Wesleyan Home → Art & Art History → Art Studio → Faculty
Faculty
Program Director
David Schorr
Professor of ArtShow Bio and PhotoBA Brown University
BFA Yale University
MAA Wesleyan University
MFA Yale University
Personal Web Site:
http://davidschorr.com
Office Hours: Year 2011/2012: Tuesday 10:00-12:00 p.m. and 2:00-4:00 p.m., 007 Art Workshops. It is recommended that students call first, ext. 3533, to be certain Professor Schorr is available.
A native of Chicago, educated at Brown and Yale, David Schorr works and resides in New York City and Middletown. He has been Professor of Art at Wesleyan since 1971 where he has taught printmaking, drawing, typography, book design, graphic design and calligraphy. He has been a Fulbright Scholar three times, to Italy in 1975, where he worked at the Calcografia Nazionale and to India in 1998 and 2001. He continues to go to India every year where he is adjunct professor at the National Institute of Design in Ahmedabad. He has also been a fellow a number of times at Tamarind Institute (America's foremost shop of fine arts lithography).
He is represented by Mary Ryan Gallery in New York City where he shows regularly. In addition has had solo shows in Chicago, Milan, Rome, Naples, Paris, Athens, Toronto, Montreal and Copenhagen. His work has been reproduced extensively in the New York Times, The New Yorker and most significantly The New Republic, for which he has done over three hundred portraits. Schorr has illustrated numerous books, among them Parallel Lives, by Wesleyan author Phyllis Rose and four volumes of the fables of La Fontaine and a collection from Baudelaire translated by Wesleyan Professor Norman Shapiro.
His work is in the collections of the National Gallery of Art, The Museum of Fine Arts (Boston), The Cleveland Museum of Art, The Fogg Museum (Harvard), The New York Public Library, The Israel Museum (Jerusalem), and the Museum of Modern Art, among others. The Yale University Art Gallery just acquired his set of sixty engraved portraits of writers, Unconstraining Voices.
Faculty
Show Bio
MA Muthesius Academy of Fine Arts
MFA Mass. College of Art & Design
Personal Web Site:
http://www.janne-hoeltermann.com
Office Hours:
Spring 2012: Thursday 1:30 p.m. 2:30 p.m. or by appointment, studio located in the "Annex" on the left hand side from the Buddhist House, which is on 356 Washington Street.
Elijah Huge
Associate Professor of ArtShow Bio and Photo
Associate Professor of Art
Art Studio North 104
860-685-3526
Assistant Professor, Environmental Studies
860-685-3526
BA Yale University
MAR Yale University
ARST434 - 01
Contemperary Urbanism
ARST435 - 01
Architecture I
ARST436 - 01
Architecture II
CUPR525 - 01
Considering Site
Personal Web Site:
http://www.peripheryprojects.com
Office Hours:
Fall 2011
Thursday 4:00-5:00 and by appointment
ehuge@wesleyan.edu
104 Studio North
Scholarly Keywords:
Elijah Huge is an architect and director of the design firm Periphery. Exploring the interactions between landscape, regulatory systems, and architecture, his work includes award-winning competition entries for the High Line (New York, NY), the Bourne Bridge|Park (Bourne, MA), and the Tangshan Earthquake Memorial (Tangshan, China). His writings and design work have been featured in Praxis, Thresholds, Perspecta, Architectural Record, Landscape Architecture, Dwell, Journal of Architectural Education, and Competitions.A graduate of the Yale School of Architecture, he received the AIA Henry Adams Medal and was editor of Perspecta 35: Building Codes. His current scholarly research examines the historical emergence of architectural emergency devices, from the automatic sprinkler head to the Vonduprin panic bar.At Wesleyan, Elijah Huge leads the architecture studio track and the atelier North Studio within the Department of Art & Art History. Focused on developing and producing research and conceptually driven projects with real-world clients, North Studio is both a locus for architectural design education within the context of Wesleyan University''s liberal arts curriculum and a laboratory for design research and fabrication.
Julia Randall
Assistant Professor of ArtShow BioAssistant Professor of Art
860-685-2059
BFA Washington University
MFA Rutgers University
ARST131 - 01
Drawing I
ARST131 - 02
Drawing I
ARST131 - 01
Drawing I
ARST432 - 01
Drawing II
Office Hours:
Fall 2011, Sabbatical, 106 Art Workshops
Sasha Rudensky
