The Philip and Muriel Berman Museum at Ursinus College opens three exhibitions this spring, all featuring the work of woman-identifying artists: Kukuli Velarde: Free, Total, Faithful, and Fruitful; Sahar Tarighi: Şamaran شاماران; Adriane Colburn: Paths of Extraction.
Art 4 Visibility is a project that commissions student-artists of color for their artwork, which is curated in first-year residential centers across campus.
Surrealist artist and Donald E. Camp Award winner Kelsey Gavin ’22 spun her collection of paintings into a significant scholarship at her dream graduate school. This fall, she is pursuing her master’s degree at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Arts (PAFA), the alma mater of her lifelong inspiration, David Lynch.
Prologue to a Garden Dark: Solo Exhibition by David Aipperspach
At the Berman Museum, students are taking a multidisciplinary approach to collaborating with contemporary artists and curating exhibitions at the intersection of some of the world’s biggest issues.
Three Ursinus College students and one alumna are being featured in a new art installation that celebrates artists of color within Montgomery County.
Sarah Marchione’s (’22) art piece, “Big Bang” is the latest purchase from the Student Art Exhibition to be added to the Myrin Library Student Art Collection. The piece was chosen by five members of the Myrin Library staff to become part of this Collection.
Brooklyn muralist Katie Merz has transformed our smokestack into a work of art—a mural that tells the Ursinus story through unique iconography.
Deborah Barkun, chair of the Department of Art and Art History at Ursinus and director of museum studies, spent part of her summer acting as the social media correspondent for the Fresh Art International podcast during the 58th International Art Exhibition in Venice.
Sarah Kaufman, an assistant professor of art and art history in photography, is one of 68 local artists whose work is now at the Pennsylvania Convention Center.
Dedicated students and staff are hard at work helping to promote an appreciation for the arts on campus.
How does an exhibition happen? Curator Ginny Kollak and Collections Manager and Senior Registrar Julie Choma walk us through some of the steps.
We are pleased to present the inaugural edition of the Senior Capstone Gallery Guide, a collaboration between the graduating Studio Art and Art History Majors. This publication and the exhibition it accompanies celebrate the achievements of the Department’s Class of 2015.
Good Neighbors finds its starting point in the many possible notions of home and community, but at its core the project is about the common ground between audiences and the artists who are their neighbors.