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CAS in the Media Arts and Sciences Media Headlines

Fine arts prof/associate dean lands lofty ‘Frigate Bird’ Award

Carol Ivory
Carol Ivory

Carol Ivory, professor of fine arts and CAS associate dean for curriculum and instruction, was honored with the Manu Daula (Frigate Bird) Award from the Pacific Arts Association (PPA) during a meeting this month in Vancouver, B.C. Recipients of the Manu Daula Award are selected by the PPA membership based on “outstanding achievement and dedication in the arts of the Pacific.” Ivory and a colleague received the award this year; only 14 people have received the award since 1984.

Ivory’s research focuses on the art, history, and culture of the Marquesas Islands, French Polynesia. She is the author of numerous articles and essays on the Marquesas in a variety of international publications. She was primary consultant on the exhibition, Adorning the World, Art of the Marquesas Islands, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York in 2005-06; and the exhibition, Gauguin and Polynesia: South Pacific Encounters, in Copenhagen, Denmark, in 2011, and Seattle, WA, in 2012. She is currently guest curator for an exhibition on Marquesan art scheduled for fall 2015 at the Musée du quai Branly, Paris.

Read about the award

Museum of Art presents Fine Arts Faculty Exhibition

Fine Arts Faculty Exhibition
Get inspired at the free fine arts exhibition!

The Fine Arts Faculty Exhibition will be presented free to the public at the Washington State University Museum of Art Aug. 12-Sept. 14. A reception will be at 6 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 22, in the museum gallery.

The museum showcases the exhibition at the beginning of the school year so incoming students are immediately exposed to the manifold talents of the WSU fine arts faculty.

Read more at WSU News

Saving early digital works

Electronic literature lives on through the WSUV ‘Pathfinders’ project—saving early digital works of the late 20th century.

An ambitious effort is under way in Vancouver to preserve electronic literature from the past. The project, “Pathfinders: Documenting the Experience of Early Digital Literature,” debuted at WSU Vancouver this week. The project is led by Dene Grigar, director and associate professor in the digital technology and culture program at WSU Vancouver, and Stuart Moulthrop, an English professor at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

With constant changes in technology, electronic artists face a continuous demand to preserve and update their work. Read more about the project

Sound scholarship: Inaugural world arts festival coming in October

Enjoy music, art, food and dance during Humanitas! The free public festival, scheduled for October 3, 4, and 5, celebrates the world arts with performances and activities around the WSU-Pullman campus.

First-come, first-served evening concerts are scheduled for all three days of the festival; workshops and school outreach programs are scheduled for Friday; and Sunday’s free outdoor festival includes food, performances, a beer garden, and family-friendly art activities.

Find out more about Humanitas at WSU News

Richland professor leads artful anti-litter campaign

Peter Christenson
Peter Christenson

Peter Christenson, a multidisciplinary artist, writer, filmmaker, and assistant professor of fine arts at WSU, is developing a creative approach to raising awareness of litter: a new project that will use GPS and social media to document and share images and location data of litter removed by volunteers. There’s also a smartphone application planned for the future that will tie into the project’s website.

Read more about the Anti-Litter Mapping Project