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17 Friday / April 17, 2015

Exhibits at the IU Art Museum

10:00 am to 05:00 pm
IU Art Museum, 1133 E. 7th Street
http://www.artmuseum.iu.edu

Hours: Tuesday – Saturday: 10:00 – 5:00 p.m. Sunday: Noon – 5:00 p.m.

New in the Galleries:

Onya LaTour: Pioneering Modern Art in Indiana
Continuing through May 10, 2015
Gallery of the Art of the Western World, Doris Steinmetz Kellett Endowed Gallery of Twentieth-Century Art, first floor
In 1941 Onya LaTour opened the Indiana Museum of Modern Art near Nashville, Indiana, creating a stir in local art circles. Two works from her personal collection are featured in this installation presented in conjunction with Onya LaTour on view at the Indianapolis Museum of Art this fall, to which the IU Art Museum loaned four pieces.

WWI War Bond Posters
Continuing through May 24, 2015
During World War I, mass-produced color posters encouraged enlistment, helped raise capital for the war effort, and solidified public opinion against the enemy. Two vintage posters for war bonds, one American and one French, are featured: although both depict a German soldier, they have very different styles and impacts.

Nature’s Small Wonders: Photographs by Ansel Adams
Continuing through May 24, 2015
America’s most famous nature photographer, Adams was also an ardent conservationist who served on the board of directors for the Sierra Club for thirty-seven years and was active in the Wilderness Society. He used his dramatic black-and-white photographs to encourage the preservation of America’s natural wonders, particularly those found in the U.S. National Parks.

This installation is on view from January 13 through May 24, 2015, in the Gallery of the Art of the Western World, Doris Steinmetz Kellett Endowed Gallery of Twentieth-Century Art. It is presented in conjunction with the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Sycamore Land Trust, whose mission is to protect the beautiful natural and agricultural landscape of southern Indiana.

Finding Atget
Continueing though May 24, 2015
French photographer Eugène Atget’s imagery mixed a nineteenth-century aesthetic with a modern sensibility, garnering him admiration and respect from the young Berenice Abbott, who became his champion. This installation features a vintage print by Atget and several later prints from his original negatives.

Women behind the Camera
Continuing through May 24, 2015
The world of professional photography in the early- to mid-twentieth century was largely a men’s club, but a small group of talented women paved the way for future generations of female “lensmen.” Portraits by three of these pioneers—Imogen Cunningham, Berenice Abbott, and Toni Frissell—are featured.

Pop Textiles
Continuing through May 24, 2015
Textiles designed by Pop artists Roy Lichtenstein, Richard Lindner, and Claes Oldenburg are featured. These bold and inventive compositions on fabric blur the boundaries between fine art, craft, and industrial production.

Robert Salmon: Romantic Painter
Continuing through May 24, 2015
Two paintings by Robert Salmon help elucidate the artist’s foundation in English Romanticism, which continued to inform his painting after his move to Boston in 1828.

Focalpoint: Fantastic African Hats: Power, Passage, and Protection
Continuing through May 24, 2015
These twelve richly embellished African hats celebrate the prestige of their owners, evoke complex histories of trade and commerce, and provide protection from harm. Organized by Brittany Sheldon, graduate assistant for the arts of Africa, the South Pacific, and the Americas.

Exhibits

17 Friday / April 17, 2015

Wylie House Museum and Bloomington Watercolor Society Exhibit: We Paint… Heirlooms!

10:00 am to 02:00 pm
Wylie House Museum: Morton C. Bradley Education Center, 307 E. 2nd Street
http://www.indiana.edu/~libwylie/events.html

Concurrent with the opening of the museum for the 2015 season, as well as the annual heirloom seed sale, the Wylie House will be hosting the Bloomington Water Color Society’s exhibit featuring paintings inspired by a visit to the museum last summer. Hours are extended on Saturday, March 7 until 4pm. The paintings will be displayed in the Education Center and will remain on exhibit through April. Visitors are welcome to enjoy the artwork during our regular open hours, Tuesday-Saturday, 10m-2pm.

