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ArtistĢżforĢżaĢżDayĢżis back!

Coinciding with , Artist for a Day is a full, fun day of hands-on art making for people of all ages. This free event is suitable for artists at every level. At Artist for a Day, you can try your hand at printing, embroidery, wax casting, sculpture and so much more! Everything is hands on, and everything is free.

Event Details:

When:ĢżSaturday, May 11, 2024
Time: 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Where: NSCAD University, Port Campus, 1107 Marginal Road.

No registration required ā€” just show up!

Artist for a Day workshop and events:

Additive Mini-Sculpture

Darlene Morrison (Alumni) – Build a mini-sculpture of mostly found materials. See how everyday waste materials can be reutilized in a fun hands-on process of creating something new. Recycled plastics, wire, rubber, wood, metal, etc. are combined with new and found objects to create sculptures without glue or nails. Drop in and explore this clean, fun process! You’ll go out the door with a hand-held piece of art that didn’t exist thirty minutes ago.

Architectural Embroidery

A transformative site-specific project, visitors will use embroidery techniques on the railings of the first floor. With yarn participants will explore textiles as a more free flowing process, learning you donā€™t need many tools to create art.

Cardboard City

Rami Geraci (Student) – Repurposing cardboard waste, visitors of all ages can construct and decorate their own building for our small-scale city. What will the future look like?

Fashion Show Gallery

Miss the NSCAD Fashion Show? Get a glimpse into the future of fashion with this display and meet the designers who created them.

Make Your Mark

Sketch your dream ring with NSCAD Universityā€™s new grad ring designed by student Erin Flemming. ĢżA one-of-a-kind ring which contains a trace of the mark students made at NSCAD. At the core of art is mark making, visitors can sketch out on the newest incarnation of our alumni ring.

Monoprint Making

Rachel Reeves (Alumni) – Monoprints and direct nature prints with plants. Printed on paper, card, fabric using water-based printing inks. During this process each print is unique, no two images are the same.

Performative Arts Communication

Jay Davison (Student) ā€“ a group of six students will engage in conversation about their artistic experiences within and outside of the art institute. This project, being based around the communicative power of conversation, is meant to engage with the public and help develop community and communicative skills.

Shrinkies

NSCAD Extended studies – Creating keychains with shrink paper and drawing materials, using a toaster oven. We’ll need a table for the toaster oven and demo materials, and two tables with chairs for people to draw/colour their shrinkies.

Student Art Award Gallery

NSCAD University is proud to present the annual NSCAD Student Art Award. This celebration of achievement is a recognition of our studentsā€™ outstanding work. The Student Art Award provides young artists across ten disciplines at the university with vital visibility as they embark on their careers. See works by: Chris Sampson, Daria Herashchenko, a. laurel Lawrence, Kate Dong, Kalani Chen-Hayes, Page Cowell, Rayce Min, Sunny Babcock, Yongxuan Zheng and Silas Wamsley.

Wet Felting

Marilyn Holm – Making textile approaches accessible to everyone! Wet felting in a baggie, just add water and friction.

Wax Casting

Sarah Sears (Alumni / Student) ā€“ Exploring a metalsmithing process, natural material / alginate mold making. Through this process visitors will create a mold and replicate an item in wax.

Artist for a Day is made possible through the participation of NSCAD alumni, faculty and student volunteers.

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From clay to television: NSCAD alumni Brendan Tang shares his journey in ceramics /from-clay-to-television-nscad-alumni-brendan-tang-shares-his-journey-in-ceramics/ Fri, 26 Apr 2024 18:30:31 +0000 /?p=37804 The post From clay to television: NSCAD alumni Brendan Tang shares his journey in ceramics appeared first on NSCAD.

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The Vancouver-based artist and ceramist is a celebrity judge on °äµž°äā€™s The Great Canadian Pottery Throwdown.

Brendan Tang (far left) with cast members on the set of °äµž°äā€™s 'The Great Canadian Pottery Throwdown.' Credit: Brendan Tang.
White and blue ceramic art that resembles fine China, with purple, red and yellow modes at the bottom.
Brendan Tang is best known for his sculptural ceramics. Credit: Brendan Tang

Vancouver-born NSCAD alumni, (he/they), enjoys working in their home city, but his studies took him to different landscapes like Edwardsville for his MFA at Southern Illinois University, and to NSCAD University for his BFA.

ā€œWhat drew me to the East Coast was the great studio-based, practice-based program at NSCAD,ā€ they say.

Now an instructor at Emily Carr University, Tang works with multiple mediumsā€”including a life-size Ford F150 truck constructed out of watercolour paperā€”but is best known for his sculptural ceramics. This is part of the reason he ended up as a judge on the inaugural season of executive produced by recreational potter and actor Seth Rogen.

