ALL ABOARD: 2023 FACULTY TRIENNIAL

January 21 – March 18, 2023
Opening reception: Friday 1/20, 5-7 pm

Join us on January 20th from 5-7 pm to celebrate the opening of All Aboard: 2023 Faculty Triennial. This exhibition presents more than sixty works by forty-seven faculty members that demonstrate the ideas, issues, and inquiries that Moore’s talented instructors are currently exploring in their professions. The exhibition reinforces the College’s ongoing commitment to showcasing the diversity of work produced by its community and features new and recent projects (produced in the last three years) across all disciplines and, for the second time, occupies every gallery on the campus ground floor. In addition, an accompanying schedule of ongoing and one-time public programs conceived by teaching faculty provides insight into the work of both the makers and the non-makers who prepare Moore’s students for careers in art and design.

PARTICIPANTS:
Gina Altadonna, Jon Appel, Andrea Beizer, Tegan Bellitta, Jen Cram, Jazmyn Crosby, Jeff Dion, Carmel Dor, Elaine Erne, Dorothy Funderwhite, Robert Goodman, Asuka Goto, Jacob Hammes, Rich Harrington, Douglas Herren, James Johnson, Kartrina Kopeloff, Joe Kulka, Lisa Jungmin Lee, Alicia Link, John McDaniel, Gigi McGee, Joyce Millman, Addison Namnoum, Tara O’Brien, Alice Oh, Lynn Palewicz, Keun Ho Park, Maureen Pelta, Maya Pindyckc, Christina Rosso-Schneider, Gene Anthony Santiago-Holt, Ornella Santoni, Perry Santulli, Zack Simonson, Ashley Smith, David Soffa, Emmanuela Soria Ruiz, Lauren Stichter, Daniel Tucker, Heather Ujiie, Daniel Velasco, Kimberly Voigt, Jonathan Wallis, Stephen Wood, Ashley York, Alyssa Zebovitz

Image: Jacob Hammes, Once, 2022, Resin, wood, metal, and mixed media with electronics.

PLAN A SAFE VISIT

We are open! No masks are necessary, but we ask guests to try their best to follow social distancing procedures during their visit to campus.

Our gallery hours are Monday through Saturday, 11am-5pm. No reservation needed—walk-ins welcome!

Your visit will be self-guided through our four main gallery spaces on the ground floor.  You'll notice additional sanitizing stations throughout the facilities, along with an increase in housekeeping activities on campus, in an effort to promote healthy spaces.

RINGS!

Since the time of the ancient Egyptians, humans have adorned their fingers with ornamental jewelry. From signifying one's marital status to protecting the wearer from forces of evil, rings have served practical, symbolic and decorative purposes throughout history and across cultures. On view June 5 - July 17, 2021 RINGS! offered a glimpse into the boundless creative freedom revealed within the ring form. Featuring work from Australia, Austria, England, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway Russia, Scotland, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United States, this international selection brings together over one hundred rings that demonstrate the artists’ wide-ranging expressions through a variety of aesthetic and conceptual ideas. From the traditional techniques of metalsmithing to avant-garde materials and approaches, the rings on view will offer a new examination of the cultural, political, and personal meanings of the ring itself. RINGS! was organized by Helen Drutt and researched by Elizabeth Essner with assistance from Colleen Terrell. Image: Stacey Lee Webber (American b. 1982) and Mark Wagner (American, b. 1976), "Vampire George Ring," 2019, vintage silver quarters, brass, paper dollars, ink. Collection of the artist.

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