Stamps MFA 2015 Thesis Exhibitions

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MFA 2015 Graduate Thesis Exhibition

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Transcript of Stamps MFA 2015 Thesis Exhibitions

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MFA2015Graduate Thesis Exhibition

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Cosmo Whyte

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Laura Amtower

Mary Ayling

Mike Bianco

Trevor King

Math Monahan

Josh Nierodzinski

Nataša Prljevic

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The Connecting Curriculum exhibition demonstrates a collaborative educational project between Laura Amtower, Rachael Van Dyke and Ann Arbor STEAM @ Northside Elementary, engaging student learning with Northside Elementary’s 2014 2015 facility expansion. Children, Kindergarten through fifth grade, collaboratively designed their school’s new playground through play based education units taught in the classroom.As experts in the field of play, the student body proposed a movement toward a playscape combining multi purpose, unique play structures with imaginative manipulation of the landscape. Students presented a series of original playscapes and concepts to the school community, public, and Ann Arbor firm Beckett & Raeder who will facilitate the new space in Spring 2015 based entirely on the children’s’ designs. The Connecting Curriculum exhibition documents Laura’s representation of a five-step engaged pedagogy through a selected compilation of children’s artwork and writings throughout the playscape project. Each thematic process demonstrates the scaffold and process of students’ development in self-expression, exploration in play, shared experiences, playscape designs and participatory research.

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Laura Amtower

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Designs for Public: Student Playground Models2015Wood, digital & mixed media

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Designs for Self: Pop-Up Adventure Playground & Running Paths2015Collage, wood, photos on vellum & found Objects

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Meeting in the Middle: Student Drawings2015Drawings, wood, & artificial grass6

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Breathing Room is a site-specific sculptural exchange set between the artist’s apartment in Ypsilanti and Slusser Gallery in Ann Arbor. Designed for one person at a time, appointments were taken at the opening for a future time and date, at which the person would return to Slusser Gallery to retrieve a key and meet a mysterious black car that would transport them to the second location in Ypsilanti. Participants were given very little information about where they were going and what they would encounter upon their arrival.

Drawing upon personal narrative, sculpture, choreography and performance, this piece is the culmination of a three-year body of work exploring the use of art as a means personal transformation.

Mary Ayling

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Breathing RoomDate of creation: A lifetime

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Opening front door, Hole in the floorDate of creation: A lifetime

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Hole in living room floor, Instrument for choosingDate of creation: A lifetime

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Breath Share 2015Glass created from two people sharing breath between two glass bubbles. 16” x 22” x 12”

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Since I began graduate studies here, I’ve been working through the idea of humans “working with” rather than having “power over” nature. I was immediately attracted to the beekeeping community and what bees have to teach us about cooperative and communal living. It occurred to me, though, that I don’t want to be a “beekeeper.” I think this title has the capacity to imply a master/servant relationship to the bees. I want to care for bees - I want to give them space to work, to conduct their alchemy of manipulating materials, and support the important work they do - the same work that I feel art curators should do for contemporary artists. So that’s how I arrived at calling myself a curator of bees.

Drawing from a variety of mediums, ranging from beeswax and neon, to cooking and performance, my practice is invested in issues of sustainability and environmental and social justice, with a focus on honeybees. Hive includes a number of sculptural objects, including a mobile bee house for sleeping with honeybees, and features a live honey tasting performance. Also included is documentation relating to my social practice focusing on my own environmental activism and honeybee advocacy.

Mike Bianco

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In sculpture, momentum creates stasis. Whether carving, constructing, or forming, an effort is exerted upon material until it becomes a sculpture. The question for the sculptor is when does the work stop? When does the material become sculpture, and how does that sculpture’s being communicate something about our own being?

In ceramic processes, the firing of a work signifies its becoming. This process literally fuses the material in place. The microscopic geology of the material becomes vitrified; individual particles form a whole, and this is the shape of the object for at least a few centuries (unless the object is broken down by non-geological forces). In Listener, the making of a pot is a metaphor for a human action, with clay recording the potential of my hands and of my spirit to shape the space that I exist in. Firing these pieces creates a registration of these actions; physical indexes of where a human event took place.

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Trevor King

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Listener201542 wheel-thrown porcelain vessels, steel sound sculpture

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Listener2015Backlit digital photograph

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Listener201542 wheel-thrown porcelain vessels, steel sound sculptureDetail

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Listener2015Two luna moth specimensDimensions variable

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Tellings is an art exhibition that explores how interprets the impermanent state of storytelling is interpreted into through visual art, through story narrative, space, and objects. Exhibited in the Stamps School of At & Design’s Slusser Gallery, this MFA thesis project places the viewer in the delicate position between the world of things and the imagined spaces of folklore and fables. Through a series of sculptures, installations, and narratives drawing draw on folklore, mythologies and personal memories, to obscure the role of storyteller is obscured and leave the audience is left to build their own narratives. The aim of the work is to deconstructs the narratives/fables into key moments, translating them into viewer experiences in visual storytelling.

