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UNT College of Visual Arts + Design - Denton, TX

UNT College of Visual Arts + Design
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  1. UNT College of Visual Arts and Design faculty member named president of the Texas Medieval Association

    DENTON (UNT), Texas ¾ Dr. Mickey Abel, associate professor in the Department of Art Education and Art History at the University of North Texas, was named the president of the Texas Medieval Association for 2014. She received her title after 19 years of involvement.

    TEMA holds an interdisciplina...ry regional conference annually that is hosted at different universities around the state. The first TEMA conference was held at UNT 25 years ago, and in October 2014, TEMA will return to UNT under the leadership of Abel, the first art historian to spearhead the conference. Dr. Barbara Rosenwein, a historian from the Loyola University in Chicago will deliver the keynote address for the conference.

    “The conference is typically led by a historian, so this will be a good opportunity to get art historians on the map,” Abel said. “This will highlight the variety of medievalists here at UNT.”

    The 2014 conference will be three days rather than the typical two because it will also incorporate conference events for the North Texas Medieval Graduate Student Symposium, an annual conference that Abel helped to create that connects medievalists of multiple disciplines in the North Texas region. This year, the conference will have a session featuring work by students in the UNT Honors College, making it the first year that undergraduates have been able to include their work in the TEMA conference and North Texas Medieval Graduate Student Symposium.

    The conference welcomes scholarly medievalists of any field to attend the event. Also at the conference, the Department of English will host a performance of Beowulf, and the College of Music will perform two medieval pieces. Faculty from the history department, foreign language department philosophy and religion department and the art history department will participate in the conference.

    “This is a fabulous opportunity to showcase the strength of our programs and the work that faculty across the university do that deals with medieval art and culture, and it is thanks to the incredibly hard work of Dr. Abel that this conference is going to happen here at the University of North Texas,” said Dr. Denise Baxter, chair of the Department of Art Education and Art History.
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  3. ReviewsSee All
    • I went to school here!
      1 · about 4 months ago
    • It's full of art students
      about a month ago
    • Mariah Tyler
      http://off288.com/ UNT CVAD student ran food blog about Denton.
      about 8 months ago
    • I am currently looking for someone to take over my lease at Midtown apartments ASAP. $549 a month.. All bills paid! Message or text me for details. (469) 438- 4888
      about 4 months ago
  4. CVAD alum and adjunct faculty member Arthur Pena has established a new, experimental art space in Dallas, along with a studio in the newly developing arts area west of the Calatrava Bridge. The space and the inaugural installation by CVAD faculty Tim DeVoe and Miriam Ewers are highlighted in the most recent issue of Glasstire.
  5. All are invited to attend our Core Drawing Visiting Artist Lecture Monday October 14 (today) 1pm Sage 116 !



    Diane Hoffman
    October 14 @ 1pm Sage 116

    Diane Hoffman holds a BFA from Rhode Island School of Art and Design and an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Her paintings are made with hand-made paint, silkscreen and customized tools such as modified brushes, string and ...felt rolling balls. She currently teaches at Brown University, Art Institute of Boston, and Community College of Rhode Island. Her work has been exhibited nationwide.
    My paintings and collages are inspired by the environmental concept that the more unorganized, over grown and rambling nature appears, the more life it can sustain.
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  6. 500X is accepting submissions for our annual College Expo!!! If you are a university student in the state of Texas you are elligible to submit. Y ou have until Sept. 27th.

    Just go to 500x.slideroom.com

    Here are the details: For $30 you... can submit up to 3 files. That means images, videos, audio files, etc. You will be notified if you are accepted by Oct. 4th. You will be responsible for delivery of your work on Oct. 5th or the 6th. You work must be ready to hang. (Preferably with D-rings or wire.)

    This year's jurors are LauraLee Brott, Jessica Iannuzzi Garcia and Lisa Hees from the McKinney Ave. Contemporary, in Dallas Texas. Also known as The MAC, it is a nonprofit organization that stands as a Dallas advocate for creative freedom offering the opportunity for experimentation and presentation of art in all disciplines. It supports the emerging and established artist's role in society by providing a forum for critical dialogue with their audiences. This relationship is cultivated through education and innovative programming.

    For more info on the jurors visit our website www.500x.org.

