Announcement
UCSD Adds arts PhD - Del Mar Times, 10.07.09 & Solana Beach Sun 11.13.09
Submitted by yolietorres on Tue, 10/13/2009 - 1:08pm. Announcement | ReviewUCSD adds arts Ph.D.
DelMarTimes.net on October 7, 2009
UCSD's Department of Visual Arts welcomes the inaugural class for the Ph.D. concentration in art practice, one of the first doctoral programs in the country designed for practicing artists.
Incoming students will have a wide range of resources on campus, including Departments of Music, Theater and Dance, CALIT2 (a center for new computing technology) and the extensive collections of the libraries. Grant Kester is chairman of the Visual Arts Department.
The art practice concentration is housed within the Ph.D. program in art history theory and criticism.
Like the other Ph.D. concentrations, art practice requires 2 1/2 to three years for course work and one to three years to complete the dissertation.
Similar Story on the SolanaBeachSun.Net, November 13, 2009
http://www.solanabeachsun.net/news/262658-ucsd-adds-arts-ph.d.
Ernest Silva: The New Children's Museum "Animal Art"
Submitted by yolietorres on Tue, 10/13/2009 - 8:13am. Announcement | Faculty ShowAnimal Art
Exhibition runs October 11 through November 2009
The New Childrens Museum, 200 West Island Avenue, San Diego, California 92101
Animal Art is the second in an ongoing series of exhibitions that renew the Museum’s galleries every 18 months. The exhibition also launches a new series of hands-on studio projects and new programs in the Arts Education Center. NCM is going animal! Participating artists: Roman de Salvo, Felipe Dulzaides, Sam Easterson, Jason Hackenwerth, Sun K.Kwak, Julio Morales, Marcos Ramirez Erre, Ernest Silva, Mungo Thomson, Perry Vasquez, Allison Wiese.
Image courtesy of The New Children's Museum
Noah Doely: Moon: A Photographic Exhibition, UCSD Visual Arts Facility 404 - Oct13-16 '09, 11am-9pm
Submitted by yolietorres on Tue, 10/13/2009 - 7:18am. Announcement | Student Project
If unable to view image, please click on "read more" below.
Univ Art Gallery Presents 'Off The Beaten Path' - Oct 23-Dec '09
Submitted by yolietorres on Wed, 10/07/2009 - 10:24am. Announcement | Events
Off The Beaten Path: Violence, Women and Art
Exhibition runs October 23 through December 12, 2009
University Art Gallery, UC San Diego, 9500 Gilman Dr., La Jolla, California 92093
Artists Talk: Violence and Politics
November 21, 2009, 1pm
Pepper Canyon Hall, room 106
For the new exhibition season the University Art Gallery, UC San Diego presents an international exhibition entitled Off The Beaten Path: Violence, Women and Art. The exhibition brings together artists from around the world to explore the global ramifications of gender-based violence. The exhibition, curated by Randy Jayne Rosenberg executive director of Art Works For Change, features twenty-one artists from nineteen countries. “Throughout the world, women and girls are victims of countless and senseless acts of violence. The range of gender-based violence is devastating, occurring, quite literally, from womb to tomb,” explains Randy Jayne Rosenberg. “The stories that underlie these artworks return us imaginatively to the event of violation and allow it to affect us.” Premised on the visionary potential in art, the exhibition avoids tabloid and sensational imagery. The invited artists were asked, “To help us create new representations through their artworks and, in doing so, help us feel and understand the essence of the problem of violence against women,” says Rosenberg.
