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Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Illustration
Threefold Cord Practice, K. Hope Mayo
Threefold Cord Practice, K. Hope Mayo
TYGR: Student Art and Literary Magazine 2018-present
No abstract provided.
The Ghosts Shed Tears, Sarah Jentsch
The Ghosts Shed Tears, Sarah Jentsch
School of Art, Art History, and Design: Theses and Student Creative Work
Before I was taught what made us different, I thought my brother and I were the same. The only difference between a doe and a buck was the antlers. As I grew, I noticed differences—in the way people spoke to us, in what was expected of us, in the questions we were asked. In what our futures were supposed to look like. The difference between the doe and the buck was still the antlers, but those antlers made one a trophy and the other venison.
Many of my formative experiences I came to understand through animals. My family home, cradled …
Exhibiting Students’ Bound Sketchbooks, Amy Beecham, Courtenay Mcleland
Exhibiting Students’ Bound Sketchbooks, Amy Beecham, Courtenay Mcleland
Library Faculty Presentations & Publications
The Thomas G. Carpenter Library at the University of North Florida implemented a dedicated space for the exhibition of student artwork in the Summer of 2017. The space is collaboratively managed by the Department of Art, Art History, and Design and the Library with the intent of providing students with valuable experience in curating and mounting exhibitions. Courtenay McLeland, librarian and co-liaison to the Department of Art, Art History, and Design and art professor Amy Beecham discuss an upcoming installation of student bound books. Students in Professor Beecham’s advanced drawing class completed accordion bound sketchbooks with a focus on continuous …
Conceptions Of Flight, Sandra Reed
Conceptions Of Flight, Sandra Reed
Art & Design Student Research
Conceptions of Flight is a thematic invitational group exhibition. The artwork exhibited here reveals a diverse and individual engagement with the theme. Some of the featured artists interpret flight as a rising up; a moving forward; a breaking free from struggle. Others have captured the thrill and wonder of travel; of the movement of clouds; of building new wings, mythopoetically. Whatever the interpretation, Conceptions of Flight provides an arresting look at the ways this age-old preoccupation continues to move the imagination and stretch the limits of our reach.