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Monday, September 10, 2018
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11:45 AM - 1:00 PM
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6:00 PM
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Tuesday, September 11, 2018
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(All Day)
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Deadline for securing independent interim sponsor
(Academic)
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Description: |
If you are wanting to pursue an independent interim in January 2019, you must have secured a faculty sponsor by this date. The deadline for proposals is Tuesday, September 25th, and the two week period between now and then is needed to work with your faculty sponsor on that proposal. The relevant online information begins at the following link, which distinguishes between internship interims and independent interims: http://www.wofford.edu/interim/create/
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Contact: |
A. K. Anderson
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11:00 AM - Noon
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January internship information session, McMillan Theater
(Academic)
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Description: |
If you're interested in doing an internship for this coming interim, this is the session for you. An overview of all the opportunities will be given, with a special emphasis on the Learning Work interim (JAN 389). If you are unable to make this meeting, an earlier one will be offered from 4:15-5:00 on Thursday, September 6th. If you are unable to make either meeting, please contact Dr. Anderson (Interim Coordinator) so that he can give you the basics about January internships for 2019.
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Location: |
McMillan Theater |
Contact: |
A. K. Anderson
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11:15 AM - 11:45 AM
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Mass Meditation, Lawn in front of Main Building
(Other)
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Description: |
Take some time for yourself and join The Space and The Wellness Center for a mass meditation on the lawn of Old Main. Sept 11, 2018 11:15 – 11:45. Meditation has been proven to improve focus and relieve stress. Bring a towel and participate in a guided meditation.
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Location: |
Old Main |
Contact: |
Curt McPhail
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11:15 AM - 12:30 PM
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Pre-Law Welcome Lunch, Papadopolous Room
(Academic)
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Description: |
Please join us for lunch (Taco Dog) in the Papadopolous Room (Admissions Office) on Tuesday, Sept 11th from 11:15am to 12:30pm. This is a great opportunity to meet the faculty advisors and student officers for pre-law as well as other students interested in applying to law school. We will go over our calendar of upcoming events as well as information important to law school for students each of their academic years at Wofford. Look forward to seeing you there.
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Location: |
Papadopolous Room |
Contact: |
David Alvis
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1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
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Art Exhibit: Scenic Impressions: Southern Interpretations from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum, upper level
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
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Description: |
Scenic Impressions: Southern Interpretations from the Johnson
Collection showcases forty-one artists—both native Southerners who recorded
their own region and distant places, and others who were transitory visitors or
seasonal residents. The result is a varied assortment of individual approaches,
and, in the words of the popular American Impressionist Childe Hassam, “some
things that are charming.”Many of the painters on viewembraced the central tenets of
Impressionism: light-filled natural settings loosely painted in high-key colors
with visible brushstrokes; fluidity of form; and an emphasis on atmospheric
transience. A “scenic impression” is the evocation of something seen, rather
than its literal transcription. In terms of subject matter, it is most
frequently a landscape, but it can also extend to a figurative composition set
outdoors. The artist’s experience—his or her impression of the scene at
hand—is paramount. The earliest paintings in the exhibition date from the 1880s and
illustrate a Barbizon-inspired aesthetic consisting of dark tones and simple
landscapes. Other works postdate Impressionism and display greater concern for
expression and form, along with an awareness of the picture plane.
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Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum, upper level |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
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1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
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Exhibit: The Richardson Family Art Gallery features the works by Kaye Savage and Colleen Balance
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
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Description: |
Kaye Savage, interested in chemical,
physical, and biological interactions across different scales of time and
space, in Earth’s surficial environments, presents both
place-based, incorporating terrain patterns and natural materials from sites
that she explores, and data-based, depicting patterns observed
by herself or by scientists that she meets in the field, as graphic
elements. Her pieces engage with locations from the Blue Ridge to the South
Carolina coast.
For Ballance, It has been more than a
bit of a stretch to return to her roots as an artist and attempt to create work
not based on theatrical text. However, once she worked with her
watercolor guru, and traveled to Morocco and southern Spain to further her MENA
studies, she was fortunate to find the inspiration she needed. The Saharan sand
of Erg Chebbi and the miraculous decorative tile motifs at the Alhambra and
madrasas of Fes provided her the mental freshness and soul touching spark to
produce what viewers can find in her works.