    The opening will be Oct. 11, from 7-10 PM
    The show runs from Oct. 11 - Oct. 27.

    Hurry Up!
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  7. P.R.I.N.T Press offers screen printing workshop Oct. 5-6, exhibition at UNT on the Square Oct. 4-31



    Artist Ashley Nason will teach a screen printing workshop at P.R.I.N.T Press Oct. 5-6. Her work will also be shown as part of an exhibition at UNT on the Square, Oct. 4-31. Above, Weather Station by Ashley Nason, lithograph and screen print, 22 x 17 inches, 2012. Download the imag...e at: https://news.unt.edu/image-galleries/image/weather-station-ashley-nason.

    ______________________________________________________________________

    What: Water-based screen printing workshop taught by Ashley Nason, associate professor of printmaking at Northern Illinois University

    When: 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Oct. 5 and 6 (Saturday and Sunday)

    Where: P.R.I.N.T Press, 1120 W. Oak St., Denton

    Cost: $100 for current UNT students; $125 for UNT alumni and faculty, and senior citizens (ages 65 and older); $150 for artists

    Contact: Sign up for the class at http://art.unt.edu/print/signup.php. For more information, visit http://art.unt.edu/print/attendevents.html, call (940) 565-2485 or email print@unt.edu.

    What else: Nason’s artwork will be shown as part of the Dialogic: P.R.I.N.T Press and Its Collaborators exhibition at UNT on the Square from Oct. 4-31. She will be present for the opening reception from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Oct. 4 (Friday). More information at: http://untonthesquare.unt.edu/dialogic-print-and-its-collaborators

    ______________________________________________________________________

    DENTON, Texas (UNT) – The Print Research Institute of North Texas (P.R.I.N.T) Press will offer a water-based screen printing workshop for all skill levels from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Oct. 5-6 at the University of North Texas.

    Associate professor of printmaking at Northern Illinois University Ashley Nason will teach the workshop, and her art will be included in an exhibition at UNT on the Square. Workshop participants will learn various techniques and concepts, including the medium’s multi-faceted abilities for alternative surface printing and incorporation with other print media. All techniques will emphasize low toxic materials and methods. The workshop will cover black and white and color image generation and production using various materials and methods, such as photocopies, tracing paper and toner washes.

    “Workshops at P.R.I.N.T Press allow students to work alongside members of the community-at-large in a professional fine art printing facility,” said P.R.I.N.T Press director Lari Gibbons. “These hands-on printing sessions afford participants the opportunity to try new approaches or further develop skills in familiar techniques. Because they are taught by accomplished printmakers who are visiting artists, the workshops bring different perspectives to our community.”

    Cost of the workshop is $100 for current UNT students; $125 for UNT alumni and faculty, and senior citizens (ages 65 and older); and $150 for artists. The workshop will be held at P.R.I.N.T Press, 1120 W. Oak St., Denton.

    Sign up for the class at http://art.unt.edu/print/signup.php. For more information, visit http://art.unt.edu/print/attendevents.html, call (940) 565-2485 or email print@unt.edu.

    Dialogic: P.R.I.N.T Press and Its Collaborators runs Oct. 4-31 at UNT on the Square, 109 N. Elm St., Denton. Nason is one of several artists who will show her work in the exhibition. She will be present for the opening reception from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Oct. 4 (Friday). The exhibition also features works from recent collaborations with artists Scott Ingram, Michelle Samour and Albert Paley, as well as collection favorites by Enrique Chagoya, Edgar Heap of Birds, William Wiley and others. Works by master printers who facilitate these projects are also featured. Master printers bring knowledge, technical expertise and creative strategies to realize each project fully from concept to final product. Master printers who have worked at P.R.I.N.T Press and who are featured in the exhibition include Erika Adams, Stan Baden, Ryan Burkhart, Catherine Chauvin, David Jones and Jon Lee.

    UNT on the Square is open from 8 a.m. to noon and 1 to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, with extended hours until 8 p.m. on Thursday, and 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. There is no charge for admission.



