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GEOS Visualization And Lagrangian dynamics Immersive eXtended Reality Tool (VALIXR) for Scientific Discovery (open access)

GEOS Visualization And Lagrangian dynamics Immersive eXtended Reality Tool (VALIXR) for Scientific Discovery

Data management plan for the grant, "GEOS Visualization And Lagrangian dynamics Immersive eXtended Reality Tool (VALIXR) for Scientific Discovery."
Date: 2022-07-12/2024-07-11
Creator: West, Ruth
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gullah Geechee Visuality as Protest Art, Contemplative Practice, and Anti-Racist Pedagogy (open access)

Gullah Geechee Visuality as Protest Art, Contemplative Practice, and Anti-Racist Pedagogy

This article centers two fabric assemblage pieces the author created in response to the Black Lives Matter protests of the summer 2020.
Date: April 19, 2022
Creator: Brown, Kathy J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Black Hair as Metaphor Explored through Duoethnography and Arts-Based Research (open access)

Black Hair as Metaphor Explored through Duoethnography and Arts-Based Research

This article presents a duoethnographic, critical arts-based research project, which began as a pre-recorded, on-demand presentation for the 2021 National Art Education Association Annual Convention. This is an edited, expanded print version of the authors' conference session examining hair as text and sites of identity/respectability politics, positionality, rites of passage, liminality, and selfhood.
Date: 2021
Creator: Brown, Kathy J. & Gilbert, Lynnette M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Artist interviews and revisionist art history: women of African descent, critical practice and methods of rewriting dominant narratives (open access)

Artist interviews and revisionist art history: women of African descent, critical practice and methods of rewriting dominant narratives

Article reflecting on over ten years of conducting and collecting interviews with and by women artists of African descent in a variety of formats (e.g. narrative arts writing, academic research and documentary film/video) to note the specific ways that artists’ interviews help to rewrite art-historical narratives.
Date: December 2020
Creator: Cross, Lauren E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Anti-racist Pedagogy in Art Education: K-12/Higher Education captions transcript

Anti-racist Pedagogy in Art Education: K-12/Higher Education

Video recording featuring co-hosts Lauren Cross, Ph.D., and Kathy Brown, Ph.D., engage in ongoing conversations about anti-racist pedagogy in the arts and design. Joined by distinguished guest panelists, Joni Boyd Acuff, Ph.D., and James Haywood Rolling Jr., Ed.D., this first installment of the 2044 series introduces Afrofuturism and the ways that it can help reimagine art discourses, laying the groundwork for establishing Afrofuturism as a framework for conceptualizing and enacting anti-racist art education practice. In addition to sharing their work and how it relates to Afrofuturism and futurist thinking, the panelists discuss how recognizing Black and Brown artists and advocating for racial literacy is essential to creating and maintaining a racial consciousness practice in K-12 education.
Date: February 12, 2021
Creator: Brown, Kathy J.; Cross, Lauren E.; Acuff, Joni Boyd & Rolling, James Haywood, Jr.
Object Type: Video
System: The UNT Digital Library

Victor, Not a Victim

Work of art of oil on canvas by artist Hannah Aaron as part of a 2020 MFA Exhibition, entitled "A Narrative Rewritten"
Date: 2020
Creator: Aaron, Hannah
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library

Navigating the Waters: 1

Work of art of exhibition: monotype, screenprint by artist Aunna Escobedo, as part of a 2020 MFA Exhibition, entitled "Navigating the Waters". L to R: A Swiftness, Accumulating: slow and steady, Shifting: between states.
Date: 2020
Creator: Escobedo, Aunna
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library

Heather Leigh Hoskins, Untitled (Growths: Diaphanous #1), 2020

Work of art of Glass, paper, fibers, crochet, resin, ink, paint by artist Heather Hoskins, as part of a 2020 MFA Exhibition, entitled "Visceral Reflections".
Date: 2020
Creator: Hoskins, Heather
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library

Untitled (Growths: Diaphanous #5)

Work of art of Glass, paper, fibers, ink, paint by artist Heather Hoskins, as part of a 2020 MFA Exhibition, entitled "Visceral Reflections".
Date: 2020
Creator: Hoskins, Heather
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library

Untitled (Growths: Diaphanous #7)

Work of art of Glass, paper, fibers, crochet, bronze, ink, paint by artist Heather Hoskins, as part of a 2020 MFA Exhibition, entitled "Visceral Reflections".
Date: 2020
Creator: Hoskins, Heather
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library

