Showing posts with label Carroll Gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carroll Gallery. Show all posts

Thursday, December 8, 2022

Newcomb Art Department Holiday Sale

Newcomb Art Department Holiday Sale flyer

After a two-year hiatus, our beloved holiday sale is back! Please join us on December 9th and 10th for the Newcomb Art Department Holiday Sale featuring works in glass, ceramics, printmaking, fiber, works on paper, painting, and more. All works are by Tulane undergraduate and graduate students, faculty, staff, and alumni. 

PLEASE NOTE RE: PARKING
There is no visitor parking on campus without a permit before 5:30 pm on Friday.
You may park on Audubon Blvd. (2-hr) or Broadway at that time. We will have two spots near the gallery reserved for those needing assistance.

Parking on campus is permitted on Saturday.

Please email Laura Richens lrichens@tulane.edu for more information.

Wednesday, September 28, 2022

Artists Respond: Post-Roe Louisiana

Exhibition panel discussio and reception October 13th

Artists Respond: Post-Roe Louisiana is a juried exhibition that will feature artwork in a variety of media by artists from Louisiana, in response to the overturning of Roe v. Wade by the Supreme Court of the United States in June of 2022.  The exhibition will be on view in the Carroll Gallery of the Newcomb Art Department of Tulane University, and will include student work as well as artwork by established and emerging artists from throughout the state.  

The exhibition’s Panel of Jurors is comprised of:
Dr. Clare Daniel, Administrative Associate Professor, Newcomb Institute
Dr. Maurita Poole, Director, Newcomb Art Museum
Laura Richens, Curator, Carroll Gallery, Newcomb Art Department

The exhibition will be on view from Oct. 4 – 28, 2022, and will include a Panel Discussion and Exhibition Reception on Thursday, Oct. 13.  

Panel discussion: 5:00 pm - 6:30 pm, Stone Auditorium, Woldenberg Art Center
Exhibition reception:  6:30 - 8:00 pm, Carroll Gallery, Woldenberg Art Center

Moderators:  
    Dr. Clare Daniel, Administrative Associate Professor, Newcomb Institute
    Kelsey Lain, Reproductive Rights and Reproductive Health Intern, Newcomb Institute
Panelists:
    Dr. Karissa Haugeberg, Associate Professor of History, Tulane University
    Lakeesha Harris, Co-Executive Director, Lift Louisiana
    Amy Irvin, Executive Director, Creative Community League

The panel discussion will be in-person, and also accessible via Zoom .

Qr codeDescription automatically generated

Link to Zoom with the QR code above, or:  https://bit.ly/ArtistsRespondLA

Read the Artist Statements here: https://qrco.de/bdOCJ1


Please contact Laura Richens at lrichens@tulane.edu for more information. 

*Thank you to the Newcomb Institute for their generous support of this project.

Thursday, August 4, 2022

RECON exhibition reunites artists in the Carroll Gallery

RECON exhibition at Carroll Gallery features artists from BFA class of 2020
The 2020 BFA graduates of the Newcomb Art Department are pleased to present RECON, an exhibition of new artwork, following the cancellation of their undergraduate thesis exhibitions nearly 28 months ago.

The root word "recon" evokes gathering, reunion, and the search for knowledge, splintering into a multitude of connotations. After time apart, we tap into the empowerment of community, with collaboration as a driving force. We rekindle the playful experimentation of our undergraduate years while still approaching our practices with the greater respect and seriousness afforded with time and experience. The artwork presented offers a portrayal of a young group reuniting to create - not in competition or exclusion - but in the interest of growth, resurrection, and collective success.

RECON was able to take place due to the generosity of Tulane University, the Newcomb Art Department, the Carroll Gallery, and Laura Richens. To everyone who contributed to RECON, thank you for showing up in every way that matters.

RECON is curated by Emma Conroy and includes new artwork by Parker Greenwood, Alex Lawton, Andrew Mahaffie, and Eli Pillaert.

