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Ferris Plock and Suzanne Husky have been busy in the San Francisco dump working hard on a body of work for the Recology Artist residency program.
While at the dump, painter and character illustrator Ferris Plock has continued to build on a recent body of work that incorporates elements of Japanese ukiyo-e prints and iconography from world religions with other motifs that hold personal...
Read the rest of the story here: www.warholian.com/?p=1726
All photos by Michael Cuffe for Warholian.com
UW Arts Institute Interdisciplinary Arts Residency Program Spring 2011 artist-in-residence, Tad Gloeckler, participated in the Nelson Institute's fifth annual Earth Day conference at the New Union South on the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus, April 20th, 2011.
As part of a panel on "Innovation in Sustainable Design through the Arts," he deployed his installation SchoodicPeninsulaBlackDiabaseDikeTeaTable-withPopoverJamandButterDipPools. The work conceptually unites spectacular geology of black diabase dikes at Schoodic Peninsula with historical traditions of serving tea and popovers at nearby Mount Desert Island.
The product (a tea table) was informed by the landscape of Acadia National Park, and explores the often exploitative relationship that humans have to nature.
Photo by Angela Richardson, UW Arts Institute
Members of Music@Menlo Winter Residency program discuss music with Menlo School students. Photo by Pete Zivkov.
03 November 2010: Major League Soccer (MLS) - Vancouver Whitecaps FC Media Press Conference - The Whitecaps introduce Richard Grootscholten as the new technical director and head coach of the club's full-time Residency program. ****(Photo by Bob Frid - Vancouver Whitecaps) All Rights Reserved
Artists in the residency program at San Francisco's waste transfer station make use of all the paint people throw away.
The University of Louisville Internal Medicine Residency Program welcomed its new residents for the 2020-2021 academic year in a summer damp themed orientation program at the Clinical & Translational Research Building on June 24, 2021.
The University of Louisville Internal Medicine Residency Program welcomed its new residents for the 2021-2022 academic year in a summer camp themed orientation program at the Clinical & Translational Research Building on June 24, 2022.
"yo buy this bag"
This photo taken by Shalin Scupham during a month-long residency in August and September of 2008. The Like a Glove P
This photo taken by Shalin Scupham during a month-long residency in August and September of 2008. The Like a Glove Project is an experimental fashion project with ame, drawing upon a 58 year collection of vintage clothing in a former thrift store turned artist in residency program where nothing is for sale.
This photo taken by Shalin Scupham during a month-long residency in August and September of 2008. The Like a Glove Project is an experimental fashion project with ameteur models, passers-by, museum visitors, and people grabbed from the street. The photographer encouraged these strangers to play dress up with a 58 year collection of vintage clothing in a former thrift store turned artist in residency program where nothing is for sale in Greensboro, North Carolina
This photo taken by Shalin Scupham during a month-long residency in August and September of 2008. The Like a Glove Project is an experimental fashion project with ameteur models, passers-by, museum visitors, and people grabbed from the street. The photographer encouraged these strangers to play dress up with a 58 year collection of vintage clothing in a former thrift store turned artist in residency program where nothing is for sale in Greensboro, North Carolina
Assistant Director of Scripps Family Medicine Residency Program Dr. Shaila Serpas at the Healthy Eating, Active Community (HEAC) program gather to celebrate the 6 year initiative and award ceremony for community champions.
Photos by Tim Wagner for Partnership for the Public's Health
The University of Louisville Internal Medicine Residency Program welcomed its new residents for the 2015-2016 academic year in an orientation program at the Clinical & Translational Research Building on June 23, 2015.
