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1 A Ar r t t H Hi i s st t o or r y y & & A Ar r t t S St t u ud di i o o S S u u m mm me e r r 2 2 0 0 1 1 4 4 Department of Art & Art History University of New Mexico Last updated April 24, 2014 If you have difficulty registering for a course due to Banner error, such as not recognizing your prerequisites, or the course requires permission of instructor, please email the instructor. O OF FF F C CA AM MP P U US S O OF FF FE E R RI I N NG GS S ARTS 358 Nature and Technology Sec 001 CRN 17454 Carey MTWRF 8:00–5:00 + arr ART 350/Off Campus June 2 - 13 (2 weeks) Offered with ARTS 458/558.001. This course is an examination of what one considers to be reality. What is a primary and essential experience? How is experience perceived in the highly mediated environment that is western society/culture at the beginning of 21st century? What part does technology play in this perception of experience? What is your relationship to Nature? What is your relationship to Nature as an artist? What impact has technology had upon Nature and your understanding of your relationship to it? How does technology shape that vision? What is the impact of native culture? What is New Mexico? These questions and many more are the basis for this fourteen-day intensive field study workshop in Northern New Mexico. We will examine such subjects as cultural and physical displacement, resource depletion, environmental crisis, authentic nature as well as the simulation of nature that surrounds us. The primary medium for the course is video. No prior experience with video is required but it is helpful. Basic understanding of a computer is necessary. You will learn the basics of this medium in an intensive "hands on" experience from the taping of original material to the editing of that material. We will spend considerable amounts of time out of doors. Restriction: Permission of instructor, Beau Carey, [email protected] . Course Fee: $350.00 ARTH 429 Topics: The Botanic Imagination: Goethe, Gardens and Literary Landscapes Sec 001 CRN 23494 Harrison ARR ARR ARR June 2 – June 14 (2 weeks – Open Learning) Offered with ENG 330/556 and INTS 410. This course will examine the “botanical imagination” and significance of landscape in Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s The Sorrows of Young Werther and Elective Affinities. Examining the changing perspectives on aesthetics, landscape and garden design, and human sensibility reflected in Goethe’s works, we will discuss the way that he and others drew upon the burgeoning discourse of botany to effect a major transformation in the ways we think about our relationship to nature. To that end, we will also read excerpts from key works on the aesthetics of the sublime, beautiful and picturesque by such writers as Jean Jacques Rousseau, Joseph Addison, Edmund Burke, Immanuel Kant, Friedrich Schiller, and William Gilpin; as well as selected readings from a few recent scholarly works on aesthetics, botany and romanticism. Taking advantage of the park and gardens at the historical Schloss Dyck near Düsseldorf you will keep a “walking journal” to reflect upon your own experiences in the gardens and landscapes you encounter in your travels, as well as to write a critical and comparative analysis of the works we read during the program. We will take field trips to the Goethe Museum at Schloss Jägerhof and the Heinrich Heine Institute and Museum in Düsseldorf. On a multi-day field trip to Weimar, we will visit the Goethe National Museum and tour Goethe’s cottage and gardens at Ilm Park; the palace at Weimar, which Duke Carl August redesigned in a neo-classical style under the guidance of Goethe; and Goethe’s residence on Frauenplan. Restriction: Permission of instructor, Professor Gary Harrison, English Department, [email protected] . Additional program fees for Study Abroad will apply. Course Fee: $48.00 Drawings by Drawing III student Sandra Hill

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Page 1: A Arrtt HHiissttoorryy&& AArrtt SSttuuddiioo Sart.unm.edu/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/aah_summer_2014.pdf · problems may include still life, landscape, portraiture, or the figure

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AAArrrttt HHHiiissstttooorrryyy&&& AAArrrttt SSStttuuudddiiiooo SSSuuummmmmmeeerrr 222000111444

Department of

Art & Art History

University

of New Mexico

Last updated April 24, 2014

If you have difficulty

registering for a course due to Banner error,

such as not recognizing your prerequisites, or the

course requires permission of instructor, please email the instructor.

