Faculty and students from the School of Art were recently included in the exhibition100 Miles II at the The Bascom Center for the Visual Art’. 100 Miles II continues The Bascom’s tradition of showcasing new artwork by faculty and their students from colleges and universities surrounding Highlands, North Carolina area. This diverse exhibition provides emerging artists and established instructors the opportunity to come together for professional development in a gallery setting.
Professor Melissa Harshman‘s piece A Long Spring was included in the exhibition alongside graduate student Alex McClay‘s work titled Every 37 Seconds.
Assistant Professor Demi Thomloudis‘ work Proposed Excavation accompanied undergraduate student Rachel Goehringer’s piece, Congratulations! You’re An Idiot…
Costello is among 56 contemporary artists selected by Whitney Museum curators for the eighty-second edition of the Whitney Biennial—the longest-running survey of contemporary art in the United States.
“Beverly’s Athens” follows Buchanan's life in Athens, situating her expansive practice from this period within the local and lived conditions that shaped it.
Sculpture, like architecture, is an invitation to marvel at shape, scale and human experience.
Kimberly Lyle, assistant professor of sculpture and technology in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences’ Lamar Dodd School of Art, makes interactive artwork both by hand and digitally that welcomes audience participation.
James Enos, Associate Professor of Interdisciplinary Art and Design, and Annie Simpson, Doctor of Design (DDes) from Harvard University, Graduate School of Design, have been collaborating since 2020 on a dialogical practice that examines polycrisis and planetary urban critique. Their shared projects have ranged from passenger-traveler accounts through watersheds of energy transition to fieldwork