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9/8/22

By Jessica Weiss ’05

In the darkened atrium of the Parren J. Mitchell Art-Sociology Building, a towering screen projects vast, striking and occasionally troubling scenes from the snow-drenched, mountainous archipelago of Svalbard, Norway—one of the planet’s northernmost inhabited areas. Along with the images, a woman recites a poem about climate change featuring phrases from thinkers and public figures as wide-ranging as Karl Marx and Donald Trump.

“The People That Is Missing,” an eight-minute video by Spanish artist Cristina Lucas, is the inaugural exhibition in a new public art space in the heavily trafficked building. Video in The Atrium (ViTA) will showcase video art from the UMD Art Gallery’s own collection and new work from national and international artists.

The exhibition opens tonight as part of NextNOW Fest, the campuswide arts festival that features more than 40 free performances, installations and activities.

“We really want people to be able to stumble upon art without having to physically be in a gallery or travel to a museum,” said Taras Matla, director of the UMD Art Gallery. “We want to bring art directly to the many students and visitors who pass through this space, allowing art to be part of their daily lives.”

ViTA has been in the works for over a year. Matla and other gallery personnel readied a large wall for projections and invested in high-tech equipment for crisp visuals and audio. A control panel in the Art Gallery office allows for staff to manage the projections from behind the scenes. And a number of benches invite passersby to stop, watch and gather around the works.

The project is a collaboration between the Art Gallery and the university’s Arts for All initiative, which brings together the arts, technology and social justice to spark innovation and new ways of thinking.

Patrick Warfield, the director of Arts for All, said the inaugural exhibition is a perfect example of the power of the arts to foster social change. The film “interrogates climate change, commerce, history and identity to remind us how art can elevate the voices of those who are too often silenced,” he said.

“The People That is Missing” alternates between sweeping vistas of Svalbard’s natural beauty and its commercial industries such as international shipping, mines and tourist cruises, ultimately calling on viewers to take action to change the course of environmental destruction. The title is an original quote by the 20th-century Swiss artist Paul Klee who suggested that the task of art—especially avant-garde art—is to create a future audience, or “people,” with a collective purpose.

UMD Art Gallery Curatorial Assistant Melanie Woody Nguyen, a Ph.D. candidate in contemporary art and theory, managed all aspects of the exhibition. The wide-open, public display helps reinforce the work’s meaning, she said.

“When I approached Cristina about showing the work here at a university, especially in such a public space, she was excited about the prospect because young people and students could make up the ‘people that is missing,’” Nguyen said—“the next generation who will take on the task of combating the climate crisis.”

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“The People That Is Missing” runs Sept. 8-Dec. 3 at the new Video in The Atrium space in the Parren J. Mitchell Art-Sociology Building.

9/13/21

University President Darryll J. Pines sent the following email to the campus community this morning:

Today, we officially launch Arts for All, a campuswide initiative that seeks to humanize the world’s grand challenges and integrate the arts more fully into conversation with the sciences and technology, enriching all.

There is transformational power at the intersection of the arts and the sciences. Solutions to some of today’s most pressing challenges—structural racism, gender inequality, climate change, global health disparities and others—need the arts and humanities to help us understand the historical, cultural, linguistic and artistic expressions that shape our world and to discover people-centered solutions.

Arts for All will create new curriculum, including the new undergraduate program in Immersive Media and Design co-developed by the Department of Art and the Department of Computer Science that debuted this semester, and the Maya Brin Institute for New Performance will prepare students for emerging fields in webcasts and virtual reality performance. These exciting new initiatives will inspire artistic and technological makers to investigate and create new connections that activate social change.

In the spirit of bringing art and culture to a wider audience, an expanded NextNOW Fest, presented by The Clarice, launches today. Throughout the week, NextNOW Fest events will occur in venues across campus as well as in College Park. Under the theme of “Where Creativity and Community Converge,” dozens of free events will celebrate imagination and creative expression.

I would like to invite every member of our campus community to be a full participant in this expanded arts programming. At the heart of the Arts for All initiative lies a deep commitment to providing interdisciplinary opportunities to make connections in and out of the classroom that empower all of us to address complex problems in new and meaningful ways.

Some highlights from NextNOW Fest 2021 and future Arts for All programming include:

  • Immersive Media Design Showcase (Sept. 16-17; Brendan Iribe Center for Computer Science and Engineering): Students in the new Immersive Media Design major showcase projects that push the boundaries of reality and break barriers in the arts.
  • NextNOW Fest at The Hall CP (Sept. 19, The Hall CP): A day-long celebration of the arts featuring workshops, interactive installations and live performance from campus and community artists and arts organizations.
  • American Landscapes (Sept. 9-Nov. 19; David C. Driskell Center): A new exhibition that highlights overlooked Black artists in American artistic tradition. In conjunction with this exhibition, a symposium will be presented on Oct. 28, with opportunities to attend in person and virtually.
  • Arts and Humanities Dean’s Lecture Featuring Vijay Gupta (Oct. 21): The College of Arts and Humanities presents violin prodigy and social justice advocate Vijay Gupta, who in 2007 became the youngest violinist ever to join the Los Angeles Philharmonic, and has emerged as a leading voice for the role of music to heal, inspire, provoke change and foster social connection.
  • Hookman (Nov. 13-21): Lauren Yee's Hookman tells the story of Lexi, a college freshman who is haunted by the sudden death of her childhood best friend—all while navigating the pressures of being a young woman entering adulthood. Directed by Nathaniel P. Claridad ’04, the School of Theatre, Dance, and Performance Studies' production brings the horror film genre to the stage, inviting audiences to explore themes of grief, trauma and guilt in an up close and personal way. This is the inaugural production of the Maya Brin Institute for New Performance.

Our world needs artists whose work helps us address grand challenges and explore the complexities of the human experience. Together, let’s celebrate the power of creativity—music, theater, dance, visual arts, design, creative writing—to improve the lives of all humankind.

Sincerely,

President Darryll Pines Signature

Darryll J. Pines
President, University of Maryland
He/Him/His

 

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