Members of Music@Menlo Winter Residency program perform for Menlo School students during assembly. Photo by Pete Zivkov.
dSatellite is a site-specific architectural structure that extends the mission of DFLUX (www.dflux.org), a Detroit-based research studio and residency program, further into its community. DFLUX engages its local neighborhood and the general public with creative actions, research, and workshops. In so doing, they hope to reveal and create emergent and sustainable cottage industries. dSatellite was created with the intention of providing future DFLUX participants and local residents with an outpost to engage in various field research. Constructed with foraged building materials, dSatellite merges both the physical and conceptual characteristics of the DFLUX Residency site and a typical nature blind used by naturalists, scientists, photographers and hunters. dSatellite is currently deployed in a completely razed residential neighborhood of Detroit currently referred to as the "field" by local residents and "Renaissance Zone" by real estate developers. A dense urban forest, rich with wildlife, has grown there, only crumbling roads and alleys, debris piles, and public utilities remain as signs of past use.
dSatellite was created during a research residency at DFLUX in Detroit, MI in collaboration with Joseph G. Cruz (http://josephgcruz.com)
The University of Louisville Internal Medicine Residency Program welcomed it's new residents for the 2014-2015 academic year in an orientation program at the Clinical & Translational Research Building on June 23, 2014.
For more on the art in your world visit www.Warholian.com or follow us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/WarholianFan
Ferris Plock and Suzanne Husky have been busy in the San Francisco dump working hard on a body of work for the Recology Artist residency program.
While at the dump, painter and character illustrator Ferris Plock has continued to build on a recent body of work that incorporates elements of Japanese ukiyo-e prints and iconography from world religions with other motifs that hold personal...
Read the rest of the story here: www.warholian.com/?p=1726
All photos by Michael Cuffe for Warholian.com
dSatellite is a site-specific architectural structure that extends the mission of DFLUX (www.dflux.org), a Detroit-based research studio and residency program, further into its community. DFLUX engages its local neighborhood and the general public with creative actions, research, and workshops. In so doing, they hope to reveal and create emergent and sustainable cottage industries. dSatellite was created with the intention of providing future DFLUX participants and local residents with an outpost to engage in various field research. Constructed with foraged building materials, dSatellite merges both the physical and conceptual characteristics of the DFLUX Residency site and a typical nature blind used by naturalists, scientists, photographers and hunters. dSatellite is currently deployed in a completely razed residential neighborhood of Detroit currently referred to as the "field" by local residents and "Renaissance Zone" by real estate developers. A dense urban forest, rich with wildlife, has grown there, only crumbling roads and alleys, debris piles, and public utilities remain as signs of past use.
dSatellite was created during a research residency at DFLUX in Detroit, MI in collaboration with Joseph G. Cruz (http://josephgcruz.com)
dSatellite is a site-specific architectural structure that extends the mission of DFLUX (www.dflux.org), a Detroit-based research studio and residency program, further into its community. DFLUX engages its local neighborhood and the general public with creative actions, research, and workshops. In so doing, they hope to reveal and create emergent and sustainable cottage industries. dSatellite was created with the intention of providing future DFLUX participants and local residents with an outpost to engage in various field research. Constructed with foraged building materials, dSatellite merges both the physical and conceptual characteristics of the DFLUX Residency site and a typical nature blind used by naturalists, scientists, photographers and hunters. dSatellite is currently deployed in a completely razed residential neighborhood of Detroit currently referred to as the "field" by local residents and "Renaissance Zone" by real estate developers. A dense urban forest, rich with wildlife, has grown there, only crumbling roads and alleys, debris piles, and public utilities remain as signs of past use.
dSatellite was created during a research residency at DFLUX in Detroit, MI in collaboration with Joseph G. Cruz (http://josephgcruz.com)
dSatellite is a site-specific architectural structure that extends the mission of DFLUX (www.dflux.org), a Detroit-based research studio and residency program, further into its community. DFLUX engages its local neighborhood and the general public with creative actions, research, and workshops. In so doing, they hope to reveal and create emergent and sustainable cottage industries. dSatellite was created with the intention of providing future DFLUX participants and local residents with an outpost to engage in various field research. Constructed with foraged building materials, dSatellite merges both the physical and conceptual characteristics of the DFLUX Residency site and a typical nature blind used by naturalists, scientists, photographers and hunters. dSatellite is currently deployed in a completely razed residential neighborhood of Detroit currently referred to as the "field" by local residents and "Renaissance Zone" by real estate developers. A dense urban forest, rich with wildlife, has grown there, only crumbling roads and alleys, debris piles, and public utilities remain as signs of past use.
dSatellite was created during a research residency at DFLUX in Detroit, MI in collaboration with Joseph G. Cruz (http://josephgcruz.com)