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Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
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1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
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Exhibit: Japanese Art of the Edo and Meiji Eras, Richardson Family Art Museum, lower level
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
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Description: |
Japanese
Art of the Edo and Meiji Eras (1603-1912) displays a variety of cultural expressions of
Japan, including tea ceremony implements, woodblock prints, porcelains, and ink
paintings. The Edo Period (1603-1868), named after the Shogun capital, is
one of the most prosperous and thriving in the history of Japanese art.
The political stability established by the Tokugawa family prompted an increase
in artistic, cultural and social development, with flourishing and distinctive
aesthetics represented in paintings, ceramics, woodblock prints and decorative
arts. The Meiji Period (1868-1912), an era of radical social and
political change from feudalism to modernity and adopted Western influences,
witnessed a blending of cultures and an innovative interchange of old ideas and
new in Japanese art. This exhibition intends to further enhance scholarly
research for students in ARTH 322 Art of Japan, and several of the labels in
this exhibition will be written by students. Featured
works are loaned from the Shiro Kuma Collection of Edwin and Rhena Symmes in
Atlanta, GA, from the Edmund Daniel Kinzinger (1888-1963) Collection of Japanese Prints loaned by
David and Barbara Goist in Asheville, NC, and from the collection of Dr. and Mrs. Hunter Stokes ('60) in Florence, SC.
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Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum, Lower Level |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
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Wednesday, September 12, 2018
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1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
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Art Exhibit: Scenic Impressions: Southern Interpretations from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum, upper level
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Scenic Impressions: Southern Interpretations from the Johnson
Collection showcases forty-one artists—both native Southerners who recorded
their own region and distant places, and others who were transitory visitors or
seasonal residents. The result is a varied assortment of individual approaches,
and, in the words of the popular American Impressionist Childe Hassam, “some
things that are charming.”Many of the painters on viewembraced the central tenets of
Impressionism: light-filled natural settings loosely painted in high-key colors
with visible brushstrokes; fluidity of form; and an emphasis on atmospheric
transience. A “scenic impression” is the evocation of something seen, rather
than its literal transcription. In terms of subject matter, it is most
frequently a landscape, but it can also extend to a figurative composition set
outdoors. The artist’s experience—his or her impression of the scene at
hand—is paramount. The earliest paintings in the exhibition date from the 1880s and
illustrate a Barbizon-inspired aesthetic consisting of dark tones and simple
landscapes. Other works postdate Impressionism and display greater concern for
expression and form, along with an awareness of the picture plane.
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum, upper level |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Exhibit: The Richardson Family Art Gallery features the works by Kaye Savage and Colleen Balance
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Kaye Savage, interested in chemical,
physical, and biological interactions across different scales of time and
space, in Earth’s surficial environments, presents both
place-based, incorporating terrain patterns and natural materials from sites
that she explores, and data-based, depicting patterns observed
by herself or by scientists that she meets in the field, as graphic
elements. Her pieces engage with locations from the Blue Ridge to the South
Carolina coast.
For Ballance, It has been more than a
bit of a stretch to return to her roots as an artist and attempt to create work
not based on theatrical text. However, once she worked with her
watercolor guru, and traveled to Morocco and southern Spain to further her MENA
studies, she was fortunate to find the inspiration she needed. The Saharan sand
of Erg Chebbi and the miraculous decorative tile motifs at the Alhambra and
madrasas of Fes provided her the mental freshness and soul touching spark to
produce what viewers can find in her works.
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
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1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
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Exhibit: Japanese Art of the Edo and Meiji Eras, Richardson Family Art Museum, lower level
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Japanese
Art of the Edo and Meiji Eras (1603-1912) displays a variety of cultural expressions of
Japan, including tea ceremony implements, woodblock prints, porcelains, and ink
paintings. The Edo Period (1603-1868), named after the Shogun capital, is
one of the most prosperous and thriving in the history of Japanese art.
