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Studying Abroad-Career Benefits and A Life Changing Experience!

29 Dec

Have you studied abroad yet? Well, here is another excuse for you to check it out- it makes you a better job candidate! Come check out the study abroad fair in Gould Court on January 27th to learn everything about studying abroad: where you can go, how it can change your life, how to apply and creative ways to pay for it!

Where: Gould Court
When: January 27th, 2009
2-3:00: Panel of students, employers and alumni on the value of abroad
experiences.
3-4:00: Study abroad fair
Who: Anyone interested in going abroad! You!

study_abroad_in_italy

For more information on the fair and panel discussion, contact us at: artsl@u.washington.edu

European Art goes Digital!

28 Nov

Ah, for all you EU-skeptics: this is an important step in preserving a transnational European identity, one that seems poised for success. Check out the website at http://dev.europeana.eu/and find yourself in the company of the best of European artists right from your laptop!

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BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) – Attention all culture-craving couch potatoes: Cultural riches from over 2,000 years of European civilization are going digital.

It’s part of a new European Union online library project that is set to rival Google and aims to create a one-stop-shop to access history, art, literature, cinema and music from across the continent.

Items have been collected from 1,000 museums, national libraries, galleries and archives – including the Louvre in Paris and the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam – so users can scour for books, paintings, audio files, maps, videos and other artifacts in one Web site: http://www.europeana.eu

Subjects are as varied as the recipe for a French ham and cheese “croque monsieur” to Homer’s epics and the life of Mozart.

“You can see all aspects of (Mozart’s) life in the works and material that comes from our museums, libraries, audio visual collections and archives across Europe,” said Jill Cousins, director of the Europeana project.

She called up nearly 1,000 items related to Mozart in a sample search on the Web site, which is available in 23 languages including English, French, German and Spanish.

The site has 3 million items now and officials hope to get 10 million items on it by 2010. Even that is just a start, as only one percent of the historic works, documents and cultural artifacts across Europe have so far been digitized.

“You may download most of what is on there (for free),” Cousins said.

The project, which started two years ago, seems to be Europe’s answer to Google’s efforts to build a private digital library and is to be launched amid much fanfare by the EU’s ministers on Thursday.

“Just imagine the possibilities it offers students, art-lovers or scholars to access, combine and search the cultural treasures of all member states online,” said Jose Manuel Barroso, president of the European Commission, which is co-financing the project.

EU officials say Europeana offers a better product than Google’s Book Search feature. Google has been scanning millions of books stored in dozens of libraries around the world over the past four years to lure more traffic to its popular search engine.

“The Google Book Search project is a great project, but it’s about books, it’s not like Europeana; you see the difference,” said Horst Forster, an EU official who helped coordinate the project. “What we have here does not have any commercial aims.”

Santiago de la Mora from Google’s European office welcomed the launch, saying Google hoped to collaborate with Europeana “taking part in what could become the biggest technological leap in disseminating knowledge since Gutenberg invented the printing press.”

Most of the items on the site so far are from France, the Netherlands and Britain. Other countries in the 27-nation EU – such as Germany, Spain and Poland – were expected to submit more artifacts in the coming weeks and months.

“We were offered an embarrassment of riches, an enormous amount of material,” said John Purday, who works on the project.

Europe’s famous museums have little to fear, however.

“Actually, it encourages use of museums, because you give people a taste of what’s there,” Purday said.

Glass-Blowing Classes! “art by fire”

19 Oct

I am so thrilled to have found this opportunity in the Seattle area. This sounds fascinating, if not a little pricey. But if you have the funds and are so inclined, I must insist you check “art by fire” out for their coming class schedules beginning in November.

Two locations make this even tastier:

Ballard and Issaquah have the same class times/dates with morning and evening opportunities:

Nov 1st – Nov 22nd
Saturday, 9am – 1pm
-OR-
Nov 1st – Nov 22nd
Saturday 2pm – 6pm

Take a deep breath and get ready to blow: http://www.artbyfire.com/classes.html

Qing Empire Porcelain: Lecture by Peter Lam *October 16th*

5 Oct

Check out the latest from the always lovely Seattle Asian Art Museum this coming Thursday, October 16th at 7pm. Peter Y.K. Lam, art historian and author of “2000 Years of Chinese Lacquer” and “Elegance and Radiance: Grandeur in Qing Glass” leads the lecture concerning Qing studio-marks.

From the Seattle Asian Art Museum website:

Emperors of China’s Qing dynasty (1644–1911), bored with the formal setup of the Forbidden City, preferred to spend part of the year in royal gardens in the suburbs and vicinity of the capital city, Beijing. Inside these gardens were halls, studios, pavilions, chambers and studies with names coined by the emperors. Very often art objects—porcelain items in particular—were inscribed with studio marks belonging to these gardens. Art historian and museum professional Peter Y. K. Lam introduces some of the studio-mark porcelainware commissioned by the Qing emperors.

Members: $4
Adults: $8
Students: $6
Seniors: $6

To purchase tickets for this event, call the Box Office at 206.654.3121 or email boxoffice@seattleartmuseum.org.

Seattle artist, Claire Cowie at Gage Academy — April 10th —

9 Apr

Dark Dreams

Claire Cowie has received critical praise for her strange, dreamlike works drawn from sources as varied as Japanese woodblock prints, celebrity culture and the artist’s dreams and memories. We examine her fantastic world and her artistic process. (information provided by gageacademy.org)

Location: Geo Studio, Room 304, Third Floor

Thursday 12:30pm-2:00pm
04/10/2008
Gage Academy of Art
1501 Tenth Avenue East, Seattle
(206) 526-2787

Kurt Weiser Ceramic Art — until April 20th —

4 Apr

These images are just amazing, so I thought I’d let them speak for themselves instead of using words to do so. Kurt Weiser’s work is on display at the Bellevue Arts Museum, the up and coming art venue in the greater Seattle area.

More on display!
Bellevue Arts Museum
510 Bellevue Way NE
Bellevue, WA 98004

http://www.bellevuearts.org/index.htm

Student tickets: $5.00 with ID