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Student Art Shown In SU

Kelly Hushin

Issue date: 9/21/06 Section: Focus
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Wednesday night, six first year art students of the university's Master of Fine Arts program proved that the Student Union, commonly a place to meet and eat, can also be a place to showcase creative innovation.

Until recently, the Student Union was not commonly thought of as a place that holds new, exciting and enlightening contemporary art exhibits. But last night in room 310 - now an art gallery for students, clubs, cultural centers and the like-fine arts graduate students held an opening reception for their exhibit, "ART." The exhibit, on display until Oct. 8, features art of various mediums from the six members of the entering class in the School of Fine Arts.

Jenn Dierdorf, a first-year graduate student majoring in sculpture, helped organize the exhibition's opening and is trying to promote the use of the space for further exhibits. Her works in the show include three graphite and colored pencil drawings titled, "Stream of Consciousness." She also has a sculpture on display suspended from the ceiling made from an old painting book and sewn together with invisible thread. "Developing form through repetition," Dierdorf said of the hanging sculpture, "I wanted to let the materials decide the shape," said Dierdorf.

She explained that most of her work is about "developing form through repetition."

Excited about the exhibit and the gallery, she hopes the space will help unite the art department with the main campus.

"There's such a connection between art and other subjects," she said. "Once you really get into it, you start to see that."

Matt Jensen, a first-year graduate student majoring in photography and sculpture, has a three-part photography project and a three-piece sculpture on display. Two components of the sculpture dominate the room by taking up a good portion of the floor and involve long, white, rectangular blocks topped with dust and needles of White Pine arranged in no particular fashion. After experimenting with pine needles in the studio at the Visual Arts Research Center (VARC) at the Depot campus, Jensen discovered his accidental sculpture.
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