On view: August 11 - September 19, 2022

[Photos of exhibition by Alex Lawton]

RECON exhibition title text with glass sculpture by Andrew Mahaffie
Team Lead, 2021, by Andrew Mahaffie

 


 

Untitled no 7 by Alex Lawton


Soft sculpture by Eli Pillaert
Lady Fingers, 2022 by Eli Pillaert


Ink painting by ParKer Greenwood
Ink painting by Parker Greenwood

Glass sculpture by Andrew Mahaffie
1000 Places by Andrew Mahaffie


Monday, November 1, 2021

Ways of Looking – an invitation to thoughtful observation

The Carroll Gallery presents

Ways of Looking – an invitation to thoughtful observation 

The viewer is invited into the gallery space to experience art in a very conscious way. 
In the back galleries are two videos, with very different ways of communicating: Peach Body Summer by Ellen Bull presents a mysterious, open-ended narrative; The Thin Veil by Jane Cassidy provides an immersive sensory experience.   
 
The front gallery features a variety of selections from the Newcomb and Tulane Art Collections, with one area specifically featuring detailed work that benefits from closer viewing with a magnifying glass.  Another section of the gallery features works from those collections that have a story behind the artist that relates specifically to the Newcomb Art Department, and that context adds another layer of meaning to the work.  A third section of the gallery has three very different everyday objects on view for the visitor to observe carefully through the act of drawing.  Additionally, some resources on “slow looking” will be available to encourage visitors to thoughtfully engage with not only the artworks in galleries and museums, but also the visible world. 
 
Exhibition dates: November 8-24, 2022
Opening reception:  Sunday, November 7, 3 - 5 pm

For more information, contact Laura Richens (lrichens@tulane.edu).
 
[still from The Thin Veil by Jane Cassidy]

Tuesday, January 19, 2021

Undergraduate Juried Exhibition is Online!

 

Virtual exhibition gallery page
The 2020-2021 Newcomb Art Department Undergraduate Juried Exhibition, juried by Jennifer M. Williams is online! We had over 150 entries by 44 student artists. We are most grateful to Ms. Williams for her thoughtful jurying, and look forward to her virtual walkthrough this Thursday (details below).

This is the first time that our Undergraduate Juried Exhibition has been available online, so please look it over, invite friends, and join us in congratulating the artists on their work and thanking them for being a part of this experience.
 
Here is the link, and please note that the video/digital works are accessible by a link at the bottom of that page as well:
http://carrollgallery.tulane.edu/_2020Juried.htm

Also, please join us for a virtual Walkthrough with the Juror this Thursday at 6:00 pm, in lieu of our usual opening reception.  Award winners will be announced at that time! Here is the link to Thursday’s walkthrough on Zoom:
https://tulane.zoom.us/j/96071183947?pwd=QjRiK3hsU1RvVWd1ck1GYkZBNXkrQT09
Passcode: 923242

Tuesday, January 5, 2021

Undergraduate Juried Exhibition virtual walkthrough with the juror, Jennifer M. Williams

Undergraduate Juried Exhibition

Please join us on January 21, 2021 at 6:00pm on Zoom for a virtual walkthrough of the Undergraduate Juried Exhibition with this year's juror, Jennifer M. Williams. Juried Exhibition award winners will be announced at that time.

Jennifer M. Williams is the Communications Coordinator and Wordsmith at the arts service organization, Alternate ROOTS.  She is passionate about collaborating with artists, and recently served as the Public Programs Manager at the New Orleans Museum of Art.  Before taking on her role at NOMA, Williams served as the Deputy Director for the Public Experience for Prospect.4.  For six years, Williams served as the Director and Curator of the George and Leah McKenna Museum of African American Art.
As a visual art curator organizing exhibitions and performances, Ms. Williams is committed to contributing to the cultural and artistic landscape in the city and across the region.  As a part of a vibrant art community, she supports and serves on a variety of committees and boards including Junebug Productions and the New Orleans Photo Alliance.  She has participated in and led a variety of experiences around the world, including the Lagos Biennial Curatorial Intensive and the Urban Bush Women Leadership Institute in Brooklyn, NY.  She received her B.A. in History with a concentration in Art History from Georgia State University.