    About Ashley Nason

    Ashley Nason was born in 1969 in New Orleans, La., and spent her formative years in Chevy Chase, Md. She received her BA in psychology and a BFA in printmaking and painting from West Virginia University and an MFA in printmaking from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Upon receiving her MFA she worked as the printmaking technician and instructor at Herron School of Art in Indianapolis, Ind. She currently lives in Dekalb, Ill., where she is an associate professor of printmaking at Northern Illinois University. Her work has been exhibited in more than 100 juried and invitational, regional, national, and international exhibitions. She is the recipient of the 2007 Illinois Arts Council Fellowship.



    About P.R.I.N.T Press

    P.R.I.N.T Press is a fine art press affiliated with the University of North Texas. It was established in 1993 with a generous donation from Mike and Jo Hart, founders of Peregrine Press. P.R.I.N.T provides a fertile environment for innovative collaborative printmaking by bringing together recognized artists, students, and printmakers while acting as a resource for both traditional and experimental techniques. It strives to sustain, expand and promote the art of collaborative printmaking through creative research and publishing projects. It also provides professional training for students and cultural events for the public community.
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  8. BREAKING INTO THE CREATIVE ARTS
    Tuesday, Sept. 24th at 6PM
    Chestnut Hall – 120A&B

    Panelists include:

    Clara Nieman
    Mezzo-Soprano
    Studio Artist – Fort Worth Opera
    ...

    Candace Lee (UNT Fashion Design alumna)
    Owner/Designer
    DIMILOC Fashions


    Michael Schwerin (UNT Music Theory alumnus)
    Development Director
    Greater Denton Arts Council
    Learn more about Michael here

    Shane Howell
    Corps de Ballet dancer
    Texas Ballet Theater

    RSVP for seats to:
    Erin E. Shults, M.A.
    Career Advisor
    College of Music, College of Visual Art and Design, Mayborn School of Journalism, College of Arts nd Sciences
    University of North Texas Career Center – Chestnut Hall, Ste. 103
    Phone: 940-369-6525
    Fax: 940-565-4376
    Erin.shults@unt.edu
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  9. Music Hackathon: Anything Music
    Sept. 13 to Sept. 15

    Music Hackathon - Anything Music
    Friday September 13 - Sunday September 15, 2013
    Sycamore Hall 119
    University of North Texas
    307 Ave. B, Denton, TX 76201

    Music Town, Music Hackathon: Designers, Artists to Converge and Create at UNT's , Sept. 13-15....

    Denton boasts a world-renowned College of Music at UNT, a real-deal indie music scene, and a tech-friendly culture - what better place for a hackathon for all things music? Join UNT's Innovation Greenhouse Sept. 13-15 as developers, designers, programmers, industry insiders, and musicians come together to share lessons learned and create new and unique music applications.

    The event kicks off Sept. 13 with Brian Cobbel and Dustin Joost speaking on music labels past and present.

    Sept. 14 features Michael A. Upshaw, Upshaw Law Firm, P.C. and more speakers and time for hackers to work in teams. Coaches will be on hand to help teams refine their projects.

    The hackathon wraps up on Sept. 15 with team presentations starting at 4 p.m.

    Space is limited (Hackathon)- Register Now!

    Speakers' presentations is free and open to students and the community. Register now!

    REGISTRATION WILL BE CLOSED ON WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 11, 2013 AT 5:00 PM!

    For more information, please email
    Nancy Hong, Executive Director

    LeadingAge HackFest - Application Deadline
    Sept. 13, 2013

    "Engage with Age" by creating a technology-driven tool to improve the lives of older adults and their families.

    The Innovation Greenhouse at UNT would like to invite

    Programmers
    Engineers
    Designer
    Gerontologists
    Administrators
    Healthcare Professionals
    Cultural Anthropologist/Sociologists
    Marketing Professionals
    Business Professionals
    Family or Professional Caregivers
    Persons passionate about the field of aging

    to our preparatory event - Age Well Innovation Challenge, designed to prepare each team for the national Hackathon scheduled for Friday October 4th to Sunday October 6th, 2013.

    Register for LeadingAge HackFest - Deadline 9/13/13!

    Register for practice HackFest - Age Well Innovation @ UNT - 10/2/13.

    For more information and registration, please email
    Nancy Hong, Executive Director

    Link
    20 Over 20 - Applications Deadline Sept. 16

    The Dallas Venture Partners and Dialexa are looking to identify 20 problems that have been bugging us for more than 20 years.

