Category Archives: Uncategorized

Grad Media Design 2012 Research Resident Announced

The Graduate Media Design Program is proud to announce that London-based designer Ilona Gaynor–currently Ridley Scott’s artist-in-residence–will be our 2012 Summer Research Resident. Gaynor will spend seven weeks in GradMediaDesign’s Wind Tunnel studio at Art Center’s South Campus, working with a team of MDP student research interns to develop Under Red Carpets, To Snatch Solid Golden Cages, part of her ongoing research into “the idea of ‘design’ as a role to plot, to hunt, to scheme, to concoct, using craft to be crafty and to simulate.”

Under Red Carpets was selected by a jury that included author McKenzie Wark, designer, writer and activist Rosten Woo, architect and MDP core faculty Tim Durfee, and critic, historian, and MDP thesis advisor Molly Wright Steenson.

Each summer, the Media Design Projects track hosts a variety of research projects by faculty, guest researchers, and post-graduate fellows. The results for 2012 will be presented at an event on Wednesday, August 15.

The residency theme for 2012 is Public Display, a look at how social media, ubiquitous computing and satellite mapping are redefining public and private space. MDP’s AMP Studio, headed by Tim Durfee, will create an exhibition, symposium, and publication on this theme in 2012-13.


Under Red Carpets, To Snatch Solid Golden Cages

A plot to rob a casino. Using actuary methods, architectural conjecture and cinematic speculation.

The project I am proposing is a meticulously calculated casino heist. Exploring the use of space in which the architectural context is the obstacle between you and what you’re looking for. Through utilisation and maniplation of the surrounding public space and it’s occupants to surreptitiously co-assist in this plot.

“…satellite mapping [is] redefining public and private space”

I ask: What if social media tools could assist in one the biggest heists in history. Could the future of criminality be invisibly crowdsourced? Could a cartographic intentional digital error be used as a ruse or distraction to occupy civilian or police attention?

—Ilona Gaynor

“Teaching Artists: the Hollywood Way” – Thierry de Duve to speak at Art Center’s Graduate Art Seminar

By addressing everyone as if each person were a lover of art, indeed, an artist, we liberate desire and enthusiasm. – Thierry de Duve

Thierry de Duve, internationally renowned theorist, critic and educator on modern and contemporary art will be speaking on campus Tuesday, March 6 at 7:30 pm as part of Art Center’s Graduate Art Seminar. De Duve’s research and writing focus on a reinterpretation of modernism. Marcel Duchamp’s readymade and its implications for aesthetics have long been a central subject of his work.

De Duve is the author of a number of books including Look, 100 Years of Contemporary Art (2001), Kant after Duchamp (1998), Clement Greenberg Between the Lines (1996), Pictorial Nominalism; On Marcel Duchamp’s Passage from Painting to the Readymade (1991) and was a contributing writer for Held Together with Water: Artwork from the Verbund Collection (2007). His publications include numerous catalogues and articles.

He curated the exhibition Look, 100 Years of Contemporary Art at the Palais de Beaux Arts in Brussels (2000) and was responsible for the Belgian Pavilion at the Venice Biennale in 2003. De Duve is professor of aesthetics and art history in the Fine Arts Department at Université Lille III in Villeneuve d’Ascq, France. He has held visiting professorships at the Sorbonne in Paris, France and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Johns Hopkins University, and was the Elliot and Roslyn Jaffe Distinguished Visiting Professor in Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania, USA. He has been a Fellow at the Center for the Advanced Study of the Visual Arts at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC and The Clark art institute in Williamstown, Massachusetts.

The Graduate Art Seminar at Art Center  welcomes internationally recognized artists, critics, art historians, architects, filmmakers and writers to Pasadena to share their insights into the world of contemporary art. The seminar—a core component of Art Center’s Graduate Art program—takes place Tuesday evenings throughout the term and is free and open to the general public.

For a full list of speakers, please visit the Grad Art website.

Exhibit and New Book Offer Retrospective of Alumnus and Former Faculty Member Richard Bunkall

Richard Bunkall Portrait

Richard Bunkall in his studio, 1996

This Sunday, March 4 at 5:00 p.m., the Pasadena Museum of California Art (PMCA) will host a book launch celebration for Richard Bunkall, The first published survey of the artist’s remarkable 25-year career as a painter and sculptor. In his shortened career, Art Center alumnus and former faculty member Richard Bunkall (ILLU ’75) created a significant body of artwork that was both original and emotionally compelling.