The political stability established by the Tokugawa family prompted an increase
in artistic, cultural and social development, with flourishing and distinctive
aesthetics represented in paintings, ceramics, woodblock prints and decorative
arts. The Meiji Period (1868-1912), an era of radical social and
political change from feudalism to modernity and adopted Western influences,
witnessed a blending of cultures and an innovative interchange of old ideas and
new in Japanese art. This exhibition intends to further enhance scholarly
research for students in ARTH 322 Art of Japan, and several of the labels in
this exhibition will be written by students. Featured works are loaned from the Shiro Kuma Collection of Edwin and Rhena Symmes in Atlanta, GA, from the Edmund Daniel Kinzinger (1888-1963) Collection of Japanese Prints loaned by David and Barbara Goist in Asheville, NC, and from the collection of Dr. and Mrs. Hunter Stokes ('60) in Florence, SC.
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Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum, Lower Level |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
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5:00 PM - 6:30 PM
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Canceled: Therapy Dogs, Front of Main Building
(Student Life)
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Description: |
Therapy dogs here to give you a little taste of some 4-legged love! Come give a dog a hug. The dogs will be on the seal of Old Main from 5-6:30 on Wednesday. September 12.
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Location: |
in front of Old Main |
Contact: |
Lisa Lefebvre
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Thursday, September 13, 2018
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10:50 AM - Noon
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Interim 2019 Travel/Study Fair, Main Bldg.
(Academic)
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Description: |
The Interim 2019 Travel/Study Fair will take place on Thursday, September 13 from 10:50am - noon on the top steps of Main Building. Faculty sponsors will be giving information sessions about their travel projects at 11:00am and 11:30am. This is a great way to learn more about Interim 2019 travel/study projects. We'll see you there!
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Location: |
Main Building |
Contact: |
International Programs
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11:00 AM - 12:40 PM
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New Faculty Luncheon, Holcombe Room, Burwell Building
(Academic)
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Description: |
The first New Faculty Mentoring Lunch of the 2018-2019 academic year will occur from 11 a.m. to 12:40 p.m. Thursday, Sept. in the Holcombe Room. The topic for the luncheon will be the Honor Code.
This lunch series serves as a mentoring program for junior faculty but any faculty or staff member is welcome to attend. Lunches for faculty in their first and second years of employment are paid for by the Provost's Office; other faculty members who are attending can purchase lunch from the Faculty and Staff Dining Room or bring a bag lunch. Anyone who has a meeting at the 11 a.m. hour is welcome to join us after their meeting concludes.
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Location: |
Holcombe Room, Burwell Building |
Contact: |
Stefanie Baker
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1:00 PM - 9:00 PM
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Art Exhibit: Scenic Impressions: Southern Interpretations from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum, upper level
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Scenic Impressions: Southern Interpretations from the Johnson
Collection showcases forty-one artists—both native Southerners who recorded
their own region and distant places, and others who were transitory visitors or
seasonal residents. The result is a varied assortment of individual approaches,
and, in the words of the popular American Impressionist Childe Hassam, “some
things that are charming.”Many of the painters on viewembraced the central tenets of
Impressionism: light-filled natural settings loosely painted in high-key colors
with visible brushstrokes; fluidity of form; and an emphasis on atmospheric
transience. A “scenic impression” is the evocation of something seen, rather
than its literal transcription. In terms of subject matter, it is most
frequently a landscape, but it can also extend to a figurative composition set
outdoors. The artist’s experience—his or her impression of the scene at
hand—is paramount. The earliest paintings in the exhibition date from the 1880s and
illustrate a Barbizon-inspired aesthetic consisting of dark tones and simple
landscapes. Other works postdate Impressionism and display greater concern for
expression and form, along with an awareness of the picture plane.
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum, upper level |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
Exhibit: The Richardson Family Art Gallery features the works by Kaye Savage and Colleen Balance
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Kaye Savage, interested in chemical,
physical, and biological interactions across different scales of time and
space, in Earth’s surficial environments, presents both
place-based, incorporating terrain patterns and natural materials from sites
that she explores, and data-based, depicting patterns observed
by herself or by scientists that she meets in the field, as graphic
elements. Her pieces engage with locations from the Blue Ridge to the South
Carolina coast.
