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Exhibits and Artists

World War I & II Posters - November 7-26, 2008

World War posters

Exhibition reception will be held November 20, 2008 from 4-6 pm.

To help represent the significance of the wars and to honor those that served in WWI and WWII, the Memorial Union Art Gallery is displaying a World War I and World War II poster exhibit along with several smaller displays relating to that time period.

"The images are straight forward appeals of Americans at home for empathy and active support of the war efforts. The artists were well known, and their work was familiar, seen daily on covers of popular magazines of the day," Ester Hockett, visual arts coordinators of the MU Gallery, said. "Thousands of copies of thousands of colorful poster designs plastered the walls and fences of cities and towns throughout the United States."

The exhibit will include 22 framed posters from the "World War I Liberty Loan Posters" exhibit and 33 framed posters from the "World War II Posters" exhibit. These are both traveling poster exhibits from the State Historical Society of North Dakota.

Additional posters from archives and framed front-page excerpts from the Fargo Forum, announce the end of the war.

A service flag from World War I and an embroidery, crafted by Marlys Hurt in 1946, from World War II, are on loan from the Cass County Historical Society and Bonanzaville, U.S.A.

Three dresses, representing the fashion throughout the World War eras, are on loan from the Department of Apparel, Design and Hospitality Management/College of Human Development & Education at NDSU. These include: a 1916 Engagement Dress, worn by Jessie Webb to celebrate her engagement with Samuel Corwin. This dress was donated by Jessie Webb Corwin. A 1940's Skirt Suit, this style was common in the 1940's. Because of wartime shortages, the fashion world was forced to be utilitarian. This dress was donated by Edigna Van Houtte. Another 1940's Dress with a fitted hourglass silhouette. This dress is an example of how the amount of fabric was restricted for the use of clothing (Donor unknown).

A World War II Navy Uniform, worn by Oliver Hanson is also displayed. The uniform was donated by Oliver's granddaughter, Briana Hanson, a sophomore communication major at NDSU.

There are also several war medals from the wars displayed at the MU gallery.

Neil W. Anderson, "Is It Justified?" October 22 - November 5, 2008

mu gallery exhibit pitures

Artist's Statement: "When creating black and white photographs, an artist is not distracted by vivid color and is able to experience content with more clarity," Anderson said. "Most people dream and/or remember in black and white, consequently black and white photography more easily allows for thought."

Reception for this exhibit is on Oct. 23, 2008, from 4:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., in the MU Gallery, Upper Level, MU.

Ross Zirkle (1955-2007): Passion in Prints - Sept.19 - Oct. 18, 2008

Ross Zirkle, artist, "Pagan Revolt", waterless litho, woodcut, 22 x 27"

The Ross Zirkle Memorial Exhibit is a collection of 28 printmaking art pieces created by Ross Zirkle, a Tamarind Master Printer, who passed away from cancer in 2007. The exhibit and its pieces will honor and display Zirkle's talent and honor his memory. The pieces are from the Raven Wolf Gallery. Raven Wolf Gallery is the compilation of two artistic talents: the Raven (Suzanne Gonsalez) and the Wolf (Ross Zirkle).

"Ross Zirkle was prolific, thoughtful and skilled. His website and blog reflect a person who cared deeply about people and about art," Esther Hockett, Visual Art and Gallery Coordinator of the MU Gallery said. "The works in the exhibit are a sampling of his powerful compositions and his expressive control of line in illustrations for books. After his cancer diagnosis, lines become texture and pattern and his work is an active coping process."

Artist Reception is Oct. 3, 2008, from 6-9 p.m. in the MU Gallery, Open to Public, part of Mid America Printmakers Council - MAPC08.

