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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Fall 2020, Valparaiso University
Spring 2020, Valparaiso University
Fall 2019, Valparaiso University
Spring 2019, Valparaiso University
Fall 2018, Valparaiso University
Spring 2018, Valparaiso University
Fall 2017, Valparaiso University
Spring 2017, Valparaiso University
Fall 2016, Valparaiso University
Spring 2016, Valparaiso University
Fall 2015, Valparaiso University
Spring 2015, Valparaiso University
Fall 2014, Valparaiso University
Spring 2014, Valparaiso University
Fall 2013, Valparaiso University
Spring 2013, Valparaiso University
Fall 2012, Valparaiso University
Spring 2012, Valparaiso University
Art Museum Curators And Management, Tiffany Tyler
Art Museum Curators And Management, Tiffany Tyler
Symposium on Undergraduate Research and Creative Expression (SOURCE)
Art museums house the greatest works from artists around the world from classics to modern pop art, without discrimination and open to interpretation. Art museums are debatably one of the most sacred places in society. Any history museum will give details about ancient artifacts or new discoveries; art, however, can change in meaning with each new visitor. Museum curators go beyond the “do not touch” signs with their large key rings opening vaults of worth and beauty. Curators work directly with artists and other museums to resurrect a dying cultural tradition. With the assistance of Valparaiso University’s own Gloria Ruff, …
Fall 2011, Valparaiso University
Spring 2011, Valparaiso University
From Fury To Erasure: Shifting Representations Of Hiv/Aids In Queer Art And Politics, Wendy Mallette, Nick Derda
From Fury To Erasure: Shifting Representations Of Hiv/Aids In Queer Art And Politics, Wendy Mallette, Nick Derda
Symposium on Undergraduate Research and Creative Expression (SOURCE)
This paper traces the shifting representations of HIV/AIDS in queer art and politics from the late 1980s until the present. We identify a nonlinear trajectory with three major characteristics: 1) militant and explicit representations of HIV/AIDS and their relation to queer sexuality, 2) memorials that publicize the artists’ personal mourning of their HIV/AIDS-related losses, and 3) HIV/AIDS' near disappearance from queer art and politics. This transition throughout the AIDS crisis to contemporary times relates to an ongoing cultural understanding of sex as private issue, a notion that the works of David Wojnarowicz, the Gran Fury Artist Collective, and Robert Blanchon …
Fall 2010, Valparaiso University
Spring 2010, Valparaiso University
Fall 2009, Valparaiso University
Spring 2009, Valparaiso University
Fall 2008, Valparaiso University
Spring 2008, Valparaiso University
Fall 2007, Valparaiso University
Spring 2007, Valparaiso University