    The prize for this event is $10,000 - winner take all!

    Register Now!!!

    For more information, please email
    Matt Himelfarb, Dallas Venture Partners

    Link
    The Innovation Greenhouse @ UNT
    The Innovation Greenhouse is a co-working space for our students' innovation activities, collaborating and leveraging with existing university resources while building new partnerships with the North Texas region businesses, not for profit organizations, and governmental agencies.

    Link
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  10. "8th Annual 125-Mile"
    "Visual Arts Exhibition"
    "January 17 – February 21, 2014"
    "Opening Reception January 17, 2014"
    "Gough Gallery, Center for the Visual Arts,"
    "Denton, TX"...

    For full information and entry form, visit www.VASTarts.org.

    "PURPOSE"
    "The 125-Mile Exhibition was initiated in 2006 to establish a regional, high-quality juried art exhibition for artists living within a 125-mile radius of Denton, Texas, to compete and show their work."
    "JUROR"
    "Jackie MacLelland is a painter, printmaker, photographer, sculptor, encaustic artist, and writer who has lived, taught, and exhibited around the world."
    "She holds degrees from a number of universities and has attended classes and workshops in a variety of mediums in Asia, Europe, and the United States. She works from her studio, which is now located in Poetry, Texas. She currently offers workshops in printmaking, photography, encaustic, and papermaking."
    "She has won awards for both her artwork and her writings, which have been published in both academic and popular culture venues. Her art works are collected nationally and internationally."
    "Having traveled extensively and exhibited both nationally and internationally, she loves to texture her works with the feel of the countries and cultures she has experienced."
    "ELIGIBILITY"
    "All artists residing within a 125-mile radius of Denton, Texas."
    "AWARDS"
    "Best of Show $500; Total awards $1500 +"
    "ELIGIBLE MEDIA"
    "2D & 3D work according to the following categories:"
    "■ Category 1: oil, watermedia on canvas/board, pastel"
    "■ Category 2: watermedia on paper"
    "■ Category 3: mixed media, collage, drawing"
    "■ Category 4: hand-pulled graphics, photography, prints (no giclée prints)"
    "■ Category 5: ceramic, textiles, fiber"
    "■ Category 6: sculpture"
    "ARTWORK REQUIREMENTS"
    "Please read carefully"
    "All work must be original and completed in the last"
    "24 months; no copies of paintings, reproductions, or photographs other than those taken by the artist are permitted."
    "Please observe the following regulations:"
    "■ framed and ready for secure installation – d-rings attached to the back and stretched with wire – no saw tooth hangers or uniframes (two pieces of plexiglas held together with clamps)"
    "■ the use of plexiglas for works under “glass”"
    "■ 40” maximum width dimension"
    "■ 40 lbs. maximum weight"
    "■ white, neutral, or black mats only"
    " ■ clean, gallery-wrapped canvas edges or framed"
    " ■ diptychs, triptychs, etc. constitute one piece and must be combined in one frame with"
    "40” maximum width"
    "Work must not have been exhibited in any previ- ous VAST juried exhibition or in any gallery in the Center for the Visual Arts."
    "Any piece perceived as an installation problem must be handled by VAST in consultation with Greater Denton Arts Council (GDAC) staff. The solution is the artist’s financial responsibility."
    "NOTE: VAST and the juror reserve the right to reject any work that is not accurately represented by the digital image or is not in compliance with entry regulations. Accepted works may be sub- ject to a second review at the request of the juror."
    "VAST and the GDAC will not be held responsible for damage to work resulting from improper or inferior framing/presentation."
    "ENTRY SUBMISSION OPTIONS"
    "Artists may submit up to three (3) images at a non-refundable fee of $20 for students, $25 for members, and $30 for non-members. Only one image per person may be selected for the exhibit. Entry fee MUST be mailed to VAST."
    "Entry forms and images may be submitted via"
    "U.S. mail to VAST, P.O. Box 1281, Denton, TX"
    "76202, or to VASTarts125@gmail.com"
    "Mailed images may be in digital format on CD-ROM. All digital images must adhere to resolution and size requirements outlined in this Prospectus (see Digital Images)."
    "All entry materials, form, fee, digital images must be received by November 15."
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  11. TexPIRG INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITIES

    Contact Name: Thomas Visco Contact Phone: 512-610-0085
    Contact Email: Thomas@texpirg.org Office Location: 815 Brazos, Austin, Tx.