Assistant Professor of ArtShow Bio and PhotoBA Wesleyan University
MFA Yale University
ARST451 - 01
Photography I
ARST453 - 01
Digital Photography I
ARST451 - 01
Photography I
ARST452 - 01
Photography II
Office Hours:
Fall 2011: Monday, 4:00-6:00 p.m., 2nd floor over Art Library
Jeffrey Schiff
Professor of ArtShow Bio and PhotoBA Brown University
MFA University of Mass Amherst
ARST445 - 01
Sculpture I
ARST445 - 01
Sculpture I
ARST446 - 01
Sculpture II
Office Hours:
Fall 2011: By Appointment, jschiff@wesleyan.edu or ext. 3525, 103 Studio North
Research Interests:
Jeffrey Schiff is a sculptor/installation artist. He has received numerous fellowships, including the Rome Prize from the American Academy in Rome, a Senior Scholar Fulbright Fellowship to India, a Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Residency, and grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the New York Foundation for the Arts. Schiff has exhibited his work widely, in New York City at the Sculpture Center, Stux Gallery, and Bose Pacia Gallery, in New Delhi at Nature Morte Gallery, and in institutions such as the San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art, the Boston Institute of Contemporary Art, Real Art Ways, and the Katonah Museum of Art. He has produced permanent public commissions at the Boston South Station Railroad Terminal and New Britain Courthouse (in process). He recently collaborated with Wesleyan students to produce The Library Project at Wesleyan University.
Scholarly Keywords:
My work explores the contingencies of order and disorder, and offers speculations about the complex ways in which the things of the world cohere, conglomerate, fragment, proliferate, and disperse. For the faculty exhibition, I have produced twoworks about stasis and movement, the propensity for pieces of the world to shift around, and the play between the desire to exert control and the temptation to escape it. Mobile Global is a prototype for a work envisioned to be much larger, in which several spools dispense carpeting onto mobile planes to produce a fragmented floor of shifting patterns. The numerous parts of the floor can roll about, changing the configuration of the floor and the juxtapositions of its colors and patterns.In Vertical Hold, I juxtapose sculpture's logic to that of photography. Digital images of clouds appear to be held in fixed positions by steel brackets attached tolong rods leaning from the floor. I am interested in the ease with which photographs fix the relationships between dynamic elements, whereas the physical realities of sculpture resist the illusion of arrested time.
http://jschiff.web.wesleyan.edu
David Schorr
Professor of ArtShow Bio and PhotoBA Brown University
BFA Yale University
MAA Wesleyan University
MFA Yale University
Personal Web Site:
http://davidschorr.com
Office Hours: Year 2011/2012: Tuesday 10:00-12:00 p.m. and 2:00-4:00 p.m., 007 Art Workshops. It is recommended that students call first, ext. 3533, to be certain Professor Schorr is available.
A native of Chicago, educated at Brown and Yale, David Schorr works and resides in New York City and Middletown. He has been Professor of Art at Wesleyan since 1971 where he has taught printmaking, drawing, typography, book design, graphic design and calligraphy. He has been a Fulbright Scholar three times, to Italy in 1975, where he worked at the Calcografia Nazionale and to India in 1998 and 2001. He continues to go to India every year where he is adjunct professor at the National Institute of Design in Ahmedabad. He has also been a fellow a number of times at Tamarind Institute (America's foremost shop of fine arts lithography).
He is represented by Mary Ryan Gallery in New York City where he shows regularly. In addition has had solo shows in Chicago, Milan, Rome, Naples, Paris, Athens, Toronto, Montreal and Copenhagen. His work has been reproduced extensively in the New York Times, The New Yorker and most significantly The New Republic, for which he has done over three hundred portraits. Schorr has illustrated numerous books, among them Parallel Lives, by Wesleyan author Phyllis Rose and four volumes of the fables of La Fontaine and a collection from Baudelaire translated by Wesleyan Professor Norman Shapiro.
