Division of Design – 91探花News /news Thu, 01 Jun 2023 19:04:47 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 ArtSci Roundup: 2023 Awards of Excellence, Graduation, Dino Lecture, Summer Reads and more /news/2023/06/01/artsci-roundup-2023-awards-of-excellence-graduation-exhibitions-dino-lecture-summer-reads-and-more/ Thu, 01 Jun 2023 18:58:51 +0000 /news/?p=81768 This week and summer, honor the 2023 Awards of Excellence recipients, visit the newly renovated Jacob Lawrence Gallery to see the works of design students, add one of College of Arts & Sciences Dean Dianne Harris’ favorite books to your summer reading list, learn about the largest animals to ever roam the earth at the Burke Museum’s annual Dino Lecture and more.


June 8, 3:30 – 5:30pm | 2023 Awards of Excellence recipients, Katharyn Alvord Gerlich Theater in Meany Hall

Honor outstanding alumni, faculty, staff, students and retirees who contribute to the richness and diversity of our University community. The president and provost will host a one-hour ceremony, followed by a reception with hors d鈥檕euvres, desserts and a chance to connect and celebrate with the 91探花community.

Free | More info


June 7 – 14, 10am – 5pm | Jacob Lawrence Gallery

industrial design student work

A graduation exhibition for students receiving Bachelor of Design (BDes) degrees.

Free |


Graduation at the Husky Stadium

June 10 | Graduation

Huskies from around the world will once again take the field at Husky Stadium to celebrate their accomplishments in front of 40,000 proud family members, friends and guests. President Cauce and the leadership of the University will be there to confer degrees as each graduates makes that once-in-a-lifetime walk across the 4,000-square-foot stage, adorned with life-size replicas of the four ionic columns that graced the Territorial University over 160 years ago.

Free | More info and registration


Through June 25 | 听Henry Art Gallery North Galleries

The Henry Art Gallery will present the UW’s School of Art + Art History + Design Master of Fine Arts and Master of Design thesis exhibition. Throughout their programs, fine arts and design students work with advisers and other artists to develop advanced techniques, expand concepts, discuss critical issues, and emerge with a vision and direction for their own work. Henry staff conduct two studio visits and work closely with the students to facilitate their projects and prepare them for exhibition at the museum. A digital publication is produced in conjunction with the exhibition to highlight the students鈥 artistic endeavors and the Henry鈥檚 commitment to this exciting and important step in the students’ development as practicing artists and designers.

Free |


Through July 29 | Reader鈥檚 Choice: 鈥淭he Overstory鈥 by Richard Powers, Online

Dianne Harris, Dean of the 91探花College of Arts and Sciences, suggested three of her favorite books for our summer read. The readers鈥 votes landed on 鈥淭he Overstory.鈥 This novel presents interlocking fables about people who learn to see the world from the trees鈥 point of view. Winner of the 2019 Pulitzer Prize in Fiction.
Free | More info

 


August 11-16 | 91探花Converge Jakarta 2023

In 2023, the UW鈥檚 signature gathering for our community of international alumni and friends travels to Indonesia for a summit in Jakarta and extended program in Bali. Our new location will offer the same unrivaled access, education and connection you expect from our annual 91探花Converge gatherings.

 


Summer Programming from the Burke Museum & Henry Art Gallery

June 23, 7:00 PM | Kane Hall

Being one of the largest animals to ever roam the earth has its upsides. Too big for most other animals to hunt, Sauropods could also reach food other dinosaurs could only view longingly. But being that big can also be a pain in the neck, especially when that neck is more than 25 feet long and weighs a couple tons. Learn about all this and more at the Burke Museum’s annual Dino Lecture, now bigger than ever.

Join University of Michigan Paleontologist Dr. Jeff Wilson Mantilla for a trip 200 million years back in time to learn how these long-necked dinosaurs got so big in the first place and the adaptations that allowed them to thrive. Hear stories about field work in India, Brazil, and Jordan, where Dr. Wilson Mantilla excavates some seriously big bones in search of evolutionary clues.

Free |


Through July 9 | Henry Art Gallery

Jones鈥檚 Altared States project, which was originally produced by CalArts Center for New Performance, with New York Live Arts, and commissioned by The Public Theater, with support from NEFA. Exploring the meeting places between the material and the numinous which have always served as contemplative sites among most world cultures through a range of artistic forms, ALTAREDSTATES invites participants into intentional relationship with unseen interwoven forces that shape our lived realities, including waves of history, culture, cosmology, and Soul.

Free |


Through August 27 | Henry Art Gallery

Known for her exuberant abstractions, Sarah Cain (b. 1979, Albany, NY) often extends her practice beyond the canvas into installation, site-specific painting, stained glass, and furniture. Her work draws from sources as disparate as Abstract Expressionism, graffiti, and pop music, and incorporates materials as diverse as sand, feathers, jewelry, crystals, and fabric. At the Henry, the artist has created an immersive architectural intervention in dialogue with the double-height architecture of the museum鈥檚 East Gallery.