OOFFFF CCAAMMPPUUSS OOFFFFEERRIINNGGSS ARTS 358 Nature and Technology Sec 001 CRN 17454 Carey MTWRF 8:00–5:00 + arr ART 350/Off Campus June 2 - 13 (2 weeks) Offered with ARTS 458/558.001. This course is an examination of what one considers to be reality. What is a primary and essential experience? How is experience perceived in the highly mediated environment that is western society/culture at the beginning of 21st century? What part does technology play in this perception of experience? What is your relationship to Nature? What is your relationship to Nature as an artist? What impact has technology had upon Nature and your understanding of your relationship to it? How does technology shape that vision? What is the impact of native culture? What is New Mexico? These questions and many more are the basis for this fourteen-day intensive field study workshop in Northern New Mexico. We will examine such subjects as cultural and physical displacement, resource depletion, environmental crisis, authentic nature as well as the simulation of nature that surrounds us. The primary medium for the course is video. No prior experience with video is required but it is helpful. Basic understanding of a computer is necessary. You will learn the basics of this medium in an intensive "hands on" experience from the taping of original material to the editing of that material. We will spend considerable amounts of time out of doors. Restriction: Permission of instructor, Beau Carey, [email protected]. Course Fee: $350.00

ARTH 429 Topics: The Botanic Imagination: Goethe, Gardens and Literary Landscapes Sec 001 CRN 23494 Harrison ARR ARR ARR June 2 – June 14 (2 weeks – Open Learning) Offered with ENG 330/556 and INTS 410. This course will examine the “botanical imagination” and significance of landscape in Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s The Sorrows of Young Werther and Elective Affinities. Examining the changing perspectives on aesthetics, landscape and garden design, and human sensibility reflected in Goethe’s works, we will discuss the way that he and others drew upon the burgeoning discourse of botany to effect a major transformation in the ways we think about our relationship to nature. To that end, we will also read excerpts from key works on the aesthetics of the sublime, beautiful and picturesque by such writers as Jean Jacques Rousseau, Joseph Addison, Edmund Burke, Immanuel Kant, Friedrich Schiller, and William Gilpin; as well as selected readings from a few recent scholarly works on aesthetics, botany and romanticism. Taking advantage of the park and gardens at the historical Schloss Dyck near Düsseldorf you will keep a “walking journal” to reflect upon your own experiences in the gardens and landscapes you encounter in your travels, as well as to write a critical and comparative analysis of the works we read during the program. We will take field trips to the Goethe Museum at Schloss Jägerhof and the Heinrich Heine Institute and Museum in Düsseldorf. On a multi-day field trip to Weimar, we will visit the Goethe National Museum and tour Goethe’s cottage and gardens at Ilm Park; the palace at Weimar, which Duke Carl August redesigned in a neo-classical style under the guidance of Goethe; and Goethe’s residence on Frauenplan. Restriction: Permission of instructor, Professor Gary Harrison, English Department, [email protected]. Additional program fees for Study Abroad will apply. Course Fee: $48.00

Drawings by Drawing III student Sandra Hill

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CCAAMMPPUUSS OOFFFFEERRIINNGGSS

AARRTT HHIISSTTOORRYY

All Art History courses have a $48.00 fee.

ARTH 101 Introduction to Art Sec 001 CRN 19981 Lavelle MTWRF 9:20-11:20 CTRART 1020 June 2 – June 27 (1st 4 weeks) A beginning course in the fundamental concepts of the visual arts; the language of form and the media of artistic expression. Readings and slide lectures supplemented by museum exhibition attendance. Meets New Mexico Lower Division General Education Common Core Curriculum Area V: Humanities and Fine Arts.

ARTH 101 Introduction to Art Sec 003 CRN 22524 Meredith ONLINE ONLINE* June 2 – August 2 (8 weeks) A beginning course in the fundamental concepts of the visual arts; the language of form and the media of artistic expression. Readings and slide lectures supplemented by museum exhibition attendance. Meets New Mexico Lower Division General Education Common Core Curriculum Area V: Humanities and Fine Arts. Online Course Fee: $100.00 + $48.00 fee. ARTH 201 History of Art I Sec 001 CRN 21130 Hernández-Durán MTWRF 11:40-1:40 CTRART 1020 June 2 – June 27 (1st 4 weeks) This course is the first half of a survey of Art History. We will cover a vast amount of material beginning in the Ancient Near East, continuing through Egypt, Ancient Greece and Rome. The second half of the semester will explore the Art of the Middle Ages including the rise of the Byzantine and Islamic Empires. Although the course will follow a chronological framework, attention will be given to the specific themes of images of kingship/rulership; the devotional image; text and image; and architecture. Meets New Mexico Lower Division General Education Common Core Curriculum Area V: Humanities and Fine Arts.

