Language

Sequin jumpsuit

Jumpsuit of multicolored, hand embroidered sequins in trompe l'oeil textile appearing as crocheted wool yarn squares. Sequin work accomplished through sequin sequencing, which is accomplished partially through digital technology. Long, flared sleeves; bell bottom pant legs. Rounded neckline. Center back zipper closure. Designer label: Ashish
Date: Autumn 2019
Creator: ASHISH & Gupta, Ashish
Object Type: Physical Object
System: The UNT Digital Library

Pastel Pink

Work of art of oil on canvas by artist Hannah Aaron as part of a 2020 MFA Exhibition, entitled "A Narrative Rewritten"
Date: 2019
Creator: Aaron, Hannah
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library

Power Punch

Work of art of oil on canvas by artist Hannah Aaron as part of a 2020 MFA Exhibition, entitled "A Narrative Rewritten"
Date: 2019
Creator: Aaron, Hannah
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library
Phoebe Adams: BFA Fibers Senior Exhibition Artist Statement (open access)

Phoebe Adams: BFA Fibers Senior Exhibition Artist Statement

Artist Statement for the Bachelor's of Fine Arts degree Fibers Senior Exhibition
Date: May 2019
Creator: Adams, Phoebe
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library

Phoebe Adams: BFA Fibers Senior Exhibition Photographs

Photographs from the Bachelor's of Fine Arts degree Fibers Senior Exhibition
Date: May 2019
Creator: Adams, Phoebe
Object Type: Photograph
System: The UNT Digital Library
Who's Next? (open access)

Who's Next?

Artist Statement from the MFA Exhibition: "My work expresses personal experiences dealing with race, identity, and social critique. As an African American woman born and raised in Texas, it is common for me to be the only black face in white spaces. Being framed as the "other" has been ingrained in my existence, affecting the way I navigate through life. Throughout my time in graduate school, I have constructed my own framework of identity. Referencing history and its permanent effects on the present, my work explores the internal and external complexities of being a black woman in America today."
Date: May 2019
Creator: Barnes, Taylor
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library

Cobbled Sketchbook Page

Work of art of Ballpoint Pen by artist Jordan Black as part of a 2020 MFA Exhibition, entitled "Heeding the Underbelly"
Date: 2019
Creator: Black, Jordan
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library

Marina Cano: BFA Fibers Senior Exhibition

Presentation from the Bachelor's of Fine Arts degree Fibers Senior Exhibition
Date: May 2019
Creator: Cano, Marina
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Marina Cano: BFA Fibers Senior Exhibition Artist Statement (open access)

Marina Cano: BFA Fibers Senior Exhibition Artist Statement

Artist Statement from the Bachelor's of Fine Arts degree Fibers Senior Exhibition
Date: May 2019
Creator: Cano, Marina
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Draw Me Near: Artist Statement (open access)

Draw Me Near: Artist Statement

Photographs from the MFA Exhibition "Draw Me Near" as shown at the Cora Stafford Gallery.
Date: March 27, 2019
Creator: Casillas, Horacio
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Draw Me Near: Video captions transcript

Draw Me Near: Video

Timelapsed video from the MFA Exhibition "Draw Me Near" as shown at the Cora Stafford Gallery. In this video, friends, family members, and colleagues dine with the artist during the exhibition.
Date: March 27, 2019
Creator: Casillas, Horacio
Object Type: Video
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beauty Remains, Object Portraiture (open access)

Beauty Remains, Object Portraiture

Artist Statement from the MFA Exhibition: "This body of work contains digital photographs, sculptures and wallpapers to highlight a personal journey through motherhood. Traditionally, the roles of a new mother have been handed down from generation to generation. A mother teaches her daughter how to soothe her fussy infant, her domestic responsibilities, to maintain her feminine mystique. Though many of these traditions of mouth to ear to mouth familial heritage continue, today’s society inundated women with visual language to remind them that although they can challenge the traditions and their choice to participate, those same discarded ideals of how to act or perform will continue to tug at the shoulder. "
Date: May 2019
Creator: DeSoto, Megan A.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library

[View of Installation Title for "Beauty Remains" MFA Exhibition]

Work of art in digital image by artist Megan A. DeSoto as part of a 2019 MFA Exhibition, entitled "Beauty Remains, Object Portraiture"
Date: 2019
Creator: DeSoto, Megan A.
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library
Live With It! (open access)

Live With It!