Free |


Through December 31 | , Burke Museum

Experience the wonder of Puget Sound through the unique wildlife and living cultures that call the Salish Sea home. From Southern resident orcas and Chinook salmon to community gardens and the annual Canoe Journey, build a deeper connection with a region teeming with life. Hear from the scientists, tribal members, and community advocates working to conserve and heal the Salish Sea, because the choices we make today will determine the future of this region.

We Are Puget Sound highlights people working to protect and restore this region. This special exhibit brings their stories to life with stunning photography, new insights, and the Burke Museum鈥檚 expansive collections.

Cost of Admission / Free to 91探花students, faculty and staff |


Have an event that you would like to see featured in the ArtSci Roundup? Connect with Lauren Zondag (zondagld@uw.edu).

]]>
ArtSci Roundup: Frontiers of Physics Lecture, Dance Concert, Undergrad Research Symposium and more /news/2023/05/12/artsci-roundup-frontiers-of-physics-lecture-dance-concert-undergrad-research-symposium-and-more/ Fri, 12 May 2023 19:31:17 +0000 /news/?p=81490 This week, learn about the Warped Side of the universe, listen to Russian Journalist Yevgenia Albats speak about her experiences, tune into the “Reflections on the 1968 91探花Black Student Union” event livestream and more.

 


May 16 – 17, 11:00 AM – 3:00 PM | , HUB Street/Lyceum/Lawn

The Makers Fair听showcases the creative talents and uniquely made crafts and creations of 91探花students, faculty, and staff. The quarterly fair is sponsored by the Husky Union Building, The Whole U, and Housing & Food Services.

Free |


May 16, 11:30 AM 鈥 1:00 PM | Communications Building

Join the 91探花Translation Studies Hub for two short talks and conversation:

鈥淎gainst Translation as Metaphor: Sultanic Languages of Sovereignty in Late 19th Century Morocco鈥
Sam Kigar (Islamic Studies, Department of Religion, University of Puget Sound) challenges a scholarly tradition of describing religions as languages that can be translated into one another. He examines the translation of two letters by Sultan Hassan I (r. 1873-1894) about his journeys to the S奴s region of southern Morocco. The Sultan was not translating forms of Islamic sovereignty into 鈥渇oreign鈥 territorial terms, instead, he was participating in the territorialization of the S奴s.

鈥淒ecentering French to re-center Wolof: Translation as a Nationalist Performance in Boubacar Boris Diop鈥檚 Work鈥
Rokiatou Soumar茅 (French and Francophone Studies, University of Puget Sound) proposes that Senegalese novelist Boubacar Boris Diop positions himself in his work as a nationalist linguistic activist by writing in Wolof instead of French, Senegal鈥檚 lingua franca. For Diop, translating these essential pieces initiated an ambitious political project that aligns with his nationalistic views, and his rejection of French hegemony.

Free |


May 17, 7:30 PM | Meany Hall

This project was born from a collaboration between Abigail Jara (choreographer and dancer) and Juan Pampin (sound artist and composer). The work was created during a residency of MUSSE DC at the Department of Digital Arts and Experimental Media (DXARTS) at the 91探花Seattle campus in April 2022.

The performance is an exploration of the territory based on sound maps. The use of sensors enables the performers to carry out a space-time reconfiguration of the forest based on its sounds, which has the body as its axis, and movement and time as its organizing principle. In turn, the performers are part of an audiovisual ecosystem in which their bodies are captured by infrared cameras 鈥 similar to those used by scientists to investigate the presence of animals in the forest.

In each section of the work, the performers explore this interactive audiovisual space based on certain concepts related to the forest, such as the animal, the arborescent, the vegetal, the aviary, and the spectral.

Free |


May 17 – May 21 | ,听Meany Hall

Join the Department of Dance for their first-ever concert in the round. Six premieres by current graduate students, including one film, explore topics from Artificial Intelligence to the concept of Yin and Yang.

$10 Tickets |


May 17, 7:30 鈥 9:00 PM | Kane Hall

The Frontiers of Physics Lecture Series brings renowned scientists to the 91探花to offer free lectures on exciting advances in physics with the goal of fostering an appreciation of science and technology in our community. This spring the Department of Physics is honored to welcome 2017 Nobel Laureate in Physics, Kip Thorne.

When Kip Thorne embarked on his career as a physicist in the 1960s, there were hints that our universe might have a 鈥渨arped side鈥: 听objects and phenomena such as black holes that are made from warped spacetime instead of from matter. Most of Kip’s half-century career has been devoted to converting those hints into clear understanding. He and his colleagues have explored the Warped Side through theory (using mathematics and computer simulations to probe what the laws of physics predict) and through astronomical observations (primarily with gravitational waves). In this lecture he will recount the history of those explorations, he will describe what we now know about the Warped Side, and he will speculate about the future.