AARRTT SSTTUUDDIIOO

ARTS 106 Drawing I Sec 001 CRN 11000 Schmitt MTWRF 9:00-1:00 ART 352 June 2 – June 27 (1st 4 weeks) Basic drawing concepts, including the expressive use of contour, value, perspective and composition while exploring both dry and wet media. Assigned problems may include still life, landscape, portraiture, or the figure. Course Fee: $63.00

ARTS 125 Art Practices I Sec 001 CRN 19982 Lovell MTWRF 9:00-1:00 ART 252 June 2 – June 27 (1st 4 weeks) This is an interdisciplinary course, exploring the processes, ideas, and diverse media of visual arts. The course addresses the thematic concepts that are central to the nature of art making today. Assignments will investigate issues of LIGHT, FRAME, and MARK. Visual problem solving will be emphasized throughout the course, in addition to an in-depth exploration of various materials and the nature of artistic meaning. Course Fee: $83.00 ARTS 126 Art Practices II Sec 001 CRN 23270 Wohlwend MTWRF 9:00-1:00 ART 127 July 1 – July 29 (2nd 4 weeks) This class is the companion course to Art Practices I and should be taken after Art Practices I is completed. Assignments will investigate issues of MOTIVE and CHANGE. This is an interdisciplinary course where students are encouraged to approach each project with the materials they feel are most appropriate. Visual problem solving will be emphasized throughout the course, in addition to the nature of artistic meaning. Course Fee: $83.00 ARTS 130 Introduction to Electronic Art Sec 001 CRN 17461 Peterson MTWRF 8:00-5:00 ART 348 May 19 - 30 (2 weeks) Introduction to the computer as a medium and fine art tool. Course will explore history, theory and contemporary art issues associated with computer-based art practice, as well as introducing students to basic tools and technologies. Course Fee: $121.00

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ARTS 168 Introduction to Ceramics Sec 001 CRN 21390 Bobrowski MTWRF 8:00-5:00 ART 152 June 2 – June 13 (2 weeks) Comprehensive introduction to the terms, concepts, historical, and technical information that support creative development. Includes hand building and throwing, basic clay bodies, slip and glaze, oxidation, reduction, and atmospheric firing. Course Fee: $113.00 ARTS 205 Drawing II Sec 001 CRN 22325 Lambright MTWRF 9:00-1:00 ART 353 June 2 – June 27 (1st 4 weeks) Further concentration on basic drawing concepts with a greater emphasis on descriptive and perceptual drawing skills using both dry and wet media. Assigned problems explore aspects of still life, landscape, portraiture and/or the figure. Prerequisite: ARTS 106. Course Fee: $58.00 ARTS 207 Painting I Sec 001 CRN 23271 Waples MTWRF 9:00-1:00 ART 245 June 2 – June 27 (1st 4 weeks) Painting materials and techniques, integrating basic drawing concepts with color theory and composition. Emphasis on descriptive and perceptual skills through assigned problems which explore aspects of still life, landscape, portraiture and/or the figure. Prerequisite: ARTS 106. Contact instructor Chad Waples at [email protected] to override prerequisite of Drawing I. Course Fee: $58.00

ARTS 287 Black & White Photography Sec 001 CRN 23268 Gould MTWRF 8:00-5:00 ART 141 May 19 - 30 (2 weeks) This course will introduce students to the fundamental techniques of black and white photography. The two-week session will be an intensive overview of working in the analog darkroom: from manual camera film exposure to film development and enlarging negatives. The focus of the course will be on both the technical skills necessary to produce a fine art black and white print and the development of personal bodies of work. No Prerequisites. Course Fee: $143.00

