MCAD MFA Thesis Catalog 2019

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The Master of Fine Arts in Visual Studies at the Minneapolis College of Art and Design (MCAD) is a community of makers, thinkers, researchers, and creative professionals working in a mentorbased, interdisciplinary environment. The work of the twelve artists and designers featured in this catalog represents the culmination of two years of rigorous studio practice, individual mentorship, research, critical thinking, and intense discourse.



Using stenographic principles, miniature scale, and rotoscope animation, my thesis critically examines how the performance of self interacts with cultural scripts of bureaucracy. I am interested in the alienation that occurs when functioning within these systems—how does the individual come to willingly reprioritize their personal needs when participating in workplace culture?

Don’t I Know About Walking on Eggshells, 2018, medium density fiber board, matt board, balsa wood, mylar sheeting, fabric, paint, polyform clay, aluminum, wire, LED lights, single-channel monitor, 31 x 22 x 37.25 in.

I am an interdisciplinary narrative artist working at the intersections of time, craft, and storytelling. Taking the form of animated model homes and dioramas, my work functions as stages and sets, emphasizing the forced and self-imposed performativity of the autobiographical subjects within. I use my practice as a way of confronting the absurdity located within my representation of self. Narratively, I am inspired by the everyday, in both its unpalatability and in the hallucinatory power of its tedium. Through the exaggeration of the quotidian, I hope to create work that is both accessible and cathartic.

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Don’t I Know About Walking on Eggshells (detail)

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Interdisciplinary Animation | halliebahn@gmail.com | halliebahn.com | New York, NY

Habitual (detail), 2018, dual-channel projected animation, balsa wood, fabric, plywood, paper, glass jar, resistors, beads, dimensions variable


Éire, 2018, archival inkjet print on silk and polyester I am a visual artist making work that blends photography with other mediums ranging from painting to printmaking to video installation. I find it interesting to create a relationship with mediums and find a way for them to coexist with each other. My work allows me to experiment and explore different outcomes with traditional darkroom printing to digital printing on fabric. It has allowed me to explore my personal narrative of growing up in a family where my father was in the military. It has also allowed me to question my practice in terms of themes involving displacement of place, journey, and destination as well as time as a common thread within my work. Moving around from place to place my whole life has left me feeling displaced at times. I call many places home, but not one of them carries more significant value over another. Each one of these places has expanded my knowledge of my community, absorbing its values, instead of being an outsider looking in. This at times has left me feeling displaced, yet I am always enriched by my observations.

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Photography | ccook@mcad.edu | cassandranncook.com | Fargo, ND

Minneapolis, MN, 2017, Polaroids

scenic route, 2018, video projection on wall

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I like to think of myself as a translator, reaching inside a building to get it to reveal its innermost experiences. My thesis work does just that; I’m using various microphones and recording devices to capture the special characteristics of the MCAD gallery space and presenting the results of my findings.

Sound and Installation | niffur@gmail.com | thatwouldbetelling.com | Minneapolis, MN

I have worked in a variety of mediums, and no matter where I go artistically and literally, there is always one that remains: sound. During my time in the program, I’ve been experimenting with ways to use sound to express ideas that are maybe not so easily understood. Specifically, the language of a space, and through virtue of that place’s unique architecture, can express itself through sound—or the absence of it.

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The Arm’s Closet, 2018, five-channel sound installation, wood, wire, LEDs, Fresnel lenses, speakers, media players, heavy satin, 12 x 5 ft.

Don Not Disturb (DND), 2018, Adafruit Feather, wire, copper tape, haptic buzzer, speaker, watercolor paper, 5 x 5 in.

Welcome to My Brain (detail), 2017, eight-channel sound installation, mylar strips, lighting gels, 20 x 20 ft.

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The architectural structures become symbolic characters, existing in translucent, ambiguous atmospheres, which are more psychological spaces for contemplation than specific environments. Elements of radical architecture, modernist design, and science fiction conspire to inform the visionary infrastructure of these imaginary worlds. Through the process of building these fictional worlds, I create a mythical time and space for whimsical self-reflection and speculation.

Painting and Sculpture | heatherlamannostudio@gmail.com | heatherlamanno.com | Kansas City, MO

I am an interdisciplinary artist who explores personal and cultural narratives within imaginary psychological spaces. My recent body of paintings and installations depicts construction sites that exist in an abstract and temporal space in between the gap of proposal and completion. This incomplete state of being acts as a metaphor for self-reflection and the perpetual nature of change that occurs as one strives for personal improvement and achievement.

