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De Anza College Student Art Show
May 16 - June 14, 2011
Closed Memorial Day, May 30
Open Saturdays June 4 and June 11. From 11 to 3 pm. With special presentations by members from the Museum Studies class and some of the artists in the exhibition.
Reception: Tuesday, June 7, 2011, 5:30-7:30pm. Awards will be presented during this reception.
Check museum hours here.
With wide diversity in media and approach, this exhibition features paintings, drawings, mixed-media works, photography, graphic design, sculpture, ceramics, and more created by students at De Anza College. The exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Gallery and Exhibition Design class.
Exhibition announcement design by Li Tze Chang.
Take a virtual tour of the show!
Virtual tour by Dan Reyes.
Come On Down!
Come On Down! is a multi-purpose project space that includes a collaborative communal area for connecting visual and oral history, and an experimental exhibition area for the results of interactive projects. Part of this campus/community space will feature frequently changing artwork. Spring 2011 presentations include:
- High school student activity: Jenny Truong, Nancy Yang. On exhibit is the artwork of two top honorable mentions of Congressman Mike Honda’s Congressional Art Competition. Here is more information about the Competition and the official press release.
An Artistic Discovery is the annual art contest conducted by Members of Congress for high school students across the country. This competition provides Members and the public an opportunity to encourage and recognize the rich artistic talents of young American high school students. The winning artist and 1 guest are flown to Washington, D.C., to attend an unveiling reception held at the Capitol this year. The winning piece from each district is displayed as part of a year-long national exhibition in the Cannon Tunnel, a pedestrian walkway leading from the Cannon House Office Building to the United States Capitol.
- Artist/student Activity: We are Socially Networked, installation by artist Pantea Karimi and students from Nimitz Elementary School. This installation was connected to Karimi’s Artist of the Year Award, which she received from the Fine Arts Commission, City of Cupertino. Nimitz students (3rd – 5th grade) viewed Karimi’s recent artwork and talked with her about its content. Then the students drew and collaged their own artworks, juxtaposing images of digital technology gadgets, logos, and/or our natural environment. The installation took the form of a social network diagram.
The technologically curious group of students from Nimitz School in Sunnyvale jumped right into the project. Connected with the Euphrat Museum’s acclaimed Arts & Schools Program, this project took the experience of art-making beyond classroom walls, inviting the youth to look at the intersection of art and life in Silicon Valley. Exhibited also are two of Pantea Karimi’s recent artworks. "Through my art, I want to capture moments when technological tools, computer-assisted sounds, programs, and images, simultaneously connect and separate us from one another."
CO-SPONSORS include: Cupertino Fine Arts Commission, City of Cupertino, Euphrat Museum of Art, Arts Council Silicon Valley.
De Anza College Student Art Show
May 5 – June 15, 2010
Closed Memorial Day, May 31
Reception: Tuesday, June 8, 5:30-7:30pm. Awards will be presented during this reception.
Check museum hours here.
For more information, read the La Voz Weekly article about this show.
Reflecting expertise in diverse media and varied interests and points of view, this exhibition features paintings, drawings, mixed-media works, photography, graphic design, sculpture, and ceramics created by students at De Anza College. The jurors, Lucy Cain Sargeant and Imin Yeh, selected artworks to be presented in the exhibition and those to receive awards. Sponsored by the De Anza Associated Student Body, the Euphrat Museum of Art, and the Creative Arts Division.
Jurors’ Awards include:
Kate Braham, Environmental Degradation, oil paint on wood panel
Nathan Byrne, Detecto, steel, found objects
Rob Holcomb, Polanco Dinner, hand colored silver gelatin print
Sea Eun Kook, Landscape of Library, mixed media
Kim Le, Les Repas, cut paper
Jinsoon Lee, Brotherhood, black and white conte on colored paper
Leny (Elena) Peretz, Neighbors, ceramic
Irina Polyakova, Corner Table, wood
Anthony A. Vasquez, 2010 De Anza Student Art Show Announcement
Tse Y. Wong, Pieces of My Life, mixed media
Leny Peretz, Neighbors. Photo: Janet Leong Malan
Jinsoon Lee, Brotherhood, Conte crayon. Photo: Janet Leong Malan
Several special projects will be included in the exhibition:
TYPE-FACES, a series of caricature faces using only letterforms with bits and pieces of individual typeface characters. Created by students from Michael Cole’s Arts 57 Graphic Design Communication/Typography, the objective was to understand the changing character, dynamics and personality of various typefaces and their associated letterforms.