Exhibits

17 Friday / April 17, 2015

BFA 4 Thesis Exhibitions

12:00 pm to 04:00 pm
Grunwald Gallery of Art - 1201 E 7th St. Room 110
http://www.indiana.edu/~grunwald

The Grunwald Gallery at Indiana University is pleased to announce this year’s BFA Thesis Exhibitions. These exhibitions feature work created by graduating Bachelor of Fine Arts students in the Henry Radford Hope School of Fine Arts at Indiana University. Each exhibition features student work from a variety of the studio areas: ceramics, digital art, graphic design, metalsmithing and jewelry design, painting, photography, printmaking, sculpture, and textiles. To gain professional experience, exhibiting students participate in the planning of their shows and installation of their pieces.

BFA 4 will open on Wednesday, April 15 and continue through Saturday, April 18. An opening reception will be held on Friday, April 17 from 6:00 – 8:00 pm at the Grunwald Gallery. This exhibition features the work of Natalie Beesley (Photography), Monica Slabaugh (Sculpture), and Laura Youngquist (Sculpture).

For further information, please contact the Grunwald Gallery at (812) 855-8490 or [email protected]. We invite you to visit our website at http://www.indiana.edu/~grunwald/. The Grunwald Gallery is accessible to people with disabilities. Gallery hours are Tuesday – Saturday, noon – 4:00 pm, closed Sunday and Monday. All events are free and open to the public. For more information on the Henry Radford Hope School of Fine Arts at Indiana University, please visit www.fa.indiana.edu.

Exhibits

17 Friday / April 17, 2015

Reynold E. Carlson Lecture

01:00 pm to 02:00 pm
Tony A. Mobley Auditorium, PH C100

Sponsored by the Departmen of Recreation, Park, and Tourism Studies at the Indiana University School of Public Health-Bloomington

Will Allen, Farmer, Founder, and CEO of Growing Power, Inc.

“Growing Power and the Good Food Revolution”

Free and Open to Everyone

17 Friday / April 17, 2015

Wylie House Museum Spring Speaker Series: 19th Century Campus Coeds, Female Faculty, the Panthygatric and More!

03:00 pm to 04:00 pm
Wylie House Museum: Morton C. Bradley Education Center - 317 E. 2nd St
http://www.indiana.edu/~libwylie/events.html

Talks are free and held on Friday afternoons at Wylie House Museum’s Morton C. Bradley, Jr. Education Center, located next door to the museum at 317 E. Second St.

Dina Kellams, Associate Archivist, Indiana University Archives

What do we know about IU’s first coed Sarah Parke Morrison and the women who followed her? What was the male dominated campus environment like for them? What did they do for fun? Join Kellams to hear more about 19th century campus coeds, female faculty, and the Panthygatric Dance!

Education / Speakers

17 Friday / April 17, 2015

One-Hour Exhibition: Objects of Ritual in the Ancient World

03:00 pm to 04:00 pm
Indiana University Art Museum - 1133 E. 7th Street
http://artmuseum.iu.edu

Please meet in the museum’s third floor office. No Pre-registration is required, but space is limited. Admission will be on a first come-first served basis.

Reliefs, statuettes, and vessels were often integral components of religious rituals and cult devotions. Eric Beckman, the museum’s curatorial assistant for ancient art, will present a selection of these objects and discuss their cultural, religious, and social significance.

Education / Speakers

17 Friday / April 17, 2015

Renaissance Studies presents Andrea Bolland: “Fare and Comporre: Painting, Poetry and the Liberal Arts in Early Modern Italy”

03:00 pm
Walnut Room, Indiana Memorial Union
http://www.indiana.edu/~rena/

Current criticisms of the Liberal Arts, whether as crumbling edifice or bulwark of elitism, ignore the fact that over the centuries (indeed millennia) it has been continually reassessed, remodeled and even reconstructed. Some of these changes—which may correspond to broader political or social transformations—moved the liberal arts toward greater isolation and exclusivity (befitting its modern caricature). Yet others have been more dynamic, opening up to question the assumptions guiding the construction of the category itself. This paper argues that the Renaissance debates over the status of the factive arts—and in particular of painting—were an example of the latter. The claims that painting is a liberal, rather than mechanical, art often privileged content over form (content—or subject matter—serving as its link to the “higher” arts). I will examine both texts and works of art that suggest a very different possibility: that the kinship of factive and liberal arts (or of painting and poetry) is not in shared intellectual products but in shared inventive processes.

Andrea Bolland is Associate Professor of Art History, University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

This lecture is made possible through the support of the College Arts and Humanities Institute, the College of Arts and Sciences, the Mary-Margaret Barr Koon Fund of the Department of French and Italian, and the Robert and Avis Burke Lecture Series, the Department of the History of Art. There will be coffee, tea and light refreshments.

