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Washington University in St. Louis News & Information > University Groups >

Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts

The Mythic Imagination of Beckmann in Exile

Art review of the exhibition "Max Beckmann: Self-Portrait With Horn" at New York's Neue Galerie. In 1947 Beckmann moved to the United States, where he took a teaching position at WUSTL. He also taught at the art school of the Brooklyn Museum.

References:
- Aug. 8,
2008
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The Mythic Imagination of Beckmann in Exile
in the The New York Times
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Blonde Ambition: Iconic Blondes Shape History

The art exhibit "Beauty and the Blonde: An Exploration of American Art and Popular Culture," is being presented by WUSTL's Kemper Art Museum. It is curated by Catharina Manchanda, and it includes the famous silkscreens of Andy Warhol's Marilyn Monroe and Roy Lichtenstein's pop art images of blondes in comics.

References:
- Jan. 19,
2008
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Blonde Ambition: Iconic Blondes Shape History
in the ABC News -- Good Morning America
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Winners of the 2008 Awards for Distinction Announced

Ronald Leax, WUSTL professor of art, received a CAA award as part of their eleven Awards for Distinction for 2008. These annual awards honor outstanding member achievements and reaffirm CAA's mission to encourage the highest standards of scholarship, practice, and teaching in the arts.

References:
- Jan. 7,
2008
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Winners of the 2008 Awards for Distinction Announced
in the ArtDaily.org
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A most unlikely father and son
 CBS News profiles a most unlikely father and son relationship between WUSTL professor Bob Hansman and son Jovan

This past Friday, on the CBS Evening News, Steve Hartman's "Assignment America" segment featured the special relationship between WUSTL architecture professor Bob Hansman and his adopted son Jovan.

References:
- Aug. 10,
2007
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A most unlikely father and son
in the CBS Evening News / Assignment America
and 6 others.
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Korean Comics: A Society through Small Frames at Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum
 The Kemper museum at WUSTL hosts a rare exhibition of comic book works from both North and South Korea this fall

Recent years have seen an explosion of interest in Japanese manga, or comic books, in the United States, yet Korean comics remain relatively unknown. This fall, the WUSTL's Kemper Art Museum will present Korean Comics: A Society through Small Frames, a rare U.S. exhibition of work from both North and South Korea.
The exhibition provides a decade-by-decade glimpse of the evolving social realities in contemporary Korea, as depicted in comics ranging from popular children's entertainment to aggressive forms of political commentary.

References:
- Aug. 9,
2007
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Korean Comics: A Society through Small Frames at Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum
in the ArtDaily.org
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Hopes for a Renaissance After Exodus in St. Louis
 The School of Architecture's John Hoal comments on St. Louis redevelopment.

Article looks at St. Louis' effort to rebuild its image in the face of population loss and public school accreditation problems.
WUSTL architecture professor John Hoal, who has been involved in numerous municipal planning projects, comments on the redevelopment effort.

References:
- April 17,
2007
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Hopes for a Renaissance After Exodus in St. Louis
in the The New York Times
and 3 others.
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Maki Designs Art Complex in St. Louis

The January issue of Art in America includes a story on architect Fumihiko Maki, who was commissioned by WUSTL in 1960 to design Steinberg Hall as a home for the university's highly regarded art collection. Nine years ago he was selected again to design an entire arts campus, to be called the Sam Fox School of Design and Visual Arts. It opened in October. The article mentions current exhibits organized by museum director Sabine Eckmann, chief curator Lutz Koepnick, and others.

References:
- Jan. 1,
2007
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Maki Designs Art Complex in St. Louis
in the Art in America
- Jan. 8,
2007
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Reality Bites: Making Avant-garde Art in Post-Wall Germany
in the Dexigner.com
and 2 others.
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Washington U. museum is set to open Oct. 25
 Washington U. museum is set to open Oct. 25

The new Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum on the campus of Washington University will open to the public Oct. 25, the university is expected to announce on Monday. The museum, the centerpiece of a $56.8 million, five-building complex devoted to art and architecture, was built on the site of a former parking lot near the corner of Skinker and Forsyth boulevards.

References:
- July 16,
2006
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Washington U. museum is set to open Oct. 25
in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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University library's collection tells story of secret codes

The invention of the printing press didn't just make it easier to disseminate information, it made it easier to hide it, too -- as the collection of books in a vault at WUSTL shows. The books, some more than 500 years old, chronicle the history of secret codes -- some concealed so intricately that art professor Ken Botnick regularly shows them to his students. (Link also contains the text of the longer St. Louis Post-Dispatch article on the collection.)

References:
- Aug. 15,
2005
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University library's collection tells story of secret codes
in the Associated Press
- Aug. 14,
2005
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WU is home to rare coded books
in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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Mini Medical School open to all walks of life

A program at the School of Medicine called Mini Medical School gives laypeople, from husbands and wives to lawyers and musicians, an abridged medical education that helps them to interact more effectively with health-care providers. Unlike a regular medical-school course, in which classmates share a basic knowledge of anatomy and cell biology, Mini Medical School mixes people with solid science backgrounds and people whose medical knowledge is limited to their experience on the cold end of the stethoscope.

References:
- Jan. 23,
2004
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Mini Medical School open to all walks of life
in the The New York Times
and 7 others.
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Healing the scars of violence with art

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| Artist's rendering of Krysztof Wodiczko's The St. Louis Projection. |
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Krzysztof Wodiczko made his reputation 20 years ago taking on big political issues. At the height of the apartheid era, he projected a swastika onto South Africa's embassy in London. In recent years, he's added audio to his multimedia projects and turned from the political to the personal. In 1998, he used audio and video projected onto the Bunker Hill Monument to tell the stories of mothers from Charlestown who'd lost children to murder. When he was invited to mount one of his projections in St. Louis by Washington University, he says he once again wanted to give voice to people who had lost loved ones to violence.

References:
- April 16,
2004
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In St. Louis, Healing the Scars of Violence with Art
in the National Public Radio's "All Things Considered"
and 42 others.
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