Summer/Fall Semester 2024
How I See Her: Aida Alarcón, Juleah Everglade and Isabella Martino
August 14 – September 12, 2024
Join us for an artists talk and reception: September 5, 5 – 6 p.m.
Three women who are artists, close friends, and ǧÃŬAV Alumni moved into the same home in Gainesville, GA during the end of summer in 2023. Their home quickly became a working studio and place of solace - filled with sleepovers on the couch, hosting intimate get-togethers, binging NPR Tiny Desks, elaborate meals made from scratch, and late night painting sessions...all leading to the conception of this body of work.
We each completed a self portrait with the intention of defining our own narrative in how we are presented to the world. Whereas the portraits we depict of each other reveal the unfound beauty that we don’t always see in ourselves. This act of deep understanding highlights how women embody the capability to form meaningful relationships and truly witness their friends. This collection of paintings also feature nostalgic iconography and personal mementos that all pertain to where we came from and where we are now, reflecting on girlhood and memories we’ve made together as women.
How I See Her actively references themes of healing while celebrating the inner child, the power of female friendships, and romanticizing this experience of living life together.
BFA Juried Show
October 2 – October 25
Reception Wednesday, October 16, 4 – 5:30 p.m.
The Roy C. Moore Art Gallery will host the first juried exhibition featuring work by ǧÃŬAV’s Bachelors of Fine Arts students. The juror is Beth Sale, former curator of the Lyndon House Art Center in Athens. Sale served as the first director of art galleries at ǧÃŬAV. For this exhibition, Sale has encouraged students to submit their best work and find their own voices as artists.
Spring Semester 2024
Kirsten Stingle: Emergence
January 10 - March 8, 2024
Join us for an artist talk and reception: Wednesday, January 24, 4:00 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.
“Often a pause is a necessary precursor to transformation. It is not a surrender to or a denial of the very real challenges we face. Rather, it is a deep inhale as we harness the possibility of change. Emergence to a new becoming."
Gainesville BFA Senior Capstone
April 15 - May 6, 2024
Reception: Monday, April 15, 2024, 5:00 – 6:00 p.m.
Artists: Mikey Avila, Lindarose King, Kayleigh Riker, Khesia Setiawan, Madison Sims, Tessa Viscardi
Fall Semester 2023
Jessica Wohl: Imagining Matriarchy
August 21 – September 22, 2023
Join us for the artist talk and lunchtime reception on September 22, noon to 1:30 p.m.
In Imagining Matriarchy, Wohl envisions what a matriarchal society might feel like. Believing that this world would be so different from the one we know, the works in this exhibition exist only as abstractions. They attempt to capture an intense, complex and unapologetic feminine energy that might permeate an alternate reality where women hold the power. Quilted entirely by hand, the thousands of black, pink and blue stitches imply how certain social identity groups may be essential in unifying, or perhaps keeping the “fabric of society” held firmly together. As women are often tasked with physical, emotional and invisible labor, this exhibition uses hand-crafted, comfort-giving objects to make evident the pivotal role women’s work plays in the formation of societies and attempts to provide a glimpse into a world where that work is celebrated, valued and visible.
Department of Visual Arts Faculty Biennial
September 28 – October 27, 2023
Reception: Wednesday, October 25, 5:00 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
"Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once we grow up." -Pablo Picasso
This edition of the ǧÃŬAV Visual Arts Faculty Biennial will give everyone a glimpse of the child artist living inside our faculty. The professors will share their current work alongside examples of their earlies artistic expressions from childhood.
BFA Capstone
"Visions Unleashed: Color, Form, & Film"
Fall 2023 BFA Student Senior Exhibition
November 6 - December 1, 2023
Reception: Wednesday, November 15, 5:00 - 6:00 p.m.
Roy C. Moore Art Gallery, located in the
Summer Exhibition
Transitions: ǧÃŬAV DoVA Alums
July 24 – August 11, 2023
Closing Reception and Juror's Talk: August 11, 2023 at 6:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.
Transitions is the first summer juried alumni exhibition. Artists who graduated from the University of North Georgia, North Georgia College and Gainesville State College were invited to submit new work exploring any interpretation of the concept Transitions. The Juror was Natalie Mault Mead, Chief Curator at the Huntsville Museum of Art, Huntsville, Alabama. This exhibition includes paintings, sculpture, ceramics, photography, textiles and digital prints.
