardy 91 SC Shadow (2010, stoneware, 20 x 13 x 34") is one of the sculptural works in Shadows and Objects, a solo exhibition held in February at AS220 Project Space in Providence. Chryssa lives nearby in Bristol, RI.
left: photo by Karen Philippi
1991
Jennifer Uhrhane PH guest
(And for those seeking quicker
Schmidt Quilts’ website.)
Farm Stand Display, Fryeburg Fair was among the photographs included in At the Fair, a solo show held in March at Clark Gallery in Lincoln, MA. Thomas is based in Harmony, ME.
Buckminster Fuller Challenge
(NYC) were on view in March at
(Bridgeport, CT; dsquilts.com)
Thomas Birtwistle 91 PH*
Design for a US Fulbright Scholar Award in Mixed Media Art at National College of Art & Design, commencing in January 2012. My research will focus on my new animated film/installation with the working title of Ruin.” Inigo Elizalde PT lives in New York City and has a textile and rug design company called Inigo Elizalde Rugs (inigoelizalderugs. com). The company exhibits regularly at trade shows, including the annual International Contemporary Furniture Fair held in May in NYC.
1996 15th Reunion October 14 – 16, 2011 Christine (Knof) Arakelian
GD and her husband Steven welcomed their second son, Shayne Aurelius, on January 31, 2011. Shayne joins his big brother
Blake, who is two. The family lives in Maplewood, NJ. In recognition of his social activism work in the Philippines, Carlos Celdran PT (Manila; celdrantours.blogspot.com) was named to Forbes magazine’s list of People You Need to Know in 2011. Carlos is an advocate of reproductive health and education for the poor, and is an outspoken critic of the Catholic Church’s stance on contraception and reproductive freedoms. Anthi Frangiadis BArch
(Onset, MA) was recognized by the City of New Bedford, MA/ Mass DOT for her entry in the Whale’s Tooth Station Design Competition. Hailed by the judges as “fun, creative, and… a signature gateway,” The Whale Over Route 18 received an Honorable Mention Award for the Iconic Treatment of New
Arnor Bieltvedt 92 PT Halos (36 x 24") was among the works featured in Flowers, a March solo show at the gallery Estudio Luna in Winnipeg, Canada. Arnor (artistarnor.com) creates work based on his childhood memories of the spectacular Icelandic landscape and his interest in the flora and brilliant light of Southern California, where he now lives (in Pasadena).
Anne Frost 97 GD Anne and Joe Morse were married on August 28, 2010 in her hometown of Bronxville, NY. Joe is a sales engineer at Salesforce.com and Anne is “still running a maintenance gardening business in San Francisco but [is] in the process of making a career change (career yet to be determined).”
Bedford’s Character. Anthi drew from the composition of a whale’s skeleton in a nod to New Bedford’s long history of whaling. The design can be see at archit8 .com/issuu.php. Christopher Frederick PH stars in Snuggle Bunny (funnyordie.com/snugglebunny), a three-part web series directed by Joe Leonard, who edits for the hit TV series Glee. Christopher designed the news anchor backdrops used in part 2 (where he appears in full bunny costume) and retouched the still images in part 1.
In March Tess Giberson AP opened a flagship boutique on Crosby Street in New York, and during Fashion Week she was selected as one of the emerging designers promoted through the W Hotels’ 2011 Fashion Next program. Her collection is also available at Barneys New York, Intermix in New York and Ron Herman in California. Jody Goodman BArch (San
Bruno, CA) is curating Japanese Art, a show at Gensler’s home office in San Francisco. The show runs from September 29 through December 2, with daily public viewing hours. Turtles Swimming in a Plastic Ocean, a painting by Lee Lee PT (aka Lee Erin Leonard), was a finalist in The Chaco Waves for Change Art Contest, which addresses the environmental impact of plastic on the planet’s oceans and sea life. Lee splits her time between Denver and Taos, NM.
1997 Ellen Godena PT (working under the name Sara June; Boston) had a solo show titled
To submit updates for class notes, email risdxyz@risd.edu.
PLEO SERIES III: Convergence
pop-up shop at the Lace boutique
in March at Mobius Artists Space
(all in Miami Beach, FL) and had
in Boston. The 48-hour intensive
a Pop-Up Studio in New York
performance/installation event
City for a week in January (see
featured “multiple late-Creta-
also page 11).
ceous dinosaurs, birds, humans, and robots in performance of their evolution…[to] provide commentary on the attachment relationship as a key neurobiologically-evolved component of survival in several species,” she explains.
Work by Tina McCurdy IL (East Haddam, CT) will be included in the Colored Pencil Society of America’s 19th Annual CPSA International Exhibition, which runs June 29-July 30 at the Charles W. Eisemann Center in Richardson, TX. She also had
Karelle Levy TX (Miami),
work in three shows last winter
the knitwear designer behind
and spring: RANDOM at Paris in
KRELwear, discussed her
Plantsville [CT], [un+art] Show
creative process at an Artists in
at ArtSpace Hartford [CT], and
Action! event in March. Presented
Tina’s Art at 70 Main Coffeehouse
in Fort Lauderdale by Girls’ Club,
Gallery in East Hampton, CT.
the series introduces local artists to the public through informal talks and presentations. Karelle has also participated recently in a pecha kucha event at the Bass Museum and a fashion presentation at the Mondrian Hotel, opened a temporary
Minh Reza 96 IL + Ali Reza BArch 96 Big sister Ara Reza (3) joined her parents in welcoming a new baby girl, Minaal Reza, into the family on October 12, 2010. The Rezas are having fun together in Walnut Creek, CA.
spring/summer 2011
53
In March Anna Schuleit PT
blog apartmenttherapy.com. The
presented a visiting artist lecture
couple and their toddler daughter
at Brown University titled Sites
Gere live in Providence’s
of Memory/Memory without
Monohasset Mill complex.
Site: Painting, Public Art, and Mild Acts of Trespassing. Anna was interviewed by the
Several RISD alumni were recipients of this year’s Rhode
Spark on Marfa Texas Public
Island State Council on the Arts
is available at marfaspark.com.
Bear With Me, the first children’s book Max has written and illustrated, was released in May by Penguin. The story follows Owen as he deals with major household change—in the form of Gary, the bear his parents bring home “without even asking!” The book is aimed at the 4-8-year-old demographic and has received positive reviews from Publishers Weekly and Kirkus. Max works out of his studio in Los Angeles.