    Media/Public Relations: Media interns develop a media strategy for promoting TexPIRG to the public, educating the public about TexPIRG issues, and using the media as a tactic in advocacy. Activities include keeping and maintai...ning press lists, developing relations with members of the local media, managing social media and maintaining visibility for TexPIRG events on campus through local public service announcements, postering, and other visibility tactics.

    Campaign Organizing: Organizing interns coordinate a campaign on campus. Their role includes recruiting and training a group of student volunteers and other interns to carry out a campus campaign on one of our issue/project areas, organizing events, coordinating petition drives and other outreach tactics, and learning to develop other student leaders.

    Grassroots Advocacy/Lobbying: Grassroots interns coordinating our efforts to generate grassroots pressure aimed at targeted decision-makers. They use tactics such as postcard/letter drives, endorsement campaigns, district meetings, student lobby days, and media attention. This intern would also work with our field organizers or lobbyists to assist in statewide lobbying campaigns.

    Issue/Research: Research interns conduct surveys or other research activities, write reports or fact sheets that document environmental or consumer problems, and release reports to the media.

    Other: Please let the TexPIRG staff person know if you are interested in an internship not listed here. Often we can accommodate other types of internships.

    To apply, please send a resume and cover letter explaining which internship you’re interested in and why to Thomas Visco at thomas@texpirg.org.
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  12. UNT’s On My Own Time exhibition winners head to regional show



    UNT’s On My Own Time Best of Show winner, Kenneth Nicholson poses next to his painting, Magenta 691. As a first place winner in the Works on Canvas Amate...ur category, his painting will be shown in the regional On My Own Time exhibition at NorthPark Center in Dallas in September. Download the image at: http://news.unt.edu/image-galleries/image/unt-custodian-kenneth-nicholson
    Photo by Michael Clements/UNT.

    DENTON, Texas (UNT) – A University of North Texas graduate who put down his brushes for eight years recently decided to take up painting again – and pursuing this passion led to a Best in Show win.

    College of Visual Arts and Design graduate Kenneth Nicholson was named the 2013 Best of Show winner of UNT’s On My Own Time exhibition on Aug. 8. The show included works, both professional and amateur, in a variety of media from UNT employees who create art “on their own time” – that is, not as part of their jobs.

    The full list of UNT winners is at the bottom of this release.

    On My Own Time is an annual art competition that includes participation from a variety of businesses around the North Texas region. First place winners advance to a regional show at NorthPark Center shopping mall, 8687 N. Central Expressway, Dallas. The reception for the NorthPark show is from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Sept. 15 (Sunday). The works will be on display through Sept. 28 (Saturday).

    This was the first time Nicholson, who has worked as a custodian at UNT for five years, entered the competition. Though he’s been painting off-and-on since 1996, it had been eight years since he’d focused on art. Yet, after he recently took up painting again – when a friend asked him to paint a portrait – Nicholson knew he couldn’t ignore the desire he had to paint.

    His winning piece, Magenta 691, includes themes and elements that Nicholson uses in his painting – abstraction and light.

    “The common thread in my painting is about the elements of light and color. They coalesce to create atmosphere and mood. Painting is my attempt to crystallize a small portion of the beauty I find in my surroundings,” Nicholson said.

    Nicholson also won first place in the Works on Canvas Amateur category and the People’s Choice award, voted on by those who viewed the exhibition.

    The On My Own Time competition is a program of the North Texas Business Council for the Arts. The competition is in its 21st year. The council was started by Dallas developer, philanthropist and art collector Raymond D. Nasher.

    At UNT, the competition is supported by Vice President for Finance and Administration Andrew Harris and coordinated by a steering committee that included Institute for the Advancement of the Arts Director Herbert Holl and IAA Administrative Coordinator Meredith Buie; Dean of the College of Visual Arts and Design and chair of the UNT Art in Public Places Program Robert Milnes; and Staff Senate representatives Charles Andrews, Rachel Grimes, Dilana King and Hillary Castillo.