Spring Semester 2023
Visual Voice
Graphic Design Juried Show
January 9 - Feb 11
Juror's Discussion via Zoom
Wednesday, January 25, 2:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.
To join the zoom discussion, email tiffany.prater@ung.edu
The Art Galleries at the University of North Georgia is pleased to announce its first Juried Graphic Design exhibition. This exhibition aims to educate through the visual communication of professional graphic designers and graphic design educators nationwide, a wide variety of content, approach, and style in poster design.
Designers and educators submitted artworks completed within the past year reflecting the theme, Women’s Rights. This year’s juror is Meghan Murray, the Design Director at Matchstic from Atlanta, where she leads her creative team in brand design. She’s also a member of the AIGA Atlanta board, where she co-chairs the Programming committee.
John Amoss - The Search for for the Esoteric Cruton:
A sundry collection of works over the Millennia
February 20 – March 24
Reception: Artist talk and reception: March 23, 4:00 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.
A look back at the career of printmaker and ǧÃŬAV professor John Amoss
BFA Capstone Exhibitions
March 27 – April 21
Reception: More details to come.
Spring Student Art Sale
April 24 – May 3
Each semester the ǧÃŬAV Visual Arts students hold a sale of their work at the Roy C. Moore Gallery featuring ceramics, paintings, sculptures, drawings and other remarkable pieces. All proceeds go directly to these talented student artists.
Fall Semester 2022
Jorge Arcos: Abstraction: Perception of Reality
August 31 – September 30
Reception: Wednesday, September 21 4:00 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Atlanta artist Jorge Arcos uses abstract painting to express his vision of the world. He says, “Thanks to my Hispanic heritage, coming from a culturally rooted country, my work portrays lively, bold, and energetic characteristics. Looking at a world that is full of nuances and changes, my focus comes from inner feelings about life.” His exhibition will coincide with Hispanic Awareness Month.
Lauren Bradshaw: Severance
October 3 – 28
Join us for a lunchtime artist talk and reception on October 28 at Noon - 1:30 p.m.
The works in this exhibition utilize materials such as fibers, textiles, clay, and latex to depict the strange but familiar liminal space that occurs between major life events. Fibrous wall-hangings work in conjunction with ceramic structures that suggest the physical tensions of merging and rupturing. Severance is referenced as a signifier of the simultaneous initiation of ending and beginning rather than solely a division of these concepts. The inherently corporeal qualities of these materials render the visceral emotions felt in response to the detachment of the present from the past.
Student Holiday Art Sale
December 5 - 14
At the end of every semester the Visual Arts students hold a sale of their artwork. This sale features ceramics, paintings, prints, drawings and sculpture with all sales going directly to the students. Payment can be made with cash and cards via Paypal, Cashap and Venmo.
Student Holiday Art Sale
December 6 - 14
Gallery Open:
- Monday and Wednesday:
- 10:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.
- Closed for lunch: 1:00 p.m. - 2:00 p.m.
- 2:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m
- Tuesday and Thursday:
- 10:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.
- Closed for lunch: 1:00 p.m. - 2:00 p.m.
- 2:00 p.m. -3:00 p.m.
At the end of every semester the Visual Arts students hold a sale of their artwork. This sale features ceramics, paintings, prints, drawings and sculpture with all sales going directly to the students. Payment can be made with cash and cards via Paypal, Cashap and Venmo.
Spring Semester 2022
Department of Visual Arts Faculty Biennial
January 17 – February 8
This Biennial allows the Department of Visual Arts to highlight recent work by the art faculty. Each campus has a remarkable array of talented people who are devoted to mentoring their students. In class and out, these teachers are also practicing artists whose work is featured in galleries, museums and venues around the country. During the Biennial, we celebrate the ǧÃŬAV faculty as professional artists by exhibiting their recent work here at ǧÃŬAV for the university community to enjoy.
Stacy Koffman: Transitions
March 3 – March 22
To join the artist talk and discussion via Zoom, please contact Victoria.cooke@ung.edu.
This exhibition by former ǧÃŬAV art professor Stacy Koffman is called “Transitions”. According to Stacy Koffman, change is inevitable and all is temporary. That is where she finds her mind and her art. Her influences range from the practice of Buddhism to Aboriginal Art, the Quilters of Gees Bend and many creative groups. She feels that trying to name and define specific “meaning” within abstract imagery is often very difficult, if not impossible. She has paintings in her studio where the meaning changes as she changes. She embraces this transitional quality of both the work and her mind. There is meaning to the process as her mind comes and goes through different spaces. Perhaps the meaning “is” the process! Letting the thoughts come and go as in a meditation practice. Trying not to hold on to any one idea or thought, and simply “be.” This is where her best work comes from and the results surprise and fill her up. It is as if she is the witness to her own process! Those are the best days in the studio.