2000
songwriter Tift Merritt for The Radio; the 40-minute interview
Max Kornell 02 IL
featured recently on the design
(Dublin, NH; annaschuleit.com)
1999 Joe Bradley PT* (Brooklyn)
showed in two simultaneous exhibitions last winter: Mouth and Foot Painting at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise and Human Form at CANADA (both in NYC). He was interviewed on Art International Radio by Brooklyn Rail publisher Phong Bui. Joe was in the band Cheeseburger when he was at RISD. James Holland FAV (Brooklyn)
created the motion graphics
Fellowship Awards: Tzu-Ju Chen JM , Victoria E. Crayhon
MFA 97 PH , Ruth F. Dealy 71 PT/ MFA 73 , Joshua J. Enck MFA 03 FD , Lorelei Pepi 87 IL and Daniel Sousa 94 IL (all are RI
residents). The fellowship winners’ artwork was exhibited in February at the Artists Cooperative Gallery of Westerly, RI. Jewelry by Lara Kurtzman PT (NYC) was on view in the winter group show HONEY at Liloveve Gallery in Brooklyn (see also page 11).
1998
title for the Ford Foundation’s
2001
Wired for Change conference,
10th Reunion
Stephanie Diamond PR
held in New York City in
October 14 – 16, 2011
(NYC) collaborated with Adia Millett on You Are Here, an interactive project that opened in January at Cabinet Magazine in Brooklyn and MASS MoCA in North Adams, MA.
February.
Claire Bigbie ID and Jay
The converted mill living space
Shapiro welcomed a son,
that McKenzie and Joel Taplin
Nicko Rhodes Shapiro, on
ID outfitted with salvaged, thrift
December 4, 2010. The family
and handmade furnishings was
lives in San Francisco.
Ben Blatt IL (Brooklyn) showed
Andrew Kennedy 02 IL
watercolor paintings last March
Veteran of the Bulge (oil on canvas, 72 x 44") was included in Emerging Artists 2011, on view in April at the Limner Gallery in Hudson, NY. Andrew is based in Montclair, NJ.
in Hotbox Devolution, a solo
Nancy Wells 03 AP Last fall Nancy (nancywells.com) presented a new collection of women’s contemporary garments—her first in four years—including highly detailed, feminine interpretations of classic women’s designs, suitable for office, evening and weekend wear. She launched her eponymous line in 2003, and in addition to her design work and fashion journalism for Examiner, Plaztikmag and Smashing Darling, she is currently working toward a certificate in Creative Entrepreneur Ownership at Fashion Institute of Technology in NYC. In February Nancy was filmed for a TV pilot as a fashion expert and style correspondent. Editor’s note: Apologies for the inaccuracies about Nancy’s career presented in the Fall 2010 issue of RISD XYZ.
show at Half Gallery in NYC. Last winter Jonah Koppel PT (Long Island City, NY) showed three large-scale paintings on canvas at the new location of Klaus von Nichtssagend Gallery in New York City. Towards a New Impending Idiot Utopia was his third solo show with the gallery. Margaret Wuller FAV (Los
Angeles) and Rachel Tiep-Daniel, co-workers at Dreamworks Animation, have started a 501c3 nonprofit organization called The Picture Book Project Foundation. Their mission is to “create an avenue for animators and illustrators to help and inspire children in need,” and they recently organized a charity
54
RISDXYZ
Disney, AOL, Digital Domain and others for an eBay auction on March 12. Proceeds from the auction will pay for boarding and education costs for 13 orphaned children in Ho, Ghana. For more information and to support the project, visit picturebookproject.com. In addition to managing the foundation, Margaret is a visual development artist at Dreamworks Animation, where she recently worked on the film How To Train Your Dragon. Mint Condition Homes, the
art auction to benefit orphaned
urban redevelopment company
kids in Ghana. Art Blocks for
operated by Mila Zelkha BArch
Ghana collected 200 original
(Palo Alto, CA), was named Build
works by artists and illustrators
It Green’s 2010 Green Building
from Dreamworks Animation,
Champion, in recognition of its
Pixar, Blue Sky, ILM, Sony,
efforts to transform residential
real estate development in Oakland, CA. Build It Green is a nonprofit whose mission is to promote energy- and resource-
2003 Nina Freudenberger BArch
(NYC) was named one of 20 up-and-coming designers to
efficient homes in California.
watch (dubbed the “new tradi-
2002
tionals”) by Traditional Home
Louise Lemieux Bérubé FS
focus of the first issue of trad
(Quebec) exhibited jacquard textile work last fall in Jacquard
magazine. The hot list was the home, the magazine’s digital spin-off, which launched in May.
Tiffany Pollack 03 PT Tobacco Flowers (colored ink on silk, 50 x 72") was among the paintings in Tiffany Pollack: Room, a winter solo show at Gasser/Grunert gallery in NYC. The exhibition featured more than a dozen silk paintings shown alongside her first largescale dyed silk installation. She lives in Brooklyn, NY.
2X2/Montreal-Tokyo, a show at the Embassy of Canada in Tokyo.
In March John C. Gonzalez IL (Boston; johncgonzalez.com)
answered with the production
Jason Herron GD submitted
showed his MFA thesis
of 52 oil paintings, which contrast
this upbeat message: “For the
exhibition for the School of the
the anonymity of the individuals
past eight years, I have been
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
depicted within them against
an art director in the movie
at Lufthansa Studios. His work
the Western construction
advertising field in Los Angeles.
consisted of a collection of
of an aesthetic concerned with
I am currently at a company
paintings purchased from an
hyper-individuality that places
called Ignition and have designed
oil painting manufacturing
value on individual autonomy.”
movie and TV posters for The
company in Dafen, China. The
Pacific, Friday the 13th and Red
curatorial statement accompa-
Ridinghood, and I received a Key Art Award for my design for the
nying the show explains: “Assuming the various roles
Bjorn Iooss PH (see page 10)
2004
Anthony Dihle GD (Washing-
michaelneff.com) and Brad
a cover illustration, title and
Ewing MFA PR (Woodbury, CT)
masthead redesign for the “Sex,
exhibited together in Light Leaks,
Drugs, and Rock n Roll” issue
a show held in February and
of Barrelhouse magazine. His
March at Joe Bar in Seattle.
work was included in FLURRY,
Michael exhibited photographs
a holiday 2010 show at Pleasant
and sculpture, Brad showed
Plains Workshop in Washington,
screenprints and letterpress
DC, where he lives. Additionally,
Step Brothers in-theater standee.
of client, artist, collector, and
Noah Breuer PR (Brooklyn)
I am grateful that I’m in a field
curator, he presents paintings
created the cover artwork for
that hasn’t been affected by the
made in response to his request
the newly released book The
Plains on February 24 at GMU’s
he writes: “I gave a talk on design/ printmaking/Fire Studio/Pleasant
economy. But it didn’t come
that each artisan hand-paint
Internet of Elsewhere: The
Fairfax Campus. I showed many,
without hard work. This industry
a portrait of him or herself.