ARTS 310 Figure Drawing Sec 001 CRN 21143 McCaulley MTWRF 1:10-5:10 ART 353 June 2 – June 27 (1st 4 weeks) Offered with ARTS 429/529.001. Visual observation of the figure and interpretation through various graphic techniques. This course is designed to further develop ability in drawing through observation and interpretation of the human form. It is an intermediate level course. This course will provide direction to the student in the area of life drawing. Students will learn basic anatomy and will begin to develop an understanding of the way a figure inhabits space, and will be able to successfully reproduce this space in two dimensions. The outstanding goal of the course is to learn academic, realistic representation of the figure; therefore emphasis will be on accurately rendering the figure on the page in proper proportion. However, good compositions are imperative, and conceptual matters will be taken into consideration, as well. You will work up to developing your own personal style within the confines of academic figurative art. Pre-requisite: ARTS 205. Suggested: Painting I. Course Fee: $88.00

ARTS 389 Topics: Introduction to Jewelry Design Sec 001 CRN 23269 Nighbert MTWRF 10:00-2:00 ART 118 June 2 – June 27 (1st 4 weeks) Learn the basics of fine metal fabrication for the purpose of wearable art, non-traditional jewelry, and adornment. The class is centered on silversmithing concepts with research and discussion on what it is to wear art and sculptural form as it relates to the body. Traditional jewelry making processes will be covered including forming, soldering, stone setting, and various surface treatments. Design will focus on original works of art that utilize the body as site or context to encourage exploration into non-conventional ideas about jewelry. Course Fee: $113.00

ARTS 389 Topics: Figurative Wood Sculpture Sec 002 CRN 22456 Wilson MTWRF 8:00-5:00 ART 123 May 19 - 30 (2 weeks) Offered with ARTS 429/529.002. The figurative wood sculpture course is a carving class, utilizing both hand tools and power equipment. The intensive workshop is a study of regionalism in carving with the potential of “newness” in aesthetics. Instruction will involve both basic and advanced tool use with an understanding of material potential and limitations. The methodology or process will evolve sketching, sketch modeling, resulting in development of a final wooden figurative sculpture. Course Fee: $148.00

ARTS 389 Topics: Wood Furniture Making Sec 003 CRN 23446 Wilson MTWRF 8:00-5:00 ART 123 June 2-13 (2 weeks – Open Learning) Offered with ARTS 429/529.003. Course Fee: $148.00

ARTS 389 Topics: Metal Furniture Making Sec 004 CRN 23450 Wilson MTWRF 8:00-5:00 ART 123 June 16-27 (2 weeks – Open Learning) Offered with ARTS 429/529.004. Course Fee: $148.00

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ARTS 389 Topics: The Practice of Looking Sec 009 CRN 23396 Dever MW 1:00-7:30 CERIA 365 June 3 – July 3 (5 weeks – Open Learning) Offered with MA 330/430 and RELG 347. Course Fee: $48.00

ARTS 429 Topics: Figure Drawing Sec 001 CRN 20145 Please see description of ARTS 310.001.

ARTS 429 Topics: Figurative Wood Sculpture Sec 002 CRN 22332 Please see description of ARTS 389.002.

ARTS 429 Topics: Wood Furniture Making Sec 003 CRN 23447 Please see description of ARTS 389.003.

ARTS 429 Topics: Metal Furniture Making Sec 004 CRN 23451 Please see description of ARTS 389.004.

ARTS 429 Topics: Experimental Drawing Sec 005 CRN 22326 Anderson MTWRF 8:00-5:00 ART 353 May 19 - 30 (2 weeks) Offered with ARTS 529.005. Students in this topics course will realize new technical and conceptual possibilities through unconventional drawing practices. The potential for experimentation within the fundamental discipline of drawing is expanded when drawing's definition is opened up to be inclusive of all gestures which suggest a bridge between conception and the concrete. Exercises will foreground issues of collaboration, installation, exchange, ephemerality, subtractive, and indirect drawing methods. Studio projects will be supplemented with image lectures, readings, class discussions, and critique. Restriction: Permission of instructor. Course Fee: $58.00