Graphic design students Kris Spencer Jones and Rameel Raymundo have been creating graphic interpretations of words written by art students in the exhibition, poetry students, and students from other disciplines working on related projects. These will form the basis for an evolving adjunct to the exhibition, complementing the First Thursdays monthly open-mic event at the Euphrat. (For more information about First Thursdays, read the La Voz Weekly article).
Students from Eugene Rodriguez’s intermediate drawing class have focused on the intersection/collision of 21st centuryarts and design. The display of selected large format self-portraits with tools of the trade was inspired by Howard Gardner’s "Five Minds for the Future" (modes of thinking as components in building a productive future). Their Four Minds for the Future: Creative, Constructive, Critical, Connective explores questions such as: How will students use their training in the world upon graduation? How does art really fit into 21st century society?
Art will also be displayed in conjunction with Student Activist Art Show: The Student Movement Exhibit. This show shares the story of the student organizing at De Anza, through photography, articles, film, and art. The focus is the Educational Movement and how concerned students at De Anza took action to create awareness about the constant deductions of funding towards education within and outside of campus. These students have their stories of change, and are fighting for the right to an affordable and great education.
The goal of the Student Activist Art Show: The Student Movement Exhibit is to empower students to do something (through photos, spoken word, art pieces, literature), then to gather student organizers, faculty, politicians, staff, administrators and students to dialogue about the importance of education, build communication and community, and strengthen support for student involvement and organizing.
Event: Thursday, June 10, 2010, 5:30pm - 8:30pm, Visual Performing Arts Center (VAPC) courtyard. (For more information, visit our Facebook event page).
The design for the exhibition announcement was created by De Anza College graphic design student Anthony A. Vasquez.
Special acknowledgement: Chancellor, Foothill-De Anza Community College District, Dr. Linda Thor; President, De Anza College, Dr. Brian Murphy; Vice President, Instruction, Dr. Christina Espinosa-Pieb; Dean, Creative Arts Division, Dr. Nancy Canter; Art and Photography Faculty; Art on Campus Committee.
De Anza College Student Art Show
May 21 – June 17, 2009
Closed Memorial Day, May 25
Reception: Tuesday, June 9, 5:30-7:30pm. Awards will be presented during this reception.
Sponsored by the De Anza Associated Student Body, the Euphrat Museum of Art,
and the Creative Arts Division, this exhibition features paintings, drawings,
mixed-media works, photography, graphic design, sculpture, and ceramics created
by students at De Anza College. The artworks reflect expertise in diverse media
and varied interests and points of view. Jurors select artworks to be presented
in the exhibition and those to receive awards.
The design for the exhibition announcement was created by De Anza College graphic design student Janet Leong Malan.
Juror's Awards include:
So Choi, What Makes Satisfaction, acrylic on canvas
Yu-Ting Hsian, Lost Innocence, acrylic on panel
Sylvie Levesque, Le Jeu and Je me Souviens, oil on canvas
Jing Lu, In This Very Life, ceramic
LeGrand Morgan, Birds of a Feather, porcelain
Hyunjoo Pak, Father, photograph
Elena Peretz, Warrior of Peace and Hang Out, ceramics, wood
Inna Razmakhova, Old Capitan, digital collage
Lisa Teng, Untitled, black & white photograph
Estee Phuong Vu, Chair #3, mahogany, ebony, pink ivory
Bing Zhang, Idle/Idol, oil on canvas
Estee Phoung Vu, Chair #3, Wood, aluminum. Photo: Michael Lowell
Bing Zhang, Idle/Idol?, Oil on canvas. Photo: Michael Lowell
Elena Peretz, Warrior of Peace, Ceramic and mixed media. Photo: Michael Lowell
Envi-Able, mixed media on recycled materials, is a collaborative installation
addressing environmental issues and re-envisioning our relationship to the natural world.
It began as an Intermediate Drawing class project and has grown to include participants from
the Global Warming Solutions conference and other local artists. Collaborators include
Juliana Kang-Robinson, the Institute of Community and Civic Engagement, and the Euphrat
Museum of Art. Installation design by Gabe Ballard and Aleksandr Barilov with Tom Smith.
Art Bench Project involved students from Instructor Moto Ohtake’s sculpture and 3D classes
who were given the opportunity to design benches for the new Visual and Performing Arts
Center patio. Models and statements for the benches were presented to the Art of Campus
Committee. These ideas are on display. Chosen: Olena Starostina (Dreamboat), Alex Barilov
(Kvadratik), Legrand Morgan (for resubmission), Robert R. Mooney (for resubmission).
Also Matthew Neilson, Tin Ho Lau, and Nancy Vizcarra.
Counting Lives Lost, Making Our Lives Count Installation is part of a larger project.