Emergent Effects of a Wired
many slides detailing my design-
is extremely fast-paced and my
This self-reflective task was
World by Cyrus Farivar.
print process, and talked some
graphic design skills grow daily.
about opening a bricks-n-mortar
I try and give back to RISD as
work/show/sell space. I also
much as possible by volunteering as a portfolio reviewer at the National Portfolio Day here in Southern California for the last four years. Our RISD community here in LA is growing and the camaraderie between alums is life-changing. RISD truly has a worldwide family.”
Jessica Hess 03 IL Jessica (San Francisco) is collaborating with Berkeley-based sculptor Christa Assad on a project titled Street Wise, which features Jessica’s paintings on Christa’s porcelain objects. Their work is on view through July 23 in Pursuit of Porcelain at Ferrin Gallery in Pittsfield, MA, and has also been exhibited recently at SOFA New York (April) and ArtMRKT in San Francisco (May). Jessica showed work last winter in Vivid Summit, a group show at Pandemic Gallery in Brooklyn, and It’s a Strange World at Brick Bottom Gallery in Somerville, MA.
Michael Neff PH (Brooklyn;
ton, DC; ant-hive.com) created
hosted an art/printmaking workshop at the [pop-up shop] Mt. Pleasant Temporium open to second graders only. I’m also on board with the Temporium as a sponsor and vendor. Stemming from the Temporium workshop, a big new group show at our little
prints, and the two collaborated on a letterpress and inkjet edition that was available as a take-home for visitors. Michael and his work have been featured lately on Craft + Creative, a series produced by Advertising Week Social Club; the GOOD magazine website; Urban Omnibus and This Blog Rules.
2005 “Aloha from Hawaii!” writes Jamie Allen IL (jamierallen.
com), who left New Jersey last June for the tropical islands. In
space on Georgia Ave, WE ARE
April he took part in a benefit
MONSTERS, opened in May.
for local artists and the Contem-
Look for our work in Reinventing Screenprinting (Rotovision UK) out this spring.”
porary Art Museum in Honolulu, “which is going through some drastic changes and economic hardships. Mahalo!”
Elizabeth Hostetler FAV (Los
Angeles) sent in two updates: on
Work by Jenny Bradley JM
the professional front, she is a
(High Falls, NY) is on view
producer on the Iron Chef America
through June 25 in Jewelers of
series on the Food Network. And
the Hudson Valley at The Forbes
on the personal side, she and
Galleries in Manhattan.
Kory Lanphear will be married on September 24, 2011.
Christina Rodriguez 03 IL Christina (christinarodriguez .com) created the illustrations for My Mom’s Deployment, a new children’s book written by Julie LaBelle. The activity book is geared towards children of parents deployed in the military and is a companion to My Dad’s Deployment (2009).
To submit updates for class notes, email risdxyz@risd.edu.
spring/summer 2011
55
2005 continued Hillary G. Broder FAV wrote
in to let us know that her art class at JFK High School in Bellmore, NY was chosen “to design and construct a 25' wide x 10' high collage depicting the story of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire of 1911. The project was done in conjunction with Adelphi University and will be shown at Cooper Union’s Great Hall in recognition of the centennial of the disaster that inspired many changes in worker’s rights in the 20th century.” She also participated in a panel discussion held in March at Cooper Union about how art can be used to instruct students in other disciplines. As the owner of Spirare Surfboards (spiraresurfboards.com), Kevin Cunningham BArch
(Providence) is undertaking a new project to “use reclaimed debris and trash in production on functional fine art surfboards,” he explains. “The beaches we
award for web design. The
IL , was published last spring by
open a new natural food store
all love to visit are being plagued
founders have been getting a lot
Houghton-Mifflin. Alison works
and café on Westminster Street
with trash: trash that washes up
of positive press on their startup,
out of her studio in Providence.
in downtown Providence. The
onto the shores from the massive
including several recent profiles
drifts of debris in the ocean.”
in Forbes (11.18.10 and 4.5.11).
He plans to use that trash to build surfboards for exhibition
Regina Mamou PH (Chicago)
2006
initiative was started in 2009 “by a group of artists, farmers,
Last winter, as an artist-in-
and generally resourceful folks
residence at the Fairmont Dallas
who wanted to be more in touch with the earth and our sources
and sale around the country;
co-curated Remember Then:
[TX] Hotel, Sean Springer SC
a Kickstarter campaign is
An Exhibition on the Photography
(Dallas; springerdesignstudio.
of sustenance here in the city
underway to support the project.
of Memory, held in the spring
com) worked on two lines
and bring neglected spaces
AirBnB, the web-based budget travel service founded by Joe Gebbia ID and Brian Chesky
Jennifer Chachenian 06 TX Jennifer and her husband Christopher welcomed twin girls, Jewel Simone and Pearl Simone, on October 13, 2010. The family lives in Houston, TX and Jennifer already has them pegged as “future RISD graduates.”
at the Center for Government
of furniture and showed work
to life through art and food
and International Studies at
at the hotel’s Ross Akard
gardens,” Andrea explains. They
2008
Harvard University.