B.F.A. Senior Capstone Exhibition: Calli Buttrey, Sarah McPherson, and Sara Wagler
March 30 - April 13
Please join us in celebrating the three, graduating B.F.A. students on the Gainesville campus. This Senior Capstone Exhibition is the final step for our Bachelor of Fine Arts majors. This is a specialized, professional degree that offers students additional, upper level studio and art course to better prepare them for graduate school admissions and positions within the creative industry that demands advanced artistic expertise. This semester’s graduating seniors are: Calli Buttrey, Sarah McPherson, and Sara Wagler
2021
Wesley Harvey - Stupid Love
February 18 - March 12
Artist talk via Zoom on February 22, 1:00 p.m. - 2:00 p.m. Contact Victoria.cooke@ung.edu for more information on the Zoom talk.
Stupid Love continues Harvey’s exploration into the idea of the perfect relationship and his own constant want and need for the fantasy to come to life. Looking under the umbrella of Queer Theory, he examines the idea of the monogamous relationship in terms of gay male sexuality and whether it can or will exist for him. He focuses not only the normative behavior but also the deviant lifestyle that often gets neglected, chastised and frowned upon. Drawing on information found in personal ads posted on dating websites, mobile dating/sex applications, and chat rooms. He has found both the normative and the deviant behaviors that has inspired his ceramics works.
Scholarship Awards
On view March 16 - March 26
The annual Scholarship Awards Exhibition displays the work of those students who have been given scholarships for their academic excellence in art.
Spring Student Art Sale
April 12 - April 23
Recent graduates and current students will be showing and selling their work to the public during our Spring Student Art Sale. 100% of the proceeds go directly to the students.
The Melancholy of Objects by Dennis Ritter
August 23 – September 17
Artist Talk: Friday, September 17, noon – 1:30 p.m.
To join the artist talk and discussion via Zoom, please contact Victoria.cooke@ung.edu.
The Melancholy of Objects is an extension of a larger body of work which explores the role of common objects - house plants, books, appliances, and keepsakes - as signifiers for personal and cultural identity through the lenses of domestic spaces, second-hand sales, and the personal collection. This exploration investigates the innate agency of “things” to affect our identify, memories, and recollections. In The Melancholy of Objects, the use of a monochromatic color scheme alludes to a darkness or an emptiness that can be found in the depths of isolation and nostalgia.
Zuzka Vaclavik: Light Year
October 11 – November 3
Artist Talk: Wednesday, November, 3 – 4:30
To join the artist talk and discussion via Zoom, please contact Victoria.cooke@ung.edu.
"During the past couple of years I, along with many others, have felt alone, sad, anxious, and an overbearing darkness as regards to the state of the world. This group of works created mostly during the pandemic, is a direct challenge to those feelings. On a planet where there is so much turmoil and suffering, these pieces function in direct opposition. A celebration of an emancipation of mind, universes found within, unencumbered creativity, and a kind of personal triumph are topics that I have explored in these pieces. After all, a light year is a measurement of distance traveled, not of time."
BA Capstone Exhibition
Juleah Edwards: Roads We Belong To
November 8 - November 19
Roads We Belong To is a physical embodiment of my summers throughout college spent road tripping the United States. These experiences traveling, camping, and learning about new places have consistently informed my work whenever I return home to Georgia. Memories traveling through these different places become a part of me and has led to this series of portraits, depicting the figure fused with the landscape. The mixed media works represents the miscellany of new perspectives that I bring home with me after my travels. Roads We Belong To is an eclectic narrative of paintings that encompass thousands of miles of backroads, vast natural scenes, years of exploration, human connection, and the feeling of home on the road.
Student Holiday Art Sale
November 29 – December 10
2020
Paintings and Prints by Angie Jerez
Exhibition opening: October 12
Angie Jerez moved to Atlanta from Bogotá, Columbia 8 years ago with a degree in graphic design. She has established herself as an illustrator and painter, creating detailed drawings, paintings and murals. She says, “I create drawings with detailed linework. My inspiration comes from random silly ideas, or from nostalgic memories. Sometimes, I find charm in objects and things that are usually ignored.”