"ROSS ZIRKLE (1955 - 2007) was a Tamarind Master Printer. He received his Master of Fine Arts in Printmaking from the University of Oregon. From 1997 - 2007, he presented his work and research on waterless lithography and figure drawing at twenty-four national workshops and conferences, including the 2004, 92nd Annual Conference College Art Association, Professional Practices Committee, Is the Visual /Arts Studio/Classroom a "Hostile Environment? Seattle,Washington, 31st Annual Southern Graphics Conference, Education Panel: Strategies for Teaching & Critiquing Print Media at Boston University, The Art Academy of Cincinnati, The Detroit Institute of Arts, University of Southern Illinois Carbondale, Carbondale Illinois and Frogman's Press, University of South Dakota, Vermillion, South Dakota. His work achieved both national and international acclaim. Including, the Hunterdon Museum of Art, Society of American Graphic Artists Exhibition at The Old Print Shop, International Paper Exhibition held at the Monique Goldsrom Gallery, New York, New York and Santa Cruz Art League, Santa Cruz, California. His work is included in many permanent collections, including Rutgers Center for Innovative Printmaking, Massachusetts College of Art, University of Texas, Austin, TX and Frogman's Press and Gallery, Vermillion, SD. In 2005, Mr. Zirkle was awarded a Kentucky Arts Council Professional Development Grant from the state of Kentucky in honor of his artistic excellence and in 2006, was awarded Teacher of the Year by the Alumni Association of the University of Kentucky. Ross Zirkle was an associate professor at the University of Kentucky where he taught printmaking and figure drawing until his death in 2007 to cancer. He is greatly missed."

Artist Bio - http://www.ravenwolfgallery.com/RossZirkle/index.html

PEARS 10th Anniversary - Sept.23 - Nov. 1, 2008

"Vecchio Courtyard" by Michelle Lindblom
Serigraphy, 2004

The PEARS program promotes printmaking production, education and innovation in the Midwest. The program has a studio in the Visual Arts Department of the NDSU Downtown campus and provides educational printmaking classes, workshops, artist residencies, internships and studio rental for qualified artists.

An artists' reception is scheduled Friday, Oct. 3 from 6-9 pm in the MU Gallery.

North Dakota State University Department of Visual Arts and Printmaking Education &Research Studio, along with co-hosts Concordia College, Minnesota State University Moorhead, and the Plains Art Museum will help sponsor and present the printmaking exhibits.

The PEARS 10th anniversary exhibition is samplings of printmaking artwork by a number of printmaking artists who have participated in the PEARS workshops over the last 10 years. The exhibit includes roughly 30 pieces of various printmaking processes and techniques, such as reduction, silkscreen or serigraph, and additional printmaking art processes. These exhibits go hand-in-hand with the upcoming Mid America Print Council 2008 Conference, October 1-5 in Fargo, N.D.

"Printmaking and the PEARS summer workshop have become a visual arts tradition for NDSU and the Division of Fine Arts. The Gallery has actively collected editions of prints from each workshop," Esther Hockett, the visual arts and gallery coordinator for the Memorial Union Gallery said. "Selections for the collection will be matted, framed and hung on exhibition in the gallery. Co-curator, Kent Kapplinger, and I have selected prints representative of the media, subject matter and the artists enrolled in PEARS through the years."

"Printmaking, like other art medium, has its own uniquely inherent visual characteristics that artists use to express themselves. Much like musicians, printmakers must become technically proficient before they can begin to fully express themselves through the medium," Kapplinger said. "Since printmaking includes four distinctly different categories of relief, intaglio, lithography, and stencil. Each with encompassing a multitude of sub-categories, mastering this broad medium can be a wonderful challenge lasting a lifetime, especially with continual incorporation of new technology including that of digital media."

"The PEARS program, along with NDSU printmaking classes, facilitates this lifelong learning and investigation in printmaking for those just beginning to be professional artists working in printmaking," Kent Kapplinger, Associate Professor of the NDSU Visual Arts and the director and master printer for PEARS said.

Fargo exhibits will be located at the Plains Art Museum, NDSU Downtown Gallery, Memorial Union Gallery at NDSU, Reineke Visual Arts Gallery at NDSU, Atomic Coffee, Sprit Room Gallery and the Upfront Gallery as well as several Galleries and Museums in Moorhead, Minn.