Gallery; at the conclusion of the
plan to open the food store as
A graphic and web design
residency he presented a piece
a worker-owned co-op in June,
consultant by day, Alex Blue ID
and have a Kickstarter campaign
(Seattle) recently began
04 ID (both San Francisco), has
Sunday Love, the second
been nominated for a Crunchie
children’s book by Alison Paul
for the hotel’s permanent collection. Sean crafts furniture,
going to support the build-out.
producing and selling handmade
home accessories and sculptures
Jessica Pollock 07 IL is
kitchen knives under the
from salvaged wood, creating
creating screen-printed promo-
company name Blue Knives
functional pieces from landfill-
tional posters to give the store
(blue-knives.com). He makes
bound materials.
a graphic boost, too.
each knife himself from Damascus or carbon steel—a
The Fertile Underground (fertileunderground.com)— an urban agriculture and art initiative spearheaded by several alumni, including Andrea Starr BArch and Nina Maxwell PR —won the bid to
Lisa Petty 11 IL Lisa recently completed a commission to illustrate Matilda & Maxwell’s Good Night, a picture book for kids designed to accompany Good Night, an advice book that’s part of the new GoodParentGoodChild book series.
56
RISDXYZ
2007 Megha Khandelwal GD and
Ajit Gupta were married earlier this year, with a ceremony in India and a wedding on April 15 in NYC, where they live.
process that takes more than 10 hours, most of it at a belt grinder. He reports that “starting a business in this economic climate has been a tough but rewarding challenge. I appreciate all of the skills that I picked up
Celeste Rapone IL (Wayne,
at RISD and I use them every day
NJ) exhibited new work in April
to create my knives.”
in Costume Required, a solo show at SOHO20 Chelsea Gallery.
Jemima Kirke PT (NYC)
Jay Zehngebot PR showed
Furniture, a 2010 indie film
new prints in Our Sentry, a solo
written and directed by her high
show held in March at R.K.
school friend Lena Dunham.
made her acting debut in Tiny
Projects in Providence, the city
She was interviewed by Esquire
where he lives.
about her budding acting
career and the film, which won
Will Harris 10 ID
the grand prize at the SXSW
Building on a project he started in the RISD course Product Design and Development, Will has been working at Design that Matters in Cambridge, MA on a low-cost device to treat newborn jaundice in Vietnam, built using locally available materials. Design that Matters has been developing the Firefly design concept he and Alicia Lew 11 ID initiated as students and Will recently helped field-test the system in Vietnam. “It’s a very exciting project,” he says. “It demonstrates the thoughtfulness of the RISD education and the amazing opportunities afforded to RISD alumni even in this difficult job market.”
film festival. In May SHOOT magazine named Hayley Morris FAV (Brooklyn,
NY) to its New York Directors Showcase, selecting her as one of the top 32 best new directors in the world. She was also invited to be one of six panelists to present during a screening of the directors’ films. Hayley’s music video for Joker’s Daughter is also featured in Papercraft 2, a new book about paper art.
was held in March at the Starving
work for Pentagram, Apple, Inc.,
Artist in Keene, NH. She’ll be
and The New York Times, among
illustrating next year’s issue as
other clients.
Sophy Tuttle IL (Jamaica Plain,
well (and she got the job through
MA; sophytuttle.com) had a solo
RISD’s ArtWorks job board).
show in conjunction with the release of Antioch University’s
New York-based designer
Whole Terrain magazine,
Jessica Walsh GD was selected
“Significance of Scale” issue
as a 2011 NVA (New Visual
(no. 17), for which she did all the
Artist) winner by Print magazine,
illustrations. The exhibition
based on the strength of her
As the maker of Bound Again Books, Angela Wehrle FD (Providence; angelawehrle.com) turns old books into new blank journals and sketchbooks using the Coptic stitch. She sells her creations on Etsy and was interviewed in February on bookbindingteam.com.
Lila Ash 11 PT Lila (lilaash.com) recently designed the logo and branding for the 2011 Valentines Day Luncheon at the Plaza Hotel hosted by Rush Philanthropic, a nonprofit group spearheaded by Russell, Joseph ‘Rev Run’ and Danny Simmons. The event, called Rush HeARTS Education, raised funds to provide public school students with arts education and emerging artists with exhibition opportunities.
2009 Photography by Tom Prado PH (NYC) was on view in March and April at Raandesk Gallery in Manhattan. The exhibition Optical: Staged featured work by the five finalists in the gallery’s annual international competition; Tom was awarded second place. He also presented Construct. Repeat. at Salon Ciel in NYC, also in March.
2010 Staci James CEC and Jason
Korske were married at the First Congregational Church in Falmouth, MA on July 31, 2010. As a user experience designer at Google, Willem VanLancker
Project, a museum “street view” feature that allows computer users to roam the halls of museums around the world and
GD (willemvanlancker.com)
inspect artworks up close. The
contributed to the Google Art
application launched in February.
2011 Rebecca Manson CR (see
page 28) Evan Murphy FD , founder
of the RISD Cycling Team, managed to make competitive cycling RISD’s first varsity-level sport this year. “We’re the only art school in the whole nation
Send us your XYZ info!
Tell us what you’re up to and we’ll share your news with the RISD community.
Here are some of the ways you can contribute to your magazine:
upcoming deadlines:
1/ submit updates (professional and personal) to class notes
September 1 for Fall 2011 (due out in October)
2/ comment on the content of each issue
February 15 for Spring 2012 (due out in April)
3/ submit exhibition information for current + upcoming shows
To submit information via post, write to:
email risdxyz@risd.edu
RISD XYZ, Two College Street, Providence, RI 02903 For address updates/mailing issues: ksouza@risd.edu
competing in cycling as an organized team,” he says. “It’s kind of a big deal.” Evan also qualified for the Collegiate Road Nationals, competing in Madison, WI in early May. After graduation he plans to work with artist Tom Sachs building and maintaining “quasi art bikes” for Sachs’s 2012 Armoury show. He’ll also continue racing in NYC and already has a team to support him there.
To submit updates for class notes, email risdxyz@risd.edu.
spring/summer 2011
57
2011 continued RISD swept the Animation category at the Society of Illustrators 2011 competition with graduating seniors Caleb Wood FAV winning a $750 First
Place prize for his film Little Wild, Ted Wiggin FAV placing second for Terra Firma and Kenneth Onulak FAV winning
third prize for Paper Dreams. Caleb also won first prize in the 2010 competition.
