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Welcome to the world of primary shapes, teapots and the crossroads
blues
By Matthias Petry
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Crossroads
Blues, an etching by Bret Hanson. / Photos by Matthias Petry
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It's
like stepping into another world. One moment you are walking across
campus with AC/DC blasting through your headphones, the next you arrive
at the Tippetts Exhibit Hall, turn off your CD player and step into
a world of creativity, originality and remarkable craftsmanship, also
called the annual Undergraduate Art Exhibition.
Yes, I know, they say that beauty lies in the eye of the beholder,
but this beholder is really fascinated by what he experiences.
All you hear is the constant humming of the air-conditioning and the
soft, muffled sounds of a very skilled piano student practicing in the
room behind the Exhibit Hall, which really fits the atmosphere.
| The first thing that will probably catch
your eye because of its big size and beauty is an untitled oil-on-canvas
painting by John Fosum of a woman lying bent on a couch. |
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Left:
Primary Shapes; below, detail of John Fosum's work.

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Right next to it you will find the Primary Shapes by Andrew
Williams, a monoprint displaying just very simple shapes in the primary
colors red, green, blue and yellow.
Impossible to overlook is Jed Maddocks' Agoraphobia, a huge,
palm tree-like work of art made of steel, wool and cement that almost
touches the ceiling. Also very remarkable right next to it is the work
by John Hansen, called Washed Your Hands. It is a sink whose
left half Hansen transformed into two ceramic washing hands.
Another impressive statue by John Hansen can be found on the other
end of the Exhibit Hall. Frustration strongly expresses every
aspect of this emotion. Hansen might have encountered it himself sometime
during his creative process, but it obviously did not keep him from
doing a remarkable job on this sculpture.
There are no limitations whatsoever to the arsenal
of techniques the artists used for their works; you will find virtually
every kind of art you could
possibly imagine. |
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Center:
Hungry for a Good Book? Above: Paddled Temoku Teapot. |
(Well, at least every kind of art that this "not-so-creative-when-it-comes-to-art"
journalist brain can imagine): A sculpture of a sitting man (Worn
Out by John Hansen) made of papier mache and old work gloves, as
well as a modified refrigerator filled with books (Hungry for a
Good Book? by John B. Pincock) or the beautiful ceramic Paddled
Temoku Teapot by Brian Olsen.
On the walls the variety of work is by no means smaller. There is everything:
From "classic" oil on canvas paintings such as Ike Bushman's
Things Are Still Complex and C-Type prints such as Mannequins
by Christy Baugh (C-Type refers to a fugitive color with a low color
permanence) to rather "modern" techniques such as inkjet prints
(Masumi Shibata's In Between #11), digital photographs (#660
by Sara Lundberg) and digitally rendered photos such as Chad Keyes'
View Two.
As diverse as the techniques are the inspirations for these works.
Bret Hanson's Crossroads Blues refers the legend of the 1930s
blues guitar player Robert Johnson, who was said to have sold his soul
to the devil to become a famous guitar player. Right next to it, Casey
Hyper's Learning to Fly captures the spirit of an even older
dream: the dream of flying.
So don't be Worn Out, overcome your Frustration and
Agoraphobia and enter the fascinating world of arts. The exhibition
will be open through 5 p.m. Friday. The closing reception will be that
same day from 6 to 8 p.m.
NW
MS
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