 Zoom Meeting ID: 960 7118 3947
Passcode: 923242

Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Carroll Gallery pop-up events - Fall 2020

Carroll Gallery pop-up events - Fall 2020
The Carroll Gallery will be hosting a trio of pop-up art events for the Tulane community this fall. The series kicks off Thursday, October 15th with an Interactive Chalkboard Mural inspired by Candy Chang’s “Before I Die” project + #ColorOurCollections, inspired by a project launched by the New York Academy of Medicine, with large-scale coloring sheets based on collections from museums, archives and other cultural institutions around the world.

On Thursday, October 22nd, join us for Recycled Journal Making. Stop by and make a small hard-cover journal out of recycled cardboard and hardware.

On Thursday, November 12th we will make Solar Prints. Gather materials to create a photogram using light, water, and photo-s ensitive paper. Inspired by Man Ray’s Rayographs.

All pop-up events are open 9:00 am – 4:00 pm in the Carroll Gallery.
 Free and open to the Tulane community. 
Social distancing: Limited to 10 people at a time in gallery.


Thursday, July 23, 2020

Art for Activism at the Carroll Gallery

Art for Activism poster
The Newcomb Art Department's Carroll Gallery is pleased to announce its premier exhibition for Fall 2020. Art for Activism is an exhibition of over 40 works organized by Art for Activism, a group of Tulane artists made up of current students as well as alumni, in support of Black Lives Matter.
Artists included in the exhibition predominantly practice in New Orleans and responded to a Call for Artists, recognizing "the power that art has to inspire discussion, revision, and a shifting of opinions and culture in a way that words often can’t."

The work in the exhibition will be sold via silent auction with proceeds going to Mobilizing Millennials, a local organization dedicated to “recovering the fabric of true American democracy and promoting social equity and economic mobility.”  Artists have been asked to submit recent work that addresses themes of systemic and individual racism and the Black Lives Matter movement, with a goal of encouraging hope and a shifting of opinions and culture towards something better.
Black Lives Matter
People can come see the work in the Carroll Gallery throughout the duration of the exhibition, August 10 - September 30, but the designated auction window will be Thursday, August 20th from 7:00 - 8:00 pm and will take place online. Art for Activism will be posting all work on their Instagram feed @art.foractivism in the weeks leading up to the auction.

Exhibition organizers:  Emery Gluck, Brandon Surtain, and Carlyn Morris
Opening date:  Monday, August 10, 2020
Gallery hours:  M – F, 9 am – 4 pm 
Silent Auction (online):  August 20th, 7:00 - 8:00 pm
Closing date: Thursday, September 3, 2020
Instagram: @art.foractivism @mobilizingmillennials

There will be no receptions in the gallery until further notice.  Viewers will be expected to wear face coverings and maintain social distance in the gallery. The Carroll Gallery is located in the Woldenberg Art Center on Tulane's uptown campus. (map )
 

Monday, June 10, 2019

Facades: new exhibition in the Carroll Gallery

Please join us for 

FACADES
Organized by Amy Crum and Marjorie Rawle

featuring works by:
Allison Beondé
Jenna DeBoisblanc
Ana Hernandez
Carlie Trosclair

Opening reception: Thursday, June 13, 5:30 – 7:30 pm
Exhibition on view June 13 – July 12, 2019

Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Undergraduate Juried Exhibition

Please join us on Thursday, November 1st, for the opening reception of the Undergraduate Juried Exhibition, from 4:30-6:30pm in the Carroll Gallery. Award winners will be announced at the opening.

