Studio Views
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STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Individuals from across the globe have moved to Texas specifically to be part of UTSA鈥檚 M.F.A. program.
- Space in the Arts Building and on West Campus was set aside to allow graduate students to create their artwork.
From the Fall/Winter 2018 Issue
President Eighmy speaks frequently about the value of intercultural knowledge and world engagement, and few places on campus embody those ideals quite like the graduate art studios, dedicated work spaces created specifically so that UTSA鈥檚 fine arts graduate students can work unhindered to express themselves. Follow along as we peer into the studio spaces of nine students enrolled in the multimedia-focused M.F.A. program. Some work in cozy studios on the fourth floor of the Arts Building, while others hone their craft at the Sculpture and Ceramics Graduate Studio on West Campus. Through painting, photography, drawing, sculpture, woodworking, performance, mixed media, and more, these artists offer incredibly unique perspectives while embracing various forms of conflict鈥攃onflicts of culture; conflicts of comfort; conflicts of chemicals; conflicts of junk, gender, and judicial negligence. Let the studio tour begin.
Hiromi Stringer
Drawing | Painting
Shiga-Ken, Japan
Seeking a change from her life as a 鈥渞eally regular office worker鈥 in Japan, Hiromi Stringer moved to the United States in 2008. She experienced a significant case of culture clash when she arrived in South Texas, but she found a clever way to broach that experience in the M.F.A. program at UTSA.
Stringer enjoys collecting antique books, and one of them is a 200-year-old English-language textbook that once belonged to a man named Shoei Umeyama. This is the name she would give the fictional character who would become the basis for her artwork. In Stringer鈥檚 artistic vision, Umeyama is a scholar who travels through time from ancient Japan to modern-day San Antonio.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know anything about the actual Umeyama, but I started to think about what he would think if he sees this world. If somebody doesn鈥檛 know anything about electricity, the water system, the internet, or satellite dishes, how would he react?鈥
Filling large sheets of washi, meaning 鈥淛apanese paper,鈥 made of rice, Stringer illustrates Umeyama鈥檚 detailed observations in sumi-e ink wash painting. Applying his knowledge of 19th century Japan, the time traveler makes educated guesses about the significance of mundane mainstays like fire hydrants and traffic cones as well as impressive destinations like Whataburger restaurants and the H-E-B water tower visible from Bandera Road and Loop 1604.
Through imagination and subtle humor, Umeyama鈥檚 notes are Stringer鈥檚 way of expressing what it鈥檚 like to be a Japanese-American in San Antonio. The 鈥渞eports鈥 are collectively known as the Umeyama Time Teleportation Museum. Stringer鈥檚 artwork has been exhibited at several galleries in Texas and Japan, perhaps most notably at Cinnabar Gallery in the Blue Star Arts Complex.
Elizabeth Griego M.F.A. '18
Multidisciplinary
San Antonio
Elizabeth Griego earned her M.F.A. in May 2018. Her artwork has often dipped into social and political confrontation, but the series she鈥檚 creating in this moment resonates with great relevance in the wake of the #MeToo movement. It is based entirely on the culture of sexual assault.
Among her works are a collection of victim-blaming statements that judges made in assault cases. She鈥檚 set them against the backdrop of disturbing images from the dark web, such as a woman鈥檚 limp arms being pinned down. She put the photos behind foggy Plexiglas to force viewers to look closely at each one. 鈥淭hese are situations that people want to keep on the hush,鈥 she explains. 鈥淭his is my way of having them confront it.
This is a sexual-assault report form with its text removed. Griego says this enlarged template represents the humanless quality of how sexual assault is often perceived: 鈥淚t becomes empty. Sterile. Clinical.鈥
When asked about the amount of research required to find the material for the series, Griego offers an unsettling reply: 鈥淚鈥檓 very sad that I was able to find the images I was thinking of using for this. It was too easy.鈥
Emily Verkamp M.F.A. 鈥17
Photography | Alternative Processing Techniques
Lubbock
Emily Verkamp was translating photographs to glass plates one day when she made a mistake. That accident turned out to be a revelation. Her use of emulsion and chemical processes gave the photos a cracked, decaying composition.
