Past Exhibitions 2019-2020
Ȧ 2-D Faculty exhibition
Dates: August 29–September 20, 2019
Opening reception: Thursday August 29th 4–7 pm
The Annual Faculty Exhibition offers an opportunity for the community to experience firsthand the inspirational and virtuoso talent that is in residence at Ȧ.
These faculty artists are integral to the current aesthetic and formal dialogue in their various approaches to art practice, including research-based and interdisciplinary methods that are the core of best practice models. Ȧ’s faculty exhibits widely they receive many prestigious awards, grants, and residencies. As a result, they encourage students by their example to think across boundaries. Collectively, these distinguished, award-winning artists bring a unique vision to the region’s cultural tapestry.
Represented are works by the following 2-D full-time and adjunct faculty:
Yizhak Elyashiv
Stephen Fisher
Liliya Krys-Burhoe
John Paul McCaughey
Amy Montali
Melissa Randall
John Rapczak
Lisa Russell
Jason Travers
Richard Whitten
Copernicus
Dates: October 3–25, 2019
Opening Reception: Thursday, October 3rd 4–7 pm
Curated by Jenny CHEN Jiaying and Frank WANG Yefeng, Copernicus is based on Nicolaus Copernicus’s “On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres,” published under pressure before his death in 1543. It contained a revolutionary and reflective perspective, asking people to imagine that they were not the center of the universe and uprooting the concept of geocentricism. This was the first time in the history of Western philosophy that humanity and the earth were not considered the epicenter of all existence. With Charles Darwin's theory of evolution and Sigmund Freud's theory of unconsciousness, the position of human beings in the universe is constantly re-evaluated. The post-human generation has also contributed to concerns about the “future of humanity”, reimagining concerns Copernicus faced in the sixteenth century.
With these historical moments in mind, “Copernicus” will bring together selected artists and artworks to present a new perspective on the world and human beings. This perspective involves all kinds of considerations related to technology, geopolitics, nature and social systems. By interweaving these topics that are neither clear or rigidly defined, we can question anthropocentrism, the centralization of people, borders, and presuppositions, all while recognizing and giving recognition to historical contingencies.
Artists exhibited include Elliot Dodd, LaTurbo Avedon, and Stine Deja, as well as the art project Slime Engine.
John de Melim: Work in Progress A Memorial Exhibition
Dates: November 7–December 6, 2019
Opening Reception: Thursday, November 7th 4–7 pm
John de Melim (1924-2019), a graduate of Tufts and the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, joined the faculty of the Art Department at Ȧ in 1960, just as the college moved to its new campus near the North Providence border. At the time, he taught a general education course required for all students titled Art in Society, a theme that would resonate throughout his art and his travels around the world. He later went on to teach printmaking and founded the Graphic Design program at Ȧ. This exhibition, organized by his son David, celebrates his life, his art, and his collection, honoring one of the pioneers of the Ȧ Art Department and a beloved figure in the Rhode Island arts community.
Graphic Design: Konkuk University
Dates: January 23–February 7, 2020
Opening Reception: Thursday, January 23rd, 4–7 pm
Facilitated by Ȧ Graphic Design Professor Heemong Kim, Graphic Design: Konkuk University features selected works from graduating students studying at Konkuk University in South Korea. The university’s objective is to develop creative designers aware of their social responsibilities through an understanding of humanity, society, technology, philosophy and culture.
LIKE-NESS: Andy Warhol Prints and Photos from the Permanent Collection
Dates: February 20–March 13, 2020
Opening Reception: Thursday, February 20th, 4–7 pm
View the exhibition catalogue online
View virtual tours of the exhibition: |
Drawn from the permanent collection at Ȧ, LIKE-NESS celebrates the unique personalities found in Warhol’s portrait Polaroids, the candid snapshots of his street photographs, and the layered colors and meanings in his silkscreen prints. These works, made in the 1970s and 1980s, contribute to an ever-broadening understanding of Warhol’s late career. Furthering our mission as an educational art gallery, this exhibition is also curated in conjunction with the Fall 2019 Art History seminar Warhol By Design, which provided Ȧ students with the opportunity to conduct scholarly research about Warhol’s life, career, and legacy and to present those findings to the public.