Illuminations: Medieval + the Saint John's Bible - Sept. 23-Oct. 23, 2008

medieval manuscript
The Metz Sacramentary, ca. 869-870, Metz, France (Bibliothèque Nationale, Ms. Lat. 1141)

The reception for this exhibit will be held Sept. 27, 2008, 5-7 pm in the MU Gallery.

The Memorial Union Art Gallery is displaing an exhibit of medieval illuminations, from Sept. 23 to Oct 23. The exhibit will correspond with the 24th annual conference of the Medieval Association of the Midwest.

Professor Carlos Hawley, of the NDSU Department of Modern Languages, is organizing the Medieval Association of the Midwest conference.

More than 40 medieval scholars will present at the conference. A keynote address, by award winning medieval scholar Barbara Weissberger, will take place during the conference.

The address will be from 10:15 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., in the Century Theater of the MU on Sept. 27. The address is free and open to the public.

"Illuminated manuscripts are some of the most informative and entertaining items to come to use from the middle ages. They provide us with a window into medieval paintings," Hawley said. "Viewing these illuminations is narrative, decorative, and supportive. It is theater on the page. One needs to look at illuminated manuscripts as medieval multimedia.

"The Memorial Union Gallery at NDSU is grateful to the Hill Museum & Manuscript Library, Saint John's University, Collegeville, Minn., for the loan of these facsimile and authentic treasures," Esther Hockett, the visual arts and gallery coordinator for the MU gallery said. "A special thanks to Matthew Z. Heintzelman, Curator for the exhibit."

Betty LaDuke Visits Campus

The NDSU Memorial Union Art Gallery is pleased to announce the upcoming visit of Betty LaDuke and her daughter Winona LaDuke. Betty LaDuke's exhibits "Children of the World I and II," featuring painting, sketches, and photographs from 1954 to 2002 are currently on display through the month of August in the Gallery. Winona LaDuke is an activist, economist, environmentalist, and writer.

Both events are free and open to the public.

August 19 at 12:00pm in the Gallery - Please join us and bring a lunch if you would like while Betty LaDuke shares her stories and experiences in creating the Children of the World exhibits currently on display in the Memorial Union Gallery. The exhibit is comprised of LaDuke's work and experiences in Latin America, Asia, Africa, and the Unites States.

August 19 at 3:00pm in the Gallery - Please join us for an artist's reception with complimentary refreshments and a dialogue with Betty and Winona LaDuke followed by a question and answer session.

Betty LaDuke is an internationally known photographer, painter, and illustrator who has spent the past 46 years documenting and drawing inspiration from children and families she has encountered throughout the world. Her work is filled with visual surprises depicting children's strengths and resilience. LaDuke's works also emphasize human emotions and characteristics, furthering the understanding of cultures different from one's own.

Betty LaDuke is currently focusing her endeavors on the mission of Heifer International, which is a non-profit humanitarian organization dedicated to ending world hunger and saving the earth by providing livestock, trees, training, and other resources to help poor families around the world become self-reliant.

Winona LaDuke is a Native American activist, environmentalist, economist, and writer. She is the founder of the White Earth Land Recovery Project in Minnesota and the Indigenous Women's Network. She is also Executive Director of Honor the Earth, a Native-led organization that she co-founded, whose mission is to create awareness and support for Native environmental issues and to develop needed financial and political resources for the survival of sustainable Native communities. Several of the photos in the Betty LaDuke's exhibit feature Winona as a child.