    2013 UNT On My Own Time winners are:

    Best in Show – Kenneth Nicholson, Magenta 691

    Best in Show, honorable mention – Michael Furrh, Blue Tape and Sand 1

    People’s Choice award – Kenneth Nicholson, Magenta 691

    People’s Choice honorable mentions – Sam Ivie, Anca III; Cheryl McQueen, Summer Turns to Autumn; Dianne Jansing, The Sunflower is Mine in a Way



    First place awards:

    Works on Canvas, Professional – Sam Ivie, Anca

    Works on Canvas, Amateur – Kenneth Nicholson, Magenta 691

    Works on Paper, Professional – Sam Ivie, Anca III

    Works on Paper, Amateur – Rebecca Barham, The Serpent’s Gift is Enlightenment

    Color Photography, Professional – Jeremy Moore, Achatina Fulica, Giant African Land Snail

    Color Photography, Amateur – Alyssa Hedenstrom, La Luz

    B&W Photography, Professional – Jeremy Moore, L’orangie du Chateua de Krsaillas

    B&W Photography, Amateur – Michelle Farley, Gypsy Woman

    Enhanced Photography, Professional – Lynne Richards, Eagle’s Flight

    Enhanced Photography, Amateur – Brian Richman, Denton Dog

    Sculpture, Professional – Michael Furrh, Mycelium

    Mixed Media, Professional – Michael Furrh, Blue Tape and Sand 1

    Mixed Media, Amateur – Keith Chapman, Shadowbox 7

    Textiles, Amateur – Betsy Snethen, Stash Afghan



    Honorable mentions:

    · Rachel Black, Cousins

    · Meredith Buie, (two honorable mentions), Alana and Night Drive

    · Dianne Jansing, The Sunflower is Mine in a Way

    · Jonathan Reynolds, Petit Jean State Park, Arkansas

    · Nancy Stockdale, A Zeppelin over San Francisco

    · Hannah Tarver, The Webb

    · Susan Whitmer, Bike Painting #4
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  13. The deadline for the 2014 Materials: Hard & Soft National Contemporary Craft Competition and Exhibition is coming soon!
    2014 Exhibition Timeline for Artists:
    September 6, 2013 – entry deadline
    October 31, 2013 – notifications sent
    November ...22, 2013 – contracts due
    January 6-10, 2014 – artwork delivered
    February 7, 2014 – opening reception
    April 4, 2014 – exhibition closes
    The prospectus is available on our website: http://www.dentonarts.com/subsite2/materialshands.html
    This annual competition and exhibition of contemporary crafts was started in 1987 and is now in its 27th year. Recognized nationally, Materials: Hard & Soft attracts hundreds of entries from every state in the union. Nationally recognized jurors select the show from slides and then award $5000 in prize money. The juror has always selected the winning pieces on-site. A catalog is printed. Many of the artists seen in the Materials exhibitions have been featured in national publications such as American Craft.
    Our juror will be Judy Gordon.
    Judy Gordon is an arts advocate and collector in Austin, Texas. She is Chair of the Craft Emergency Relief Fund (CERF+) Board of Trustees, and Chair of the Campaign for CERF’s Future. In 1985, she co-founded The American Craft Exposition, an annual juried craft show held in Evanston, Illinois. She has served on the American Craft Council Board of Trustees and held several executive committee positions, including Chair of the Show Committee and has served on several juries including CraftNY and ACE. Since moving to Austin in 1999, she has served as Advisor and Chair of Friends of Art of the Pot, an annual pottery studio tour, on the Board of Advisors of the Austin Museum of Art, and she is a docent emeritus at the Blanton Museum of Art at the University of Texas. She has a BSS (Bachelor of Science in Speech) degree from Northwestern University and is a former Creative Dramatics teacher.
    For more information, please see the prospectus: http://www.dentonarts.com/subsite2/materialshands.html
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  14. Water-Based Screenprinting

    with Ashley Nason


    Water-Based Screenprinting Workshop
    Instructor: Ashley Nason
    SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5 THROUGH SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2013 FROM 9:30AM TO 5PM