His work is in the collections of the National Gallery of Art, The Museum of Fine Arts (Boston), The Cleveland Museum of Art, The Fogg Museum (Harvard), The New York Public Library, The Israel Museum (Jerusalem), and the Museum of Modern Art, among others. The Yale University Art Gallery just acquired his set of sixty engraved portraits of writers, Unconstraining Voices.
Keiji Shinohara
Artist in Residence, ArtShow BioArtist in Residence, Art
860-685-2816
Artist in Residence, East Asian Studies
860-685-2816
CER
ARST460 - 01
Intro To Sumi-e Painting
ARST461 - 01
Alternative Printmaking:
ARST460 - 01
Intro To Sumi-e Painting
ARTS618 - 01
Japanese Woodblock Printmaking
Office Hours: Spring 2011 By appointment kshinohara@wesleyan.edu ext. 2816 104 Art Studio South
Research Interests: Keiji Shinohara was born and raised in Osaka, Japan. After 10 years as an apprentice to the renowned Keiichiro Uesugi in Kyoto, he became a Master Printmaker and moved to the United States. Shinohara's natural abstractions are printed on rice paper with water-based inks from woodblocks in the Ukiyo-e style - the traditional Japanese printmaking method dating to 600 CE. Keiji Shinohara has been a visiting artist at over 100 venues. He has received grants from the Japan Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts and his work is in many public collections, including the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Milwaukee Art Museum, the Fogg Art Museum at Harvard University, and the Library of Congress.
Scholarly Keywords: While living in Kyoto, I trained for ten years in the traditional Japanese woodblock printing style known as Ukiyo-e. The technical foundation for my artwork is rooted in that training, accompanied by techniques of contemporary western printmaking. Yet the imagery itself is very different from historical Ukiyo-e.
The process of printmaking is appealing to me because of its inherent surprises. There is always a negotiation going on with the material. Each piece of wood brings its own character to which I must adjust each time.
For me, the story behind the work is very important; there is a sense of narrative that is very private. The feelings and emotions that I convey through these abstract landscapes matter most to me. Almost always my images are of nature, but it is the essence of the landscape that I want to express, not realistic accuracy.
Because I am left-handed, part of my Ukiyo-e training included attending Sumi-e (ink brush painting) school to become more adept at using my right hand. Woodblock printmaking is a very precise step-by-step process of planning and design, so I really like Sumi-e for the freedom it gives me to express myself spontaneously.
This specific series was inspired by my observations of the attempts to preserve ancient wall paintings. Sometimes the areas that chip away are restored in an attempt to maintain the original vitality of the painting. Yet there is a certain beauty to wall paintings that honestly reflect the passage of time, which is what I wanted to capture in these pieces.
Tula Telfair
Professor of ArtShow Bio and PhotoBFA Moore College Of Art
MFA Syracuse University
ARST439 - 01
Painting I
ARST440 - 01
Painting II
Personal Web Site:
http://www.forumgallery.com/adetail.php?id=164, http://www.tulatelfair.com
Office Hours: Fall 2011: Tuesday and Thursday, 8:30-9:30 a.m. or by appointment, 103 Art Studio South
Research Interests: The action in Tula Telfair's landscape paintings takes place above the level of our understanding, in a place where events are determined, not experienced: her vistas are imagined, not observed. Telfair paints at the intersection of memory and anticipation, transporting us back and forth between what we have experienced and what we want to investigate. To do so, is to expand the limits of naturalist majesty, to move through an endless combination of indefinite time and unknown place with an effortless fluidity made possible by consummate craft. Telfair builds and frames her fictional visions with brilliant color that illuminates her enormous, active and unforgettable skies. Horizons are transitory spaces, alive with the intensity of reflected luminance; clouds are spectacular dramas, unfolding and revealing their tumescent stories. In Pleasure does Not Readily Surrender to Analysis and Exploring the Material Limits, Telfair shows stacked multiple images, exploring the associative power of nature. No two locales seem the same, but the pull of the near-narrative is constant and magnified by the mutuality of time and mood in the choices the artist makes. The