2012 Work by Rose Dickson PH (rosedickson.com) was selected
entries. She also took second
One weekend in January Max
for publication in Aesthetica
place in the Workbook Next
Frieder PT brought his
Magazine’s Creative Works
Generation Competition for two
Foundstrument Soundstrument—
Annual 2011. She was one of 30
Photoshop montages inspired
an interactive percussive
artists selected from 4,000
by family photographs.
sculpture created from found materials and reclaimed junk—to crowds of curious kids
Nathalie Jolivert BArch 12
at the Providence Children’s
Nathalie is thrilled to have won the 2011 Gensler Diversity Scholarship, which will cover the cost of her fifth year at RISD and offer her a full-time internship at the San Francisco-based architectural and design firm this summer. The scholarship recognizes emerging talent among African-American college students and was awarded based on the quality of the work she submitted—a project to create sustainable buildings for an indigenous group in Colombia. “Not only does this scholarship bring financial relief to my family,” the Haitian students notes, “but with the mentorship and internship programs provided, my education will surely be enriched.”
Museum. As children explored the sounds, from “bops of plastic pipes to chimes of cast glass to the bing of reverberating metal,” he also led a collaborative mural-making activity. The Fabled dress, a garment that Ryan Novelline IL constructed
out of recycled children’s Golden Books, was featured on the
Armando Veve 11 IL + Ivy Tai 11 IL Several Illustration majors won cash prizes in the 2011 Society of Illustrators competition in NYC. Armando won $2500 for Mysteries that Howl and Hunt (above left) and Ivy won $1000 for Absolute Ivy (above). In addition, JooHee Yoon 11 IL (see also page 29) won $5000—one of two top prizes—for her mixed media piece Elephant, while Dadu Shin 10 IL earned $2500 for his piece Lost Dog and Kevin Laughlin 11 IL won $1000 for Minotaur. Works by Ole Tillman 11 IL, Marina Loeb 11 IL and Kyle Norris 11 IL were also selected for inclusion in the SOI NY exhibition.
Today show on April 1.
2013
Egle Paulauskaite AP
earned an honorable mention in the RateYourStudyAbroad .com Fall 2010 Travel Writing & Photography Contest for the essay Inside Out—about interning at a sewing atelier
deaths Jacqueline Yvonne Horning William Brandau Landgraf
50 TX of Beaverton, OR on
William C. Perry 59 ID*
DIP 33 MD of Dublin, OH on
November 11, 2010.
of North Smithfield, RI on December 23, 2010.
March 23, 2011. Esther Lois (Rosenberg) Nemtzow 42 GD* of Coconut
Creek, FL on December 25, 2010. Catherine Walcot (Rodwell) Hill 43 PT/MAE 64 of New York,
Ralph J. Hartman 51 LA* of Pawtucket, RI on March 16, 2011.
J. Paul Guertin 61 ID of East
Donald A. Jasinski BArch 51
Greenwich, RI on January 29, 2011.
of Waterville Valley, NH on January 5, 2011.
NY on December 23, 2010.
Thomas Sanford Bockoven,
Richard Ballou 49 PT of Rhode
2010.
Island on March 21, 2011. Robert Edwin Hill 50 AR of
Bristol, RI on December 5, 2007. 58
RISDXYZ
Sr. 53 ID of Hanover, PA on May 1,
E. Michael Horn 54 PT* of Rumson, NJ on November 18, 2010.
Robert E. Leach 61 MD of
in Rome during her RISD EHP experience. Rudy Maxa, host of The Savvy Traveler on NPR and RudyMaxa’s World on PBS, judged this year’s travel essay contest.
Maria Canada AP was selected as the winner of Project Beethoven, a garment design competition that challenged student designers to create eveningwear inspired by Beethoven’s music.
Ronald O. Wilczek 64 SC of Dighton, MA on January 20, 2011. Michael Dinsmore Bigger
Carol J. Pentleton Robinson
68 SC* of Minneapolis, MN on
74 GD of Chepachet, RI on
February 16, 2011.
February 2, 2011.
Patricia (Cseplo) Sloan
Peter V. Grajirena 75 PT* of Mancos, CO on February 18, 2011.
69 IL* of Fort Worth, TX on
October 15, 2010.
Knoxville, TN on December 29, 2010.
of Taos, NM on January 13, 2011.
Jean Blake White 63 PT* of
Eileen Yee 70 IL* of Portland,
Franklin, MA on March 12, 2011.
OR on October 14, 2010.
Charles “Pete” Libby 64 IL* of Alburgh, VT on February 12, 2011.
Donald Janney 72 GD of New York, NY on February 18, 2011.
Richard N. Tipton BArch 69
Robert Seydel MFA 90 PH of Amherst, MA on January 27, 2011. Dennis Charles Theisen
MFA 95 FD of Grand Rapids, MI on April 6, 2011. Justin M. Yuen 06 IL of NYC/
Hong Kong on March 4, 2011.
Commencements Past RISD graduates have historically had a natural knack for celebrating Commencement right, embracing the event for what it is—the exciting culmination of a crazy, wonderful, intensely meaningful period in their lives. While other colleges opt for a stiff interpretation of whatever “pomp and circumstance” suggests to them, RISD prefers to do it differently, whether that means draping a live boa around your neck as the accessory du jour, chatting with a puppet counterpart or processing across the stage buck naked. And in 1990, when hundreds of oldsters were invited back to campus to collect “honorary BFAs” because they graduated in the years before RISD was first allowed to grant bachelor’s degrees, the long wait simply made it that
images courtesy of the RISD Archives
much sweeter to finally receive a degree from RISD.
spring/summer 2011
59
Graduate Class Notes
Susan Jamison MFA 91 PT Above the Pack (egg tempera on panel, 88x72") is among the recent work featured last year in Into the Forest, a six-month solo exhibition at the Taubman Museum of Art in Virginia. Susan (susanjamison.com) works out of a fun studio in Roanoke, VA.
1965 In April Alan Stecker MFA PT (Barnesville, GA) exhibited digital art in People in the Paint, a solo show at A Novel Experience in Zebulon, GA.
barrel and has earned starred reviews from Publishers Weekly and School Library Journal, which wrote: “Van Allsburg’s foray into nonfiction is filled
1975
with the same suspense,
Queen of the Falls, the latest book by Caldecott Medalwinning author/illustrator Chris Van Allsburg MFA SC (Providence), was released in April by Houghton Mifflin. It tells the true story of the first woman to go over Niagara Falls in a
have thrilled readers of his
Alan Metnick MFA 73 PT This spring Alan showed photos from Poland at Providence College and works on paper at Gallery Z in Providence, where he lives. The prolific artist also creates serigraphs, silkscreen prints and colorful glass works such as this one 166 Valley Street (2001, stained glass, 16 x 28").
surrealism, and menace that fiction.” Chris is best known for his picture books Jumanji and The Polar Express, both of which were made into movies.
