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

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
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
Floating Life (open access)

Floating Life

Photography, as a way of recording, is often high-definition and highly descriptive. Therefore, photography has a close relationship with visual perception. In my soft and abstract photographic images, the particularity of time and place is deliberately diluted, and the traditional objects in the photographic images are eliminated to challenge the viewer to locate themselves in relation to the photographs. The ambiguity of the photograph stimulates the viewer's self-consciousness to the greatest extent, while also spurring profound examination of the particular ways one expects photographs to affect them.
Date: May 2020
Creator: Ning, Siyu
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fractured Terrains (open access)

Fractured Terrains

Since my youth in Ukraine, I have been inspired by the first cosmonaut, Yuri Gagarin, who went to outer space in April 1961. Since then I have been imagining the fragments of an unknown space that is divided into a variety of different felt locations. I am interested in envisioning fractured terrains, where the intrusion of sharp elements interact with a soft transparent and atmospheric space. I want to create a sense of discord as a metaphorical reflection on the absurd, political situation in Ukraine where I am originally from. For me, navigating or transitioning from one imaginary space to another through the act of making painting feels equivalent to experiencing a new place for the first time.
Date: May 2020
Creator: Vasyutynska, Laura
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Gainsay Taxonomies (open access)

The Gainsay Taxonomies

Through painting, I use materiality to describe the material world. By rooting my practice in visual culture and art history, I seek to extend the meaning of images beyond their initial form. The coalescing of opposing and complimentary formal elements accentuate the visual and contextual friction. This allows the work to exist in an ambiguous state. Seen together, my works appear disparate, but they suggest alternative meanings through association with one another. The works can exist on their own, but engage in dialogue when juxtaposed against each other. Although about specific occurrences, the works afford the viewer their own interpretations.
Date: December 2020
Creator: Huynh, Loc
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Heeding the Underbelly (open access)

Heeding the Underbelly

Black’s work presents The Ubiquitous, an entity that propagates into subhuman beings that ravage the deserts in search of sacrificial circles or homing beacons. Their physical nature is heavily influenced by: Languid, liquid human body language; the otherworldly visage and tenacity of plant life; the heaving monstrosity of mountains and rock formations; and the joyous allegory of movie monsters, puppets, and pulp fantasy. The Ubiquitous is explored in Black’s whimsical writings and intensive drawings which are characterized by her mark’s immediacy; and her work seeks to understand this Being’s purpose, function, and correlation to her own life..
Date: May 2020
Creator: Black, Jordan
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Memory Beast (open access)

Memory Beast

Memory Beast was a series of experiments in multispecies collaborative storytelling. A new tool was created, a memory beast, a holotype representing our ideas of specific species, based on memories and drawings collected in participatory research. The fabricated memory beasts, placed next to their biological counterparts, made visible the conflation of living species with personal memory and cultural imagery. Using this new tool, implanted with sonic recordings of cows, the beginnings of an interspecies pidgin language was developed. Memory Beast imagined and enacted new pathways to finite flourishing on a wounded earth, planting story seeds for alternative realities.
Date: December 2020
Creator: Grasham, Morgan
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Narrative Rewritten (open access)

A Narrative Rewritten

In A Narrative Rewritten, I explore two distinct periods of my past. One group of work deals with the emotional effects of trauma I experienced as a child during years of practicing ballet. The other celebrates a pivotal moment of spiritual awakening that gave me the strength to confront internal falsehoods I previously developed. I paint from observation, to engage with my subject and to ground myself in the present moment. In my oil paintings, I paint representationally, while delving in to the spectrum of abstraction. I use imagery symbolically from ballet and boxing to represent a shift from inadequacy to empowerment.
Date: May 2020
Creator: Aaron, Hannah
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Navigating the Waters (open access)

Navigating the Waters

My current work investigates visual meditations on water and its connection to the human experience. Through observation and reflection, my process allows me to make associative connections with water’s powerful metaphorical qualities. Water’s multiplicity of meaning is vast. It is a complex force of nature that begs to be explored through various modes of thinking. Mindfulness combined with the act of discovery and adaptation allows my imagery to evolve organically. Working between drawing and printmaking, I create variable series of artworks, that oscillates between mimicry and abstraction as a contemplation of our human relationship and natural forces.
Date: May 2020
Creator: Escobedo, Aunna
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library

