Graduate student helps Edmontonians re-imagine landmark building
When 42 Edmontonians came together to imagine a new future for the Rossdale Power Plant, they were treated to a virtual tour by Master of Design student Reyhaneh Alizadeh.
When 42 Edmontonians came together to imagine a new future for the Rossdale Power Plant, they were treated to a virtual tour by Master of Design student Reyhaneh Alizadeh.
Successfully defending a doctoral thesis is cause enough for celebration. For intermedia artist Brad Necyk, the celebration was capped off with a little something extra and golden, courtesy of Canada's Governor General. His doctoral dissertation won the Governor General's Gold Medal, the highest possible academic honour.
According to Vikki Wiercinski, a University of Alberta Bachelor of Design grad and co-organizer of the Royal Bison, one of the purposes of the fair is to provide a supportive environment for local designers.
Art & Design student Caleb van der Leek went on a study abroad to Münster, Germany to study Industrial and Communication Design.
Catherine Burgess, who has a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University of Alberta, has been sculpting for more than 40 years. She has kept her studio in Edmonton, had 25 solo exhibitions and has had her work shown in over 60 group exhibitions in Canada, the U.S. and the U.K.
In their ground-floor office, where large windows look out on a busy intersection on the U of A campus, Bloemen ('19 BDes, Industrial Design) and Wesley ('19 BDes, Industrial Design) spend their days working at the nexus of design, medicine and education.
MFA student combines female autonomy, family genetics and reproductive technologies with her artwork
Art & Design professors Sean Caulfield and Marilène Oliver, as well as several printmaking graduate students, participated in the Print Triennial of the Graphica Creativa festival, featuring print media artists from around the world.
Bachelor of Design student Riel Kitson was awarded this national scholarship, which was created to support an indigenous design student pursuing an education in graphic/communication design at a Canadian post-secondary institution.
Art & Design student Stephanie Perrin creates a story of a 16-year-old transplant recipient who has to save Edmonton from mutant earthworms
With two U of A design degrees under his belt, Derek Jagodzinsky now hopes to share his knowledge and passion for culturally aware fashion design. "I want to break stereotypes and bring Indigenous know-how to the modern world," he said.
Artist Tamires Para Pedroso moved to Edmonton from Brazil to earn her Master of Fine Arts degree in painting, and while studying, started learning more about women and gender studies, and their intersection with art.
The offbeat slices of prairie life on display at the Gopher Hole Museum in Torrington, Alta., provide a rich glimpse into Alberta's heritage along with their humorous appeal, says a U of A professor of art, design and visual culture and museum expert Lianne McTavish.
'It helped me, anyway, to build a healthier relationship with my body'
Industrial Design alums Nick Kazakoff (BDes '13) and Brendan Gallagher (BDes '13) have a hot new product, one that's a new twist on an old staple of city streets - the phone booth.
School in Cortona celebrates 20 years of study abroad excellence.
"Thick Skins - Our Journey Towards Communal Healing" by Tamires Para Pedroso depicts the multiple facets of her experience growing up in Brazilian patriarchal society.
Art & Design student Ziwei Huang returns from the U of A School in Cortona to share his favourite experiences from the program, as it celebrates its 20th anniversary.
A collaboration of more than 30 local and international artists curated by Marilène Oliver, Dyscorpia features installations of visual art, design, sound visualization, virtual reality, creative writing, and computer science.
What began two years ago as a multi-disciplinary research project eventually morphed into Dyscorpia, the new exhibition occupying Enterprise Square Galleries.
An ambitious and frankly unnerving group art show running at Enterprise Square through May 12, Dyscorpia considers massive change from the perspective of our ever-expanding biological thresholds
BFA students Amanda Chwelos and Chantel Schultz introduce their graduating class' portfolio show, "Nice to Meet You."
The free exhibition Dyscorpia combines art, with medical technology, artificial intelligence, and virtual reality.
'Dyscorpia' draws on diverse disciplines from fine arts to computing science and medicine to look at how technology is redefining the limits of our bodies.
Dr. Michiko Maruyama is a fourth year cardiac surgery resident at the University of Alberta. In addition to training to become an open-heart surgeon, Dr. Maruyama is also interested in creating innovative medical educational resources in the form of toys and games. She recently completed her Masters of Industrial Design and her thesis was titled, "Changing the World One Toy at a Time".
The Strathcona Farmers' Market parking lot study is being conducted by Elnaz Aliasl Mamaghani, a graduate student studying Industrial Design. She hopes to gather feedback from students, community members, and anyone who uses the Farmers' Market parking lot through an online survey to help make a space that is friendly to all stakeholders.
Joining the Department of Art & Design in January as the 2019 Fulbright Canada Research Chair in Printmaking (while on sabbatical as the Dewitt Wallace Professor of Art at Macalester College), the self-described "muckraker" believes that international residencies like the Fulbright serve a purpose beyond simple academic and creative exchange.
University of Alberta Art & Design students, Naomi Brierley and Julie Kuhn, share some of the beautifully designed furniture, multimedia and product design from the "You See It When You Know It" 2019 Bachelor of Design grad show.
Fashion Trust Arabia, a non-profit group, brought a team of A-List judges and celebrities together for its inaugural design awards. The socially-conscious brand of award-winner Salim Azzam (MDes '14) is inspired by local traditions, with pieces hand-crafted and embroidered by women from mountain villages.
The artworks of Joshua Wade and Myken McDowell shine a spotlight on aspects of the human condition we often overlook.
Art & Design student, Ziwei Huang, shares what it's like to finally experience Italian art, culture and history without a textbook.
Skye Oleson-Cormack (BDes '11) is a multi-disciplinary designer based in Montreal, and currently runs Fingers Crossed Press.
Jeremy Dutcher made an entrance in a design by Edmonton-based Luxx, owned by Indigenous fashion designer Derek Jagodzinsky.
Combining hardened, industrial materials like wooden pallets with degradable items like paper and commercial caulking, MFA candidate Joshua Wade explores the juxtaposition of material purity to convey fragility and vulnerability.
MFA candidate, Myken McDowell, used Super-8 found footage from her family archives to create her latest FAB Gallery exhibit, Before It Fades.
Myken McDowell, a Master of Fine Arts candidate at the University of Alberta, has been working with Super 8 film footage from 1968 to 1972 to create an exhibition that explores familial connections and memory through prints, video, and an installation that includes objects from a family member's home.
Medical imaging creates pictures of anatomy and function that help physicians make clinical decisions for patients. The gigabytes of information that underlie today's digital images are typically forgotten, a virtual remnant of the human body that is a symbol of and material for our current age of big data, artificial intelligence, and posthumanism. British artist Marilène Oliver recovers these data and creates art that restores bodies and their expressive potential.
On the walls of the studio hang a few of Cumberland's creations-compositions with ornate and decorative wallpaper-like patterns as the backdrop for surreal, multi-coloured ribbons. The playful pieces are visually striking and will be part of Cumberland's upcoming exhibit Serious Whimsy.
The Art of the Book is a juried art exhibition, featuring incredible examples of books, boxes, calligraphy, decorated paper and more by Canadian and international book artists.
Art & Design professor, Sue Colberg, shows some of the winning books of the most prestigious awards for excellence in Canadian book design.
Undergraduate Art & Design student, Naomi Brierley, was thrilled to have the opportunity to provide a new logo and visual identity to the Kule Institute for Advanced Study (KIAS), one of the most prominent research institutes at the University of Alberta.
Vikki Wiercinski (BDes '06) is a multi-disciplinary designer who's made the 12 years of her career all about experimentation and entreneurship.