    This workshop introduces participants to water-based screen printing techniques and concepts including the medium’s multi-faceted abilities for alternative surface printing and incorporation with other print mediums. ...All techniques will emphasize low toxic materials and methods. We will cover black and white and color image generation and production using numerous materials and methods, including photocopies, transparency film, light blocking paper stencils, tracing paper, toner washes, and drawings on tracing paper and mylar. Direct and indirect printing techniques will be explored with a primary emphasis on photo emulsion as the primary method used. Printing techniques including registration, layering, editioning and monoprinting, watercolor printing, and blends will be covered. No prior experience is required. Maximum enrollment: 10

    Ashley Nason was born in 1969 in New Orleans, Louisiana, and spent her formative years in Chevy Chase, Maryland. She received her BA in Psychology and a BFA in Printmaking and Painting from West Virginia University and an MFA in Printmaking from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Upon receiving her MFA she worked as the printmaking technician and instructor at Herron School of Art in Indianapolis, Indiana. She currently lives in Dekalb, Illinois, where she is an associate professor of Printmaking at Northern Illinois University. Her work has been exhibited in more than 100 juried and invitational, regional, national, and international exhibitions. She is the recipient of the 2007 Illinois Arts Council Fellowship.

    Current UNT Student $100 | UNT Alumni/Faculty $125 | Senior Citizen (ages 65 and over) $125 | Artist $150. Sign up.
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  15. UNT dye garden to provide sustainable, organic colors for student projects

    DENTON (UNT), Texas 3Ž4 Artists at the University of North Texas are stepping away from harsh chemical dyes in favor of natural dyes made from flower petals, plant leaves, roots and other organic materials.
    The organic materials will be grown in UNT’s Natural Dye Garden, a project that was suggested by students, and will... be funded by the We Mean Green Fund, housed in UNT’s Office of Sustainability, and UNT’s College of Visual Arts and Design.
    The garden will be located on the west side of Bain Hall, which is at the intersection of Avenue D and Highland Street. A garden opening is set for 6 p.m. Oct. 9 (Wednesday) with a reception and artist talk with Greenmeme, a design group installing a site-specific work in the garden, funded by a private donor.
    “Artists have used dye gardens for centuries, but over the last few years these gardens have grown in popularity as many look for an alternative to chemical-based dyes,” said Lesli Robertson, lecturer in UNT’s College of Visual Arts and Design. “In addition to providing materials for dyes, the garden will also be a beautiful community space with art installations and room to walk around and relax.”
    Visiting artist Sasha Duerr led a natural dye workshop at UNT in 2012, which inspired students to create a natural dye garden on campus.
    The space will benefit students from areas of study outside of the visual arts as well, including biology and anthropology.
    “The Natural Dye Garden will provide an iconic educational and aesthetic experience for visitors and the students using it, along with being a great complement to UNT’s Art in Public Places program,” said College of Visual Arts and Design Dean Robert Milnes.
    The We Mean Green Fund is a $5 per student fee that funds environmentally-friendly and sustainable projects across the UNT campus. The fee was voted on and approved by a student majority during Earth Week 2010. UNT students, faculty and staff can propose sustainable projects online.
    “The Green Fund is a great opportunity for students to get involved and make a positive environmental impact on campus,” said Lauren Helixon, assistant director of campus sustainability and We Mean Green Fund coordinator. “Rather than passively participating in campus growth, the fund allows students to leave a legacy and the Natural Dye Garden in one such project.”
    The fund has supported projects including the installation of electric vehicle charging stations across campus, the installation of filtered water stations to easily refill reusable water bottles, tree plantings and added recycling bins.
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  16. *Digital Archivist
    *The University of Colorado Boulder Libraries invites applications from
    innovative and creative individuals for the position of Digital
    Archivist.
    This is a tenure-stream faculty position reporting to the Director of
    Arch...ives & Special Collections (ASC). Duties for this critical position
    include leading efforts to preserve, describe, and provide access to
    born-digital archival and special collections materials; developing
    processes for archiving and preserving born-digital materials including
    email, Web sites, social media, and other digital primary materials
    acquired on a variety of current or legacy formats such as tape, floppy
    disks, hard drives, and mobile devices; acquiring and maintaining
    legacy
    hardware and software that may be necessary for providing access to
    digital
    materials; developing and documenting procedures (and building
    infrastructure) for the acquisition of born-digital collections and
    electronic records and for the routine migration of materials to
    maintain
    formatting compatibility with Libraries IT software and hardware;
    providing
    digital program development, guidance in best practices for data
    management, training and development for library personnel and campus
    departments as needed; and delivering born-digital content to external
    discovery and delivery mechanisms in collaboration with specialists in
    cataloging and metadata, information technology, and scholarly
    communications. The digital archivist will serve as an expert in
    assessing
    digital content storage needs and will implement appropriate tools and
    procedures to accomplish these aims. The successful candidate will
    assist
    with the research and implementation of information architecture,
    coding
    standards, and emerging technologies as well as participate in the
    development of controlled vocabulary, metadata structures, and
    crosswalk of
    metadata to ArchivesSpace.

