The Human Object: Explorations of the Figurative Toy (open access)

The Human Object: Explorations of the Figurative Toy

This Problem in Lieu of Thesis documents the thought processes that led to the completion of a series of five interactive sculptures. Each piece incorporates a part of the human body taken from its normal context and placed into the context of children's playground equipment.
Date: December 1999
Creator: Blytas, Christina
System: The UNT Digital Library

Precision Atomic Spectroscopy with an Integrated Electro- Optic Modulator and DBR Diode Laser at 1083nm

Access: Use of this item is restricted to the UNT Community
We have explored the use of recently developed high speed integrated electro optic modulators and DBR diode lasers as a tool for precision laser studies of atoms. In particular, we have developed a technique using a high speed modulator as a key element and applied it to the study of the fine structure of the 23P state of atomic helium. This state has been of long standing interest in atomic physics and its study has been the aim of several recent experiments using various precision techniques. We present our method and results, which will describe a new method for determining the fine structure constant, and lead to a precision test of atomic theory.
Date: December 1999
Creator: Castillega, Jaime
System: The UNT Digital Library

Exploration of Sculpture

Access: Use of this item is restricted to the UNT Community
The images that I sculpt deal with reflections of human traits. Wood lends itself to this endeavor, offering minimal resistance to manipulation. Keeping the origin and qualities of the material while manipulating it into another object is a statement within itself. Letting the wood do what it does naturally keeps the viewer in touch with the fact it is still just an object of nature. Wood does not make itself any less real because of the relationship of the sculpture to it as wood.
Date: December 1999
Creator: Coldewey, Charles
System: The UNT Digital Library

Empowerment: The Paradigm for Success for the Nursing Homes of the 21st Century

Access: Use of this item is restricted to the UNT Community
For a workplace to be successful, it needs to have a higher morale, thus leading to higher quality of care for residents. For a workplace to be successful in empowerment, it must have developed strong teams, and everyone must work as a team and respect one another. The research for this paper focused on many issues. The most important part of my research came from a study of the nursing assistants at Jennings Hall (JH) in Garfield, Ohio. From the data received, I concluded that the two biggest problems in many nursing homes are lack of respect and lack of team-centered attitude.
Date: December 1999
Creator: Connorton, Margaret L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Methods and Meditations upon Portraiture: Inside Out (open access)

Methods and Meditations upon Portraiture: Inside Out

In this proposed study, I had hoped to discover new strategies to develop imagery. I also wanted to know if using strategies in my work that expressed the psyche of myself, would work to express the psyche of other people. By using new and old strategies, I wanted to see not only if the outside face of people in photographs could be misread but if the inside face of people could be expressed.
Date: December 1994
Creator: Lee-Miller, Peggy
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exploring Suicide Through Painting (open access)

Exploring Suicide Through Painting

A continuing goal of my work has been the desire to evoke strong emotive responses in relation to imagery. The content of this body of work deals with suicide, utilizing text with imagery. The content of this body of work deals with suicide, utilizing text with imagery. I have explored in this body of work the aspects of suicide and how it relates to the individual as well as the family.
Date: December 1995
Creator: Thompson, Larry
System: The UNT Digital Library
Field Programmable Devices and Reconfigurable Computing (open access)

Field Programmable Devices and Reconfigurable Computing

The motivation behind this research has been the idea of the capability of the computing device to dynamically reconfigure itself. The goal of this work is to measure the computational power of reconfigurable machines rather in an abstract manner by proposing a model the FPGAs abstract computing machines. Modeling FPGAs in terms of Automata Theory would give a base to answer more fundamental questions about the capabilities and possible answers. If a Finite State Machine (FSM) or a Turing Machine (TM) has the capability of reconfiguring its finite control, does this ability give the abstract computing device new computational power. In other words is a reconfigurable FSM, TM or a Cellular Automata more powerful than their corresponding non-configurable versions?
Date: December 1995
Creator: Koyuncu, Osman
System: The UNT Digital Library
Like Random Piles of Debris in My Mind (open access)