Having studied 尘辞谤诲补苍莽补驳别 and other alternative photographic processes during her undergraduate years at Texas Tech, Verkamp knew she鈥檇 stumbled upon something unique. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why I didn鈥檛 completely dismiss these messed-up images when I did this in the dark room,鈥 she explains. 鈥淚 embraced them.鈥
These striking abstract images comrpise an exhibition titled Through the Veil, which has been displayed at UTSA鈥檚 Visual Resource Center and the Terminal 136 gallery.
Exhibition viewers have been enamored of the depth of Verkamp鈥檚 pieces as they鈥檝e voiced their interpretations. She says, 鈥淧eople say they see fire and blood and snow and icicles鈥攁 lot of natural textures.鈥
Elizabeth Camilletti
Painting | Multidisciplinary
Roanoke, Virginia
Elizabeth Camilletti is a Virginia native who came to San Antonio for its mix of culture, tradition, and fresh creativity. She was also captivated by the interdisciplinary approach of UTSA鈥檚 M.F.A. program, which she says is less rigid than the East Coast grad schools she had toured. 鈥淭he more I looked at those programs,鈥 Camilletti says, 鈥渢he less I was interested in the work coming out of them.鈥
The artwork of her first semester was largely inspired by a series of lectures by Frank Stella, who was disappointed that abstract pieces never gave viewers the opportunity to enter the painting the way Caravaggio鈥檚 dramatically illuminated portraits often did. Camilletti took it as a challenge to create abstract pieces that people could 鈥渆nter鈥 by incorporating ripped canvas layered on corners, windows, and household items.
Camilletti is still adjusting to life in San Antonio as well as life as an apartment renter. In this painting she whimsically takes on the splendor and burden of her sofa-front view: palm trees at an outward glance and grocery-list stress from one glimpse at the kitchen. 鈥淚t鈥檚 called The Couch Becomes Less Uncomfortable the More You Look Out the Window,鈥 she says.
Eden Collins
Multidisciplinary | Mixed Media | Performance
West Branch, Michigan
If there鈥檚 a guiding force powering the artwork of Eden Collins, it鈥檚 that she aims 鈥渢o always remain in a space of the uncomfortable,鈥 she says. It was no different on this day as she was working on a series of miniature rooms that put household objects used for sexual discovery in the spotlight. 鈥淭his is totally 鈥榥ot safe for work鈥 stuff,鈥 she says with a big laugh.
During her undergraduate studies at Hope College in Holland, Mich., and her early years in the M.F.A. program at UTSA, she worked a lot with fabric. These are clothing items and purses that she pulled apart one thread at a time. 鈥淚 keep finding work that has a certain level of tedium,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou almost have to lose your mind a little bit to enjoy it.鈥
Collins also developed a passion for performance art at UTSA. She鈥檚 created several characters, including a 鈥渂athtub drag queen鈥 named Anita Finger, Gary the Man, the Opera Singer, Karen the Merkin Saleswoman, and Giraffe the Giraffe (pronounced HER-affe the giraffe).
Collins says she鈥檚 still figuring out a way to work this 鈥渄rag stag鈥 into one of her performances.
These 鈥渞oyal jewels鈥 sit on a pedestal just outside of her studio. Inspired by a short-lived Snapchat filter that created crowns for people鈥檚 faces (and took self-absorption over the top), she created this set of jewelry that swaps priceless stones for cropped photos of her face. She photographed herself wearing them with a full-length gown and a fur coat.
Whether Collins is toying with the gender norms of hair length or riding a big furry bicycle for the Luminaria art festival, people seem to take to her playfulness. She took first place in the 33rd Student Art Exhibition and had a solo exhibition at Hello Studio at Blue Star last year. Her work has been displayed in shows in Minnesota, Michigan, and Maryland as well.
John Atkins M.F.A. 鈥18
Sculpture
Belle Chasse, Louisiana
John Atkins keeps his nose to the grindstone. The Louisiana native is constantly juggling multiple projects, and it has paid off. His sculptures have been featured in exhibitions in Houston and San Antonio, and he once sold a dozen kinetic sculptures to the makers of American Horror Story: Freak Show. 鈥淚 got to hang out and watch Kathy Bates do monologues as a bearded lady!鈥 he recalls about the TV series.