Heather Leigh Hoskins, Visceral Reflections, 2020

Work of art of Mixed Media Immersive Installation by artist Heather Hoskins, as part of a 2020 MFA Exhibition, entitled "Visceral Reflections".
Date: 2020
Creator: Hoskins, Heather
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library

Solace I - Detail

Work of art of tea bags, bed sheet, book remnants, string, steel by artist Traci O’Dwyer as part of a 2020 MFA Exhibition, entitled "Of My Own Making".
Date: 2020
Creator: O’Dwyer, Traci
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library

Memory Beast (Installation View)

Work of art in laser cut cardboard, CNC routed wood, vinyl by artist Morgan Grasham as part of her 2020 exhibition, entitled "Memory Beast".Image of installation view of 2020 MFA exhibition by artist , entitled "Memory Beast".
Date: 2020
Creator: Grasham, Morgan
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library
One Thing at Least is Certain (open access)

One Thing at Least is Certain

Diana Rojas explores the hidden and invisible through interdisciplinary collaboration and conversation across fields such as Philosophy, Music Composition, Physics, Material Science and Visual Art. The tools and environments she creates - by utilizing the archaic and contemporary, the digital and sculptural, known and unknown, and the minute and immersive -culminate in experiential works that prompt viewers to slow down and inspire introspection. The slowing down that these works provoke raises questions about existence, reality and being. By combining materials and elements of theories and devices of exploration, she references their antecedents, but creates new opportunities for viewer investigation. This includes utilizing creative coding, video, 3D modeling, welding steel, kiln forming and soldering glass, and cutilizing sand as projection screens. Additionally, she utilizes sound and light to create captivating installations, inspired by interest in the influence that immaterial forces have on human minds and decisions.
Date: May 2023
Creator: Ponce, Diana Rojas
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
From Every Depth of Good and Ill (open access)

From Every Depth of Good and Ill

Titled after a poem by Edgar Allan Poe, From Every Depth of Good and Ill, is an exhibition composed of vignettes created with ceramic sculpture, ephemeral installation works, and printmaking. The work primarily references domesticity and antiquated subjects to illustrate the process of coping with past trauma and the resultant feelings of shame, inadequacy, and incompleteness. Marked by a palette of warm rust and sepia, aged patterning, and worn textures, the tableau of objects presented within the space mimic old familial photographs. Each resulting work serves as a dirty looking-glass for the viewer to peer through.
Date: May 2023
Creator: Gibson, Jacob Tylor
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Candalaria Paredes and Delores Martinez (open access)

Candalaria Paredes and Delores Martinez

My work explores my identity as a Latino, veteran, and father, and counteracts the lack of positive representation of men of color in society. While they are similar to traditional piñatas in their design and construction, my sculptures are based on abstract representations of my internalized identity. These anthropomorphic forms stand rather than being hung, enacting ownership over their space. This allows them to take on a newly assigned identity and presence. These forms allow me to display, articulate, and communicate. the struggles I have experienced throughout my life because of systemic oppression.
Date: May 2023
Creator: Martinez, Saxon
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Rainbows, Stones & Ghosts (open access)

Rainbows, Stones & Ghosts

Rainbows, Stones and Ghosts is a two-part exhibition of multi-dimensional drawings about the almost and the not-yet-made. My Project-in-Lieu-of Thesis exists physically as a series of oil paintings, works on paper, and a site-specific sculptural installation. With recurring imagery of rainbows, stones, and construction debris, the works reimagine their subjects as icons and objects of potential. Highlighting time, labor, and material, my project questions the creation of value, status, and the concept of the ‘ideal’. My drawings dissolve the boundary between the absence and presence by continuously breaking down, expanding, and reimagining their surfaces, subjects, and sites. Rainbows, Stones and Ghosts is an invitation to navigate the ‘almost’ as an immersive space of possibility.
Date: May 2023
Creator: DePetris, Sarah
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Oil People (open access)