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P.S. I love you, Rietveld (detail), 2018

Kindled Spirit, 2017, acrylic on canvas, 48 x 60 in.

P.S. I love you, Rietveld, 2018, balsa wood, cast concrete, transparent tape, dimensions vary

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YOU WILL pt.2 , 2018, projection, metal, 13 x 19.5 ft. fleeting, 2018, projection, light, metal, fine tooth surface paper, 9 x 5 ft.

You will wonder . . . You will ask why . . . You will question . . . There will always be one question you do not have the answer to We all have a thirst for answers of the unknown. We all want to be heard, understood, accepted, and have a purpose in life to find the balance in this chaotic world in which we live, and to find the order in the disorder we embody. Essentially, asking questions of the unknown can drive a person mad or can drive that person to live. Everyone has a type of belief system when it comes to religion, culture, politics, and the environment. It is important for

everyone to follow their intuition and be open to all possibilities of answers to questions in life. We all eventually have to find a solution or belief system that brings peace from within. These ideas drive my work to create and examine our existence. My work generates spaces to ponder and question theories of conscious energy, afterlife, and natural phenomenon. I use found objects, projections, moving images, photographs, and paper accordions to create physical spaces in conjunction with ephemeral phenomena resulting from light, reflection, and shadow.

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Interdisciplinary | donnameyer2160@gmail.com | donna-meyer-kpz8.squarespace.com | Wausau, WI

Time is a Thief, 2018, light, metal, dimensions vary


I create self-portraits to reflect my identity and the way cultural implications have complicated what it means to be a woman. I am intrigued by the alluring power that femininity possesses but also aware of how femininity is so often represented as the subordinate gender. Consequently, I am compelled by and resistant toward ideas and acts of femininity. Through my paintings, I aim to bring women’s issues to the surface of my canvas, revealing their layered and intricate complexity. My paintings are expressive of women’s struggle to navigate femininity and establish individual agency amidst the persistence of traditional gender norms.

Reflections, 2017, oil on canvas, 40 x 30 in.

I am a painter motivated by a deep impulse to create social narrative art, especially feminist portraiture. The frequently degrading and submissive ways in which women have been depicted in historical and contemporary contexts drive my work and my need to generate conversations surrounding the visual representation of women.

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Confrontation, 2018, oil on canvas, 18 x 24 in.

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Drawing and Painting | clarissaodin@gmail.com | clareodinart.wordpress.com | Woodbury, MN

Disappearance, 2018, oil on canvas, 28 x 36 in.


I am a photographer whose work is guided by memory, dealing with the complexities of family and concealed narratives. I utilize archival imagery, the written word, and various methods of organization to identify facets of personal history. Through photography, I attempt to make sense of the traces of life. My work delves into questions surrounding familial experience. I find myself intrigued by the paradoxes involved in how I might articulate these narrative mysteries without revealing them. Carrying the impulse to protect, I explore the use of photography as a tool for suggestion and garnering meaning. My photographs highlight the intimate relationships that develop between the archival instinct and the medium of photography. I have a specific interest in writing and applying organizational structures, which can be revealing forces for memory. These actions allow me to have a feeling of control over the past, present, and future by reordering my environment.

Photography | graceolson8@gmail.com | grace-olson.squarespace.com | Fargo, ND

Heritage Hills, 2018, archival pigment print, 15 x 11 in.

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The Boat, 2018, wood and tile, 8 x 2.5 in. Masking, 2018, archival pigment print, 20 x 26 in.

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When I paint, I am seeking a greater understanding of myself through an analysis of my memories by physically weaving them together through paint. For my thesis project, I analyze how family photography curates my memories and the resulting dissociation I feel between my childhood photographs and my narrative of self. I visualize memory by employing blank areas of negative space, thin layers of paint that blur, and moments of highly realized details. My paintings are both dream-like and otherworldly to reflect the intangibility of memory.

Sun Room, 2018, oil on canvas, 78 x 66 in.

I am a narrative figure painter who draws on lived experiences, memory, and personal family photography. In my work, I experiment with pairing surface material and painting technique to visually evoke loss, memory, altered realities, and liminal spaces. My paintings explore personal narratives of family while reflecting universal experiences.

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Your Habitat, 2018, oil on canvas, 59 x 69 in.

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Painting | anikahschneider@gmail.com | anikaschneider.portfoliobox.io | Laytonsville, MD

Family Room Pose Diptych, 2019, oil on duralar, 40 x 50 in.