ARTS 429 Topics: Post Photo – Making Art With Cell Phone Sec 006 CRN 22328 Mattern MTWRF 10:30-2:30 ART 141 June 2 – June 27 (1st 4 weeks) Offered with ARTS 529.006. This course grabs the lowly tool of the cell phone camera as a starting point to investigate image-making and visual culture in the 21st century. In an age where photography has become exceedingly democratic, to the extent that not carrying a cell phone camera has become the exception, what are the images that are being produced and how do we as artists contend with this evolving media landscape? Is there such a thing as an individual voice in the sea of billions of Instagram and Flickr images? What is the place of the physical photographic print today? This course will be a hands-on laboratory and forum for producing, appropriating, re-mixing, and re-considering the images of our day and days gone by. Students will learn practical techniques with their own cell phone cameras and/or point-and-shot cameras to creatively and consciously probe the world around them. Using a variety of open source software, imaging apps, and other tools, we will work to find new strategies for deploying meaning through this omnipresent technology. In addition to making and discussing images, we will view the work of contemporary artists in photography and film including Errol Morris, John Waters, Ryan McGinley, and Penelope Umbrico, among others. The classroom will be our touchstone for discussions, presentations, and workshops, but we will also shoot in the field and visit a variety of arts institutions and image resources both locally and virtually. This course is open to artists and makers working in all media who are interested in finding new ways to tap the cell phone camera as part of their practice. Course Fee: $143.00

ARTS 429 Topics: Papermaking - Eastern Sec 007 CRN 22330 Van Ginkel MTWRF 8:00-5:00 ART 142D May 19 - 30 (2 weeks) Offered with ARTS 529.007. This course explores the history and technique of traditional Nagashizuki papermaking and related aesthetics. Students will produce their own Japanese style papers using traditional sheet forming techniques and fibers such as: Kozo, Gampi, and Mitsumata. Coursework will include fiber preparation, sheet forming, and drying/finishing methods as well as readings and discussions of related history and aesthetics. Course Fee: $138.00

ARTS 458 Nature and Technology Sec 001 CRN 17463 Please see description of ARTS 358.001 (page 1).

ARTS 469 Pueblo Pottery Sec 001 CRN 18886 Cruz F 9:00-5:00 + arr ART 150 June 2 – July 29 (8 weeks) Offered with ARTS 569.001. A cross-cultural class designed to expose students to the Puebloan pottery tradition. The course combines a hands-on approach to pottery making with an analytical investigation of material culture and ethnoaesthetics. Course Fee: $133.00

ARTS 529 Topics: Figure Drawing Sec 001 CRN 20146 Please see description of ARTS 310.001.

ARTS 529 Topics: Figurative Wood Sculpture Sec 002 CRN 22333 Please see description of ARTS 389.002.

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ARTS 429 Topics: Papermaking - Eastern Sec 007 CRN 22330 Van Ginkel MTWRF 8:00-5:00 ART 142D May 19 - 30 (2 weeks) Offered with ARTS 529.007. This course explores the history and technique of traditional Nagashizuki papermaking and related aesthetics. Students will produce their own Japanese style papers using traditional sheet forming techniques and fibers such as: Kozo, Gampi, and Mitsumata. Coursework will include fiber preparation, sheet forming, and drying/finishing methods as well as readings and discussions of related history and aesthetics. Course Fee: $138.00

ARTS 458 Nature and Technology Sec 001 CRN 17463 Please see description of ARTS 358.001 (page 1).

ARTS 469 Pueblo Pottery Sec 001 CRN 18886 Cruz F 9:00-5:00 + arr ART 150 June 2 – July 29 (8 weeks) Offered with ARTS 569.001. A cross-cultural class designed to expose students to the Puebloan pottery tradition. The course combines a hands-on approach to pottery making with an analytical investigation of material culture and ethnoaesthetics. Course Fee: $133.00

ARTS 529 Topics: Figure Drawing Sec 001 CRN 20146 Please see description of ARTS 310.001.

