Skip to main content Skip to navigation
CAS in the Media Arts and Sciences Media Headlines

WSU art students participate in art exchange

Photo courtesy of WSU News
Photo courtesy of WSU News

WSU master of fine arts students are participating in some creative cross-pollination through two art exchange exhibitions with peers at nearby universities this month.

Students are showing work in printmaking, photography, painting, sculpture, installation, video and ceramics at the University of Idaho in Moscow through Feb. 20. They are sharing exhibit space at WSU Vancouver with students from Portland State University Feb. 15-April 15.

The collaborative shows are designed to introduce students from all three universities to other artists and their creative work while providing real-world experience in the many facets of exhibition planning and execution.

JJ Harty is among WSU students showing work in both exhibits.

“I’m participating because I love to share my work and ideas,” he said. “I also want to make connections with others artists and expand my curriculum vitae and professional portfolio while fostering communications and community between universities.”

Find out more about the art shows.

Artist, WSU professor honored with top Oregon fellowship

Avantika Bawa
Avantika Bawa

Avantika Bawa, assistant professor of fine art at Washington State University Vancouver, is the 2014 recipient of the Oregon Arts Commission’s Joan Shipley Award. Bawa was selected for outstanding talent, demonstrated ability and commitment to the creation of new work.

The Portland-based artist topped a group of 13 Oregon artists selected for fellowships from a pool of more than 190 applicants from 35 cities. Fellowships support artists working in visual arts and design and include small financial stipends.

Read more about the award

Visual Edge: Dennis DeHart’s Confluences

"Times 2," by Dennis DeHart
"Times 2," by Dennis DeHart
Insider’s look at the oddities and the beauty of the Pacific Northwest

You are invited to travel the byways of eastern Washington, Oregon and Idaho with photographer Dennis DeHart at The Evergreen State College. DeHart, a TESC graduate who teaches photography at WSU, has trained his lens on many of the out-of-the-way places in the Northwest to provide an insider’s look at the oddities and the beauty of the region and a look into the devastating effects of industry on once pristine lands.

He approaches his photographic journey with an artist’s eye for color and composition and with obvious sympathy, and even reverence, for the land and its people. Not to mention a quirky sense of humor.

Read more about the Visual Edge

Museum of Art/WSU receives six original prints from the Andy Warhol foundation

Warhol Truck
Warhol Truck

Six original Andy Warhol prints recently were added to the permanent collection of the Museum of Art/WSU. A gift from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, they are the largest Warhol prints in the museum’s permanent collection (up to 40 x 40 inches) and depict both mundane and recognizable pop culture references.

“These works add a wonderful new dimension to our holdings of modern art,” said Chris Bruce, museum director. “Equally important, the gift provides us with an extra incentive for a successful campaign to build a new museum on campus so we can share such treasures with our audience more frequently.”

More than 20 years after his death, Warhol remains not only a fascinating cultural icon but one of the most influential figures in contemporary art and culture.

Read more at WSU news

Alum seeks IDs of subjects drawn by former art professor

Recognize anyone?
Recognize anyone?

Washington State University alumnus and art collector Dave Fitzsimmons owns three portraits by a former WSU art professor and wants help to discover who the subjects are.

Worth Griffin joined the staff of Washington State College (now WSU) in 1924, became chairman of the Fine Arts Department until 1950, and retired from WSU in 1958. His artistic abilities stretched to many mediums and styles, and he spent years painting scenes and portraits from the Northwest and Mexico.

Many of Griffin’s works are stored in the fine arts vault at WSU or are privately owned.

Find out more