The MFA Open Studio event will also take place on Thursday evening from 5:30-7:30pm.

Tuesday, October 23, 2018

Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: call for entries

On Thursday October 25th from 9am to 3pm, students may submit up to five art works to be considered for the 2018 Undergraduate Juried Exhibition.The call is open to all Tulane undergradauate students currently working towards a degree.

This year's juror is Cristina Molina, a member of the New Orleans artist-run gallery The Front where she regularly curates, exhibits her own artwork, and co-organizes The Front’s annual juried film festival. 

Works must be dropped off in person to the Carroll Gallery. Entry forms can be submitted online through the following link: https://goo.gl/forms/AY29kCuIp0nJRGpl1.

The exhibition opens on Thursday, November 1st with a reception from 4:30-6:30pm. A walkthrough with juror Cristina Molina will take place on Wednesday, November 7th at 3:00pm.
 

Thursday, October 11, 2018

In Conversation with Sally Heller

by Emily Wilkerson

New Orleans-based artist Sally Heller worked with Newcomb Art Department students for the last two weeks of September to develop the installation Mind Over Mayhem. In October, School of Liberal Arts Writer and Editor Emily Wilkerson sat down with Heller to speak about her artistic practice, her new installation in Tulane’s Carroll Gallery, and experiential learning.

Emily: Tell me a little about Mind Over Mayhem, the installation you developed in the Carroll Gallery with Tulane students.

Sally: All of my installations have titles that are a play on words, for example Bloom and Doom and Terrain Wreck, and they are usually about my general impression of the world as a chaotic place. So the idea of Mind Over Mayhem addresses what’s going on politically, and how we can bring to order these matters that are out of our control.

Emily: And how did the installation unfold?

Sally: I began the installation by accumulating low-end consumer goods, often materials or things that get used and thrown away. Then the students and I transformed these objects by bundling, cutting, and knotting them to remove them from their intended context. During the first day of installation, the students and I also applied rigging to the grid on the gallery’s ceiling, which consisted of clothesline tied in a crisscross fashion across the length of the space. At the same time, we mounted a twenty-foot photographic print onto the back wall. From there we could suspend forms, the items we collected and transformed, from the rigging and against the backdrop of the wall print. This created a three-dimensional effect—it was as though the students and I constructed a three-dimensional, abstract painting with the gallery space as our canvas.

Emily: What do you hope students gain from their experience working with you?

Sally: In constructing the installation, we made decisions about how to access the piece, where to place boundaries, and how much tension should be applied to the rigging, so the students were examining materials, planes, and space carefully. The process takes into account everything they are learning in their individual classes, such as painting and sculpture, and combines all of that into this one process.

What’s interesting to me about making this work is the potential I see in the materials themselves. And that is something I hope to impart to the students—the excitement of building with these non-traditional art materials.

Emily: Can you talk about what inspires your work?

Sally: There’s a raw energy that comes from making something with your hands, especially on a really large scale. I’m also using objects that we generally don’t pay attention to, and am turning these objects into art. By turning disposable items into something significant, you can begin to see the power in very nominal things.

Everybody’s aesthetic sensibility is really about who they are. It comes from a deep place inside you. My work and process are impacted by not wanting to stay within the boundaries of painting, a cannon that was mostly dominated by white, male artists. When I became a feminist, I realized I didn’t have to subscribe to the boundaries of painting. My process is really about me as a person.

Emily: How do you think visual art, and the liberal arts, influence the way we see and move in the world around us?

Sally: It seems that right now the political climate is all about tightening rules. And I think the liberal arts allow you to expand your thinking. I also think a liberal arts background, and exposure to the arts, allow you to have more sympathy, and not be too reactive in situations.

I believe the more knowledge you have, the better decisions you’ll make in your relationships, in your workspace, and really in every aspect of life.


Mind Over Mayhem is on view at Tulane's Carroll Gallery through October 24.