2008 Summer Exhibit - Betty LaDuke, "Children of the World", June 13 - August 22, 2008

children of the world

Beginning June 13th the works of Betty LaDuke will be on display at the North Dakota State University (NDSU) Memorial Union Art Gallery. Betty LaDuke is an internationally known photographer, painter, and illustrator who has spent the past 46 years documenting and drawing inspiration from children and families she has encountered throughout the world. Her work is filled with visual surprises depicting children's strengths and resilience. LaDuke's works also emphasize human emotions and characteristics, furthering the understanding of cultures different from one's own.
The two exhibits, Children of the World and Children of the World II, provide an opportunity for cultural and aesthetic comparisons across the boundaries of time and continents. The multimedia exhibit of photographs, drawings, and paintings weaves through the artist's life and beyond, and provides a unique opportunity to explore the artist's creative process of translating from the literal, camera captured moment and on-site sketches emphasizing select details of people and events into mythical, aesthetic renderings with paint on campus. The images evoke many smiles, but at the same time encompass some of the most significant social and cultural transitions of our world community for the past half-century. The images show how children are loved, nurtured, and conditioned to grow in diverse circumstances.
NDSU will have both exhibits on display through beginning June 13, 2008 through August 22, 2008. The Memorial Union Art Gallery is located on the NDSU campus at 1401 Administration Avenue in room 258.

"The earth is our common home, and local and global future depends on the well being of all the children of the world."
-Betty LaDuke

www.bettyladuke.com

Alternate Endings - Exhibit by Ezra DesJarLais, April 17 - May 22, 2008

Alternate Ending Exhibit

Someplace Warm, 42" x 38" $500

Artist's Statement

As an artist I prefer that my work be as objective as possible while simultaneously trying to inject into it as much personal content as possible. This particular series of paintings is about duality.

I find that objectivity is important in any given piece of artwork and take great satisfaction in the fact the audience is free to derive their own meaning or interpretation from a piece of artwork. However, I think it equally important for artists to be able to express themselves or to communicate a specific idea. This series of paintings gives the audience freedom to explore the content of each piece for themselves.

Most of the pieces in this series contain images which are either spray painted onto the background or foreground. The meaning of these images is free for the audience to interpret.

Each of the paintings also contains a series of symbols which are an amalgam of images inspired by Native American designs. Each symbol represents a letter of the alphabet. These symbols are very specific and meant to relate to a deeper personal content. It is at the discretion of the audience whether or not to decipher them.

I invite the audience to use their creativity and imagination to relate to these paintings and invite them to take a closer look.
- Ezra DesJarLais

Essential Truth - Exhibit by Leila Rastegar, April 17 - May 22, 2008

Fall in Fargo

Reception in honor of the artist: April 17, 5:00 - 7:00 p.m.

Artist Statement

My work explores the urban environment and our interaction within that environment. I am intrigued with the rhythms and complexities of urban scenes. I drive by some of these places many times and notice nothing, and then one day the light makes a fascinating shadow and interesting complexities. These glimpses of the city, as I portray them in my paintings, become an intimate part of my life - an image and a place and a representation of season and time of day that I keep forever.

Since I was a child, drawing has been my greatest pleasure. Although I work from everyday cityscapes, I take great satisfaction in experimenting with a larger format, more applications of colors, and a looser use of the brush. After years of feeling passionate about landscapes, I feel a surge of interest in painting the man-made objects that inhabit urban places as well - everyday forms such as cars, rail yards, buildings, street signs, billboards, electrical poles, fire hydrants, and so forth. These subjects fascinate me as part of the scenery of our everyday lives.

I take photographs of compelling scenes to preserve their urban environment and lighting conditions. I crop the best photograph and change the composition the way I prefer. With this body of work, I start the painting with acrylic. I define the composition by dividing the picture into color blocks; I use a complementary color of the local color, final colors to paint each block. After I have covered the whole canvas with the acrylic, I start to paint with oil. I repeat this process until I get the balance that I want - of color, lightness, darkness - balancing the areas of the canvas. Using acrylic allows me to work fast and decide what color value I need. The final layers are done in oil, allowing me more time to work on the intensity of the color.

