Self-Assembly: MFA Thesis Exhibitions
The 2022 MFA graduates will be hosting both physical and online exhibitions of their work beginning in April 2022. Check here, at Anchorlight Gallery, and at Lump Gallery for more information.
The 2022 MFA graduates will be hosting both physical and online exhibitions of their work beginning in April 2022. Check here, at Anchorlight Gallery, and at Lump Gallery for more information.
Please join us in celebrating the achievements of our outstanding students in the Department of Art and Art History! Each student will be giving a brief presentation of their Honors work in the past year. Refreshments will be served.
Join us to celebrate our graduating Studio Art seniors of Spring 2022 in an exhibition of their ARTS 500 seminar works! 19 Artists will have their work on display in the Hanes Art Center through graduation weekend.
Go to the Honors in Studio Art webpage to find all information about applying for the Senior Thesis Honors Program in Studio Art. Questions? Contact Mario Marzan: mmarzan@email.unc.edu
Alexis Rockman (American, born 1962) created this dramatic series depicting historic sea disasters to explore the impact of transportation and migration – from goods and people to plants and animals – on our planet and its waterways.
Eva Wylie's current body of work aims to capture the movement, flow, light, and materiality of our evershifting environment. These works are produced by printing on translucent silk that is then stretched over painted frames to create delicate yet densely stratified pieces that float on the wall.
The Visual Resources Library of the Department of Art and Art History at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill will be conducting a series of short Personal Archiving workshops on focused topics for the Fall 2022 semester.
Ezra Wube (b., Ethiopia) is a mixed media artist who lives and works in New York. His work references the notion of past and present, the constant changing of place, and the dialogical tensions between "here" and "there".
Working between photography, self-portraiture, and performance, the work of Franco-Cameroonian photographer Samuel Fosso occupies a central position in the international contemporary art world.
The Visual Resources Library of the Department of Art and Art History at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill will be conducting a series of short Personal Archiving workshops on focused topics for the Fall 2022 semester.