For Ballance, It has been more than a
bit of a stretch to return to her roots as an artist and attempt to create work
not based on theatrical text. However, once she worked with her
watercolor guru, and traveled to Morocco and southern Spain to further her MENA
studies, she was fortunate to find the inspiration she needed. The Saharan sand
of Erg Chebbi and the miraculous decorative tile motifs at the Alhambra and
madrasas of Fes provided her the mental freshness and soul touching spark to
produce what viewers can find in her works.
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
Exhibit: Japanese Art of the Edo and Meiji Eras, Richardson Family Art Museum, lower level
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Japanese
Art of the Edo and Meiji Eras (1603-1912) displays a variety of cultural expressions of
Japan, including tea ceremony implements, woodblock prints, porcelains, and ink
paintings. The Edo Period (1603-1868), named after the Shogun capital, is
one of the most prosperous and thriving in the history of Japanese art.
The political stability established by the Tokugawa family prompted an increase
in artistic, cultural and social development, with flourishing and distinctive
aesthetics represented in paintings, ceramics, woodblock prints and decorative
arts. The Meiji Period (1868-1912), an era of radical social and
political change from feudalism to modernity and adopted Western influences,
witnessed a blending of cultures and an innovative interchange of old ideas and
new in Japanese art. This exhibition intends to further enhance scholarly
research for students in ARTH 322 Art of Japan, and several of the labels in
this exhibition will be written by students. Featured works are loaned from the Shiro Kuma Collection of Edwin and Rhena Symmes in Atlanta, GA, from the Edmund Daniel Kinzinger (1888-1963) Collection of Japanese Prints loaned by David and Barbara Goist in Asheville, NC, and from the collection of Dr. and Mrs. Hunter Stokes ('60) in Florence, SC.
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum, Lower Level |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
9:00 PM - 11:55 PM
|
|
Friday, September 14, 2018
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Scenic Impressions: Southern Interpretations from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum, upper level
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Scenic Impressions: Southern Interpretations from the Johnson
Collection showcases forty-one artists—both native Southerners who recorded
their own region and distant places, and others who were transitory visitors or
seasonal residents. The result is a varied assortment of individual approaches,
and, in the words of the popular American Impressionist Childe Hassam, “some
things that are charming.”Many of the painters on viewembraced the central tenets of
Impressionism: light-filled natural settings loosely painted in high-key colors
with visible brushstrokes; fluidity of form; and an emphasis on atmospheric
transience. A “scenic impression” is the evocation of something seen, rather
than its literal transcription. In terms of subject matter, it is most
frequently a landscape, but it can also extend to a figurative composition set
outdoors. The artist’s experience—his or her impression of the scene at
hand—is paramount. The earliest paintings in the exhibition date from the 1880s and
illustrate a Barbizon-inspired aesthetic consisting of dark tones and simple
landscapes. Other works postdate Impressionism and display greater concern for
expression and form, along with an awareness of the picture plane.
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum, upper level |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Exhibit: The Richardson Family Art Gallery features the works by Kaye Savage and Colleen Balance
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Kaye Savage, interested in chemical,
physical, and biological interactions across different scales of time and
space, in Earth’s surficial environments, presents both
place-based, incorporating terrain patterns and natural materials from sites
that she explores, and data-based, depicting patterns observed
by herself or by scientists that she meets in the field, as graphic
elements. Her pieces engage with locations from the Blue Ridge to the South
Carolina coast.
For Ballance, It has been more than a
bit of a stretch to return to her roots as an artist and attempt to create work
not based on theatrical text. However, once she worked with her
watercolor guru, and traveled to Morocco and southern Spain to further her MENA
studies, she was fortunate to find the inspiration she needed. The Saharan sand
of Erg Chebbi and the miraculous decorative tile motifs at the Alhambra and
madrasas of Fes provided her the mental freshness and soul touching spark to
produce what viewers can find in her works.
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Exhibit: Japanese Art of the Edo and Meiji Eras, Richardson Family Art Museum, lower level
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Japanese
Art of the Edo and Meiji Eras (1603-1912) displays a variety of cultural expressions of
Japan, including tea ceremony implements, woodblock prints, porcelains, and ink
paintings. The Edo Period (1603-1868), named after the Shogun capital, is
one of the most prosperous and thriving in the history of Japanese art.