Artist Statement from the MFA Exhibition: "I did everything right. I counted my carbs, meal prepped, and joined the high school volleyball team (For exercise of course. Heaven forbid it be for fun). All growing up, I always assumed that things would get so much easier when I stepped into adulthood. I would be comfortable in my body. Spoiler Alert, that didn’t happen. Before this starts to sound like a Judy Blume novel, let me explain. A shot of apple cider vinegar, 13 vitamins, gluten free diet, and portion control. These are all aspects of my routine that I dread but they keep me going. The concept of routine as composition really resonated with me when I first made these dietary changes. Much like repeated elements in a composition, repeated elements in my routine are what keep me going, help me function, and make me a successful composition (or human, whatever you want to call it). So why do I get bogged down by the objects that are supposed to be helping me? As a woman who has been on some sort of diet since age 12, it was difficult to come to terms with the fact that your body …
Date: May 2019
Creator: Deal, Lyndee
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library

Luck.O.Matic

Work of art of mixed media by artist Caron Dessoye as part of a 2020 MFA Exhibition, entitled "Lucky You".
Date: 2019
Creator: Dessoye, Caron
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library
Trappings (open access)

Trappings

Artist Statement from the MFA Exhibition: "Trappings is a huntress’ vanity room installation, exhibiting the duality of being feminine while utilizing masculine skills and traits. Keela Dee Dooley is a metalsmith from southwest Virginia, in the Appalachian Mountains where southern culture has gender expectations, stereotypes, and misconceptions. Working in what is considered a “man’s world” she challenges the expected role of a young woman by being skilled in a traditionally male dominated field, ferrous metalsmithing, and referencing the traditionally male dominated practice of hunting. Breaking the boundaries of industrial equipment and material, she creates elegant yet intimidating wearable sculptures out of steel on the CNC Plasma Cutter."
Date: May 2019
Creator: Dooley, Keela Dee
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library

Collective Memories Dinneware

Work of art in MDF, paper (Paper mache of museum visitor responses on paper) by artist Karla Garcia part of a 2019 MFA Exhibition, entitled "Uncertain Ground."
Date: 2019
Creator: Garcia, Karla
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library

Memory objects

Work of art (variable dimensions) in paper (paper mache objects of visitor responses) by artist Karla Garcia part of a 2019 MFA Exhibition, entitled "Uncertain Ground."
Date: 2019
Creator: Garcia, Karla
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library
Uncertain Ground (open access)

Uncertain Ground

Artist Statement from the MFA Exhibition: "In my artwork I explore my concept of home in relation to my memories growing up in the border cities of Juarez, Chihuahua and El Paso, Texas. Being a young immigrant, the only constants in my life were my sense of home and the common landscape on both sides of the border. In order to create a connection of that time and place, I investigate materials that are symbolic to my Mexican heritage and my life in the United States through the combination of traditional handwork and digital fabrication. I utilize various materials such as clay and corn husks, unifying them through the formal elements of value, line, and shape. My work becomes abstracted to symbolize the passage of time and the way in which our memories are imperfect representations of events."
Date: May 2019
Creator: Garcia, Karla
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Double Dare (open access)

Double Dare

Artist Statement from the MFA exhibition: In my recent work, I explore my identity as a first-generation American, using my painting practice to think about early memories of living in-between two cultures. These remembered moments allow a space for me to consider how both cultures merge. Portraying vivid memories through colorful recognizable objects and body parts, memories take on a new context, showing the passage of time, and reflecting on how memories take on new meaning. My desire to save these moments relates to my wish to name what makes me belong, and what marks me as unique, within the two cultures in which I exist.
Date: November 2019
Creator: Giron, Cynthia
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bewildering Genealogy (open access)

Bewildering Genealogy

Artist Statement from the MFA Exhibition: "When I left my parents to venture out into the world alone, my white privilege was stripped. While my racial background is not white, I was raised by white parents who had two biological children. Being raised this way afforded me the comfort and ability to pass through life with little to no danger of being hurt, being granted permission to be anywhere I wanted, never shut out because of my color. I still have access to many of those things because I am still my parents' daughter. I am however increasingly aware of the color of skin and how I am perceived in the context of being on my own, a single, bi/asexual artist. I also learned of my membership in a club of other people of color that I didn’t know I belonged, small and yet furiously protective of its members. A language of nods, shrugs, and eye to eye glances are a part of the language of the club, our nonverbal communication that validates our presence in a white world. much of the work this group does involves teaching and explaining why we exist as a unit separate from the world …
Date: May 2019
Creator: Janke, Sarah
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library

Image of Collection 1 and 2 as well as Signage for MFA Thesis Show

Work of art of installation image by artist Sarah Janke as part of a 2019 MFA Exhibition, entitled "Bewildering Genealogy"
Date: 2019
Creator: Janke, Sarah
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library

You Know What to Do

Work of art in reclaimed textbook, tape, gesso by artist Matthew Johnson as part of a 2021 MFA Exhibition, entitled "Phantom Pain." (Reclaimed surgeon textbook featuring diagrams that were appropriated into pieces in the show, as explained in the Project Report.)
Date: 2019
Creator: Johnson, Matthew
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library
Potty Talk (open access)

Potty Talk

Artist Statement from the MFA Exhibition: "I create figurative sculptures that explore the anxieties and rituals of acceptance. These sculptures embody ambiguous, self-referential narratives that act as a resolution between myself and my anxieties. My work is primarily ceramic because clay is an extremely intuitive medium, allowing me to explore the figure from both an emotional aesthetic and an anatomical scrutiny. I am also interested in multiplicity and its visual relation to habits and rituals. Repetition can be a very calming activity, but it can cause adverse effects as well. I am interested in that fine line between compulsive and compulsory."
Date: May 2019
Creator: Larrabee, Teresa Kaye
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library