There are a few artists influencing me. For example Lucian Freud and Edward Hopper have been the greatest influences. Freud, an Austrian-born British citizen, is a painter of the body at rest. He paints, draws, and etches heads and bodies. His interest is in truth-telling by not just copying the scene like a camera, but by manipulating reality to the essence of truth. Hopper, the best-known American realist of the inter-war period, was a master at manipulating reality to reveal essential and disturbing truths about the modern world. I am drawn more to Hopper because of his view of the world. I like his work because he portrays the truth that exists in everyday life. In my recent work, I try to incorporate use his vision and way of thinking.

Everyday urban scenes have a powerful impact on me as an artist. By choosing to paint scenes that strike me in a certain way, I connect with them. I now forever see places that once were overlooked as memories of my life. I strive to portray them as an essential truth of life. -- Leila Rastegar

Lisa Barber Installation - March 27 - May 22, 2008

lisa barber art

Lisa Barber has been an Assistant Professor of Art at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside since the fall of 2003. In 1998 she received her MFA from the University of Texas at Austin, and in 2002, she received the Emerging Artist Award from the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA). Her listing of solo shows includes Thomas Hunter Studio Gallery in New York City, Northern Clay Center in Minneapolis, NCECA 2007 in Louisville, and the Leedy-Voulkos Art Center in Kansas City. In the spring of 2006 Barber was awarded a McKnight Artist Award and Residency, a competitive award in the international field of ceramic art.

Installation will be March 27 and 28; the exhibition will close May 10. During installation, Lisa Marie will be available for conversation. She'll be available Thursday, April, 27, 2008 evening for the reception, too.

Her website is www.LisaMarieBarber.com.

"Portraits", Kathy Chornuk - March 27, 2008 - April 5, 2008

Saying 'Hello!'
43" x 54", acrylic

Artist's Statement - "PORTRAITS" is an exhibition of brilliantly colored acrylic, oil, or mixed media on canvas. They range in size from approximately 2' square to 6' x 4'. The idea behind this show was to paint faces of people. I was inspired by a figure drawing class I had taken a couple of years ago. In the first week of that class we drew portraits of one another. I found the experience interesting and realized the face is composed of many different shapes and colors. These images come from quick sketches of people that posed for me or are drawn from my imagination. They are painted rapidly as if I were doing a quick sketch of that individual.
The portraits are colorful and not the colors people are comprised of in real life. I use bright colors to represent the energy I see and feel when painting each portrait. I always begin by painting the eyes of the portrait first. After painting the eyes I get an idea where I am going with the rest of the portrait. Many times I sense a certain emotion immediately and portray that emotion while painting. At other times the emotion remains elusive until I am finished with the portrait. I use thick paint or switch to extremely thin washes during the progression of each work. This variety of paint application represents as much energy to me as the brush stroke itself. All of these factors work together to help present a particular emotion.
I thoroughly enjoy painting facial features of both people and animals. As an artist, I am excited to see a portrait to its conclusion and the emotions that I envisioned captured on canvas.

NDSU Photo Club Exhibit - Spring 08

ndsu photo club

See the work of 14 members of the NDSU Photography Club at the Memorial Union Gallery. Among the 48 pieces - many of them available for purchase! - exhibited in the Gallery and the adjoining North Star Butte Lounge are work by Prasad Burange, Ross Collins,John Ehlen, Kelsey L. Johnson, Anna G. Larson, Daniel Reetz, Stefan Robinson, Jose Rodriguez, Holly Scallon, Erica Schierholz, Nitesh Sule, Jessica Wachter, Nathan Welk, Travis Wigdahl.

Opening - Thursday, February 28, from 4:00 until 6:00 p.m.

Rosanne Olson Photography, January - March, 2008

Rosanne Olson uses the pinhole photography technique for some of her pieces. So, what is a pinhole photograph, anyway?

Take a needle, poke a tiny hole in a box, put film in the box, allow the light to seep in for a while. Then develop the film and you have a pinhole negative.