Education / Speakers

17 Friday / April 17, 2015

IU Cinema: Abderrahmane Sissako Jorgensen Guest Filmmaker Lecture

03:00 pm to 04:15 pm
IU Cinema: 1213 East 7th Street, Bloomington, IN 47406
http://www.cinema.indiana.edu/Abderrahmane-Sissako

Lecture details are forthcoming.

ABDERRAHMANE SISSAKO
Abderrahmane Sissako (born 13 October 1961) is a film director and producer who has often worked in Mali and France. Sissako is, along with Ousmane Sembène, Souleymane Cissé, Idrissa Ouedraogo and Djibril Diop Mambety, one of the few filmmakers from Sub-Saharan Africa to be considered one of the world’s leading filmmakers. His film Waiting for Happiness (Heremakono) was screened at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival official selection under Un Certain Regard, winning the FIPRESCI Prize. His 2007 film Bamako received much attention. Sissako’s themes include globalization, exile and the displacement of people. His 2014 film Timbuktu was selected to compete for the Palme d’Or in the main competition section at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival.

Soon after his birth Sissako’s family immigrated to Mali, his father’s country, where he completed part of his primary and secondary education. Sissako returned briefly to Mauritania, his mother’s land, in 1980. Then he left for Moscow, where he studied cinema at the VGIK (Federal State Film Institute) from 1983 to 1989. Sissako settled in France at the beginning of the 1990s. In addition to feature films and short films, Sissako has served on the jury of the Premiers Plans festival in Angers in January 2007, and on the jury of the Cannes Film Festival later in the same year.

This event is sponsored by the College Arts and Humanities Institute, African Studies Program, the Black Film Center/ Archive, the Department of Comparative Literature, the Department of History, Film and Media Studies, The Media School, and the IU Cinema. Special thanks to Cultural Services of the French Embassy, Institut Français, Amélie Garin-Davet, and Marissa Moorman. Screenings are free, but ticketed.

Abderrahmane Sissako is scheduled to be on campus April 13–19 and present at several screenings.

Films / Speakers

17 Friday / April 17, 2015

Opening Reception: MFA Thesis Exhibitions

06:00 pm to 08:00 pm
IU Art Museum
http://artmuseum.iu.edu

Every spring IU Art Museum collaborates with the Hope School of Fine Arts and the Grunwald Gallery to present thesis exhibitions of graduating SoFA MFA candidates. Three exhibitions, lasting twelve days each, will be presented this year. At 6:30 p.m. during the opening receptions, each exhibitor will give a brief talk about his or her work.

Autumn Bussen, painting
Paige Mostowy, sculpture
Ekaterina Vanovskaya, painting

Exhibits

17 Friday / April 17, 2015

BFA 4 Thesis Exhibitions Opening Reception

06:00 pm to 08:00 pm
Grunwald Gallery of Art - 1201 E 7th St. Room 110
http://www.indiana.edu/~grunwald

The Grunwald Gallery at Indiana University is pleased to announce this year’s BFA Thesis Exhibitions. These exhibitions feature work created by graduating Bachelor of Fine Arts students in the Henry Radford Hope School of Fine Arts at Indiana University. Each exhibition features student work from a variety of the studio areas: ceramics, digital art, graphic design, metalsmithing and jewelry design, painting, photography, printmaking, sculpture, and textiles. To gain professional experience, exhibiting students participate in the planning of their shows and installation of their pieces.

BFA 4 will open on Wednesday, April 15 and continue through Saturday, April 18. An opening reception will be held on Friday, April 17 from 6:00 – 8:00 pm at the Grunwald Gallery. This exhibition features the work of Natalie Beesley (Photography), Monica Slabaugh (Sculpture), and Laura Youngquist (Sculpture).

For further information, please contact the Grunwald Gallery at (812) 855-8490 or [email protected]. We invite you to visit our website at http://www.indiana.edu/~grunwald/. The Grunwald Gallery is accessible to people with disabilities. Gallery hours are Tuesday – Saturday, noon – 4:00 pm, closed Sunday and Monday. All events are free and open to the public. For more information on the Henry Radford Hope School of Fine Arts at Indiana University, please visit www.fa.indiana.edu.

Exhibits

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