ARTS 529 Topics: Figurative Wood Sculpture Sec 002 CRN 22333 Please see description of ARTS 389.002. ARTS 529 Topics: Wood Furniture Making Sec 003 CRN 23448 Please see description of ARTS 389.003. ARTS 529 Topics: Metal Furniture Making Sec 004 CRN 23452 Please see description of ARTS 389.004. ARTS 529 Topics: Experimental Drawing Sec 005 CRN 22327 Please see description of ARTS 429.005. ARTS 529 Topics: Post Photo – Making Art With Cell Phone Sec 006 CRN 22329 Please see description of ARTS 429.006. ARTS 529 Topics: Papermaking - Eastern Sec 007 CRN 22331 Please see description of ARTS 429.007. ARTS 558 Nature and Technology Sec 001 CRN 17464 Please see description of ARTS 358.001 (page 1). ARTS 569 Pueblo Pottery Sec 001 CRN 18887 Please see description of ARTS 469.001. Summer 2014 semester ART HISTORY Instructors: Hernández-Durán, Ray, Assoc Professor *Harrison, Gary (Professor and Presidential Teaching Fellow, ENG) Lavelle, Debra, Teaching Assistant Meredith, Ruth, Adjunct Lecturer III Summer 2014 semester ART STUDIO Instructors: Anderson, Scott, Assistant Professor Bobrowski, Gina Voelker, Assoc Prof Carey, Beau, Adjunct Lecturer III Cruz, Clarence, Adjunct Lecturer III *Dever, Susan (Asso Professor, MA) Gould, Meggan, Assistant Professor Lambright, Julia, Teaching Assistant

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Lovell, Jessamyn, Adjunct Lecturer III Mattern, Andy, Adjunct Lecturer III McCaulley, Rachel, Teaching Assistant Nighbert, Justin, Adjunct Instructor III Peterson, Conor, Adjunct Lecturer III Schmitt, Lindsey, Teaching Assistant Van Ginkel, Tim, Assistant Professor Waples, Chad, Teaching Assistant Wilson, Randall, Assistant Professor Wohlwend, Adam, Teaching Assistant * Instructors from other UNM departments Art History Instructor section numbers for Undergraduate Tutorial (ARTH 496), Problems in Art History (ARTH 551/552), Masters Thesis (ARTH 599), Dissertation (ARTH 699): .006 Anderson-Riedel .007 Andrews .009 Barnet-Sánchez .017 Buick .029 Fry .037 Hernández-Durán .039 Jackson .049 Lumpkin .065 Otto-Diniz .067 Penhall .082 Szabo .096 Zuromskis

Art Studio Instructor section numbers for Independent Study (ARTS 495), Graduate Tutorial (ARTS 595), and Dissertation (ARTS 699): .001 S. Anderson .008 Babcock .016 Bobrowski .018 Bouton .020 Cook .021 Cyman .023 DeJong .028 Exposito .033 Gould .034 Gilbert .035 Hamon .036 Harris .040 Ho .041 Jesse .059 Manning .064 Montgomery .073 Polli .075 Rangel .077 Salinger .080 Shimano .081 Stone .082 Stine .083 Sturges .084 Tsiongas .087 Valdes .089 Van Ginkel .093 R. Wilson .095 Zhang Abbreviations ARR, arr – Arranged ART – Art Building ARTH – Art History ARTS – Art Studio CERIA – Center for Environmental

Research, Informatics & Arts COMP – Comparative Literature CRN – Call Number CTRART – Center for the Arts ENG – English F – Friday INTS – International Studies M – Monday MA – Cinematic Arts

R – Thursday RELG - Religion S – Saturday Sec – Section T – Tuesday W – Wednesday

Drawings by Drawing III students Ashley Peralt, and Yvonne Gandert

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Department of Art & Art History Mary Tsiongas, Chair Kirsten Buick, Associate Chair Kirsten Buick, Graduate Director Kat Heatherington, Graduate Advisor Kyle Beenhouwer, Undergraduate Advisor Nancy Treviso, Department Administrator Amanda Armstrong, Accountant Ellen Peabody, Administrative Coordinator Marjorie Crow, Administrative Assistant Art Studio Lab Managers: Oscar Caraveo, Ceramics Lab Michelle Evans, Photography Lab Brian Kimura, Electronic Arts Lab Justin Nighbert, Mattox Sculpture Center And Art Annex Brooke Steiger, Printmaking Lab Scott Williams, Sculpture Lab Department of Art and Art History MSC 04 2560 220 Yale Blvd NE (for deliveries) 1 University of New Mexico Albuquerque NM 87131- 0001 505- 277- 5861 505- 277- 5955 fax

art.unm.edu Administrative Offices Art Building, Room 204 (west of Center for the Arts/Popejoy Hall, north of Yale Blvd and Central Avenue)

Drawings by Drawing III Students Jennifer Moya and Carlene Moya