golden glow of the hidden sun and the razor edge of the horizon unite the disparate elements with sure-handed confidence and control. There is a nearly geometric progression to these works, their power multiplying continuously as we move from one image to another. Adding to the depth of the spaces and the mystery of the narratives in these works is the realization that the meadows, forests, streams and skies are not contained by the frame, rather they extend before, behind and beyond the edges of the picture plane. In Imagination in the Service of Truth and Is Memory the Product of Historical Time?, the endless horizons are illuminated by a laser beam of white-hot light that compels attention and concentration. The horizon is a chapter in the story each painting reveals, not an event itself. This brilliant light, compressed under heavy skies, is the result of forces unknown, hinting at powerful events that have occurred or will occur in the future Many of the works contain bodies of water. Endless winding streams or completely contained pools reflect the sunlight and the clouds, while conveying the mood of the tales the paintings tell. Water guides us through the paintings, always pointing us toward the subject. Whether flowing or still, the water in these paintings is an anchoring presence that reassures us of the possibilities inherent in the landscapes. Similarly, the mountains do not overwhelm, holding their place against the sky, while never dominating. The paintings are not simply focused on the struggle between the elements of nature, as they are illustrative of the tense harmony within it. The fate of these stories hangs on this fragile balance, resulting in images that excite, calm and fascinate - often all at once. Telfair's paintings achieve their success with incredible economy of emotions and bravura. There is the suggestion of what has happened or will happen, but rarely does she depict a major event outside of nature itself. These are judicious works, subtly modulating their way through the narratives they have to reveal. They do this with radiant light, color and palpable stillness. They communicate by combining stillness with motion, solitude with universality and definition with suggestion. Far from the backdrops of Renaissance landscapes, or the observed travelogues of the nineteenth century, these are fully contemporary paintings in their inspiration and their execution, simultaneously lush and minimal.
Scholarly Keywords: Painting and Drawing: Professor Telfair spent her early childhood in Gabon, Africa, moving to the United States when civil war broke out. She has exhibited her work extensively in galleries and museums in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston and Philadelphia, and additionally in Germany and France. Her paintings are in over thirty public collections including: Barclay Bank, Brauerei Beck & Company, Cable Vision, City of Philadelphia District Attorney's Office, Deloitte Touch, General Electric Corporation, Invenergy, Mastercard Corporation, Medicis Pharmaceutical Corporation, Metropolitan Life, Redding Art Museum, Russ Corporation, Steelcase Corporation, Syracuse University, The Chubb Group, The Federal Reserve Bank, The New Orleans Museum of Art, The Tower Group, The VanGuard Collection, Vlasic Corporation and Zilkha & Company. She received her BFA from Moore College of Art in 1984, and attended Syracuse University as a Graduate Fellow, receiving her MFA in 1986. Ms. Telfair is represented by Forum Gallery. All the images I paint are invented, and come purely from memory, not from observing a site, or utilizing photographic aids. Even though many of the required elements of the sublime are present, placing the work within the Romantic landscape tradition, I also employ devices that remind the viewer that these are simply paintings; two-dimensional surfaces covered with paint. Each image is bordered on three sides with a different colored edge. These lines appear to shift their color as they come directly in contact with the landscape, and can also make one side of the canvas appear to be closer to the viewer than the other. Although the images may appear familiar, using titles like, Debating the Precise Nature of Space or The Power of Interacting Volumes, distances them from association with any particular place, affording the viewer the opportunity to recall a personal experience. While maintaining an awareness of the material object, the depicted epic moments in nature, generally facilitate an emotional response. I am interested in the subjectivity of perception and the power of memory, using illusion to trigger recollections of things past.