Oil People

My ceramics are composed of two bodies of work poised against one another, one rendered in porcelain and colored inclusion stains combined in processes rooted within the practices of laminating clay, and the other made of brutal metallic black stoneware. The first are made of landscapes and abstractly depict them, while the latter represent ways in which we consume oil literally and metaphorically. Within myself are conflicting desires for convenient access to my environment and the loss of biodiversity caused by my unsustainable use of it. This is the core of the conflict between my pieces and my intention in making work is to embody my relationship with nature as influenced by my familial context in the US. All of the vessels are designed to be functional, but to serve used motor oil instead of food or drink. If the purpose of the objects is to represent my relationship with nature and the iteration of days, then the performance of them is meant to invoke the recognition of multiform oil consumption and the effect it has on my life.
Date: May 2023
Creator: Grasham, Eric
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Inside, Outside, Under (open access)

Inside, Outside, Under

My ceramic works utilize a heightened sensory perception to encourage a prolonged engagement with the handcrafted objects. With an emphasis on repetition, I create individual rings from clay coils and interlink them in complex, radial configurations to produce a malleable, geometric network designed to respond to the user's movements. The work revolves around dichotomies: hard/soft, delicate/strong, inspired by clay's chemical alterations in the firing. Each malleable pattern preserves the fluid movement the pliable clay begins with. Overall, the abundance of ornament elevates the object, transforming an everyday object into something intended for special occasions or moments for the self.
Date: May 2023
Creator: Segrest, Courtney
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Times-Mu-Ta-Tion (open access)

Times-Mu-Ta-Tion

My work as an American artist (Korean diaspora) reflects the interplay of diverse cultures and locations that have shaped my experiences. Through the exploration of photo and video archives from my travels, I uncover patterns and images that symbolize both place and transition. Utilizing digital technology, I fragment and reconstruct visual elements, evoking a sense of longing and disconnection. I also investigate the relationship between the body and space, using multi-modal responses. My work aims to capture dualities and stimulate contemplative meditation through the juxtaposition of tangible and intangible, clear and hazy, large and small, and intimate and distant elements.
Date: May 2023
Creator: Suh, Jae-Eun
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
AI, Arts & Design: Questioning Learning Machines (open access)

AI, Arts & Design: Questioning Learning Machines

Article is an introduction to Artnodes issue No. 26, “AI, Arts & Design: Questioning Learning Machines" which addresses the question: Does generative and machine creativity in the arts and design represent an evolution of “artistic intelligence,” or is it a metamorphosis of creative practice yielding fundamentally distinct forms and modes of authorship?
Date: July 2020
Creator: West, Ruth & Burbano, Andres
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Anti-racist Pedagogy in Art and Museums captions transcript

Anti-racist Pedagogy in Art and Museums

Video recording featuring guest panelists, Stephanie A. Johnson-Cunningham, and Kelli Morgan, Ph.D., this third installment of the 2044 series frames Afrofuturism and futurist thinking in museum practice to examine the roles museums play in maintaining and recreating anti-blackness and white supremacy. Panelists discuss how museum educators and curators can practice anti-racist pedagogy and thinking. Racist and colonial practices of museums need greater racial equity and recognition. Through the use of visual imagery, Afrofuturism as a framework may be a viable strategy for community building, imagination, and expression. Recognizing that museums are rooted in white colonial narratives that have been and continue to be oppressive to Black and people of color, museums can amplify Black experiences and narratives while pointing out the need for systemic change in the sector. From the periphery of colonial violence and commodification to the centrality of visibility and recognition, museum education can provide opportunities to “analyze how racism shapes how we view, discuss, create, and engage multiple audiences within the museums.”
Date: April 9, 2021
Creator: Brown, Kathy J.; Cross, Lauren E.; Johnson-Cunningham, Stephanie A. & Morgan, Kelli
Object Type: Video
System: The UNT Digital Library

Close-Up of Instagram Crop Top

Works of art on mixed media by artist Christine Drake-Thomas as part of a 2022 MFA exhibition, entitled "The Third-Party Pop-Up Shop" in the Cora Stafford Gallery South, 1201 W Mulberry St, Denton, TX 76201, from April 13th to 16th, 2022.
Date: 2021
Creator: Drake-Thomas, Christine
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library

Google Crop Top

Works of art from artist's Google Chrome Search History from June-July 2021, digital print on cotton, resin-coated digital print on Masonite, resin hanger, printed tags, by artist Christine Drake-Thomas as part of a 2022 MFA exhibition, entitled "The Third-Party Pop-Up Shop" in the Cora Stafford Gallery South, 1201 W Mulberry St, Denton, TX 76201, from April 13th to 16th, 2022.
Date: 2021
Creator: Drake-Thomas, Christine
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library