Built pop-up design shop
Melissa Bui, Student Design Association Director, discusses the Built pop-up design shop at Kingsway, which features products created by Design Studies students from the University of Alberta.
Melissa Bui, Student Design Association Director, discusses the Built pop-up design shop at Kingsway, which features products created by Design Studies students from the University of Alberta.
From novelist Margaret Atwood to local artist Alex Janvier, some of Canada's biggest stars got brightly coloured makeovers as part of one last hurrah for Canada 150, from graphic design students in Art & Design at the University of Alberta.
Liz Ingram is distinguished professor emerita from the Faculty of Arts at the University of Alberta. Her latest exhibition is a mini-retrospective of more than 40 years while teaching at the university. "Water Bodies" explores how we as humans are connected with and are made up of water, a precious resource we should be aware of and be careful to preserve this basic element of life.
Three Art & Design graduate students, Myken McDowell, Phoebe Todd-Parrish, and Becky Thera, presented on panels at the University Art Association of Canada Conference.
In honour of Canada 150, students in Design 593: The Practice of Graphic Design were tasked with creating illustrations of people they believed had made an important contribution to Canadian society.
Liz Ingram and Meghan Pohlod, two University of Alberta artists, show off the full range of their skills in their latest exhibits.
Since childhood, Chris Perron, '14 BDes, has considered himself a freestyle Lego builder - preferring to make DIY creations instead of following the instructions. Fast-forward a few years, and dreaming up new designs for the colourful bricks is now his nine-to-five.
Kathy Milanowski, who is studying visual communication at the University of Alberta, was one of 10,000 hopefuls from all provinces and territories who submitted a 30-second video to Historica Canada, a charitable organization that promotes awareness of Canadian history and citizenship.
It takes a special sensibility to turn two shop-vacs into an art installation, but that's what MFA candidate TJ McLachlan has done as part of his thesis collection.
Daniel Evans, an MFA student in Printmaking, has an exhibition called Turgor, a series of work dealing with the imaginative potential of urban spaces and modern mythology's relationship to technology.
Slip into another time at Gillian Willans' exhibition "And light she lingers as your hostess." This collection of still scenes invites viewers to investigate intimate snapshots of domesticity.
At Edmonton's rendition of the 16th annual worldwide PARK(ing) Day event, Daniel Walker, a graduate student studying Art History at the U of A, stationed the U-Haul van to act as a pop-up art gallery for the day. Inside, he hosted works by Edmonton artists that centered around mass-produced domestic products.
Hetero[topia] is an art exhibition showcasing the final research projects of three Master of Design graduates, Bahaa Harmouche, Derek Jagodzinsky, and Siyi Xie. This exhibition explores how designers can interact with the intricate conflicts and complications existing in today's society.
Master of Design student Carson Wronko combines his passion for minimalism and the Canadian wilderness in his new collection.
Michael Woolley's exhibit brings awareness to the degree of self-agency, the body as a receptor to the world, and the phenomena of academia on a personal level and as a whole. Peter Hide's exhibit displays confidence and comfort in his craft, arising from four decades of practice, and a professorship at the University of Alberta since 1977.
A substantial new public artwork in the Terwillegar Park off-leash area is both a triptych and an interactive puzzle - created with ingenuity by Edmonton sculptor Royden Mills over three years.
Natasia Martin, a Bachelor of Design graduate and the designer of the 2017-2018 music mainstage promotional illustrations, kindly provided us with some insight into her creative techniques.
When Geoffrey Lilge surveyed the remains of a shuttered steel chair factory ravaged by a fire in 2014, he saw an opportunity. "The metal shop was basically still intact," Lilge says.
Designer Vikki Wiercinski takes inspiration from the Western Canadian landscape for her vibrant, elegant work.
Cardiac surgery resident Michiko Maruyama, who is also pursuing a master's degree in industrial design, is combining her love of both disciplines to teach children about cardiac health.
The tall, plush and penetrable vagina in question is called In and Out, designed by Kasie Campbell (BFA '15), and includes a performance aspect. The piece "deals with the anxieties and vulnerabilities that the artist experiences when they've become the object of someone else's gaze."
On Friday, June 23, 2017, University of Alberta Art & Design professor, Sean Caulfield, was awarded the Eldon & Anne Foote Edmonton Visual Arts Prize of $10,000 for his work, The Flood.
Although exhausted from jet lag, having just flown back from Europe the night before, University of Alberta Art & Design professor, Natalie Loveless, warmly welcomes me into her office for our interview. With her is fellow Art & Design professor, Sean Caulfield, who was just with Loveless in Norway and Switzerland, presenting the world première of their <Immune Nations> exhibit.
Kyle Terrence (MFA '16) and Lindsay Kirker (BFA '17) were selected by the Art and Design Graduate Student Association (ADGSA) to take part in the ADGSA's Artist in Residence program. Over the past month, the artists have been hard at work developing new and experimental facets of their practice.
Associate Professor of Industrial Design at the University of Alberta, Tim Antoniuk has been working seven days a week determining how people can live more sustainably-and, even more importantly, happily in small spaces. The result? Antoniuk has built a completely livable 230 square-foot micro condo.