Free |


May 18, 4:00 鈥 5:30 PM | Communications Building

This lecture series and colloquium advance crucial conversations on world language and literature study on the 91探花Seattle campus through an interdisciplinary, multi-departmental speaker series focused on issues of race, identity, colonialism, and migration within a broad European context. These approaches to national literatures offer effective frameworks for undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty to grasp the intersectional complexity of power configurations in literary and visual cultures.

Free |


May 18, 7:30 PM | Meany Hall

Indian Classical vocalist, educator, and composer, Srivani Jade听presents “Ritu Chakra: Ragas of the Six Seasons of North India” in听the听culminating听recital of her artist residency at the 91探花School of Music. She听is accompanied by Deepashri Joglekar (Harmonium), Ravi Albright (Tabla), Suchitra Iyer (Vocal Saath), and Tanpura. Her 91探花students present a short opening act of Ragas and bandish compositions they learned during the quarter.

Srivani Jade identifies deeply with the Khayal and Thumri traditions of North India, and devotional repertoire from the Bhakti movement. Her performances have received critical acclaim in the 2014 Sawai Gandharva Festival and 2016 Earshot Jazz Festival, and she has many albums, film and musical scores to her credit.

$10 – $20 Tickets |


May 18, 7:30 PM | Kane Hall

Christopher Ozubko is a Canadian-American designer, educator, and former Director of the School of Art + Art History + Design at the 91探花. He completed his BFA at the University of Alberta, and his MFA at the renowned Cranbrook Academy of Art, then under the direction of Katherine and Michael McCoy. After his appointment to the Design faculty at the 91探花in 1981, Ozubko established his own atelier in Seattle, Studio Ozubko, which garnered numerous regional, national, and international design awards.

Ozubko’s poster designs are in the collections of the George Pompidou Museum, Paris; the US Library of Congress; the Museum of Applied Art, Helsinki; Dansk Plakatmuseum, Arhus, Denmark; and IPT Toyama, Japan.

As an educator, Ozubko developed and led the 91探花summer 鈥淒esign in Rome鈥 program for more than a decade, which exposed students to photography, history, epigraphy, traditional craft, and industrial technology.

Free |


May 18, 7:30 PM | Husky Union Building

Come to the Husky Union Building and listen to Yevgenia Albats, Distinguished Journalist in Residence, Jordan Center for the Advanced Study of Russia, talk about Putin’s Wars. The speech is followed by a public Q&A.

Yevgenia Albats is a Russian investigative journalist, political scientist, author, and radio host. She has been Political Editor and then Editor-in-Chief and CEO of The New Times, a Moscow-based, Russian language independent political weekly, since 2007. On February 28, 2022, Vladimir Putin blocked its website, just days after Russia invaded Ukraine. Despite that, Albats continues to run the newtimes.ru, and she kept reporting from Russia until she had to leave the country in the last week of August 2022 after she was fined for her coverage of the war with Ukraine and pronounced a foreign agent. She graduated from Moscow State University and holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from Harvard University. Additionally, she was a full-time professor at Moscow鈥檚 Higher School of Economics.

Free with Registration |


May 19, 11:00 AM – 5:00 PM | Undergraduate Research Symposium, Kane Hall

The Undergraduate Research Symposium is an opportunity for undergraduates to present what they have learned through their research experiences to a larger audience. It is also a space for students, faculty, and the community to discuss cutting-edge research. This event is held on UW鈥檚 campus and is open to all students, faculty, and community members to attend.

The event includes poster, visual arts and design, performing arts, and oral presentations by students from all academic disciplines and all three 91探花campuses, plus invited student presenters from peer institutions.

Free |


Credits: Emile Pitre Collection, James Garrett, MOHAI, Steve Ludwig Photo: Credits: Emile Pitre Collection, James Garrett, MOHAI, Steve Ludwig

May 19, 5:00 – 6:30 PM | , Livestream

Join together with students 鈥 past and present 鈥 to celebrate and commemorate the 55th Anniversary of the Black Student Union (BSU).

This panel conversation is an opportunity for our campus community to hear from BSU founding members听James P. Garrett, Larry Gossett, Kathleen Haley, Carl Miller, and Leathia Stallworth-Krasucki, who demanded changes in how the 91探花served students of color. From their 1968 occupation of the 91探花administration building (now Gerberding Hall), to the myriad ways they have been leading voices in justice and equity over the years, these visionary leaders have shaped this university and our greater community.

The panel will be moderated by 91探花alum and听former Black Student Union leader听Dr. Marc Arsell Robinson, Assistant Professor of History from California State University, San Bernardino.

Registration for in-person attendance is听at capacity听and is only open for the livestream.

Free |


Have an event that you would like to see featured in the ArtSci Roundup? Connect with Lauren Zondag (zondagld@uw.edu).

]]>