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Math Monahan

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Cast of Hawks2015Arrows & found objects

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Between Tides2015Driftwood, chalk, charcoal & found objects

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Stone Tomes 2015Cement

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Below Shepherd’s Hill is an exhibition of artwork that investigates the methodological possibilities of forensic aesthetics. In particular, it examines the derivative concept of forensic imagination through the narrative potential of painting in conjunction with forensic multispectral photographic imaging. In this MFA thesis project, exhibited in the Russell Industrial Center, the visitor encounters a series of paintings that trigger the affects of a traumatic autobiographical event.

As I bear witness to my experience through painting, the paintings become material witnesses. They carry the history of their creation embedded in layers of paint. Using forensic imaging techniques, like x-rays and infrared I can look back through the surface of the painting. The resulting photographs reveal hidden information, both intentional and accidental. They are a reminder that what can be seen on the surface is both a consequence of the past and far from the complete truth.

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Josh Nierodzinski

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Bath2015 Digital X-Ray photograph on vellum24” x 32”

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Knock, Knock2015Digital X-Ray photograph on vellum24” x 32”

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Bath, Knock, Knock2015Digital infrared photograph on vellum

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Shepherd’s Hill2015Oil on canvasTriptych: (3) 36” x 68”

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The Birthday Party2015Oil on canvas 60” x 72”

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The House on Four Waters is a multimedia installation that addresses the mechanisms of real and imagined sites of memory for two sisters. The title is taken from a collaborative personal narrative with my sister Jelena that serves as the foundation for the work. Far from a nostalgic idealization of the past, The House on Four Waters uses collage and disjunction to create an alternative understanding of present.

This installation is rooted in my experience of national fragmentation in the context of an increasingly globalized world. The inherent conflicts exposed the relationship between imagination and politics as well as memory and materiality. Through my research I discovered static displacement as an apt metaphor for an individual and national experience. Static displacement is the condition of being displaced without moving. As a nuanced physical and psychological space, static displacement is an integral human ability to absorb and look inward, to collapse into oneself and come together. The House on Four Waters embodies this notion through a direct visual, auditory, and physical encounter. Referencing Cells (Eyes and Mirrors) by Louise Bourgeois as an example of an installation formed around bodily centered metaphor, The House on Four Waters exists as a meditation on retroactivity and presence in a constrained space of disparate media.

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Nataša Prljevic

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Down view on the video of a human eye integrated into the aluminum-covered floor.

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Inside view towards the exit showing two persons in front of the installation.

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Close up detail of one of the collages showing its glowing surface and textures.

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Inside view and close up of a drop cloth collage composition with cut outs and shadows.

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My work explores postcolonial identity through the lens of globalization, modernity, diaspora and migration. Through the process of dialectic installations of drawings, photographs and sculpture, I argue for the re-examination of identity as not fixed, but liquid and in a constant state of flux. Taken in its entirety, my work is interested in probing the following questions: How has identity, sense of placelessness, or presence been altered by dislocation? Can identity exist beyond the nation state in a transnational way? And if it can what are the new ways that this postcolonial subject can understand himself or herself to be part of a larger group beyond the categories of political, ethnic, subcultural or diasporic?

Cosmo Whyte

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YOU know WE can’t swim right2015 C-Print photo on plexiglas50” x 38”

YOU know WE can’t swim right2015 C-Print photo on Plexiglass50” x 38”

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Wake The Town and Tell The People2015Plywood, 12 speakers, 3 horns, 15 tweeters8.5ft x 6ft x 4ft

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Tools2014Cast porcelain, ink, glaze

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Stranger than the village2015C-Print photograph 35” x 26”

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The Stamps School offers both undergraduate and graduate degrees in art and design. The School’s unique open curriculum emphasizes interdisciplinary study, requires international educational experiences, fosters community engagement, and draws on the resources only available at a top-ten research university.

About the Penny W. Stamps School of Art & Design at the University of Michigan

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© 2013 Regents of the University of Michigan.

Mark J. Bernstein, Julia Donovan Darlow,

Laurence B. Deitch, Shauna Ryder Diggs, Denise Ilitch, Andrea Fischer Newman, An-drew C. Richner, Katherine E. White, Mark S. Schlissel, ex officio.

Regents of the University of Michigan

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The University of Michigan, as an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer, complies with all applicable federal and state laws regarding nondiscrimination and affirmative action. The University of Michigan is committed to a policy of equal opportunity for all persons and does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, marital status, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, disability, religion, height, weight, or veteran status in employment, educational programs and activities, and admissions. Inquiries or complaints may be addressed to the Senior Director for Institutional Equity, and Title IX/Section 504/ADA Coordinator, Office for Institutional Equity, 2072 Administrative Services Building, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1432, 734-763-0235, TTY 734-647-1388, [email protected]. For other University of Michigan information call 734-764-1817.

Anti-discrimination Policy Statement

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Design: Parisa GhaderiDirector of the program: David Chung

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2000 Bonisteel Blvd, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2069 www.stamps.umich.edu