Artists: Amnesty International, Laylah Ali, Maimuna Feroze-Nana, Mona Hatoum, Icelandic Love Corporation, Yoko Inoue, International Rescue Committee, Jung Jungyeob, Amal Kenawy, Lisa Bjørne Linert, Hung Liu, Gabriela Morawetz, Miri Nishri, Yoko Ono, Cecilia Paredes, Susan Plum, Cima Rahmankhah, Joyce J. Scott, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, Masami Teroka, Hank Willis Thomas
For more information please visit the University Art Gallery website at: http://uag.ucsd.edu/exhibitions/2009/09_offthebeatenpath.shtml#
Contact: Isabelle Lutterodt, UAG Coordinator | 858.534.0419 | uag@ucsd.edu
VALS Presents Mike Plante's ''Lunchfilms'' on Oct 20 at 6:30pm - UCSD VAF Performance Space
Submitted by yolietorres on Wed, 10/07/2009 - 9:38am. Announcement | Events | Student ProjectVisual Arts Department Visiting Artist Lecture Series Presents:
Mike Plante
Tuesday, October 20th, 2009 @ 6:30pm
Visual Arts Facility Performance Space, UC San Diego, 9500 Gilman Dr., La Jolla, California 92093
VALS is pleased to present Mike Plante a Filmmaker and film programmer for Sundance and CineVegas, and writer for Filmmaker Magazine and Cinemad. Plante is the first artist of a really great line up of visiting artist's this Fall at UC San Diego Visual Arts Department. Plante will be showing ''Lunchfilms,'' a series he commissioned from filmmakers.
For more information on Lunchfilm, please visit:
http://lunchfilm.blogspot.com/
For more information on the lecture please contact: Suzanne Wright, VALS Coordinator at stwright@ucsd.edu
Fred Lonidier/E Navas/Alumni N Waisman and F Zúñiga/Undergraduate Alum C Ontiveros-TJ/SD: Cooperation & ...-Oct5-Nov25'09-Cali
Submitted by yolietorres on Fri, 10/02/2009 - 12:57pm. Alumni_Event | Announcement | Events | Faculty Show
Fred Lonidier/PhD Candidate Eduardo Navas/MFA Alumni Nina Waisman and Felipe Zúñiga/Undergraduate Alum Camilo Ontiveros
Tijuana/San Diego: Cooperation and Confrontation at the Interface
Exhibition runs Monday, October 5 through November 25, 2009
Calit2 Theater / Atkinson Hall, University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA 92093
The gallery@calit2 presents "Tijuana/San Diego: Cooperation and Confrontation at the Interface" moderated by Eduardo Navas. The show brings together works by seven artists who draw upon the cultural landscape of the border region linking Tijuana and San Diego. While most of the artists are based in Tijuana, two of them - Lea Rudee and Fred Lonidier - are UC San Diego faculty members. The works in "Tijuana/San Diego: Cooperation and Confrontation at the Interface" range from digital prints to interactive multimedia. José Ignacio López Ramírez-Gastón's interactive spatialized sound installation, 24 Speakers and 24 Sound Sources, deployed in the interior of the gallery@calit2, enacts the concept of the democratization of knowledge and 'reversed migration' in the use of technology. In the main hallway, Media Womb creates an interactive sound cocoon made of recycled egg cartons - visitors' movements inside the womb modulate sounds connected to the media's mis/representations of Tijuana and transborder drug cartels. Media Womb is a collaboration from the artists of the CUBO Project: Giacomo Castagnola, Camilo Ontiveros, Nina Waisman and Felipe Zúñiga, with programming by Marius Schebella. Other works on display include former UCSD School of Engineering dean Lea Rudee's photographs documenting the Tijuana River's path across the border, revealing its many roles as drainage creek, city water supply, border crossing obstacle, and preserved salt marsh. UCSD Visual Arts Professor Fred Lonidier's N.A.F.T.A. #15 "Rio Tijuana Bridge: A Tale of Two Globes or Two Tales of a Globe/Puente del Rio Tijuana: Un Cuento de Dos Mundos o Cuentos de Un Mundo" provides a representation of the problematics of "globalization" from the perspective of the organized efforts by workers to make gains in labor rights and conditions of employment.