Basically, that's it. A pinhole camera can be anything from an oatmeal box to a 35mm film box. The tiny hole, best drilled into a piece of brass taped to the box, allows the light to enter in the same way that the "camera obscura" worked to project a scene onto a wall back in the 1500s.

For my pinhole photographs, I use a modified 4x5 camera with Polaroid film. The magic of the pinhole, for me, is in the waiting. Exposures may take anywhere from several seconds to more than 10 minutes. Most are in the 10-minute category. In making the photograph, I decide on what I want, set up the camera and position it as I imagine the film will see the picture. I then make a guess at the exposure and begin. Then try again.

During the long exposures, people may walk through the pictures, but because of the very slow formation of the image, no one shows up on the film. Occasionally people stop to inquire, curious about the odd-looking camera without a "lens". As we wait, light drifts slowly through the tiny hole, producing a photograph that has an unlimited depth of field, but lacks the acuity of a photograph made with a real lens.

I place the negatives in individual water-filled baggies, then carry them around with me until I get to my hotel room where I clean them and hang them up to dry. Because the negatives are exposed to the outdoors, they sometimes become scratched or damaged, especially on windy days, all part of the process of making a pinhole photograph.

To make a photograph in this way offers an opportunity for quiet and meditation. The images depict a serene world of architecture, icons and landscapes, which will remain long after we are gone.

~Rosanne Olson

For images in the MU Gallery, visit Rosanne Olsons web site www.rosanneolson.com.

Essays by Rosanne Olson: Pinhole Meditations and Pinhole Tales

Fall 07 Exhibit

MU gallery

"Fractal.....", November 3rd - November 28th, 2007

The first student exhibition is open in the Memorial Union Gallery. It will continue through November 28. At the opening reception on Friday evening, artist Mary Pfeifer talked about her work in multiple media, her fascination with fractals, dot patterns, matrix, dpi, ppi and the installation in the Gallery. Pfeifer is a candidate for the Bachelor of Fine Art.

Ms Pfeifer credits her 2002 P.E.A.R.S. - the Printmaking Education and Research Studio - experience with her fractal fascination. "By the time the visiting professor, Master Printmaker Elizabeth Dove, left NDSU, I was hooked on finding the most non-repetative dot pattern possible when printmaking." Subsequently, reading the novel "Fractal Murders" by Mark Cohen, Pfeifer says, she "was able to understand the dynamics of dot patterns for the first time."

In addition to the 90-inch tall fractal females and their companion framed prints, Pfeifer presents two additional series. One series is portraits of women who are accompanied by modern day mythology. The other series of recent work - five feet tall acrylic paintings on stretched canvas - "examines my relationship with my mother, now deceased, who had Alzheimer's disease, and my own personal struggle with the aging process".

Joining Pfeifer for the evening were Jon Offutt and Kay Ornberg, whose work is also showing and for sale in the Gallery. Offutt is a well-known glassblower; Ornberg's pieces include wearable art and photography (images captured by Ornberg and digitally manipulated by Pfeifer).

This exhibit was installed by the Gallery's new student employees, who worked with the artists and with the Memorial Union Gallery Coordinator, Esther Hockett. Preparations included design of placement of the artworks, moving pedestals from off-site storage and painting them, removing nails and hangers used for the previous show, and touching up the walls. Each artwork is placed to show it to best advantage and to create a relationship with other pieces in the show via theme, color, or shape, for example. Text labels describing each piece are compiled, printed, and placed on the wall, as is the artist's statement. For a BFA show, the faculty advisers review the hanging presentation of the work. Final steps include installing vinyl or poster title text on the wall and positioning the many track lights to showcase the work for best visibility, according to Hockett. The Gallery student staff are: Marita Abe, Alex Ellis, Briana Hanson, Mary Kinstler, and Leila Rastegar.

