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 | Mark Lombardi: Global Networks June 18 - August 1, 2004 Mark Lombardi (1951-2000) created complex diagrams of influence, showing how money, power, and politics are intertwined in the global economy. His large drawings reveal elegant webs of complex transactions and surprising connections. |
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 | Danica Phelps: Writers Trade June 18 - September 12, 2004 Danica Phelps is a New York artist whose work combines the arts of drawing and accounting to document her financial and personal transactions. For this exhibition she has begun a new project in which she trades drawings with writers who in turn submit an essay about aspects of her work. The drawings and essays will appear in a catalogue to be published by the Faulconer Gallery. |
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 | Austin Thomas June 18 - September 12, 2004 Austin Thomas addresses concepts of personal connection and self-awareness by creating environments for social interaction in which the viewer becomes a participant. Using construction materials ubiquitous in America's home-improvement craze, Thomas builds decks, platforms, tables and chairs she calls perches, which, in her words, facilitate conversation, dialogue, storytelling, discussion, and give a new perspective. She is also installing a seating platform for viewing the exhibitions in the gallery as well as a picnic table for the Holden Sculpture Courtyard. |
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 | I saw it: The Invented Reality of Goya's Disasters of War August 13 - September 12, 2004 An exhibition curated by students in Prof. Susan Strauber's exhibition seminar presenting the 80 images from Goya's seminal set of prints Disasters of War, which chronicle his reaction to the Napoleonic wars in Spain. Goya's prints, based as much on his feelings about the atrociousness of war on all parties as on actual experience, are a timely and timeless reminder of the human capacity for violence. A catalog, written by the students, accompanies the exhibition. |
| Exhibition website |
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 | William Hogarth's Industry and Idleness August 1 - November 21, 2004 Burling Gallery |
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 | William Kentridge Prints October 1 - December 12, 2004 William Kentridge Prints, curated by Kay Wilson Jenkins, curator of the collection, presents 120 of over 300 prints created by Kentridge, dating from the early 1976 Muizenberg Beach linocuts to his 2004 Learning the Flute and Learning the Flute (reverse). William Kentridge (b. 1955, Johannesburg) is one of the most significant and internationally renowned artists of our time. He has always addressed the more challenging and intimate aspects of contemporary life and of South Africa, both during Apartheid and in the post-Apartheid period. His work in every media often involves erasing, recreating, and reworking an image many times in a metaphorical search for identity in changing contexts. |
| View a selection of images |
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| Prints by Francisco Goya and Max Beckmann October 20 - December 19, 2004 Print and Drawing Study Room Works by Hogarth, Goya and Beckmann from the Grinnell College Art Collection will be on view throughout the semester in conjunction with William Kentridge Prints. All three artists are important references for Kentridge in his work. |
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| Angela Matsuoka: 9th Semester Student December 3-19, 2004 Chrystal Center Gallery, Lower Level |
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| Images of Iowa: Photographs of a State's Natural Resources February 1 - March 4, 2005 Burling Gallery, Burling Library Sponsored by Center for Prairie Studies |
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 | Scandinavian Photography 1: Sweden January 28 - March 18, 2005 The first exhibition of Scandinavian photography in the United States was held in Minneapolis over twenty years ago. While it included many living photographers, its purpose was to establish the history of photography in northern Europe. This exhibition, the first in a series that will examine current photography in all five countries one at a time, considers the work of photographers in post-millennium Sweden. Curated by Dan Strong, associate director and curator of exhibitions. |
| Click here to view a selection of images and list of artists. |
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 | Ford Foundation Fund: Selections from the permanent collection March 30 - April 27, 2005 Print and Drawing Study Room In 1961, the Ford Foundation awarded $2 million to Grinnell College to finance special projects, cooperative faculty-student research and visiting faculty. One of the special projects was to build an art collection that focused on the history of printmaking. Highlights from the purchases made possible by the Ford Foundation grant will be on view in the Print and Drawing Study Room. |
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 | Annual Student Art Salon 2005 May 6 - 23 2005 |
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| Chinese Calligraphy by students of Ming Yang Burling Gallery May 9 - 23, 2005 |
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| I Grew up with the Dead and Budapest Stories: Images and poetry by Margaret Rutherford '81 May 2 - June 4, 2005 Print Room and Burling Gallery Recent mixed-media work by Margaret Rutherford '81 based on stories shared by her mother, a Holocaust survivor. |
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 | Bobbie McKibbin: Drawn West April 8 - June 5, 2005 Over the last decade, Professor Bobbie McKibbin has been increasingly drawn west to the Bitterroot Valley of western Montana, where she now has a second home. In these works, featuring pastels of Iowa, Wyoming, Montana, and places in between, Professor McKibbin draws the very different landscapes though which she travels to get from her Midwestern home to her Western home. This exhibition will travel after its Grinnell venue. |
| More images from the exhibition |
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