Amber Rooke (BFA '02), The Works executive artistic director, hopes visitors will cast their gaze firmly upon all that's offered and simply walk into the 13-day festival-the largest of its kind in North America-with arms extended, ready to embrace The Works in all its multidisciplinary glory.
The exhibition "QUICK DIRTY: Art/Des Pop-up" brings together University of Alberta MFA, MDes and MA in History of Art, Design and Visual Culture (HADVC) students. The Art and Design Graduate Student Association put together this exhibition to showcase the diverse work executed while earning a Master's degree.
Steven J. Hoffman, whose background is in law and global health, had his views on art and its impacts change dramatically through the process of working on <Immune Nations> with University of Alberta professors Sean Caulfield and Natalie S. Loveless.
What's a story without its characters? Local visual artist Brad Necyk (BFA '11 and MFA '13) pondered this question while digitally removing characters from various stills of TV shows and movies for his exhibit Just a Hard Rain.
The Certificate in Computer Game Development at the University of Alberta, a joint venture between the Faculty of Arts and the Faculty of Science, brings together students from a wide variety of disciplines to learn the art and design of creating video games.
Curated by U of A instructors Royden Mills and Marilene Oliver, Hope and Fear features the works of numerous students from the university's and the Portage College's art and design departments. The exhibit mirrors the ever-increasing anxieties of living in the current day while inspiring hope in everyone who passes through the Rutherford atrium.
Shadowpox, an art installation part of the new Immune Nations exhibit, gives participants a unique experience of fighting a virus with a vaccine while trying to save the people around them by what public health officials call herd immunity-when enough people are immunized that the virus has no one left to infect.
The University of Alberta is thrilled to congratulate three Art & Design graduate students who recently received scholarships for their diverse and varied pursuits.
Mind Body Context is an exhibit that examines the spectrum of identity in search of a common understanding. Curated by fourth-year BFA student, and Scott Gallery assistant Breanna Barrington, the exhibit features works from 14 undergraduate and graduate fine art students from the University of Alberta that explore issues of identity in both interior and exterior contexts.
The Bachelor of Design Graduate show is an opportunity for students in both the Visual Communication Design (VCD) and Industrial Design (ID) programs to showcase works featuring their own personal intentions and visions.
Students in the Visual Communication Design program often get the opportunity to tackle real world challenges in class. When the Canadian VIGOUR Centre (CVC) needed an update to their visual identity, Associate Professor Susan Colberg saw it as a perfect fit for her design students.
Miriam Rudolph's work has a sense of urgency in it's beautifully layered and patterned narratives. Her show leaves you thinking about our own place in these narratives of our planet.
Marc Siegner is a welcome sight in the Edmonton arts community. He can be found on the Latitude patio, in the SNAP print studio, and during the weekdays, he's influencing the lives and processes of University of Alberta students in his role as a Printmaking Technician. We sat down with Marc to put his excellent storytelling to paper.
Can art offer a new way of understanding the experience of illnesses like cancer? A group of doctors and artists in Edmonton think so. The interdisciplinary team behind the project includes University of Alberta researchers in departments from surgery to reconstructive sciences to anthropology to visual culture.
Last fall University of Alberta painting professor Jesse Thomas took more than 50 of his paintings and drawings to the Zhengzhou University of Light Industry in China-the first foreigner to show his work there and the first faculty member from the Department of Art & Design to hold a solo exhibition in China.
Thanks to a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Insight Grant and three years' hard work, close to all 300-ish of these provincial tourist magnets have been catalogued, photographed and mapped by a team run by the University of Alberta PhD Lianne McTavish.
How much does a book cover affect one's choice in picking it up? Is it important if it's a plain red hardback with gold lettering, or a paperback with crisp graphics? In the age of ebooks does it even matter? The Alcuin Society thinks so, proving in a new exhibition at the FAB Gallery that judging a book by its cover is essential.
Can a modest art exhibition speak to the colossal cultural practice of painting? How do we parse through colour and line to form meaningful impressions? These are some of the questions proposed by Adrian Emberley's final visual presentation for the degree of Master of Fine Arts in Painting.
Here are some of our favourite underrated campus heroes, including Kathleen Berto from the Department of Art & Design, who we'd like to say thank you for putting smiles on our stressed faces when we need it most.
Sue Colberg, Associate Professor of Design Studies and curator of the exhibit, attributes the endurance of the printed book to great design, and the 43 award-winning books chosen by the Alcuin Society represent the highest achievement in this field.
Liz Ingram, Distinguished University Professor Emerita from the Department of Art & Design at University of Alberta, is named a Member of the Order of Canada.
This meditative exhibition, by Kelsey Stephenson (BDES '11), is set against the backdrop of the University of Alberta Hospital, a bustling acute-care facility that houses the gallery.
The 'see me, hear me, heal me' project is a group for cancer survivors to offer their stories. They have been working with an interdisciplinary team of researchers from the University of Alberta and artists, sharing their stories as a form of scientific examination and to inform the artists to produce a new series of works.
A new multimedia exhibition called "FLUX: Responding to Head and Neck Cancer" explores how head and neck cancer affects patients' lives.
Local artists spent the last year meeting with patients, families, and doctors.