Skip Navigation

Department of Art

May 22 2012 - 1:26pm

Participants in the fast-paced Introduction to Drawn Environments class executed these colossal wall works in only three days before taking them down, starting the series of transformations that the gallery and various spaces in the Trahern Building will undergo as the students work and construct their art pieces. Until June 1st, student work can be seen in the building  in various states of completion.. "Oceano", by Nicole Santoyo "Opposite Reaction", by Darrell Sheffield "Opposite Reaction" by Darrel Sheffield "Delusions of Rapture", By Derrick Wilson "Constellations in Bloom", by Tyler Foster "Urban Streets", by Amy Hall "Thosand Years", by Brittany Kluck "Self Portrait: Meditative Vision of the Enlightened Artist", by Tommy Braden "Murmaider", by Christina Crawford "Spider Web", by Stephanie Parkans

May 22 2012 - 11:36am

Art students proudly displayed their finished work before tearing it down and beginning on a new piece. After beginning a drawing on location, they then blew up the drawing to an enormous scale by using a grid technique or projection. At such large sizes, the works took on a whole new attitude.

Darrell's scrambled office Tyler's tower Stephanie's suggestive stairwell Nicole's decrepit bathroom Brittany's spiraling Sundquist staircase Amy's angular archway Christina's colorful architectural landscape Derek's all-seeing pyramid
May 22 2012 - 11:23am

Eleven pioneering APSU art students are creating incredible mural sized drawings this Maymester as part of Prof Collins’ Special Topics Class, Introduction to Drawn Environments. Stop by Trahern and check out these incredible pieces in the works until June 1.

Chrtistina Crawford working work in progress Amy Hall Tyler Foster works in progress Derrick Wilson Darrell Shefield works in progress
May 15 2012 - 2:04pm

Horror.jpg

Horror Stories is a web-based artwork that enables an interactive and collaborative film-making experience. The work is not a film per se, it is a contemporary update and visual equivalent to ghost stories told around a campfire. That everyone wants to shoot a horror film might be an exaggeration, but the genre’s signature low budgets, repetitive motifs, and minimal narratives make the feat possible for many amateurs and fans. In Horror Stories the viewer’s experience depends on his or her own expectations of horror films. Programming by Julie Gill.

Visit Terminal

May 15 2012 - 2:00pm

digital_graffiti.png

“This one of a kind juried festival allows digital artists to explore how their fluid forms intersect with technology and wrap the architecture of Alys Beach to create entirely new art forms. Guests who attend Digital Graffiti are able to view these installments and glimpse the latest in digital art and technology.”

http://www.digitalgraffiti.com/