Visual Arts Launches New Concentration in Art Practice
Submitted by sghanbari on Wed, 09/30/2009 - 9:22am. Announcement | PHD_Project | MediaVisual Arts Launches New Concentration in Art Practice
http://ucsdnews.ucsd.edu/newsrel/arts/09-09ArtPractice.asp
September 24, 2009
By Sheena Ghanbari
This fall UC San Diego’s Department of Visual Arts welcomes the inaugural class for the Ph.D. concentration in art practice, one of the first doctoral programs in the country designed for practicing artists.
Incoming students will have a wide range of resources on campus, including the cutting-edge departments of Music, Theater and Dance, CALIT2 (a center for new computing technology) and the extensive collections of the libraries.
Monica Duncan: 'I Feel Different' at LACE - Oct 20-Jan 24 '10
Submitted by yolietorres on Wed, 09/23/2009 - 12:43pm. Announcement | Student Project
Monica Duncan
I Feel Different
October 20 - January 24, 2010
Opening Reception on Tuesday, 20 October 2009, 8PM
with performances by resident artist Niña Yhared (1814) and James Luna
LACE Gallery, 6522 Hollywood Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90028
LACE is pleased to present I Feel Different, a multi-media group exhibition organized by guest curator Dr. Jennifer Doyle. This provocative project explores both the experience of feeling different from others and the transformative powers of emotion – to make one feel differently. The participating artists each make work about and of emotional intensity, featuring Nao Bustamante, Lezley Saar, David Wojnarowicz, Monica Duncan, Lara Odell, Susan Silton, and Niña Yhared (1814).
Los Angeles-based author and academic Jennifer Doyle examines the way in which personal feelings are often guarded in social settings and deemed inappropriate. When an artist successfully overrides the self-consciousness and the inhibitions that settle on us in social places, it comes as a shock. Finding ourselves overwhelmed with actual emotion – crying, laughing, afraid, disgusted, aroused, and outraged – can leave us feeling more than a little naked.
Neal Bociek's URBAN TREES Dedication Event Sat Sept 12 '09, 10AM - 1140 N. Harbor Dr. San Diego, CA
Submitted by yolietorres on Fri, 09/11/2009 - 7:46am. AnnouncementNeal Bociek
The Port of San Diego’s Public Art Program is proud to unveil the sixth installment of
urban trees six
Join the San Diego’s waterfront to view 30 new sculptures and meet the artists whose ideas have created a unique urban gallery
September 2009 through August 2010
Opening on Saturday, September 12, 2009 @ 10 am
On North Harbor Drive at the east end of the Cruise Ship Terminal (1140 North Harbor Drive), San Diego, California
A giant box of popcorn overflows with oversized baby chicks. A couple of feet away, a giant tuning fork with wavy branches points out toward the sea. Just a few yards from that, three spotted frogs frolic up a game board that swirls to the sky. It sounds like a scene from “Alice in Wonderland”, but in reality, it’s part of the Port of San Diego’s Urban Trees 6 exhibit.
Alum Nina Katchadourian in group exhibition: Intelligent Design - UCR Sweeney Art Gallery - Sep 5-Nov 28 '09
Submitted by yolietorres on Wed, 09/09/2009 - 7:22am. Alumni_Event | AnnouncementAlum Nina Katchadourian in Group Exhibition:
Intelligent Design: Interspecies Art
Curatorial Walk-Through
November 14, 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
Due to the popularity of the exhibition Intelligent Design: Interspecies Art, co-curators Tyler Stallings and Rachel Mayeri will provide an encore walk-through of this provocative exhibition that explores collaborations between humans and animals, the first such show in the U.S. This event is FREE and open to the public.
Exhibition runs September 5 through November 28, 2009
Opening Reception on September 26, 6-9PM
UCR Sweeney Art Gallery, 3800 Main St., Riverside, CA 92501
Intelligent Design: Interspecies Art is a group exhibition of twenty international artists exploring human interaction with animals through a collection of provocative video installations, photographs, paintings, and sculptures.