Academic Associations: College Art Association
Grants: See: http://www.tulatelfair.com/resume.html
Lab URL:
http://www.tulatelfair.com
Publications:
http://www.tulatelfair.com/resume.html
http://www.tulatelfair.com
Kate TenEyck
Art Studio TechnicianShow BioBFA Rhode Island School of Design
MFA University of Hartford
ARST437 - 01
Printmaking
Personal Web Site:
http://www.kateteneyck.com
Office Hours: Fall 2011 Sunday 12:00-4:00 p.m. 105 Studio South (Woodshop) kteneyck@wesleyan.edu ext. 3670 105 Art Studio South (Woodshop)
Chair of the Department of Art & Art History
Joseph Siry
Professor of Art HistoryShow BioProfessor of Art History
41 Wyllys Avenue 302
860-685-3147
Chair, Art and Art History
Kenan Professor of the Humanities
BA Princeton University
MAA Wesleyan University
MAR University of Pennsylvania
PHD Massachusetts Institute Techno
ARHA258 - 01
Contemporary Architecture
ARHA254 - 01
Architecture of 20th Century
Office Hours: Spring 2013: Mondays & Wednesdays, 12:40 p.m. - 2:00 p.m. or by appointment, 41 Wyllys Avenue room 302
Research Interests: Joseph Siry is professor of modern architectural history. His books are Carson Pirie Scott: Louis Sullivan and the Chicago Department Store (Chicago, 1988); Unity Temple: Frank Lloyd Wright and Architecture for Liberal Religion (Cambridge, 1996); The Chicago Auditorium Building: Adler and Sullivan's Architecture and the City (Chicago, 2002), which won the 2003 Society of Architectural Historians' Alice Davis Hitchcock Award for best book by a North American scholar; and Beth Sholom: Frank Lloyd Wright and Modern Religious Architecture (Chicago, 2012). He also published book chapters, and articles in the Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians and the Art Bulletin, the first of which won College Art Association's 1991 Arthur Kingsley Porter Prize for the outstanding article by a younger scholar. He was given Wesleyan's Binswanger Award for Teaching Excellence in 1994. His work has been funded by the N.E.H., the Getty Research Institute, the Mellon Foundation, and the Graham Foundation.
Scholarly Keywords: Modern and American architectural and urban history
Emeriti
John Frazer
Professor of Art, EmeritusShow Bio and PhotoBFA Texas College
MAA Wesleyan University
MFA Yale University
Research Interests:
John Frazer, Professor of Art, emeritus, obtained his Master of Fine Arts at Yale where he was a student of Josef Albers. He has been awarded two Fulbright Grants for study in France and in Japan. He has had numerous showings of his paintings and drawings in both 32 group and in 22 solo exhibitions throughout the world. Approximately 200 of his works are in private collections. He has made seven documentary films and has published a definitive study of the pioneer French filmmaker Georges Melies. Frazer has his home and studio in Middletown.
For several years he has worked with a still life series that features fruits and vegetables suspended on strings as was often done prior to refrigeration, the goal being to look at these objects that are so easily overlooked.
Scholarly Keywords:
John Frazer, Professor of Art, emeritus, obtained his Master of Fine Arts at Yale where he was a student of Josef Albers. He has been awarded two Fulbright Grants for study in France and in Japan. He has had numerous showings of his paintings and drawings in both 32 group and in 22 solo exhibitions throughout the world. Approximately 200 of his works are in private collections. He has made seven documentary films and has published a definitive study of the pioneer French filmmaker Georges Melies. Frazer has his home and studio in Middletown. For several years he has worked with a still life series that features fruits and vegetables suspended on strings as was often done prior to refrigeration, the goal being to look at these objects that are so easily overlooked.
Alumni Spotlight

Joe Dahmen '97

Jeffrey Deitch '74

Vince Fecteau '92

Amber Frid-Jemenez '97

Lexi Funk '91

Lyle Ashton Harris '88

Rachel Harrison '89

Hyunmin Lee '04

Liz Magic Laser '03

Glenn Ligon '82

Danielle Mysliwiec '98

Juliana Romano '04

Aki Sasamoto '04

Sarah Schorr '99

Ben Weiner '03





