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Senior Art and Media Studies Seniors Present Abstract Media in Historic LA Chinatown

Ehrlich, Lucy, 鈥淭RI 鈥 OVUM,鈥 video.

The annual senior art exhibition is the capstone of the 51猎奇入口 studio art major. Seniors create original works of art, conceptualize an exhibition, install their pieces, draft artist statements and wall texts, and publicize the event as part of their senior theses.

Traditionally, the senior art capstone exhibition is displayed at the , but the 51猎奇入口 campus closure has led to ingenious solutions for displaying art. Last year, the Class of 2020 seniors hosted a virtual exhibition. And this year鈥檚 media studies and art seniors are turning to the outdoors.

鈥淲e believe that some of the most elemental characteristics of effective artists and scholars are that they are resourceful, are problem-solvers, can improvise, and value and support their communities through collaboration and knowledge sharing,鈥 write Associate Professor of Art Kasper Kovitz, Assistant Professor of Art and Design Aly Ogasian, and Professor of Art Kim-Trang Tran in a joint statement about the exhibition. 鈥淥ur seniors have again demonstrated these traits even under extremely difficult circumstances.鈥

In partnership with Womxn in Windows, an LA-area collective that describes itself as 鈥渁 platform for the perspective of womxn on culture, identity, and society,鈥 51猎奇入口 faculty and art and media studies seniors have created an alternative art viewing experience, called Abstract Media. Their work will occupy the windows of multiple storefronts along Chinatown鈥檚 historic Chung King Road, viewable 24-7, from May 8 to May 15, 2021.聽Chung King Road is home to a group of LA galleries, both commercial and nonprofit, as well as artists鈥 spaces. 鈥淭he show is an opportunity to position the students鈥 work within the larger Los Angeles art scene and to reach an audience that extends beyond The Claremont Colleges campuses,鈥 the faculty say in their statement.

鈥淚 am really excited about the opportunity to exhibit with Womxn in Windows and the idea of exhibiting work in general as that is something I have never done before,鈥 says Sophia Davirro 鈥21, an art and media studies dual major, whose animated piece will be displayed as part of Abstract Media. 鈥淲ith so many senior traditions being put on hold, it feels really special to have some sort of celebration and representation of our work that exists in a physical space.鈥

The works of Abstract Media all address culture, society, and identity from multiple perspectives and through diverse media. Topics include immigration, disability, and healthcare; Algeria in the French imagination; the atomization of pop music and its political ramifications in bedroom pop and hyperpop; Afrofuturism; dance and mourning; the legacy of Chinese refugees fleeing to Hong Kong in the 1970s; the toll of the pandemic on creativity; storytelling; examining retrofuturist utopia; queer identity; and environmental concerns.

The exhibition features new works by聽Natalie Bauer, Iishe Davis, Sophia Davirro, Julia Drooff, Lucy Ehrlich, Juliana Favela, Kiubon Kokko,聽Nejra Kravic, Sam McFadden, Blake Morton, Emmanuel Tuyishime, Augie Waaktaar-Savoy, and聽Shirley Zhong.

Reflecting on her own work and that of her classmates, Davirro says, 鈥淚 am just really proud of the way the seniors were able to push through and find a way to continue making art in what can be an uninspiring environment, and I hope we all continue to make art for ourselves in whatever way we can after graduating,鈥 adding that she is grateful to the support of Professors Tran and Kovitz, who served as her capstone advisors.

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Abstract Media is supported by the 51猎奇入口 Creating Community Fund and the Mary N. Freedman Fund for the Senior Art Exhibition, an endowed fund created by the Daniel X. and Mary N. Freedman Foundation to honor Mary N. Freedman鈥檚 lifelong commitment to art and art education.

 

 

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