Shahzia Sikander MFA 95 PT/PR
MFA PT (NYC), was included in
Shahzia Sikander: The exploding company man and other abstractions continues through June 25 at the San Francisco Art Institute. This still is from her HD video animation The Last Post, which is among several animated drawings and live performances included in the exhibition.
Artillery magazine’s video screen-
1979
1983
wright MFA SC (Dorchester, MA)
NH. He also participated in
exhibited in Love, a solo show
a show at Thorne-Sagendorph
of sculptural work at Boston
Art Gallery in Keene, NH, where
Sculptors Gallery.
he was awarded third place
exhibition at the Upstairs
for service to the field at the
in the 2011 Biennial Regional
Artspace in her hometown
annual conference of the
Juror’s Choice Competition.
of Tryon, NC.
National Council on Edu-
In February and March Kristin
1980
(NCECA), held in Tampa at the
1978 Ronnie McClure MFA PH
(Canterbury, NH) showed work in a variety of media in
Occhino MAE (Attleboro, MA)
Ambiguities and Lucidities,
exhibited paintings in a four-
a spring exhibition at the Rivier
person show at the Woodshed
College Art Gallery in Nashua,
Gallery in Franklin, MA.
In February Linda Hudgins
Linda Arbuckle MFA CR was
MAE showed work in an
presented with an honors award
cation for the Ceramic Arts
In May Sharon Lynne Safran
end of March. Spirit of Ceramics,
56 PT*/MAE (Annandale, VA)
an artist DVD series produced
exhibited A Colorful Life: A
by NCECA, also focused on the
Retrospective of Sharon L. Safran’s
Florida-based ceramist and was
Multidimensional Art at the JCC
released at the conference. Linda
of Northern Virginia in Fairfax.
contributed to 21st Century
The career-spanning show
Ceramics: The First Decade (2011,
included all types of work—
Lark Books) and had work
1982 Brad Buckley MFA SC has been
promoted to professor of Contemporary Art and Culture at Sydney College of the Arts at the University of Sydney in Australia, where he is also the associate
RISDXYZ
call for entries, was screened at The Standard’s Purple Lounge in West Hollywood, CA.
Last winter Joseph Wheel-
from watercolors to scarves.
60
ing in April. The selection of eight films, culled from a national
published in Majolica (2011, A&C Black) by Daphne Carnegy. Anne Karpis MAT has retired
from Fulton County Schools in Atlanta, GA and is now working full-time as an artist in Nicosia, Cyprus.
dean of Research.
1984
My Atlas: Lindsay/A Report to
teaching at RISD as an adjunct
an Academy, a short film by
instructor for several years and
Anne Sherwood Pundyk
is also a professor of architec-
John Hendrix MAT has been
Dale Chihuly MFA 68 CR
for Helsinki—designing smart
Through the Looking Glass, a major retrospective of Dale’s glass work, is on view through August 7 at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. The selection includes chandeliers, a 60' Mille Fiori, a Persian Ceiling and several other installations.
demand management solutions to enable people to save energy. The project is called Low2No and is a joint project with Arup engineering, Sauerbruch Hutton architects and us. We will design and build by 2012 a district in Helsinki Harbor to the highest energy-efficient demands.
part by grants from the RISD Professional Development Fund.
1991 Daphne Minkoff MFA 91 PT
tural history at the University of
showed new work in Transfor-
Lincoln in the UK. He recently
mations, a March-April show at
published three books: Renais-
the Seattle Art Museum’s SAM
sance Theories of Vision (Ashgate
Gallery. The exhibition in her
Publishing); Architecture as
home city focused on artists who
Cosmology: Lincoln Cathedral
“recycle, re-purpose and reuse
and English Gothic Architecture
discarded materials to create
(Peter Lang); and Robert Grosse-
their artwork.” Daphne’s work
teste: Philosophy of Intellect and Vision (Academia Verlag). The books were supported in
included collage and encaustic on board.
Our task is very specific: using design to support behavioral change.” He and his wife Marguerite Kahrl MFA 95 SC
live in Torino, Italy.
1996 Work by Milissa Galazi MA is on view in June in two twoperson shows: at The Mill Gallery in Pawtucket, RI and Ernden Fine
Kana (kanatanaka.com) recently completed Bubbles to the Sky (2011, glass and steel wire, 8x7x8'), a public art project for the Bay Farm Island Branch Library in Alameda, CA. Commissioned by the city, the suspended sculpture is composed of thousands of handmade glass beads, with blue tinted beads forming a mother dolphin and a baby dolphin, and clear beads representing bubbles in the ocean.
Art gallery in Provincetown, MA.
1997 Architects Peter Gill Case MArch and Joe Haskett MArch 02
Matt Monk MFA GD , a Graphic
(both of Providence)—creators
Design professor at RISD,
of The Box Office, a RI office com-
exhibited work in Abstractions,
plex built of recycled shipping
Christine Vaillancourt MAE 75
a recent two-person show at
containers—have teamed up with
Providence’s Lenore Gray Gallery.
RISD and Brown to investigate
(christinevaillancourt.com) is an art teacher in the Newtown, MA public schools, and is represented as a painter by galleries in San Francisco, Georgia and Toronto. She and her husband live in a 47-unit artist building in the Fort Point neighborhood of Boston.
1993
the potential for building sustainable and energy-efficient homes
Jan-Christoph Zoels MID is
and other buildings from similarly
senior partner and design director
repurposed containers. The
at Experientia, an international
partnership has been awarded
experience design consultancy.
a $150,000 federal grant from
He writes: “Currently we are
the Small Business Administra-
working on a beautiful project
Kana Tanaka MFA 99 GL
tion; RISD students in the spring course Re-BOX developed design plans and researched viability. Peter and Joe also just launched the new startup UbiGO to bring their concepts to market.
2001 El Velador (The Night Watchman), a new film by Natalia Almada MFA PH (Brooklyn;
altamurafilms.com), premiered at the March New Directors/New Films festival in New York City. The film, which looks at the war on drugs in Mexico from the point of view of a cemetery guard, screened at Lincoln Center and MoMA.