Posers

I have impulses to make things, sometimes the idea happens prior to its construction, sometimes it happens after. I doubt the presumption of art's ability to save or better people, which creates for me, a conflicted relationship with art-making. I think in most cases, the best it can do is attract people's interest for a moment or so, to the extent that they feel compelled to see it again. Upon those sentiments I make things that provoke a thought or pleasure in myself that I hope other people can relate to. That seems to me to be the bitch of subjective activities. You do what you feel but are never quite sure how it's felt.
Date: May 2020
Creator: Chavez, Jeremy Allen
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library
Of My Own Making (open access)

Of My Own Making

As we travel through life, we lose pieces of ourselves. It’s inevitable. Yet we are more than the sum of our parts. These pieces can be cast aside, lost to the wind or imply left behind. They can also be stitched back together, forming a patchwork quilt of sorts. The world is constantly changing, and now more than ever we live in a time of uncertainty. So, I feel the need to stitch together my reality. I am a Maker, and I choose to make a reflection of the world I want to inhabit; a world of my own making.
Date: May 2020
Creator: O’Dwyer, Traci
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Visceral Reflections (open access)

Visceral Reflections

I am an interdisciplinary artist whose work bridges mental health, body dysmorphia, and the visual arts together through sculptures, paintings, performances, and large installations. I work with traditional and nontraditional materials through a manual and digital process to physically represent my realities of living with body dysmorphic disorder. I use padding, paper, and other fibrous objects as metaphors for the flesh and manipulate these materials in numerous ways to create exaggerations of the body.
Date: May 2020
Creator: Hoskins, Heather
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Counting Seconds (open access)

Counting Seconds

Each of my oil or pastel paintings is an observation of seemingly mundane familiar places that I encounter day-to-day. I think of my art as a kind of visual journalism, where I examine common human emotions evoked by a careful consideration of the substance of light interacting with spaces or objects. The naturalistically rendered compositions are cropped and depicted in small fragments, allowing the viewer a brief glimpse into a quiet portrayal of the world. Essentially, my art allows me to share my sensibilities and to connect with others through portraits of ordinary, yet intimate, moments in time.
Date: December 2020
Creator: Shurbet, Kelsey
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mano De Obra (open access)

Mano De Obra

Juan Barroso's artwork depicts Mexican labor and the immigrant experience at the border. With the current political administration enforcing policies that dehumanize and force immigrants into the shadows, recognizing an immigrant’s humanity is vital. As the son of immigrant parents, he pays homage to his people and the dignity of their labor. He mixes 2- dimensional imagery, influenced by personal narratives, with 3-dimensional functional forms. Using a small watercolor brush, he paints his images with thousands of dots in a timeconsuming and labor-intensive process that becomes an act of devotion.
Date: May 2020
Creator: Barroso, Juan
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lucky You (open access)

Lucky You

Belief is our acceptance of an optimal truth. We embed a belief into the things in our life that give us comfort or strength. Whether they are recognizable in popular culture or are our own private object, their value shifts to what we need them to be. My current work is inspired by multi-cultural historic luck or from my own practice of object collection. They are physical objects that are representative of ritual or ones that “bring” luck. The objects are primarily wearable jewelry, although I have included the pocket as a location of wearability. Regardless of how or where they are worn, they are meant to be valued by the wearer in some capacity.
Date: May 2020
Creator: Dessoye, Caron
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library

Brachaid

Access: Use of this item is restricted to the UNT Community
Brachaid is a collection of photographs that explore the blindness of our perspective that is informed by images. By photographing peripheral landscapes like wastewater processing facilities, the edges of temporary streams, and stormwater basins, the project uses the landscape and its perceived neutrality to foreground how the production of images constructs our perception. The work in Brachaid emphasizes the production of images, from subject and framing choices to the use of imaging software, to demonstrate that such production is regularly and radically obscured in most of the images we consume, and that this same structure exists in our lived reality.
Date: May 2020
Creator: Evans, Chris Wright
Object Type: Artwork
System: The UNT Digital Library