Exposéd: Trinity University Senior Exhibition 2015

Facebook Event

Trinity University Art & Art History Department presents Exposéd
Tuesday, April 23rd to Saturday, May 16th, 2015
Opening Reception: Thursday, April 23rd, 5:00 pm-7:00 pm
Hours: Tuesday-Saturday 1:00 pm-5:00 pm or by appointment 
Price: Free

Michael and Noémi Neidorff Art Gallery
1 Trinity Pl. 
San Antonio, TX 78212
Phone: 210.999.7682

image by Hillary Dohoney

image by Hillary Dohoney

Source: https://www.facebook.com/events/9906730810...

Seniors’ artwork to be 'exposed'

Featured in the Trinitonian by Julia Elmore

Over the next few weeks, efforts to ace final exams and complete final papers and projects will be well underway as summer approaches. Across academic disciplines, seniors will be putting the finishing touches on final projects before graduation. For art majors, these projects will be on display at the senior art major show on April 23.

The senior art show will feature pieces from graduating seniors and serves as their final project. Senior Hillary Dohoney looks forward to the exhibition and the opportunity to display her paintings for the Trinity community.

“The senior show is a great send-off for art majors,” Dohoney said. “It allows us to finally have the release of exhibiting our work in a public place and with that we get the validation that what we’ve learned at Trinity is enough to get us started outside of academia.”

In addition to preparing their individual pieces, each student has worked on some aspect of planning the show itself. Associate professor of art and art history Jon Lee has been meeting with students to discuss how the collaboration of different parts of the artwork will come together as a whole at the show.

“We have assigned different jobs to each student and they will all come together to produce the show,” Lee said. “They have worked really hard.”

Students say these small jobs have given them a glimpse of what goes into a show of this nature, besides the creation of the actual projects.

“We’ve been learning what all goes into an art show, like advertising, designing the layout and curating,” said senior Megan Brown. “It feels like we’re learning about the real world, instead of just taking classes structured around tests.”

Brown wasn’t the only one who learned skills applicable outside of the classroom.

“It has taught me how to meet a deadline and that I have the capacity to organize myself into a professional artist, at least for one night,” Dohoney said.

The theme of the show is “Exposed,” and it celebrates the uniqueness of each student’s work. Many of the works feature unique materials or unsuspected media.

“I am doing a small series of conceptually abstract pieces using cheaper, everyday materials, like some drawings using gel pens,” Brown said.

The Trinity community is encouraged to visit the show, which will include food, drinks and music on opening night.

“People should come and see the show because these students have been working very hard for four years,” Lee said. “They want to show what they have been working on and hear what other people think.”

The show will open at 5 p.m. Thursday, April 23, and will run through May 16 in the Michael and Noemi Neidorff gallery in the Dicke-Smith building.

Source: https://www.trinitonian.com/seniors-artwor...

Students showcase artwork in exhibit

Featured in the Trinitonian by Sarah Davis

Two student art exhibits opened on Nov. 20 in the Neidorff Art Gallery following the opening reception that evening.

One exhibit, titled “Woven from Fragments,” features the work of seniors Megan Brown, Stephen Sedia, Jacqueline Golden and Sarah Longridge, presenting collage and multimedia work from the students."

Woven from Fragments centers on process-driven artwork and features multiple collage and collaborative pieces; the show itself is something of a collage. It includes pieces from multiple artists and media all woven together,” Longridge said.

The artwork of this exhibit addresses relationships over time, whether they are among humans or between humans and nature.

On her artwork titled “Pelmanism,” Longridge says that “the 18 individual collage pieces that make up ‘Pelmanism’ represent a faulty system of interaction between man-made structures and natural ones, and, for me, they serve as a reminder that there are gaps in our understanding of the world we live in and how we must continue to fill them.”

The other exhibit featured in the gallery is “Overlooked, Hidden, Unseen,” which includes the artwork of seniors Hillary Dohoney, Carina Hiscock and Alejandra Trigoso. These pieces are about investigating artwork on a small scale.

Overlooked, Hidden, Unseen is about appreciating unappreciated objects and creatures found in the human and natural world. It’s meant to be an engaging viewing experience that requires the audience to pay close attention to the works rather than doing a routine glance-and-pass,” Trigoso said.

Senior Hillary Dohoney further explains the meaning behind the artwork.

“The works are often small, tucked away or subtle. Rendering the art in this unconventional way compels the viewer to take the time to notice and appreciate the very things that are so often ignored,” Dohoney said.

Jessica Halonen, associate professor of art and art history, commented on the collaboration between students in creating two art exhibits for one space in the gallery.

“Although the process of making art can be a solitary one, collaboration and being a team player is an important part of the contemporary art world,” Halonen said. “By including multiple students in a group exhibition and/or dividing the space into two exhibitions, students learn to work together to produce a professional quality exhibition.”

Both exhibits will remain in the art gallery until 5 p.m. tomorrow, Dec. 6.

Source: https://www.trinitonian.com/students-showc...