Gallery hours are 11:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday; 11:00 a.m. until 8:00 Thursday evening, and by appointment. The Memorial Union Gallery was founded in 1969 by NDSU Student Government. Closed for two years for Union construction and renovations, the Gallery re-opened in late September in its new, expanded location above the NDSU Bookstore, formerly known as the Varsity Mart.

Death Penalty Photography Exhibit: October 17-21, 2007

death penalty exhibit

"Images of the Death Penalty, Photographs by Scott Langley"
A photography exhibit is scheduled for Oct. 17-21 at the NDSU Memorial Union Gallery. U.S. District Court Judge Ralph R. Erickson, who presided over the trial of Alfonso Rodriguez in the murder of Dru Sjodin, is scheduled to give an opening presentation at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, October 17.

The exhibit and presentation are planned in conjunction with the annual human rights conference of the North Dakota Human Rights Coalition. Presentation Sisters, Fargo, are helping to sponsor the exhibit.

Images of the Death Penalty, Photographs by Scott Langley website
http://www.langleycreations.com/photo/deathpenalty/index.html




Opening Exhibit: "Balance...", Sept. 28 - Oct. 13, 2007

gallery opening

The Memorial Union Gallery is delighted to announce a re-opening exhibit in a new location! Come and see the current and student work of NDSU Visual Arts Department graduates! Included in the show are 40 works: video, painting, print-making, multimedia/assemblage and sculpture. The art work by nine artists - Nathaniel Booth, Jennifer Brandel, Judith Feist, Kathryn Hagstrom, Amanda Henderson, Christina Johnson, Eric Johnson, Jay Pfeifer, and Rick Woodland - were installed on Friday, September 28, 2007. The show was co-curated by Kent Kapplinger Associate Professor, PEARS Director & Master Printer, Department of Visual Arts, NDSU, and Esther Hockett, Visual Arts and Gallery Coordinator at the Memorial Union.

An opening reception - free and open to the public - will be held Friday, October 5, 2007 from 5:00 until 7:00 pm - as a part of Homecoming festivities and in celebration of the re-dedication of the Memorial Union facility and programs.

The theme and title for the show is 'balance' as it relates to daily life, art and work, present and past, consumption and environment, self and family, process and product .The MU Gallery is now located on the second floor, above the Bookstore (formerly known as the Varsity Mart), at the south entrance. Special hours for Homecoming week, Monday, October 1, through Saturday, October 6, are 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Gallery hours Monday, October 8 thru Saturday, October 13 are 11:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m. ; Thursday, October 11 until 8:00 p.m.

Exhibit Statement for 'balance…'

September 28 - October 13, 2007

The theme and title for this Homecoming and Memorial Union Re-Dedication exhibition is 'balance' as it relates to nine artists' daily life - art and work, present and past, consumption and environment, self and family/friends, process and product .

Recent NDSU Visual Arts Department graduates who are working artists are featured. They are: Nathaniel Booth, Jennifer Brandel, Judith Feist, Kathryn Hagstrom, Amanda Henderson, Christina Johnson, Eric Johnson, Jay Pfeifer, and Rick Woodland. The 40 exhibited works include video, painting, print-making, multimedia/assemblage and sculpture.

The show was co-curated by Kent Kapplinger Associate Professor, PEARS Director & Master Printer, Department of Visual Arts, NDSU, and Esther Hockett, Visual Arts and Gallery Coordinator at the Memorial Union. An opening reception - free and open to the public - is scheduled for Friday, October 5, 2007 from 5:00 until 7:00 pm, as a part of Homecoming festivities and in celebration of the re-dedication of the Memorial Union facility and programs.

The MU Gallery is now located on the second floor, above the Bookstore (formerly known as the Varsity Mart), at the south entrance. Special hours for Homecoming week, Monday, October 1, through Saturday, October 6, are 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Gallery hours Monday, October 8 thru Saturday, October 13 are 11:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m. ; Thursday, October 11 until 8:00 p.m.

Last updated: Friday, November 21, 2008 10:51:48AM

Webmaster - nathan.green@ndsu.edu