The definitive 300-page book features over 200 color plates of Bunkall’s work, with essays by art critics Peter Frank, B.R. Gilbert and Peter Clothier. This Sunday, Frank will be joined by artists Ray Turner and Kenton Nelson as they discuss the life and art of Bunkall, whose life ended prematurely at the age of forty-five from ALS, commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease.

The book launch coincides with the PMCA exhibition Richard Bunkall: A Portrait, currently on view through April 22. The exhibit examines the many ways Bunkall conveyed adventure and described mystery through his artistic vision, for which he was honored with Individual Painting Grants from the National Endowment for the Arts twice within five years.

For museum hours and admission information, as well as details about the book launch, visit the PMCA website or RSVP directly by calling 626.568.3665 x17.

"Richard Bunkall" Book Jacket

"Richard Bunkall" Book Jacket

The Art and Culture of Black History Is A Constant Presence

As Black History Month comes to a close next week, we wanted to take a moment to recognize the many organizations that encourage and promote the work of African American artists and designers in our community throughout the year. Some of the most notable include:

California African American Museum

Image courtesy of California African American Museum.

The California African American Museum (CAAM) is located at the “crossroads of the Los Angeles community,” alongside the California Science Center, Natural History Museum, and the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum and Sports Arena in Downtown Los Angeles’ Exposition Park. The California African American Museum researches, collects, preserves and interprets for public enrichment the history, art and culture of African Americans.

Located inside a fully operational Macy’s store at the Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza, The Museum of African American Art is believed to be the only museum of its kind in the nation. The Museum is a nonprofit cultural and educational institution dedicated to the interpretation, promotion, and preservation of art by or about people of African descent and their contributions to world culture. (Macy’s. Who knew?)

Watts Towers Arts Center, located in the heart of Los Angeles’ Watts community, is the curator of the Watts Towers structure, consisting of seventeen major, historic sculptures. The Watts Towers Arts Center provides diverse cultural enrichment programming through tours of the Towers, lectures, changing exhibitions, and studio workshops for both teachers and students. [Art Center has close affinity for the Watts community, having recently collaborated on the Watts Art? project under the aegis of our Designmatters and Fine Art programs.]

Watts Towers

Image courtesy of Watts Towers Arts Center.

Beyond these major cultural organizations, there are a number of smaller gallery and exhibition spaces throughout Los Angeles, which highlight and champion African American artists and designers. One such example is the Tilford Art Group (T.A.G.), which is devoted to promoting the emerging artist from the United States and abroad, while providing a sacred space for artistic discussion, education and celebration. In doing so, T.A.G. endeavors to continuously recognize the Master artist, particularly those of the African Diaspora and Latin America, from whom many of the young and emerging artists have drawn their inspiration.

Los Angeles is also home to The Pan African Art and Film Festival, which is considered America’s largest and most prestigious Black arts and film festival. The festival presents and showcases the broad spectrum of Black creative works, particularly those that reinforce positive images, help to destroy negative stereotypes and depict an expanded vision of the Black experience in an effort to foster communication between peoples of diverse cultures, races, and lifestyles.

Closer to home, the Jackie Robinson Center in Pasadena, which organizes the City’s Black History Parade and Festival, is a multipurpose social service delivery center that provides assistance to a culturally, economically, and socially diverse population in the Northwest area of Pasadena. In addition to a number of health and wellness services, the center offers educational programs and recreational and cultural activities throughout the year.

In the words of Golden Globe Award-winning actor Morgan Freeman, “Black history is American history” and we’re fortunate to live in a region wherein the art and culture of African Americans is a constant presence.

Send Our Behance Student Ambassadors to New York


In an effort to get increased exposure for students, alumni and faculty, Art Center launched its own branded network on Behance, the world’s leading platform for creative professionals to showcase and discover creative work online.

Much of that effort has been spearheaded by Art Center students Youmna Chamcham and Kevin Wansa. As official Behance Student Ambassadors, they have had the opportunity to work as an extension of the Behance Team and gain professional and leadership experience.

What’s next for Youmna and Kevin? You can help send them to New York to rep Art Center at the 99% Conference. All you have to do is sign up and create your own Behance profile–and it’s completely free! The more folks they get to sign-up, the better their chances at going to New York. (Don’t tell anyone, but Pratt Institute is currently in the lead!)

Go directly online to create your Behance profile or meet Youmna on Wednesday, February 22 at the South Entrance to sign-up in person. Youmna can answer all your questions, and she also has discount cards for those of you that want to try out the advanced features on Behance’s ProSite.

Want more info about Behance and how it can benefit you as an up-and-coming creative? Check out this video produced by Kevin and Youmna!

