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UMGC Global Media Center Exhibit Turns Spotlight on Artist-Teachers

听In Joan Bevelaqua鈥檚 oil painting 鈥淢yth of Possession #4,鈥 a black and gray dress, perhaps suspended from a hanger, dominates the canvas. Something wrapped in a white cloth and tied with a blue ribbon sits on the 鈥渓ap鈥 of the dress, and the atmospheric background suggests a nondescript location.

At first blush, the painting might present a rather symmetrical composition. But upon further inspection, one sees that Bevelaqua, a painter and adjunct painting instructor at UMUC, has carefully balanced diagonal and vertical lines that transcend individual objects. In that sense, the work evokes the nuanced ingenuity of post-impressionist painter Paul C茅zanne.

鈥淢y paintings are based on observation. I have always enjoyed challenging myself to create an illusion of the real,鈥 Bevelaqua wrote in her program commentary for the 鈥淎ll That鈥檚 Art: Faculty Art Invitational 2016 Exhibit.鈥

She is guest curator for the exhibit, as well as an artist in the show, which comprises the works of 31 artists representing 12 colleges and universities. Bevelaqua 鈥榮 commentary explains further that her work explores the psychological and subconscious nature of reality to express what cannot be seen. 鈥淭hrough my work, I attempt to search for personal themes that have universal and archetypal meanings.鈥

The annual faculty show, which gathers together works by professors in the 91直播 of Maryland system, as well as those of invited guests, has a universal flavor. Teaching and making art, after all, involves exercising entirely different muscles, Bevelaqua explained in her curatorial statement in the exhibit catalog.

鈥淭here is often a struggle between becoming an excellent instructor and developing an artistic body of work, not only because of the time needed for both, but also because the demands and challenges are so different,鈥 she wrote.

In his catalog essay, Eric Key, director of the arts program at UMUC, added that faculty members are the backbone of every educational institution. That鈥檚 true in the arts as well.

"Whether they are teaching literary art, dance, visual art, or performing art, art professors give their students the tools and abilities to produce works that push the creative envelope or detail a narrative of daily life.

鈥淚n the visual arts, these narratives are portrayed in paintings, drawings, mixed media, photography, videography and sculpture,鈥 Key wrote.

In exhibit commentary, UMUC President Javier Miyares added that the show 鈥渟erves to remind us of the importance of art in our communities.鈥

As is often the case in a show with such a range of artists, there are a variety of artistic perspectives. Even as the show celebrates the permanence of artist-teachers鈥 contributions to their communities and the broader art world, one artist鈥檚 work explores the opposite: decay.

For his inkjet series 鈥淪ymbol and Referent 3,鈥 , an adjunct assistant professor at UMUC, photographed studio materials, which he treated with 鈥渄ecidedly non-archival鈥 processes, he wrote in the catalog.

The work in the exhibit features 鈥渟ilk-screened fabric that will eventually disintegrate, because it has been soaked in bleach.鈥 The materials become archival inkjet prints, which 鈥渢ake on hybrid properties: at once abstract fetishized art objects that are inherently non-referential and photographs that are indexical archives of something destined for the wastebin.鈥

A sense of flux and impermanence also surfaces in UMUC adjunct associate professor 鈥檚 work in the exhibition, 鈥淏ecoming (Detail C).鈥 The print shows a partial portrait, in three-quarter view, made of what appear to be marbles or shells.

鈥溾楤ecoming鈥 reflects the notion that the self is not a fixed entity but rather one that exists in a perpetual state of flux,鈥 she explained in her catalog entry. 鈥淭he series echoes the paradoxical notion that creation often arises from destruction."

Nina Chung Dwyer鈥檚 2015 silkscreen print 鈥淧assacaglia鈥 also navigates impermanence. The series addressed wooden sticks that are designed to prevent erosion in wildlife refuges, the Montgomery College artist-professor noted, in the catalog.

鈥淭he works seek to create a visual musicality from the rhythm of the lines, the geometry of their forms, the tension between natural and man-made elements, and the echo of the images by their reflections,鈥 Dwyer wrote.

An 鈥淚nverted World鈥 is the subject of Ding Ren鈥檚 series of 15 photographs, printed and displayed in a plastic sleeve. Ren, who is based in Amsterdam and who teaches photography at UMUC, found the photo sleeves at Urban Outfitters 鈥渙f all the places,鈥 she said. She added that she decided to use them because they fold easily and are small and convenient to send via the mail. 鈥淭hey remind me of a panel of a shower curtain.鈥

鈥淭eaching online can feel as if you are working independently, and you don鈥檛 get that same social interaction as working in an office. It is nice that the art department has organized this exhibit to bring faculty together,鈥 Ren said.

The exhibition, on display until July 31, is open daily from 9 a.m. until 9 p.m. at the Arts Program Gallery, Lower Level, 91直播 of Maryland 91直播 College, College Park Marriott Hotel & Conference Center, 3501 91直播 Boulevard East, 91直播, MD 20783. Directions.

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