    The position includes significant responsibilities for research,
    creative
    work, and service in keeping with the tenure standards of the
    University of
    Colorado at Boulder.

    *Requirements
    *Please address each of these qualifications in your application
    materials:

    - Master¹s Degree in Library and Information Science from an
    ALA-accredited institution or equivalent advanced degree;
    - Strong knowledge of forensic technologies utilized by the archival
    or
    cultural heritage communities for harvesting, managing, and preserving
    born-digital archival and manuscript material;
    - Demonstrated problem solving skills;
    - Knowledge of legal and ethical issues affecting digital archival and
    special collections objects;
    - Knowledge of current trends, tools, and protocols in digital
    archiving
    and preservation;
    - Understanding of principles and techniques for archiving of
    websites,
    email, social media, and other online primary sources;
    - Familiarity with metadata standards relevant to the archival control
    of digital collection materials such as EAD, Dublin Core, MODS and
    PREMIS;
    - Demonstrated ability to work independently and collaboratively;
    - Excellent organizational skills and ability to plan, coordinate, and
    implement complex projects;
    - Excellent oral and written communication skills;
    - Potential for research, scholarly work, and professional
    achievement.

    *Desirable qualifications*

    - At least two years of relevant experience in an archival repository
    or
    similar cultural setting, including working with born digital
    materials;
    - Strong knowledge of XML and related technologies (especially XSLT,
    XSL-FO) and one or more relevant programming languages (Ruby, Python,
    Perl,
    etc.);
    - Familiarity with OAIS standards, TRAC principles, and best practices
    in assessment of needs and development of workflows in digital
    preservation
    strategies;
    - Familiarity with experimental media and/or digital humanities;
    - Demonstrated supervisory success.

    *Appointment and Salary:*
    The successful candidate will be appointed as a full-time (12 month),
    tenure-stream faculty member. Depending upon professional experience
    and
    demonstrated accomplishments in scholarly activity, creative work, and
    service, appointment may be made at the senior instructor or assistant
    professor level. Benefits include 22 working days of vacation; 10 paid
    holidays; liberal sick leave; excellent University group health care
    plans;
    group life insurance; a variety of retirement/annuity plans; and
    support
    for scholarly/professional activities. Tenured faculty members are
    eligible
    for sabbatical leave.

    *Application Process*:
    Review of applications will begin immediately and continue until the
    position is filled. It is recommended that applications be submitted by
    July 15, 2013 in order to receive full consideration. Application must
    be
    made online at http://www.jobsatcu.com/postings/67062, and must
    include a
    letter of application specifically addressing qualifications for the
    position; CV or resume; and names with postal addresses, email, and
    telephone numbers of three references. Questions may be directed to
    Dylan
    Wiersma, Search Coordinator, at Dylan.Wiersma@Colorado.EDU. The full
    position description can be viewed at
    http://ucblibraries.colorado.edu/about/jobDigitalArchivist.

    The candidates selected for this position must be able to meet
    eligibility
    requirements to work in the United States at the time the appointment
    is
    scheduled to begin. The University of Colorado is an Equal Opportunity
    Employer committed to building a diverse workforce. We encourage
    applications from women, racial and ethnic minorities, individuals with
    disabilities, and veterans. Alternative formats of this ad can be
    provided upon request for individuals with disabilities by contacting
    the
    ADA Coordinator at hr-ada@colorado.edu.* *In addition, the University
    of
    Colorado is committed to providing a safe and productive learning and
    living community. To achieve that goal, we conduct background
    investigations for all final applicants being considered for
    employment.
    Background investigations include reference checks, a criminal history
    record check, and, when appropriate, a financial and/or motor vehicle
    history
    See More

Earlier in 2013