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Art Exhibition Showcases Professors’ Projects

November 05, 2015 Art | University of Maryland Art Gallery | College of Arts and Humanities

Art Exhibition Showcases Professors Projects

The Art Gallery holds a reception to showcase professors' art work.

By Alex Carolan, The Writer's Bloc

Courtesy of the University of Maryland Art Gallery

On a false wall in room 2202 in the Art and Sociology building there is a neon arrow that points diagonally downward.

This is the work of Hasan Elahi, an interdisciplinary artist and professor at this university who, in part of an ongoing art project, tracks his location online after an unnecessary run-in with the FBI in 2002. He continues to update his whereabouts on his website and the neon green arrow is one of his newer works.

The Department of Art Faculty Exhibition celebrated an opening reception Wednesday from 5 to 7 p.m. where artists congregated with students and faculty to discuss their presented works.

The artists at the Department of Art Faculty Exhibit are members of the faculty who present their work about once every three years. Patrick Craig, an associate professor who specializes in painting, drawing and mixed media said that the purpose of the exhibition is so undergraduate students have a chance to see faculty work at some point in their career at Maryland.

Craig said that it’s important for students to realize that the faculty works in studios outside of teaching classes. He said that he has a 12,000 square foot studio, which he describes as the same size of “a small rambler home.”

“Students don’t understand what I do until they actually see it in the flesh,” he said. “You can see it online all you want, but it’s not the same.”

The Assistant Director of the UMD art gallery, Taras Matla, said Craig is known primarily as a painter. However, Craig has a plastic sculpture entitled Sisters at the exhibition in addition to a painting called Migration.

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