We Took Action: Art Center’s Second Successful Day of Service to the Community

Volunteers Receiving Instruction before working for Arroyo Seco Foundation. Photo Lucia Loiso/Art Center College of Design

Continuing a volunteer initiative launched in celebration of the College’s 80th Anniversary in 2010—and in support of the National Day of Service inspired by the life of Civil Rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.—Art Center is proud to sponsor its second day of service.

“Art Center Takes Action: A Day of Service in Pasadena” kicked-off at 8:00 a.m. on Saturday, February 18 at the College’s South Campus with a breakfast with College Provost Fred Fehlau and representatives from participating organizations. Volunteers picked up commemorative tee-shirts and mingled with leaders from the community organizations. “Designers, while expressing their own points of view, are also always working in service of others. This day is just an extension of what we as a community do all the time,” Mr. Fehlau told the group at the breakfast.

Moving Mulch for the Pasadena Boys & Girls Club. Photo Lucia Loiso/Art Center College of Design

From there, teams of Art Center volunteers grabbed a boxed lunch and were dispatched to locations around the city to take on such tasks as collecting food, facilities improvement, environmental cleanup, beautification projects and special activities.

Working in the garden of the Pasadena Boys & Girls Club. Photo Lucia Loiso/Art Center College of Design

Working in the garden of the Pasadena Boys & Girls Club. Photo Lucia Loiso/Art Center College of Design

We were reminded of President Lorne Buchman’s remarks at our first Day of Service, “when the Art Center community comes together to participate in volunteer initiatives such as this, we help elevate Art Center’s reputation not only as a good neighbor, but as a meaningful place to pursue an art and design education.”

Volunteers visited with the residents at the Villa Gardens Retirement Community, helped beautify the The Boys & Girls Club of Pasadena, removed invasive plant species from near Art Center for the Arroyo Seco Foundation and acquired goods and donations for the AIDS Service Center.

Volunteers came from the ranks of students, faculty and staff. All those involved expressed great satisfaction in being able to help the community in some way.

“In reaching out to local organizations—even more than those that participated in the Day of Service—we’ve already begun to build a volunteer network for future collaborations,” said Dean of Students Jeffrey Hoffman.

AIDS Service Center Food Drive. Photo Lucia Loiso/Art Center College of Design

Alumnus Emerson Terry Broke Down Doors, He Just Didn’t Realize It

Art Center Alumnus Emerson Terry

Art Center alumnus Emerson Terry.

It wasn’t the end of World War II, new job opportunities in the defense industry or the region’s cultural awakening that drew him to Los Angeles in the mid-1940s. It was the weather. “After I was discharged from the Navy, I went home to Ohio and then on to Detroit to work on the assembly line,” 86-year old Pasadena resident and Art Center alumnus Emerson Terry (ILLU ’53) recalls. “It was cold in Detroit, so my brother and I decided to move to Los Angeles.

“We arrived in Pasadena on New Year’s Eve in 1946. It was something, driving down the boulevard with people lined up along the street and banners flying in the air. Neither of us had heard of the Rose Parade before and we felt that spirit of celebration.” [ed. note: Art Center didn’t move to Pasadena until 1976.]

In 1948, when Terry was taking art classes at Los Angeles City College, a former classmate told him he had enrolled at the Art Center School (as the College was then known) and invited him to visit. “I was blown away by the quality of the students’ work,” Terry says of visiting the school’s Third Street campus in the Hancock Park neighborhood of Los Angeles. “I realized that type of artwork was what I really wanted to do, and I wasn’t going to learn it at City College.”

Having been admitted under the strength of his portfolio and the G.I. Bill, Terry began taking classes. “The Art Center experience was unlike anything being offered by other colleges or universities at the time. It really was a school where the instructors were all industry professionals. That in itself made the learning very concise. And I dare say, it was a different experience than learning from people who had only gone to school, matriculated and started teaching.”

Emerson Terry at Art Center 1953

Emerson Terry at Art Center's Third Street campus in 1953.

Terry was among the first African-American students to attend Art Center. In fact, one of his fellow classmates, Bill Moffit, was both a friend from his earliest days in Los Angeles and also the first-ever African-American student admitted to the school. But according to Terry, the dearth of African-Americans on campus didn’t affect his experience. “I made new friends at Art Center and didn’t feel out of place. I was able to compare my abilities to other people’s abilities. That’s where we acknowledged each other’s differences: the quality of our work.”

