Wednesday, April 20, 2011

agriART Course offered this Fall 2011

Graduate Student Deborah Lash Featured on NPR!

Deborah Lash, MFA Candidate in Critical Art Practices, was featured on NPR's "Art Beat" with Sean Rameswaram. Please check out the NPR link for more information. Congrats to Deborah!

Deborah's show, "The Fat Lady Sings," runs from April 20-29 in the Fine Art Gallery in the Art and Design Building. The reception and live performance for her show will be held on Thursday, April 21 from 6-9pm. For more information about Deborah and her work, visit her website at  www.deborahlash.com.

Monkey Dress
2010

Safety pins & stuffed monkeys



Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Art and Design Building Named Best New Art Space near D.C.

Washington City Paper 30 Years - Best of D.C. 2011

"Best New Art Space Almost Near D.C."

The 50 percent increase in space for studio, classrooms, and workshops that George Mason University’s School of Art bought for itself with its new $25 million Art and Design Building afforded it about a zillion-percent increase in visibility in the D.C. art community.  Mind you, the 88,000-square-foot Art and Design Building isn’t any nearer to the District.  It will still take a long slog out Interstate 66 to get there, with only the promise of lunch at the Eden Center to brighten the long commute.  One show, however, was worth sitting through traffic: “Tattoos of Ships,” a 2010 solo exhibit featuring Maggie Michael.  Going for gold, the school invited Michael to take on its new ground-floor gallery space as if it were her studio, and she accepted.  The results - sculpture, installation, and painting, much applied directly to the wall, all resembling Michael’s take on El Lissitzky's classic Proun project- were unlike anything to be seen in the District or its environs last year.  See?  The drive can be worth it.

Manassas Art Guild Seeks Submissions

CALL FOR ARTISTS - EXHIBITS NOW SEEKING SUBMISSIONS

The Manassas Art Guild is seeking artists who would like to exhibit their work in several upcoming art shows. Currently the Guild has openings for three exhibits, taking place this spring and summer. Works in all media, including photography, are eligible for entry.

The first exhibit, eARTh, is on April 23; the theme for this exhibit is artwork which celebrates the natural world (animals, landscapes, recycled art, etc.) In June, the Guild will be hosting a booth at the Manassas Railway Festival; artists are invited to submit work which relates to trains and railways. And in July, the Guild is sponsoring "Remains to be Scene: Artists and Virginia's Historic Places," an exhibit and competition timed to coincide with the events surrounding the 150th anniversary of the Civil War.

A fourth exhibit, the Guild's annual "Paint! Manassas," is being scheduled for the fall; details will be available later this spring.

The deadline to enter the "eARTh" exhibit is April 9, with deadlines for the other exhibits to follow. Artist can find details and entry forms on the Guild's website, www.manassasartguild.org, or call 571/377-1782 to leave a voicemail message.

The Manassas Art Guild is a not-for profit organization which seeks to build and maintain a visible and active visual arts community in Manassas and beyond.

Friday, February 25, 2011

Thomas Stanley Brown Bag Discussion, Center for Consciousness and Transformation

Tuesday, March 1, 2011, 12-1:15PM
Johnson Center, Gold Room (Lower Level)

The end of history or the end of the world, some type of ontological collapse, is written into the mythologies of many cultures including the judeo-christian archetypes that are still quite resonant in our presumably secular society. Unfortunately, where last days prognostications are taken most seriously, they are also taken most literally and in those dim quarters, the end of the world is painted in the gloomiest colors of catastrophe and travail. The world we inhabit is as much a creation of our discursive manipulations over time and through language as it is the product of physics. The manner in which we inhabit a virtual symbolic world has eclipsed in salience, importance, and immediacy our habitation in what used to be called the real world. (Which is now, of course, just a very bad television show.) Hardware apocalypse is when everything melts, burns, or blows up and humanity along with it. Seems very wasteful. Can we talk in the twenty-first century about something like a software apocalypse? That is, a modification of or an accretion to language and/or how it is used that is so massive in its ontological consequences that we, in effect, experience the end of the world created under the old semantic order. Join Dr. Stanley as he uses his experience in life and music to explore and perhaps make palatable something he calls "velvet apocalypse".

ABOUT THE PRESENTER
Thomas Stanley is...
    * Ethnomusicologist specializing in new and emerging musical practices, especially as these relate to the collective experience of temporal texture on a macro-scale (i.e., history).
    * Author of George Clinton and P-Funk: an Oral History (1998).
    * On-air music programmer at WPFW-FM presenting an amazing array of underground and experimental musics.

TOPIC DISCUSSION VIA PB WIKI
We invite you to respond to the following question prior to the presentation on March 1 on the CCT Brown Bag Wiki: What does the expression "I-and-I" mean to you? Source it, interpret it, and connect it, if possible to our discussions of consciousness and its transformations.

If you’ve already signed on to the list, you can go directly to the question prompt by following this link: https://cctbbag.pbworks.com/w/page/36203673/March-2011-Brown-Bag

If you'd like to join the list but haven't, please contact Martha Souder at msouder@gmu.edu.

RSVP via PINGG
Please let us know whether you’ll be attending or not. You should soon receive an invitation from Stacey Guenther for a PINGG evite. Please respond there. If you have trouble accessing the evite, please respond here. We’re asking you to respond, so we can ensure we have enough space to accommodate everyone.

BE THERE, Even if You Can’t Be There
For members of the community who can’t physically attend, University Life will be streaming the presentation, so you can be there without physically being there. This should be especially beneficial to those of you on the Arlington and Prince William campuses. To view a live stream of the event, go to http://www.livestream.com/universitylifelive

Design Competition

A new non-profit group, The Red Truck Foundation, is launching its campaign with a logo design competition. RTF is an organization that works to bring emergency care services to third world countries. RTF recognizes the lack of infrastructure in many of these developing nations - and has found a solution through the use of motorcycle ambulances. Through the competition initiative the organization hopes to not only bring awareness to its cause, but to also encourage creativity across the design community. Logo entries are due by midnight on March 10, 2011. Entries can only be made by individuals, and must be original graphics. There will be two rounds of voting - the first will be conducted by the public, and the second by a jury panel selected by RTF. The final winner of the competition will win $300, and the opportunity to showcase his/her talents. Your design can be the first response. Save lives with a creative design. To learn more about RTF and how you can participate in the competition please visit their website: www.redtruckfoundation.org, or search The Red Truck Foundation on Facebook.

Graduate Student Exhibition


The Graduate Student Exhibition runs from Monday, February 28-Friday, March 11 in the Fine Art Gallery, School of Art. The opening reception will be held on Wednesday, March 2 from 6-8pm.