Posted on Jun 3, 2008

“Untitled,” a plaster sculpture 3 ft. high by 2 ft. diameter by artist Molly Rebecca Freeman ’08 is part of the her multi-media exhibit entitled “My Inner Self-Portrait” on display June 3 through 15 in the Senior Art Exhibition in the Burns Atrium Art Gal

Through June 15

Visual Arts Building

Burns Atrium Art Gallery

Senior Art Exhibition

Works by Molly Freeman and Clare Stone; reception set for Saturday, June 7, 2-4 p.m.

 

 

Through June 12

Humanities Gallery

Aesthetic Divisions

Works from former Union artist-in-residence Arlene Baker's “Silk Spaces” series

 

 

Through June 15

Mandeville Gallery

Nott Memorial

Senior Invitational

Featuring the work of Ben Atkins, Robbie Flick, Jen Libous, Kaitlin Pickett, Amanda Silvestri, Rachel Start, Clare Stone and Walter Yund; closing reception set for Saturday, June 14, 2-4 p.m., at the Nott Memorial.

  

 

“Candolim, Goa,” 2007, 11”x14” digital photograph is one of 16 in the exhibit “My Trip to India: Photographs by Sara Jacobson ‘10” taken during winter break 2007-08. The exhibit will be on display May 22 through June 16, 2008.

Through June 16

Wikoff Student Gallery

Nott Memorial

My Trip to India: Photographs by Sara Jacobson ‘10

Featuring the work of Sara Jacobson ‘10 taken during winter break

 

 

“Hanoi and Cantho, Vietnam, 2007,” photograph, Martin Benjamin, professor of visual arts, is one of 20 photographs in the “Photographing Another Culture: Vietnam 2007” exhibit on display in the Global Visions Gallery, Grant Hall. The photos were made by

Through August

Global Visions Gallery

Grant Hall

New Eyes: Images of Daily Life in Vietnam

Features 20 photographs by students from Union and Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Geneva, N.Y., taken during the fall 2007 color digital photography class in Vietnam. Nineteen students from the two schools spent 97 days armed with cameras and immersed in the language and culture of Vietnam. They came away with nearly 1,200 images. This show was curated by Jen Libous ’08 and Martin Benjamin, professor of Visual Arts and director of the Vietnam term abroad.

 

 

“Pendulum Labyrinth, installation shot” for the “Pendulum Labyrinth” exhibit, by artists D. Shayne Aldrich ’98 and Tina Tacorian ’01, is on display in Jackson’s Garden on the north side of the Hans Groot’s Kill through Nov. 29, 2008. Its faceted perimeter

Through November 29

Jackson's Garden

North side of Hans Groot's Kill

Pendulum Labyrinth

Created by artists D. Shayne Aldrich ’98 and Tina Tacorian ’01. The labyrinth is a mystical design of unknown origin, rich in universal symbolism. Today, all over the world, people work with this ancient symbol in a variety of ways, yet no one has unlocked its mystery. The walk-able design, created by D. Shayne Aldrich ’98 and Tina Tacorian ’01 and inspired by the movement of a pendulum, is a reference to the passage of time. Its faceted perimeter echoes the deeply symbolic architecture of the Nott Memorial.

 

 

Arnold Bittleman, “Thicket,” 1981, etching on paper, 22 ½” x 30 ¼”

June 6 through June 15

Nott Memorial, first floor

Arnold Bittleman: Selections from the Union College Permanent Collection

This independent study final project by Liza Turkel ’08 brings together a number of works by Arnold Bittleman never before shown together. Bittleman was a professor of Art at Union College from 1966 until his premature death in 1985. His works are in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Brooklyn Museum, among many others. This exhibition was made possible with help from Rachel Seligman, director of The Mandeville Gallery and curator of the Permanent Collection, and Prof. David Ogawa, associate professor and chair of the Visual Arts Department. An opening reception is set for Friday, June 6, 5–6 p.m. at the Nott.