While Art Center prided itself on providing its students a professional working environment, the real world was a bit different. “It was one thing to get into school with government money and a decent portfolio,” Terry stated. “But when it came time to take my portfolio and knock on the doors of studios and agencies—that’s when segregation and racism reared its ugly head. This was before the Civil Rights movement of the ‘60s. It was before Martin Luther King and sit-ins and fighting for inclusion.

“By the time I finished Art Center I felt I was a very capable artist. And while my instructors said I would do quite well, they failed to realize what circumstances I would face. It was very difficult for me to see my Caucasian friends walk right into job openings that I knew I was qualified for.”

Despite the challenges of the time, Terry went on to work with a number of prominent companies. His first full-time job was with aerospace firm Douglas Aircraft Company. “I used a lot of what I learned in Hamilton Quick’s perspective drawing class on that first job,” Terry recalls.

Drawing defense industry contractor General Dynamics

Terry produced award-winning work for defense industry contractor General Dynamics.

Other companies Terry worked for throughout his illustrious career include: Revell, a leader in plastic model kits; defense industry contractor General Dynamics; The Film Designers Division, and NBC’s print media department. He also served a stint as Treasurer of the Society of Illustrators, during which he created significant work for the United States Air Force Art Program.

Terry also worked at some of the top agencies of the ‘50s and ‘60s, including Stephens Biondi deCicco, Diener/Hauser/Bates, and Group West Studios alongside top-notch illustrators Ren Wicks and Art Center instructor Joe Henninger.

In part, it was his Art Center network that provided him jobs. “I had a lot of Caucasian friends with whom I got along with quite well. There have always been some people that have never had that racial bias or that racial hostility. They accepted people for who they were. When they got into positions at studios or companies, they gave me the work I wouldn’t get otherwise.”

At the same time, Terry started what would become a successful freelance career.  “I was freelancing all the time,” he said. “Technical illustrations, exploded drawings, production design, book covers, small paintings. When you’re out there hustling, you take what you can get and you make the best of it. Eventually, through my freelance work, I was able to get better employment opportunities. When I look back, I did a lot of extraordinary things.”

Inside Hollywood Cover for Simon & Schuster Pocket Books

"Inside Hollywood" book cover for Simon & Schuster's Pocket Books.

Terry’s enthusiasm for learning is still strong. “All this new technology is fantastic. A few years ago, I signed up for computer classes at Glendale Community College. I’m learning how to build websites and eventually want to start drawing and painting on the computer. I’m just sorry I didn’t get into it sooner.”

While still learning, Terry already has a couple of websites under his belt: a portfolio site he continues to update with previous and current work; and a site dedicated to the history of African Cowboys, which features his own art prints and reproductions about notable African-American men and women of the Old West.

In addition to his interest in history and websites, he works with his daughter Sharon Terry, who also attended Art Center, on a line of greeting cards. “When I see a student that has talent, or the possibility of talent, including both of my daughters, I tell them to learn to draw. Once they learn to draw, they can concern themselves with the bigger questions about where they want to study or what type of job they want after college.

“Sharon got a scholarship to attend Art Center’s Saturday High program, and that was really the beginning of her career. That type of access—access to classes and quality instruction—is the best thing for students today.”

And Terry is particularly proud that both his daughters have successful careers in art and design. “I was able to guide both of my daughters through some of the doors that I had to break down on my way up. Of course, I didn’t realize I was breaking down doors at the time. I just wanted to find a job as an artist.”

Art Center’s “120 Group” Champions Diversity

Art Center’s 120 Group, an ethnically diverse, alumni-based organization was recently established to promote educational and career opportunities in art and design for underrepresented minority populations. Its members seek to create a diverse, inclusive, culturally- and ethnically-rich global community of artists and designers.

The group’s founding members include Art Center alumni, staff, faculty and students. The group is led by current president Tyrone Drake (GRPK ’96), who himself is both alumnus and faculty member, as well as Creative Director at Natsun America.

What’s the group’s ultimate goal? “Our goal is all about connection. We encourage all alumni to come back and get involved with this very passionate group,” Drake says. “Together, I believe we can make a difference and become a valuable resource for the entire Art Center community.”

120 Group serves Art Center College of Design and the greater art and design community through three key areas: Diversity and Inclusion, Outreach and Accessibility, and Mentoring and Support.

Although its members are primarily committed to increasing diversity at the College, they also seek to create awareness and opportunities for underrepresented minority students, faculty, staff, and alumni interested in studying, teaching or working in art and design related fields.

Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr.

Artist Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr. in conversation at Art Center College of Design.