Twin II, 2019, oil on canvas, 42 x 44 in. My work deals with the complexity and multiplicity of cultural identity. My primary medium is oil painting; however, throughout the process of making, I utilize various media, including drawing, sculpture, and digital collage, to spark my inspiration. The issue of cultural identity is broad and complex—therefore, my practice focuses on the transnational experiences of a foreigner or immigrant. Nevertheless, my work embraces ambiguity and ambivalence, so that it is open for any interpretations. My thesis work is a large-scale painting that visualizes the chaotic convergence of cultural influences. My cultural identity is always a “work-in-progress.� Thus, the painting functions as a snapshot of the process of my identity becoming something. Ambiguity and clarity reside together on the pictorial space. The layers of symbolism obscure the individual symbolism, merge, and eventually grow to have another significance. The chaotic juxtaposition expresses the energy of the transformative experience of my cultural identity.

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Untitled, 2018, oil on canvas, 24 x 24 in.

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Painting and Drawing | yutauchida.artist@gmail.com | yutauchida.com | Hiroshima, Japan

Self-Portrait, 2019, oil on canvas, 22 x 20 in.


The Blooming Seed (excerpt), 2018, digital

I am an illustrator who draws inspiration from my memories and experiences. My memory has always been really bad; however, certain moments are just hard to forget. I cannot help myself from thinking back to those precious things that have happened in my life. In a process similar to writing, drawing allows me to capture these fragments from past memories on a tangible surface. In the twenty-first century, we have to face increasingly more environmental issues. In my thesis project, I intend to explore the possibility of associating illustration with public service announcements in order to direct people’s attention toward pressing environmental issues. Art is powerful; I hope by showing the startling contrast between delightful past memories and depressing current environmental issues in my illustration, I will motivate the audience to help reduce our harmful human impact on our planet.

Quartet 4, 2018, digital

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Illustration | yiwan1994@gmail.com | yiwanillustration.com | Langfang, Hebei, China

Flying on the Crane to the Eternal Life, 2017, watercolor on paper, 15 x 21 in.


My thesis project includes a sixteen-page comic and several single-page comics in which I demonstrate this approach to “nonsense.” The longer comic depicts a disorienting journey of self-discovery in a postapocalyptic setting. I expect the readers who are willing to go on this journey with me to experience a strong emotional disturbance at the end.

Comic Art | joiyaowenjin@gmail.com | joiyaowenjin.wixsite.com/hahaha/comic | Yingtan, Jiangxi, China

My thesis investigates narrative devices that approach “nonsense” (as the word is used in the Japanese ero guro nansensu movement) in comic storytelling. My comics create a mystical atmosphere by using nonsequitur, intertextual references, appropriation, and symbolism. Therefore, my work resembles an incomplete puzzle, coded with symbols and metaphors, which requires the audience to engage and fill in the blanks in order to make sense out of “nonsense.” Topics I explore with my comics are mundanity, identity formation, and the isolation of people.

Wednesday Is Chicken (excerpt), 2019

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I Love You, Funny Bunny!, 2019, digital print, 21 x 21 in.

My Mom’s 51st Birthday, 2019, Risograph print

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I am an artist working in illustration and comic art. With each project, I try to explore a different aspect of the mind/world hyperobject, a concept I have created after Timothy Morton’s notion of “hyperobjects”—“entities of such vast temporal and spatial dimensions that they defeat traditional ideas about what a thing is in the first place.”

Resonance, 2019, zine

How to Get Away from True Love and Happiness, 2018, zine

Hyperobjects are objects that have a complexity and vitality about them and cannot be apprehended, such as race, class, human life, or climate change. And they are massive and overwhelmingly difficult to map, discuss, and know. In my conception, each of us is a hyperobject. My work attempts to explore the hyperobject that engulfs my life. My work depicts feelings, ideas, and impressions I see about the world; speculations on so-called universal truths; and how the internal mind synchronizes with external phenomena.

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It Was A Good Day, 2019, zine

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Illustration and Comic Art | simoneyijunzheng@gmail.com | simonejung.com | Ningde, Fujian, China


Mentorship Minneapolis and St. Paul (the Twin Cities) make up the nation’s eighth most creative metropolitan area. Students have access to worldclass art and design centers such as the Minneapolis Institute of Art— located across the street from the MFA Studios and Gallery—the Walker Art Center, the Weisman Art Museum, and the Minnesota Museum of American Art as well as an equally robust local gallery scene. Both public and private grant opportunities abound for artists; Minnesota ranks first in the nation for per capita public funding for the arts, thanks to the state’s Legacy Amendment.

