Book Arts Club members learn new book arts skills, including letterpress printmaking, paper making, and book binding, and have access to the Book Arts Studio for ongoing practice in these areas
Open lab hours give students enrolled in VA courses the chance to work in the studio outside of class time. Open lab hours are posted around the building outside of each studio.
Imago Foundation for the Arts (IFA) invites emerging regional artists 30 and under to submit their work for a juried exhibition at IMAGO Gallery during the summer of 2018. This is an opportunity for young artists to gain visibility.
An introduction to basic visual art concepts, exploring a range of materials with emphasis on experimentation and analysis of visual relationships. Drawing is a vital part of this course
This is a call for participants for the Open Studios event on Thursday, April 26, from 5-6pm. Open Studios connects collectors with artists for engaging dialogue and a glimpse into the studio practice of student artists.
The Visual Art Department is looking for applications from qualified students to work in the labs/studios for the Fall 2018 semester. Areas include Book Arts, Darkroom, Digital Print Lab, Gallery Preparator, Painting, and Printmaking/Foundations.
We have a few time slots open for currently enrolled VISA students to reserve individual critiques with Visiting Artists Caroline Wright and Son Kit on Friday, April 6, and Edra Soto on Wednesday, April 11.
If you were accepted into the 38th Annual Juried Student Art Exhibition, please pick up your artwork on Monday, March 12 between 10am-9pm in the Print Study Room 421.
An award for a Junior or Senior Visual Art Concentrator. Independent concentrators may apply as long as they plan a career in some aspect of art. Eligible projects may be done as completely independent projects outside of Brown, as independent study projects, or as work within the regular department curriculum
In classrooms from the Brown campus to Barbados, some 165 Brown students took a variety of innovative courses during the second year of the University’s Wintersession mini-term.
Director RaMell Ross describes the loosely developed plot of Hale County This Morning, This Evening, as an “anti-narrative.” The film is a series of beautiful scenes of Hale County, Alabama, and seems to be a love letter to the people there, specifically the black community. The film goes over random snapshots of Ross’ life after his move to Alabama over the span of five years, with him as an unnamed, never-speaking point of view, giving an intimate look at the the lives he documents.