2002
Ren (going on 5) is adjusting to his new baby sister. Yuki is still designing products (modern goods.com) and making art in sunny Santa Fe. Building on his inspiring personal experiences in Ghana, Jonathan Thurston MFA SC
(Edgewater, NJ) founded the International School of Art, Business and Technology (isabt. org), a nonprofit focused on bringing educational resources
Yuki Murata MID and her
to impoverished communities in
husband Chris Long welcomed
West Africa. He has succeeded in
their second child on October 28,
supplying schools with computers
2010. Tei Nozomi Murata-Long
and thousands of books, and
is named after her paternal
has developed a program to
great-grandmother and maternal
allow schoolchildren to create
grandmother. Tei’s older brother
their own published books.
GAME, a two-person show featuring the work of Gayle Mandle MFA PT/PR and her
David W. Radabaugh MFA 01 GD
daughter Julia, was on view
Last summer David (Denton, TX) began working as design director of American Way, American Airlines’ twice-monthly inflight magazine. In January he and his team launched a cover-to-cover redesign of the publication; the first issue featured musician John Legend, Frank Gehry’s New World Symphony building in Miami and a look at the inner workings of Google Labs.
from April 27–May 20 at Leila Taghinia-Milani Heller Gallery in NYC. Gayle is living in Doha, Qatar with her husband Roger, who served as RISD’s president from 1993–2008.
1998 Since 2006 Kristin Surette Undhjem MLA has operated
gardenstore, an artful landscape and gardening shop in Telluride, CO. She plans to launch an e-commerce website later this year. She also continues to run KSLA, her landscape architecture firm, and do floral design for weddings.
To submit updates for class notes, email risdxyz@risd.edu.
spring/summer 2011
61
Mark Pack MFA PT showed
work in New Wilmington Painting, a winter exhibition sponsored by the New Wilmington [DE] Art Association.
2005 Jesse Burke MFA PH (Rumford,
RI) had a winter solo show titled Low at the Perth [Australia] Centre for Photography, and has had work in several group shows over the past few months: The Truth is Not in the Mirror: Photography and a Constructed Image
Gabriela Salazar MFA 09 PT
at the Haggerty Museum of
Gabriela’s installation Robert Moses, He Knows Us was on view from December to February at flatbreadaffair in Brooklyn. She also showed work in 2010 Studio LLC, a group exhibition held last winter at the Jamaica [NY] Center for Art & Learning, and had a piece published in the “Black and White” issue of Color & Color magazine.
Art at Marquette University in Milwaukee; the RISD Faculty Biennial; Postcards From The Edge, a visual AIDS benefit hosted by CRG Gallery in New York City; and Let’s Be Friends at Residence
glass and glass-related sculpture”
Hye Yeon Nam MFA DM
Gallery in Long Beach, CA.
was selected from more than
(Atlanta, GA) had a show titled
Last winter Greg Hopkins MFA
Heather McPherson MFA 08 PT Washingtons was among the new paintings and drawings Heather exhibited in Success Story, a solo show at Providence College’s Reilly Gallery. She is an assistant professor of painting at the college, but commutes from Brooklyn.
the best in the arts, cinema
PT (Brooklyn; greghopkinspaint
and new media to highlights
ings.com) had a solo show of
from sports and video gaming.
acrylics on canvas and linen at
2004 In March Katie Commodore MFA PR (Brooklyn; kcommodore.
com) and Kelly McCallum 01 PH (Toronto, Ontario) showed
work together—Katie’s new drawings and paintings and
2003 Joshua Enck MFA FD , who
Kelly’s sculpture and jewelry work—in London vs. New York,
teaches in RISD’s Foundation
an exhibition at space fiftyfour
Studies and Furniture Design
in Shoreditch, London.
programs, has won a 2011 Fellowship in Three-Dimensional Art from the Rhode Island State Council on the Arts. One of his new metal sculptures was included in the 2011 RISCA Fellowship Exhibition and he had his first solo museum show, entitled The Gesture Contained: Recent Sculptures by Joshua Enck, earlier this year at the Museum of Art at the University of Maine in Bangor. The show included nine sculptures in wood and metal, as well as process sketches. Jecca MFA PH (NYC) was
Last September Regin Igloria MFA PT (Lake Forest, IL)
opened North Branch Projects (northbranchprojects.com), an arts project space in Chicago’s Albany Park neighborhood “that serves as a community bookbinding facility,” he explains. “The space provides an outlet for exploring the creative process in a neighborhood where few resources for the arts exist. We are working on a neighborhood archive, consisting of sketchbooks hand-bound by visitors and made available to the public, to record stories, drawings, ideas,
involved in the New York
thoughts, etc., along with other
Foundation for the Arts’ recent
projects which utilize the book
participation in The Big Screen
format…. Our aim is to encourage
Project (bigscreenproject.org),
dialogue between artists, non-
a jumbotron HD format LED
artists, and everyone in between
screen in a midtown Manhattan
in an inclusive setting, making
plaza that showed an eclectic
it possible for ideas to have
range of cultural content—from
a positive impact in society.”
62
RISDXYZ
Sloan Fine Art in New York City. His work was also featured in New American Paintings, no. 92. Li Li Zhao MFA CR (Stamford,
CT) launched a handbag line last fall—check it out at zhaodesigns.com.
2006 Helen Lee MFA GL (Fremont,
CA) worked with Alexander
200 submissions from artists
Singularis last winter at Buffalo
in 13 countries; the organizers
[NY] Arts Studio.
funded the effort through a successful Kickstarter campaign.
2007
They explain their organizing
Christopher Robbins MFA DM ,
principle: “This show features
John Baca MFA DM and Chris
artists whose works inhabit so
Mendoza MFA DM (Little Neck,
many places simultaneously
NY; Nevada City, CA; and Pro-
that they might not fit into any
vidence, RI) collaborated on next
of them. {SUPERPOSITION}
time almost, a March installation
consists of works that directly
in a bank of windows in midtown
address this condition of being
Manhattan. The piece presented
in multiple places at once,
a network of conveyor belts
as well as projects produced by
made of fake grass that dropped
artists who inhabit the fringes
hollow plaster houses on the
of genres.”
floor, causing them to smash.
