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Faculty and Alumni: Rosen Honored by American Craft Council

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Annabeth Rosen
做TV Professor of Art and Art History Annabeth Rosen takes time out from her sculpting to show a visitor the photo gallery in campus ceramics studio TB 9. She was recently recognized by the American Craft Council. (Tim McConville/做TV)

Following is a collection of various art exhibitions and other 做TV faculty and alumni in the news, including a new honor for Professor of Art and Art History Annabeth Rosen, who also holds the Robert Arneson chair.

Rosen is being honored as a Fellow of the American Craft Council, a national nonprofit dedicated to advancing American craft. The ACC honors individuals and organizations for exceptional artistic, scholarly, and philanthropic contributions to the craft field. The ACC recognized Rosens work as one of the preeminent ceramic sculptors in the 21st century. She transforms the conventional material of ceramic into fired, broken-but-gathered, unconventional, visually striking, and mysterious works of art, the ACC said. Rosen said my process of building, breaking, and putting back together becomes part of an interior process as well as a means of fabrication.

Rosen's work is represented by PPOW Gallery in New York, the Anglim Gilbert Gallery in San Francisco, the collection of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Oakland Museum, Denver Art Museum, Philadelphia Museum of Art, and many public and private collections. Rosen has received multiple grants and awards including a Pew Fellowship, two NEA Fellowships, a 做TV Chancellor's Fellowship, and a Joan Mitchell Painters & Sculptors grant. In 2016, she was named a United States Artists fellow. Most recently, Rosen has been granted the Gwendolyn Knight Lawrence Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2018.

Awarded biennially since 1970, the ACC Awards include the College of Fellows, the Gold Medal for Consummate Craftsmanship, the Award of Distinction, and the Aileen Osborn Webb Award for Philanthropy. This years awards highlight seven artists, a museum, and an advocate in the craft field who are continuing to uplift traditions while advancing the boundaries and impact of contemporary craft.

More information from the ACC is .

做TV alumna and grad student collaborate on opera

Two Aggies collaborated to create the 40-minute opera Bones of Girls, and its abbreviated 20-minute version Moon, Bride, Dogs. The opera was written by librettist Cristina Fr穩es, who earned her MA in Creative Writing from 做TV. It was composed by Ryan Suleiman, a Provost Fellow and doctoral student in Composition/Theory at 做TV. Moon, Bride, Dogs was performed recently as part of West Edge Operas annual Snapshot program. This performance was lauded by Joshua Kosman in his in the SF Chronicle. Kosman described the work as eerily beautiful, and stated Theres nothing in this 20-minute opus that doesnt need to be there, but it covers plenty of ground in just a few deft strokes. Fr穩es and Suleiman hope to shoot a film adaptation of the opera later this year.

Art faculty in continuing exhibitions

Robin Hill: theres only one sky, artspace 1616, Sacramento, through Sunday, Feb. 29

  • Robin Hill, 做TV professor of art, will have a solo exhibition at artspace 1616 from through Feb. 29. In the exhibition, theres only one sky, Hill transforms discarded objects by giving them new life; which allows the objects to comment on matter and time.
  • Also with Hill: Critical Matters 2.0, Gallery, Sacramento, through Saturday, March 2

Heres a story about it. More on Hills work and exhibitions

Deirdre White: Now That My Ladders Gone, ampersand international arts, San Francisco, through Friday, Feb. 28

  • Art Studio Lecturer Deirdre White will have a solo exhibition at ampersand international arts through Feb. 28. Her oil paintings take as a subject the mobile contraptions built by un-homed people and reference the folds of cloth and bindings found in artworks by the old masters. More on Whites work

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