The political stability established by the Tokugawa family prompted an increase
in artistic, cultural and social development, with flourishing and distinctive
aesthetics represented in paintings, ceramics, woodblock prints and decorative
arts. The Meiji Period (1868-1912), an era of radical social and
political change from feudalism to modernity and adopted Western influences,
witnessed a blending of cultures and an innovative interchange of old ideas and
new in Japanese art. This exhibition intends to further enhance scholarly
research for students in ARTH 322 Art of Japan, and several of the labels in
this exhibition will be written by students. Featured works are loaned from the Shiro Kuma Collection of Edwin and Rhena Symmes in Atlanta, GA, from the Edmund Daniel Kinzinger (1888-1963) Collection of Japanese Prints loaned by David and Barbara Goist in Asheville, NC, and from the collection of Dr. and Mrs. Hunter Stokes ('60) in Florence, SC.
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum, Lower Level |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
Saturday, September 15, 2018
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Noon - 2:00 PM
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Scenic Impressions: Southern Interpretations from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum, upper level
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Scenic Impressions: Southern Interpretations from the Johnson
Collection showcases forty-one artists—both native Southerners who recorded
their own region and distant places, and others who were transitory visitors or
seasonal residents. The result is a varied assortment of individual approaches,
and, in the words of the popular American Impressionist Childe Hassam, “some
things that are charming.”Many of the painters on viewembraced the central tenets of
Impressionism: light-filled natural settings loosely painted in high-key colors
with visible brushstrokes; fluidity of form; and an emphasis on atmospheric
transience. A “scenic impression” is the evocation of something seen, rather
than its literal transcription. In terms of subject matter, it is most
frequently a landscape, but it can also extend to a figurative composition set
outdoors. The artist’s experience—his or her impression of the scene at
hand—is paramount. The earliest paintings in the exhibition date from the 1880s and
illustrate a Barbizon-inspired aesthetic consisting of dark tones and simple
landscapes. Other works postdate Impressionism and display greater concern for
expression and form, along with an awareness of the picture plane.
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum, upper level |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Exhibit: The Richardson Family Art Gallery features the works by Kaye Savage and Colleen Balance
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Kaye Savage, interested in chemical,
physical, and biological interactions across different scales of time and
space, in Earth’s surficial environments, presents both
place-based, incorporating terrain patterns and natural materials from sites
that she explores, and data-based, depicting patterns observed
by herself or by scientists that she meets in the field, as graphic
elements. Her pieces engage with locations from the Blue Ridge to the South
Carolina coast.
For Ballance, It has been more than a
bit of a stretch to return to her roots as an artist and attempt to create work
not based on theatrical text. However, once she worked with her
watercolor guru, and traveled to Morocco and southern Spain to further her MENA
studies, she was fortunate to find the inspiration she needed. The Saharan sand
of Erg Chebbi and the miraculous decorative tile motifs at the Alhambra and
madrasas of Fes provided her the mental freshness and soul touching spark to
produce what viewers can find in her works.
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Exhibit: Japanese Art of the Edo and Meiji Eras, Richardson Family Art Museum, lower level
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Japanese
Art of the Edo and Meiji Eras (1603-1912) displays a variety of cultural expressions of
Japan, including tea ceremony implements, woodblock prints, porcelains, and ink
paintings. The Edo Period (1603-1868), named after the Shogun capital, is
one of the most prosperous and thriving in the history of Japanese art.
The political stability established by the Tokugawa family prompted an increase
in artistic, cultural and social development, with flourishing and distinctive
aesthetics represented in paintings, ceramics, woodblock prints and decorative
arts. The Meiji Period (1868-1912), an era of radical social and
political change from feudalism to modernity and adopted Western influences,
witnessed a blending of cultures and an innovative interchange of old ideas and
new in Japanese art. This exhibition intends to further enhance scholarly
research for students in ARTH 322 Art of Japan, and several of the labels in
this exhibition will be written by students. Featured works are loaned from the Shiro Kuma Collection of Edwin and Rhena Symmes in Atlanta, GA, from the Edmund Daniel Kinzinger (1888-1963) Collection of Japanese Prints loaned by David and Barbara Goist in Asheville, NC, and from the collection of Dr. and Mrs. Hunter Stokes ('60) in Florence, SC.
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum, Lower Level |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
 |
 |
|