The Jackalope
  • Home
  • About
  • Jackalope Staff
  • Submit to Jackalope
  • Upcoming Events
  • Submit an Event
Home » Posts Tagged "student work"
Dance Meets OVF
  • OVF
Apr15

Dance Meets OVF

posted by Amanda Tyler

Choreographer Jocelyne Danchick discusses the multimedia dance performance she is preparing for this year’s OVF.

»»
What is a Gift?
  • Campus
Nov07

What is a Gift?

posted by Amanda Tyler

The Gift Music and Art Festival takes place this weekend, on the nights of both Nov. 8-9. For free admission, students can create a gift of artwork to be given up for auction at a later date. So what exactly should this gift consist of? The crew behind the festival is accepting any medium of work, of any size or subject matter. So far, gifts have ranged from alternative process photographic prints to origami birds and intricately painted portraits. Music and film majors are welcomed to submit a gift in their genre also, provided that a CD or DVD of the work can be presented. All art will be accepted for admission, as long as it is evident that time, energy and thought has been put into the piece. When your work is complete, the gift can be be brought to the festival, where a crew member will exchange it for your entrance. Still stuck? Pictures below demonstrate a few examples of work made and materials used for a variety of gifts. For more information on the festival, check out this Jackalope article and the event Facebook...

»»
Student Spotlight
  • Visual Arts
Oct27

Student Spotlight

posted by Shayla Blatchford

Studio Art major Jessica Gulliford is currently working on her BFA thesis show, a “grand performance” that will focus on inviting her audience into her artwork. The show will consist of installations and performances incorporating “stanchions, ticket booth, photo ops, fog machines, red and pink lights… a bunch of rock’n roll’n.” In the meantime, Gulliford will be offering free portraits to anyone who wishes to visit her during her posted hours. Her next portrait session will be from noon to 2 pm, Nov. 7 in the Fogelson Library. Participants can pick up their portraits at her show, where they will be separately...

»»
Harvest Season
  • Visual Arts
Oct25

Harvest Season

posted by Nicholas Beckman

“We didn’t want to curate something that seemed like an exhibition,” Luke Dorman explained in defense of his process curating Harvest, the studio art department’s 2nd annual juried art show. Dorman, along with Kelsy Waggaman, both graduates of the College of Santa Fe, were selected to judge and curate Harvest. On Thursday, Oct. 17, the two sat down for an open talk with anyone interested in learning more about their approach to the show. “The exhibition of the rejects,” or Salon de Refuses, is the first cluster of artwork seen when stepping into Fine Arts Gallery in the Southwest Annex. The salon, which was located in the rear of the exhibition during last year’s show, presents all of the works that were submitted to Harvest, but not accepted. The walls are filled with vibrant pieces of each artist’s individual talent, differing in both mediums and subject matter, but aesthetically stimulating when packed so closely together. They fool you into thinking that this is the show you came to see and, judging by the placement and variety in artwork, it is not that much of a stretch. You begin to realize then, after moving a little further into the room, that the selections that have been individually chosen and praised by the jurors are yet to come. The focus shifts from everything at once to one at a time. The 12 pieces selected were given room to breathe between one another with not a single exhibit resembling the next, yet they were all somehow related. You’ve already been shown the works that didn’t work together with all of the variables that go into a juried show, so you can gather that these pieces are meaningful and are all speaking to you thematically. In response to a student’s question asking if a specific theme was apparent to her and Dorman, Waggaman emphasized the importance of the viewer’s response rather than the jurors’ intent. “Do you see a theme?” she posed. At the Q&A with the jurors, students and faculty members, the majority of questions of which were centered around the purpose of the show, its layout in the space and the jurors’ ideas on juried shows in general. Dorman and Waggaman both agreed that, as former art students, it was difficult for them to say “no” to certain pieces that were truly remarkable by themselves, but didn’t work well next to other pieces. Waggaman described acceptance into the Salon as “a different kind of pride.” She also said that whenever her work wasn’t accepted to shows, she learned the most from those failures and it showed her how to improve her work for the next time. From embroidered shoes/socks on paper plates to a mimetic painting of two feuding foxes, all of the pieces in Harvest and the Salon played together to create a sense of place and acceptance. Both jurors worked independently at first in order to decide which ones they liked personally, then came together and collaborated with each other’s favorites. This bonding of different minds formed a cohesive collection of artwork that somehow worked together—despite lacking a specific...

»»
SFUAD at SITE
  • Creative Writing
  • Photography
  • Santa Fe
  • Visual Arts
Sep09

SFUAD at SITE

posted by admin

In Spring, 2013, students from the Jackalope pre-cursor class Collaborations toured several exhibits at Site Santa Fe, producing writing and photography that was then published by SITE as a gallery guide. View the guide online here. Photography student Sandra Schonenstein also created an audio visual piece interview with SITE intern Diana Padilla: And photography student Shayla Blatchford also created an audio visual piece with Linda Mary Montano, whose show, “Always Creative,” was part of the SITE...

»»

Archives

  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • November 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • November 2016
  • October 2016
  • September 2016
  • May 2016
  • April 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • April 2014
  • March 2014
  • February 2014
  • January 2014
  • December 2013
  • November 2013
  • October 2013
  • September 2013
  • August 2013
  • April 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013

Search The Jackalope

Recent Comments

  • Diane Haun on “Give Yourself a Chance” Memorial
  • SFUAD senior Garrett Johnston's new Touchstones Film Club | The Jackalope on Come Along to Club-Along
  • SFUAD remembers Film School alumnus Eatmon-Ponciano | The Jackalope on Remembering Harrison McClure
  • End of Semester Events | The Jackalope on CWL Senior Brantlee Reid
  • End of Semester Events | The Jackalope on CWL Senior Alison Gamache

Monthly Top Reads

    About Jackalope

    Jackalope Magazine is the student magazine of Santa Fe University of Art and Design. Building on the interdisciplinary nature of our education, we aim to showcase the talent of our university and character of our city.

    Search by Topic

    Recent Stories

    • Glyph Gala 2018!
    • Leah Naxon BFA Exhibition
    • Alumni Profile: Nathally Botelho
    • Spring 2018 CWL Class
    • Scout: A Sci-Fi Film
    • Spotlight: Donna Bella Litton
    • Control
    • Christmas Show Spectacular

    Connect

    • SFUAD Social Media
    Work on this site may not be reproduced or used elsewhere without written permission.