Sally Heller is a multi-material based artist who creates recognizable yet improbable landscapes constructed from cultural detritus. She has been awarded residencies at Headlands Center for the Arts, San Francisco; Civitella Ranieri, Umbertide, Italy; the Vermont Studio School, Johnson, Vermont; and Yaddo, Saratoga Springs, New York. Her work has been exhibited at the Lawndale Art Center, Houston; the Contemporary Arts Center, New Orleans; DePauw University, Greencastle, Indiana; Whitespace Gallery, Atlanta; Kemper Fine Art, New York City; and Scope, Miami, among many other sites. She holds a B.S. from University of Wisconsin and an M.F.A. from Virginia Commonwealth University.

Wednesday, October 3, 2018

Sally Heller: Mind Over Mayhem

The Carroll Gallery is pleased to announce the opening reception of Sally Heller: Mind Over Mayhem, an installation created collaboratively with Tulane University studio art students, on Thursday, October 4, 5:30 – 7:30 pm. A short walkthrough with the artist will take place at 6:00 pm. In addition the Newcomb Art Department will host an artist’s talk with Sally Heller on Thursday, October 24, at 6:00 pm in Stone Auditorium. The exhibition is on view through October 24, 2018. This exhibition is supported by the Dorothy Beckemeyer Skau Art and Music Fund at the Newcomb College Institute.

Tuesday, May 15, 2018

Bachelor of Arts Exhibition 2018

Newcomb Art Department | Tulane University
Bachelor of Arts Exhibition 2018
closing reception:  Friday, May 18, noon – 2 pm
  


Amelia Blackburn
Jacqueline Cooke
Brianna Douglass
Gali Du
Janey Hollis
Lucia Hughes
Kristian Murina
Sarah Schacht
Farah Serur
Noa Sklar
Madison Steiner
Casey Vinder
Andrew Winston
Yu Zou

Tuesday, April 24, 2018

Student Art Awards + BFA Reception

Newcomb Art Department | Tulane University

2018 Student Art Awards Night

+ Bachelor of Fine Arts Opening Reception

 
Thursday, April 26, 2018

Award Ceremony: Stone Auditorium, 6:00 pm

Stern Prize Paper – Art History Awards – Studio Art Awards

followed by BFA, Part 2, Opening Reception in the Carroll Gallery, 6:30 pm


Caroline Chase, Rubi Ferras, Megan Wolfkill

Friday, October 20, 2017

Newcomb Art in the New Wave

Charlie Tatum, left, talks with Maxwell Sandler, right, about his ceramic entry, Delilah, 2016. 
Sandler, a junior majoring in cell and molecular biology with a minor in studio art, was eager to have his piece reviewed by Tatum, editorial and communications manager for Pelican Bomb, an online arts publication, during the opening reception for the 2017 Undergraduate Juried Exhibition in Carroll Gallery.

[photo: Paula Burch-Celentano, Tulane New Wave, October 20, 2017]

Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Student Art Awards and BFA Exhibition

Celebrate with us this Thursday, April 27th!

Newcomb Art Department Student Art Awards

(includes reading of Henry Stern Prize Paper in Art History)
5:00 pm, Stone Auditorium

Bachelor of Fine Arts Exhibition

5:45 pm, Carroll Gallery



[from left, details of works by:  Marisa Chafetz, Lis Rossi, Eliza Carey, Lilith Winkler-Schor]

Monday, November 21, 2016

Newcomb Art Department Annual Holiday Sale

Newcomb Art Department  
Holiday Sale
Open to the Public
Friday and Saturday, December 2 and 3
10 am - 4 pm

* Preview night for Newcomb Art Department Alumni and special friends
also open to Newcomb Art Museum Members
 *Thursday, December 1, 6 - 8 pm

 *RSVP with Molly LeBlanc at mleblanc@tulane.edu or 504.865-5327.  
Alums: Bring a friend! 

[photo by William DePauw]