Atkins is fascinated with old objects that have a history, which explains why he hand-weathered two-by-fours, crafted fragile ceramic tools in retro pastel colors, and acquired all sorts of 鈥渏unky鈥 items to create his messy workbench.
鈥淎s long as I鈥檝e been alive, I鈥檝e been around somebody who has a workbench covered in crap,鈥 he says. 鈥淪ome of it鈥檚 in jars. Some of it鈥檚 in buckets. There are tools that should be hanging up, but only three of them are. The workbench is useful, but it鈥檚 also hindered by its own usefulness.鈥
Eric Ryberg
Woodworking | Performance
Jamestown, New York
Eric Ryberg was an undergraduate student at the State University of New York at Fredonia, a small campus southwest of Buffalo near Lake Erie. 鈥淚t鈥檚 as far from the city as you can get,鈥 he explains. He started as a painting major, but his interests shifted to 3D art and sculpting. 鈥淯sing my hands to make something more physical than representational,鈥 he says, 鈥渨as more enjoyable.鈥
Ryberg has taken to woodworking in his first year in the graduate program at UTSA. He says it鈥檚 a craft that his grandfather was passionate about, and his appreciation for carpentry tools rubbed off on him. 鈥淗e was the type that thought of the tools as gold,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 mess with them. You don鈥檛 touch them.鈥
Having such an appreciation for those tools has been both a blessing and a burden as an artist. Through his work鈥攃rafting axes, anvils, and forging hammers from wood鈥擱yberg urges viewers to think more about their form than their function. There was just one problem: He admired them too much. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 get past making them look nice,鈥 he says.
Attempting to break that hold, Ryberg will annihilate the wooden tools he鈥檚 created in a performance. He plans to destroy 50 wooden axes while chopping a log with them. The pile of broken axes and axe handles will be presented as the final piece. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be very freeing for me to get away from being so protective of my work,鈥 he admits.
Verena Gaudy M.F.A. 鈥18
Ceramics | Performance
Graz, Austria
Born and raised in Austria before earning her B.F.A. in Cardiff, Wales, Verena Gaudy was often overwhelmed by the human atrocities committed during war鈥攎ost notably, her home country鈥檚 startling involvement in the Third Reich. Her recent work questions why violence is so firmly rooted in human behavior. The series of ceramics is called Perpetual Need for Conflict.
Gaudy crafted 54 unique ceramic 鈥済renades,鈥 which were lined up in nine rows of six in an exhibition at the SAC Visual Arts Center in the fall of 2017. Her M.F.A. thesis exhibition, 鈥淥f Bombs and Men,鈥 built on the theme of abstracted battle artifacts as it addressed humankind鈥檚 capacity for destruction.
Gaudy has also created a series of porcelain cups and ceramics for war refugees and the people who take them in.
The messages on Gaudy鈥檚 ceramic pieces are intended to be motivational, inspirational, and contemplative.
Mart铆n C. Rodr铆guez 鈥03, M.F.A. 鈥18
Multidisciplinary | Performance
San Antonio
Mart铆n C. Rodr铆guez, a first-generation mainland Puerto Rican, took a different path than many of his peers in the M.F.A. program. He earned his bachelor鈥檚 degree from UTSA in 2003 and then worked in the Office of Information Technology for several years before pursuing his M.F.A. He is a multidisciplinary new media artist whose emphasis is performance art. He frequently collaborates with fellow student Verena Gaudy.
Rodr铆guez鈥檚 artwork often incorporates aspects of Mexican-American, Texan, and Puerto Rican culture with an aim to creatively connect to his heritage. With horns made from plantains, this is one of a handful of Vejigante masks he鈥檚 created. These masks are often seen at Puerto Rican celebrations like Carnival and Santiago Ap贸stol Fiesta. The Vejigante once represented a folkloric demon, but took on a new dimension through African and Caribbean influences.
Rodr铆guez crafted two spines, one of which he wore for a performance piece titled Cacoon at the 8K on Broadway pop-up exhibition in San Antonio in 2016. He鈥檚 also been part of group performances in Austin, Mexico City, and Puebla, Mexico.