From a conversation between two De Anza students, Tim Sage and Zari Aziz, one a veteran
from the Afghanistan War and the other a Muslim woman from Afghanistan, a series of
activities has been developed to promote dialog, healing and the dispelling of stereotypes
commonly associated with returning veterans and Muslim students. An April 29th healing
dialog between Sage and Aziz was the first component of the project. It was followed by Kathleen
Crocetti’s large student-assisted installation Counting Lives Lost in De Anza’s Main
Quad (May, June). A symbolic portion of that installation, with documentation of the
process and related commentary and poetry by students is exhibited in the Euphrat.
Counting Lives Lost Committee and co-sponsors: DASB, Health Services, Intercultural
and International Studies Division, Euphrat Museum of Art, Creative Arts Division.
Tim Sage & Zari Aziz , Counting Lives Lost, Making Our Lives Count installation at De Anza College, 2009. Photo: Jonathan Rogers
WISE37 exhibits a large tree sculpture they made out of recycled materials collected
from students and around campus. Art students and other museum viewers are encouraged
to add elements to make it a more powerful statement. W.I.S.E. 37 stands for Working
to Institute a Sustainable Environment on the 37th Parallel. It is a De Anza environmental
club working on issues on and off campus. For more information, visit www.wise37.com.
Installation view of the De Anza Student Art Show, Euphrat Museum of Art
Special acknowledgement: Chancellor, Foothill-De Anza Community College District,
Dr. Martha J. Kanter; President, De Anza College, Dr. Brian Murphy; Vice President,
Instruction, Christina Espinosa-Pieb; Dean, Creative Arts Division, Dr. Nancy Canter;
Art and Photography Faculty; Art on Campus Committee.
De Anza College Student Art Show
May 19 - June 12, 2008
Closed Memorial Day, May 26
Sponsored by the De Anza Associated Student Body, the Euphrat Museum of Art, and the Creative Arts Division, this exhibition features paintings, drawings, mixed-media works, photography, graphic design, sculpture, and ceramics created by students at De Anza College.
The artworks reflect expertise in diverse media and varied interests and points of view. Jurors select artworks to be presented in the exhibition and those to receive awards.
The design for the exhibition announcement was created by De Anza College graphic design student Ana Milosavljevic.
Special acknowledgement: Chancellor, Foothill-De Anza Community College District, Dr. Martha J. Kanter; President, De Anza College, Dr. Brian Murphy; Vice President, Instruction, John Swensson; Dean, Creative Arts Division, Dr. Nancy Canter; Art and Photography Faculty; Art on Campus Committee.
De
Anza College Student Art Show
May 21 - June 14, 2007
Closed Memorial Day, May 28, 2007
Reception: Tuesday, June 12, 5:30-7:30PM.
Awards will be presented during this reception.
Sponsored by the De Anza Associated Student Body,
the Euphrat Museum of Art, and the Creative Arts
Division, this exhibition features paintings, drawings,
mixed-media works, photography, graphic design,
sculpture, and ceramics created by students at De
Anza College.
The artworks reflect expertise in diverse media
and varied interests and points of view. Jurors
select artworks to be presented in the exhibition
and those to receive awards. The 2007 jury consists
of DeWitt Cheng,
art writer for Artweek,
Hector Dio Mendoza,
Eureka Fellowship recipient and artist of multiple
disciplines, and Reneé
Billingslea, Instructor, Santa Clara University.
.
Special acknowledgement: Chancellor, Foothill-De
Anza Community College District, Dr. Martha J. Kanter;
President, De Anza College, Dr. Brian Murphy; Vice
President, Instruction, Dr. Judy Miner; Dean, Creative
Arts Division, Dr. Nancy Canter; Art and Photography
Faculty; Art on Campus Committee.
Student
Art Show on "Change"
Jan. 23-Feb. 23, 2006
Reception: Feb. 21, 6-8 p.m.
Sponsored by the De Anza Associated Student Body,
the Euphrat Museum of Art, and the Creative Arts
Division, this exhibition featured paintings, drawings,
mixed-media works, photography, graphic design,
sculpture and ceramics created by students at De
Anza College.
This year's juried exhibition focused on "change."
The theme was very encompassing, from personal change
to global change, planned change to imposed change.
The exhibition also included a collaborative public
artwork produced by Linda Mau's ceramics class,
consisting of individually designed pairs of ceramic
foot/shoe prints leading a march to the future Euphrat
Museum of Art.
The gathering of works reflected expertise in diverse
media and varied interests and points of view. Two
jurors - Tony May, Professor, San José State University,
and Kathy Aoki, Professor, Santa Clara University
- selected artworks to be presented in the exhibition
and students to be awarded.
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