Like Random Piles of Debris in My Mind

In this project, I further examined my work as a fictional layering of vernacular culture within the discourse of historical art. This investigation addressed the sources of my art, both in the outside world and in the context of an inherited art tradition. I focused on the issues of the formation and function of my work as an estheticized representation of this culture.
Date: December 1993
Creator: Garrett, Randall D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Analysis of Retained Two Dimensional Elements in a Three Dimensional Sculptural Format (open access)

An Analysis of Retained Two Dimensional Elements in a Three Dimensional Sculptural Format

The object of this problem in lieu of thesis has been the exploration and identification of the retained two dimensional design idiom in the sculptural format of my work. (By this, I am referring to the lateral, planar quality which often continues as part of my designs.)
Date: December 1991
Creator: Trimble, H. Carl III
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Use of Symbolic Imagery Through the Decorative Qualities of Majolica (open access)

The Use of Symbolic Imagery Through the Decorative Qualities of Majolica

For the purpose of this study I intended to use Majolica to allow me both more flexibility in the physical act of decorating my ceramic work, as well as the opportunity for the expansion of my selection of symbols. During this investigation the following questions were addressed: 1. Was the color range attainable with Majolica relevant to my work? 2. Was my chosen imagery complemented by the special properties of Majolica. 3. Did the textural possibilities of Majolica benefit my work?
Date: December 1990
Creator: Lipscomb, Loretta T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pattern: Literal and Metaphorical (open access)

Pattern: Literal and Metaphorical

My work contains physical and illusionary layers of images which reflect or relate cultural and personal experiences. These experiences address collective cultural patterns or personal and collective experience simultaneously. Visual metaphorical and literal patterns represent behavior and experiences. Inherent in the presentation of these types of patterns and experiences is the implication of time and the relationships between old, new, and changed experience. One vehicle for effectively portraying these linear layers of literal/metaphorical images in fibers could be visual images representing a metaphorical pattern combined with literal patterns. The literal pattern would either reflect or have a relationship with the metaphorical pattern. Another vehicle for expressing the linear layers of images could be varying representations of depth of field exist.
Date: December 1995
Creator: Ridenour, Elise
System: The UNT Digital Library
Concept Vs. Intuition: A Study Into the Personal Understanding of Images (open access)

Concept Vs. Intuition: A Study Into the Personal Understanding of Images

I was curious as to what my work was about and what images were important to me. There had to be a reason why I was driven to do what I did, whether it was a conscious, conceptual purpose or a subconscious, intuitive reason. The problem of this investigation was to discover which of these I used in the creation of my images or whether I used both.
Date: December 1990
Creator: Student, Cheryl L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Injuring Eternity (open access)

Injuring Eternity

I endeavored to investigate how temporal forms could be used as an avenue for addressing my sculptural concerns. These concerns included the relationship of form to material, the temporary manifestation of enduring principles, and responsibility to materials and their meanings. My pursuit of this investigation arose from both a search for alternatives in a field with a tradition of permanent object orientation and an effort to expand my own perceptions of what constitutes sculpture and the activity of sculpting.
Date: December 1997
Creator: Neumann, Cristophe
System: The UNT Digital Library
In Search of Depth (open access)

In Search of Depth

In this proposed study, I hoped to discover compositional elements that once added to the work would convey my conceptual ideas. I was interested in exploring the addition of deep pictorial space and increasing the size disparity between the figures as possible solutions for injecting a level of irony and/or eluding to the subverted agenda of the content. I wanted to see if these two secondary compositional adjustments subtly conveyed not only a strategic contradiction of the art historical concept of expressionism but the numerous accepted truths in society.
Date: December 1993
Creator: Bhagwat, Tanya A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Influence of the Exploration of Scale on the Responses Made in Sculpture (open access)

The Influence of the Exploration of Scale on the Responses Made in Sculpture

The purpose of this problem-in-lieu of thesis is to explore the effect of scale in my sculpture, on me as an artist as well as the viewer. My work addressed the following questions: 1. Can smaller-than-life-size sculpture communicate with the same intensity as my previous life-size work? 2. How does scale affect the ability of the work to communicate ideas and feelings? 3. Can the sculpture be as confrontational without occupying space as we do? 4. Does a larger-than-life-size piece gain intensity in any of these questions due to its scale? 5. How does scale affect my feelings toward the work and my method of working?
Date: December 1990
Creator: Kneip, Kathryn L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Looking Through a Window (open access)