Rosenberg GL and Matthew Szosz 07 GL to organize
{SUPERPOSITION} (hyperopia projects.com), a group show on view in June at the Center on Contemporary Art in Seattle. The juried exhibition of “sculptural
Sarah Gross MFA 09 CR Sarah’s piece The Street Where You Live 2 (2011, recycled clay) was among the works on view in Arabesques, her recent show with Sanam Emami at the Belger Art Center in Kansas City, MO. “I seek to activate space by building screens,” Sarah explains. “My exploration is rooted in the institution of veiling in Islamic society.”
are paid 5¢ per drawing, which are automatically assembled into a large computer-generated grid,” explains an article posted on wonderhowto.com. Bowie Zunino MFA SC and Jeff Barnett-Winsby MFA 06 PH
(jeffbarnettwinsby.com) will be married on June 18, 2011 in Wassaic, NY. The pair are codirectors of The Wassaic Project (wassaicproject.org), an arts organization in upstate New York dedicated to supporting emerging artists. Bowie founded the project as a free summer festival while she was at RISD, and it has since expanded to include a residency program in addition
Ben Blanc MFA 04 FD
depictions of our built environ-
Ben, a critic in RISD’s Furniture Design Department, has a solo exhibition of sculpture and design work at Louis Boston from April to August. Among the steel tube structures on view is elephant, a full-scale sculpture of a female African elephant.
ment and its relation to the
2008 Moon Jung Jang MFA GD had
a solo exhibition titled A Minor
2009
is an arc of a circle measuring
far right: photo by Kristina DiTullo 96 IL
Chace Center’s Gelman Gallery. Work by 20 graduate and undergraduate students was included in the show.
2012 Andrew LeClair MFA GD was
among a handful of other RISD MFA alums who worked with RISD Graphic Design Critic John Caserta (thedesignoffice.org)
to create Flatfile, a website template for visual artwork. John notes that the platform is “perfect for a portfolio, for an exhibit catalog, to announce shows and press, and more. The
RISD alums at our festival, and
look, feel and functionality of Flatfile is inspired by the
used Amazon’s Mechanical Turk
continue to have great RISD
labor market to “guide workers
alums as artists in residence,”
physical flat file cabinet…. There
through the execution of simple
she says. And: “Jeff and I also
are infinite ways to put it to use.”
LeWitt forgeries. The workers
run a bar in Wassaic!!!”
Visit flatfile.ws for a tour.
Reconfiguring the Ordinary, a brooch piece by Yong Joo Kim MFA JM (Providence), has
less than or equal to 180°. My
been selected by curator Ursula
recent research focuses on the
Ilse Neuman for the permanent
transformation of a minor arc
collection of the Museum of
or a minor arc sector in visual
Arts and Design in New York City.
communication. I explore the
This highly selective collection
dynamic relationship of colors,
houses nearly 500 art works
angles, orientations, scales
documenting the development
relating to metaphors and nar-
of jewelry art, ranging from the
rative principles. This exhibition
pioneering work of early American
consists of books and research
Studio jewelers to the ground-
posters, visualizing the meaningful
breaking and nontraditional
metamorphosis of a variety
methods of contemporary artists.
of minor arcs.”
exhibition held at RISD in the
is where these two meet in dyna-
County Public Library in her
“Mathematically, a minor arc
Phoebe Stubbs MFA GL
curated Break It Down, a winter
construction; and the third world mic reaction and adaptation.”
describes the theme of the show:
natural landscape.” He has also
Mimi Cabell MFA PH and
world is one of Western Imperial
Arc last fall at Athens-Clarke hometown of Athens, GA. She
to the festival (August 5–7). “We have shown a number of
2011
Eli Levenstein MFA FD (NYC)
Courtney Leonard MFA CR
and his work were featured
(Southampton, NY) exhibited
in the Korean interior design
mixed-media pieces involving
magazine BOB (2.2011). A new
video, audio and tangible objects
area rug he created was on
in Cur.rent Car.ri.er, a winter
display in February at
show at the Julian Akus Gallery
Meulensteen gallery in NYC.
at Eastern Connecticut State University in Willimantic. She
Recent projects by Clement
describes the thematic basis
Valla MFA DM (Brooklyn)
of her work: “As an Indigenous
include Postcards from Google
woman [a member of the
Earth, Bridges, a “conservation”
Shinnecock nation], I navigate
project of screenshots from
three worlds: the first world is
Google Earth to preserve the
that of indigeneity; the second
software’s “strange, surrealist
To submit updates for class notes, email risdxyz@risd.edu.
risd:store
risd totes, tees + other great gear perfect for summer find us on Facebook + Twitter
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| Providence | 401 454-6464
spring/summer 2011
63
by
Sarah Haskell 76 TX
64
RISDXYZ
My life always comes back into focus through my artwork. I recently got back from a 5,000-mile trans-Atlantic passage on a 43-foot sailboat and kept
a journal while I was on the voyage. It was a way for me to process the experience—through a combination of drawing, writing and collage.
Please submit a page from your own sketchbook (showing anything that’s on your mind). Our favorite will appear in the next issue. Questions? Email risdxyz@risd.edu.
8)
How much of the monthly emailed
newsletter (formerly known as eviews, now called XYZmail) do you read? all of it most of it some of it I delete it without opening
9)
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and updates about alumni available online, how likely would you be to go to the website to read it? very likely I might look on occasion not at all likely
Rate XYZ
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Please indicate any actions you
have taken as a result of receiving RISD XYZ:
Now that you’ve seen the first four issues of the new alumni magazine, we’d like to know what you think of it. Please take a few minutes before June 21 to respond to the online version of this same survey at www.risd.edu/xyzsurvey. Or fill out this one and mail it to: RISD XYZ, Two College Street, Providence, RI 02903 before June 21, 2011.
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11 )
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7)
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16 )
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Rhode Island School of Design Two College Street Providence, RI 02903 USA
Burlington, VT 05401 Permit No. 19
october 14 – 16, 2011
alumni reunion + parents’ weekend risd by design 11 connect relax recharge
Return to RISD from Friday, October 14 – Sunday, October 16 for a weekend full of people you want to see, artwork and other great visual stimuli and fun things to do. travel + lodging suggestions: www.risd.edu/rbd more program info: rbd.risd.edu questions? contact claire at: crobinso@risd.edu | 401 454-6379 Illustration by Aaron Meshon 95 IL (www.aaronmeshon.com)