Studio Art STUDIO ART

Line in Space: Just a Corner of Your Memory Palace

Sponsored by:
Studio Art
Students from Sanford Mirling’s fall class Sculpture I: Communicating in Three Dimensions exhibit works that focus on the limitless, form-making possibilities of welded-steel rod. While tackling elemental aesthetic issues of balance, volume, perspective, and scale, each sculpture provides a glimpes into the artist’s own personal narrative. As a collection, these pieces represent earnest experiments in translating two dimensions into three and memories into new realities. On-going through November 10 Sponsored by the Program in Studio Art

Johnson Memorial Building

Free
Open to the Public

Landscape Re-Imagined: The Autumn Campus

Sponsored by:
Studio Art
The works created in Jim Butler’s fall class Landscape Re-Imagined: Painting, Drawing, Photography, and Glass are large-scale images of our campus presented in new and surprising ways. Students artistically interact with middlebury’s natural and built environments while studying the rich history of how humans have depicted landscape. Their results exploit all the fluidly colorful possibilities of pigment to reimagine our everyday world. On-going through December 10. Sponsored by the Program in Studio Art.

Johnson Memorial Building

Free
Open to the Public

Landscape Re-Imagined: The Autumn Campus

Sponsored by:
Studio Art
The works created in Jim Butler’s fall class Landscape Re-Imagined: Painting, Drawing, Photography, and Glass are large-scale images of our campus presented in new and surprising ways. Students artistically interact with middlebury’s natural and built environments while studying the rich history of how humans have depicted landscape. Their results exploit all the fluidly colorful possibilities of pigment to reimagine our everyday world. On-going through December 10. Sponsored by the Program in Studio Art.

Johnson Memorial Building

Free
Open to the Public

Landscape Re-Imagined: The Autumn Campus

Sponsored by:
Studio Art
The works created in Jim Butler’s fall class Landscape Re-Imagined: Painting, Drawing, Photography, and Glass are large-scale images of our campus presented in new and surprising ways. Students artistically interact with middlebury’s natural and built environments while studying the rich history of how humans have depicted landscape. Their results exploit all the fluidly colorful possibilities of pigment to reimagine our everyday world. On-going through December 10. Sponsored by the Program in Studio Art.

Johnson Memorial Building

Free
Open to the Public

Landscape Re-Imagined: The Autumn Campus

Sponsored by:
Studio Art
The works created in Jim Butler’s fall class Landscape Re-Imagined: Painting, Drawing, Photography, and Glass are large-scale images of our campus presented in new and surprising ways. Students artistically interact with middlebury’s natural and built environments while studying the rich history of how humans have depicted landscape. Their results exploit all the fluidly colorful possibilities of pigment to reimagine our everyday world. On-going through December 10. Sponsored by the Program in Studio Art.

Johnson Memorial Building

Free
Open to the Public

Landscape Re-Imagined: The Autumn Campus

Sponsored by:
Studio Art
The works created in Jim Butler’s fall class Landscape Re-Imagined: Painting, Drawing, Photography, and Glass are large-scale images of our campus presented in new and surprising ways. Students artistically interact with middlebury’s natural and built environments while studying the rich history of how humans have depicted landscape. Their results exploit all the fluidly colorful possibilities of pigment to reimagine our everyday world. On-going through December 10. Sponsored by the Program in Studio Art.

Johnson Memorial Building

Free
Open to the Public

Landscape Re-Imagined: The Autumn Campus

Sponsored by:
Studio Art
The works created in Jim Butler’s fall class Landscape Re-Imagined: Painting, Drawing, Photography, and Glass are large-scale images of our campus presented in new and surprising ways. Students artistically interact with middlebury’s natural and built environments while studying the rich history of how humans have depicted landscape. Their results exploit all the fluidly colorful possibilities of pigment to reimagine our everyday world. On-going through December 10. Sponsored by the Program in Studio Art.

Johnson Memorial Building

Free
Open to the Public

Landscape Re-Imagined: The Autumn Campus

Sponsored by:
Studio Art
The works created in Jim Butler’s fall class Landscape Re-Imagined: Painting, Drawing, Photography, and Glass are large-scale images of our campus presented in new and surprising ways. Students artistically interact with middlebury’s natural and built environments while studying the rich history of how humans have depicted landscape. Their results exploit all the fluidly colorful possibilities of pigment to reimagine our everyday world. On-going through December 10. Sponsored by the Program in Studio Art.

Johnson Memorial Building

Free
Open to the Public

Landscape Re-Imagined: The Autumn Campus

Sponsored by:
Studio Art
The works created in Jim Butler’s fall class Landscape Re-Imagined: Painting, Drawing, Photography, and Glass are large-scale images of our campus presented in new and surprising ways. Students artistically interact with middlebury’s natural and built environments while studying the rich history of how humans have depicted landscape. Their results exploit all the fluidly colorful possibilities of pigment to reimagine our everyday world. On-going through December 10. Sponsored by the Program in Studio Art.

Johnson Memorial Building

Free
Open to the Public

Landscape Re-Imagined: The Autumn Campus Exhibition Opening

Sponsored by:
Studio Art
The works that students created in Jim Butler’s fall class Landscape Re-Imagined: Painting, Drawing, Photography, and Glass are large-scale images of our campus, presented in new and surprising ways.  Students interact artistically with Middlebury’s natural and built environment while studying the rich history of how humans have depicted landscape.  Their results exploit all the fluidly colorful possibilities of pigment to reimagine our everyday world.

Johnson Memorial Building

Free
Open to the Public