Looking Through a Window

Each of the pieces in this study was a single room structure which incorporated a window. The scale varied depending on whether the piece as a whole or in part was to be worn.
Date: December 1990
Creator: Greene, Melody
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Commemoration of Womanhood Through Small Sculpture/Jewelry (open access)

The Commemoration of Womanhood Through Small Sculpture/Jewelry

The triumphs over daily conflicts correspond to monuments that commemorate specific events of my life as a woman. The monuments commemorating these events necessitated an intimate format because the events depicted deserve close personal attention. The intimate scale offers the option of being presented as a sculpture with a base that has a detachable, wearable part.
Date: December 1993
Creator: Scott, Michelle Milner
System: The UNT Digital Library
Loss Versus Hope: A Printmaker's Investigation (open access)

Loss Versus Hope: A Printmaker's Investigation

Using this conflict between death and dying versus hope and new life, I searched for an undogmatic way to convey a Christian antidote to the despair and ugliness of post modern art. The struggle was to find the imagery, format, and media combinations to express a vision, with realism and hope, for the late twentieth century, in a unique and interesting context.
Date: December 1993
Creator: Clevenger, Sara Lisbeth Brown
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Exploration of Organic and Geometric Form Combined in Stone Sculpture (open access)

An Exploration of Organic and Geometric Form Combined in Stone Sculpture

Dualities of all kinds exist in the world today. Being a visual artist and sculptor I recognize these dualities every day of my life in the natural and man-made forms I see. These forms can be broken down into two categories: the geometric and the organic. The purpose of this problem in lieu of thesis was to explore how organic and geometric form could be combined to create a unified sculpture in stone and how the finished sculpture affected me as a viewer. The figure was the main organic form represented and addressed in this problem.
Date: December 1993
Creator: Rippeon, Wesley P. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Imagery of "Man": An Analysis of Ten Paintings and Their Related Imagery (open access)

The Imagery of "Man": An Analysis of Ten Paintings and Their Related Imagery

The Isle of Man and Southeast Texas both display unique aspects of their geographical localities. In many ways they share similar attributes. I feel strongly that we are a product of our past and of our surroundings. So what type of imagery can be dealt with as a personal icon to link the two diverse places of my past and present?
Date: December 1990
Creator: Kennaugh, Don Michael
System: The UNT Digital Library
Masks and Nature (open access)

Masks and Nature

The intention of my mask-making was to present a body of work that visually captured my many encounters with spiritual presences in nature. From my perspective, these spiritual presences can be described most effectively as Platonic ideals, or the blueprints from which all physical forms are derived. These spirits are, therefore, the life breath and animating force behind the material world. I wanted to transcend the mere physical manifestations of nature and create in the masks a primary vehicle or conduit for the spiritual presences that I sensed in nature.
Date: December 1990
Creator: Cato, Maribeth
System: The UNT Digital Library
Between Seeing and Knowing (open access)

Between Seeing and Knowing

I intended to create a body of work using a variety of media and a combination of imagery that is both subjective and objective in regards to representation. I incorporated into the work, words and phrases which are not related to the imagery. This has allowed the work to be variously interpreted. I wanted certain elements of the work to appear simultaneously very old and very new.
Date: December 1991
Creator: Middleton, Michael D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Manipulations in Utilitarian Ceramics (open access)

Manipulations in Utilitarian Ceramics

The objective of this study was to obtain an aesthetically pleasing surface, by altering the surface to enhance a particular form. I incorporated plant and landscape imagery from my past experiences.
Date: December 1996
Creator: Ochs, Raymond Lee
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Creation of New Metaphors Out of Symbols From the Past (open access)

The Creation of New Metaphors Out of Symbols From the Past

In order to become more aware of valuable characteristics that may be unique to the paintings and/or the books, I proposed to execute a body of work consisting of four sets, each set containing one painting and one book. I continued using religious icons as subject matter and the motif of the layered pentimento of the fresco as a metaphor for self-investigation.
Date: December 1991
Creator: Gibson, Lambrini Piskioulis
System: The UNT Digital Library