Location

Master of Fine Arts in Visual Studies

The program’s mentorship model stresses studio time and constructive group critique. Each step of the way is tailored to students’ goals in this highly personalized program. Weekly exposure to visiting artists and guidance from individual mentors helps students develop their body of work and accompanying written thesis.

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Opportunities

During their time in the program, students have the chance to engage with local artists, designers, critics, and curators through countless studio visits and events such as the fall MFA exhibition, MCAD Art Sale, Open Studio Night, professional practices talks, thesis presentations, lectures, conferences, festivals, and more.

Space

The program is housed in the MFA Studios and Gallery that opened in Spring 2016. The building includes individual studios for every student, a smart classroom, a large gallery space, communal areas, and more. The MFA Studios and Gallery serve as an incubator for student work to take form as well as a space for annual events like Open Studio Night and the MFA Thesis Exhibition.

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Community

Each cohort is diverse and unique, with its own sense of community. Cohorts are small and always include international students. Students have 24/7 access to the MFA Studios and Gallery, making it easy for students to have drop-in conversations and cultivate relationships that will last well after graduation.

Livability

Whether students crave visual arts, music, craft beverages, or sports, the Twin Cities have it all. With leading medical, retail, technology, food, and advertising companies, the Twin Cities attract top talent from around the world. An unmatched park system connects lakes, creeks, and rivers with miles of biking and running paths. Whittier, MCAD’s neighborhood and home to famed Eat Street on Nicollet Avenue, is a rich, multicultural community located just south of downtown Minneapolis.

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Facilities

Students have 24/7 access to the highest caliber of professional facilities and services at MCAD as well as the support and guidance to help them make use of these resources to their fullest extent. Facilities include a 3D shop, art supply store, papermaking studio, and printmaking studio as well as M/LAB, a professional production environment that has no equal in the Upper Midwest, and the Service Bureau, an in-house print and copy center.

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Graduates of the MFA program join a strong MCAD alumni network. They are eligible to sell their work in the annual MCAD Art Sale for five years as well as visit MFA alumni studios and offices on trips to New York City and Los Angeles. MCAD’s Career Development Department hosts annual events like the Emerging Talent Showcase and Internship Fair, which connect students with employers, and offers valuable resources and services to both students and alumni.

Network

Faculty

Working artists and designers who are respected in their fields, MCAD’s faculty are renowned for their ingenuity, expertise, and commitment as instructors. Each year they inspire new generations of creative thinkers to make the successful transition from students to professional artists and designers.


Credits

MFA Graduate Faculty Committee

Ellen Mueller Director, Master of Fine Arts in Visual Studies

Michael Banning Visiting Faculty, Master of Fine Arts in Visual Studies

Kiley Van Note Assistant to the Director, Master of Fine Arts in Visual Studies

Jan Jancourt Professor, Design

Ann Benrud Director of Communications, Minneapolis College of Art and Design

Frenchy Lunning Professor, Liberal Arts Rik Sferra Professor, Media Arts

Rita Kovtun Copywriting and Editing Patrick Sexton Design Grace Olson Photography Dylan Olson-Cole, Manager Kayla Campbell, Senior Designer MCAD DesignWorks Shapco Printing Minneapolis, Minnesota

Location Main Campus 2501 Stevens Avenue Minneapolis, Minnesota 55404 mcad.edu MFA Studios and Gallery 2201 1st Avenue South Minneapolis, Minnesota 55404 mcad-mfa.com

Additional Information Nondiscrimination Policy The Minneapolis College of Art and Design does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, gender, disability, marital status, or age in its programs, activities, scholarship and loan programs, and educational policies.

Title IX The Minneapolis College of Art and Design (the “College” or “MCAD”) encourages an atmosphere of mutual respect among members of its community. The College prohibits and will not tolerate sexual harassment or sexual violence by any member of the College community against another College community member. The College believes that all individuals should be treated with respect and dignity. Therefore, it is the expectation of the College that all individuals, in the course of performing their jobs or pursuing their academic careers, will conduct themselves appropriately. Sexual harassment or sexual violence committed by an MCAD student, faculty member or staff member against any other member of the College community is prohibited and will not be tolerated.

Admissions mcad.edu/admissions MFA Program mcad-mfa.com mcad.edu/mfa All artists and their corresponding artwork published in this book are copyrighted materials. All rights reserved. ©2019 Minneapolis College of Art and Design



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