In addition to mentoring and outreach efforts, 120 Group seeks to bring a diversity of creative voices to Art Center. In November 2011, 120 Group, in conjunction with Art Center’s Archetype Press and the Southern California Chapter of the American Printing History Association, co-sponsored a lecture and workshop series with guest artist Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr. The artist is a letterpress printer and bookbinder based in Gordo, Alabama. At age 40, unsatisfied with his comfortable, middle-class life, he abandoned the traditional American Dream to follow his own. He traded in his computer for a printing press, his white collar for overalls, and is now a self-proclaimed “humble negro printer” whose letterpress work raises emotionally charged questions about race and individuality.

The founding members of 120 Group invite interested Art Center alumni to assist in their mission by becoming part of this valuable network. Please contact Dana L. Walker at dana.walker@artcenter.edu or visit the group’s website to join today and get more information.

College Art Association Names Jacki Apple Distinguished Teacher of the Year

Jacki Apple, an Art Center College of Design faculty member of over 28 years, as well as a practicing visual, performance and media artist, critic and writer since the early 70s, has been awarded the 2011 Distinguished Teacher of Art Award from the College Art Association. This award is presented to an artist of distinction who has developed a philosophy or technique of instruction based on her experience as an artist; has encouraged her students to develop their own individual abilities; and/or has made contributions to the body of knowledge understood as embracing technical, material, aesthetic and perceptual issues.

From the official announcement:

For the past twenty-eight years, Jacki Apple has provided students at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California, with a dynamic, inspiring, and evolving model of the possibilities and rewards of an interdisciplinary practice. An artist, writer, and producer, she has produced work in multiple modes—performance, installation, drawing, book art, photography, film, radio, text, and audio—and presciently engages the opportunities afforded by new technologies. Praised by students and colleagues alike for her intelligence, generosity, enthusiasm, and critical discernment, Apple adeptly bridges various disciplines using a wide scope of knowledge about contemporary culture and technology and a depth of understanding about the history and practice of the visual and performing arts. A gifted communicator, Apple is exceptionally effective in encouraging students to think for themselves.

CAA will formally recognize the recipients at a special awards ceremony during the 100th Annual Conference in Los Angeles, on Thursday afternoon, February 23, 2012, 12:30–2:00 PM, at the Los Angeles Convention Center. Led by Barbara Nesin, president of the CAA Board of Directors, the awards ceremony will take place in West Hall Meeting Room 502AB, Level 2; it is free and open to the public. The Los Angeles Convention Center is located downtown, at 1201 South Figueroa Street adjacent to the Staples Center.

For more information and to read the full announcement of all the CAA 2012 Awards for Distinction, please see http://www.collegeart.org/awards/2012awards

Take Action! Volunteer for a “Day of Service in Pasadena”

Continuing a volunteer initiative launched in celebration of the College’s 80th Anniversary in 2010—and in support of the National Day of Service inspired by the life of Civil Rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.—Art Center is proud to bring back “Art Center Takes Action: A Day of Service in Pasadena”.

“Art Center Takes Action: A Day of Service in Pasadena” will kick-off at 8:00 a.m. on Saturday, February 18 on the rooftop of the College’s South Campus. Volunteers will have breakfast with College leaders and representatives from participating organizations. From there, teams of Art Center volunteers will grab a boxed lunch and be dispatched to locations around the city to take on such tasks as collecting food, facilities improvement, environmental clean-up, beautification projects and special activities.

Day of Service 2012 Poster

The "Art Center Takes Action" poster was originally designed by Advertising student Ray Allan David.

The local organizations that Art Center volunteers will engage with this year include: AIDS Service Center, which develops and delivers services, advocacy and education tailored to improve the quality of life for those impacted by and at risk for HIV/AIDS; Arroyo Seco Foundation, which promotes the preservation and promotion of one of Southern California’s greatest natural treasures; The Boys & Girls Clubs of Pasadena, whose goal is to improve the lives of children by helping them build self-assurance and develop leadership skills while reinforcing positive values; and Villa Gardens Retirement Community, a premier retirement community steeped in tradition, culture, caring and a love of life.

Students, faculty, staff, alumni, supporters, friends and family are all encouraged to volunteer. Sign-up now using the online registration form to volunteer with your organization of choice or visit the CSE office at Hillside Campus to sign-up in person. For more information, please call 626.396.2323 or email cse@artcenter.edu.

*** You must sign-up prior to the event to ensure we’re best prepared to serve our community and that we can provide enough meals for volunteers.

Art Center volunteers beautify the courtyard at The Boys & Girls Club of Pasadena in 2010.