How did you end up in Halifax from all the way across the country?

Most of my education has been looking for a studio-based program. Academia means a lot of reading and philosophy, but I was looking for a program that would meet my technical making needs. When I went to NSCAD to visit, I met Walter Ostrom and immediately, that East Coast welcome was thereā€” heā€™s such an open, generous man.

I ran into him at the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia and he said, ā€œCome down to Ceramics [at NSCAD] and Iā€™ll get someone to show you around.ā€ That open-door vibe that is so great about the East Coast.

You talk about belonging to ā€œthe remix generation,ā€ what does that mean to you and how does it apply to your work?

A lot of my training comes out of that late-90s post-modernism vibe, a deconstruction/reconstruction kind of aesthetic; that really informed my practice. As a young person I was emulating a lot of pop cultureā€”itā€™s almost like I understood it through a lens of popular culture, hip hop, EDM. I feel in a lot of ways, my work approaches it that way. Reprocesses it and remixes it.

I feel like back in my day, finding trends was a way of defining yourself and finding the communities you wanted to be a part of. When I came out to NSCAD in the late 90s, rave culture was really big and that was such a wonderful experience as part of my education. It was a way of finding your people.

You work with lots of materials but what is it about ceramics that you connect to?

ĢżWorking with my hands is a draw. I like the order of a processā€”I find something delightfully predictable about knowing what you have to do next. Itā€™s a little more sophisticated than a Sudoku puzzle, but thereā€™s joy in completing it.

Thereā€™s a flow state about these things thatā€™s satisfying on a mental level, getting into that zone. The process gives you a structure, the space created with the process helps me figure out the world. Iā€™m always in awe of paintersā€”thereā€™s a process but itā€™s also so amorphous. Ceramics has a timeline.

A lot of ceramicists dive into the alchemy, but Iā€™m so controlling of the process of how Iā€™m carving things and painting things. Where thereā€™s more improvisation is how I do my compositions or modelling things, thereā€™s space to do the free-form jazz sort of thing. So, itā€™s less ā€˜gifts from the kilnā€™ and more ā€˜thatā€™s exactly what I wanted.ā€™

Competition shows usually have a templateā€”thereā€™s the nice judge, the mean one, the wild card. How did you fit in at The Great Canadian Pottery Throwdown?

ĢżI could just be myself, which is a big ceramic nerd!

We all know these competition shows and the kinds of characters that are part of them. During COVID, The Great Canadian Baking Show was my comfort show, and I knew it wasnā€™t the backstabbing, teaching through cruelty and shame that a lot of competition shows tend to be.

Essentially the goal was to have the people compete with themselves and be the best they could be. Basically, the rising tide lifts all boats approach. I teach from a place of care and Iā€™m genuinely interested in what these people are doing. They were into that vibe.

Are you getting recognized?

ĢżI havenā€™t been recognized yet, but I did cut my mullet off so maybe Iā€™m incognito. I miss that beautiful mane.

followers are definitely going up though, which is a hoot, but I donā€™t know what to do about this. Art school in the 90s did not prepare me for social media management.

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The Dawson Print Shop opens doors to artist Ashes Withyman and his Wandering Calendar project /the-dawson-print-shop-hosts-artist-ashes-withyman-wandering-calendar-project/ Wed, 24 Apr 2024 14:14:00 +0000 /?p=37727 The Dawson Print Shop continues to be a hub for creativity, learning, and innovative creations in printmaking. Some of the posters produced from the ‘Wandering Calendar’ project. Credit: Paul Kajander. If the history of print had a faceā€”a typeface, that isā€” it would most likely live in the Dawson Print Shop at NSCAD University. Housing […]

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The Dawson Print Shop continues to be a hub for creativity, learning, and innovative creations in printmaking.

Some of the posters produced from the ‘Wandering Calendar’ project. Credit: Paul Kajander.

If the history of print had a faceā€”a typeface, that isā€” it would most likely live in the at NSCAD University.

Housing one of Canadaā€™s most extensive collections of functional typographic material, the Dawson Print Shop has myriad historic letterpress printing technologies, with more than 1000 typefacesā€” each with unique fonts that you wonā€™t find anywhere else today. ĢżĢż

, an artist and part-time faculty at NSCAD, was in the Dawson Print Shop for the first time on April 16, working with artist as part of the , a project co-organized with NSCAD sculpture faculty, HaeAhn Kwon. Kajander was amazed by the depth of resources at the site.

ā€œMy jaw dropped to the floor,ā€ he says with a laugh. ā€œI was really grateful to see that there is a facility like this existing at NSCAD. There are so many fonts, type sets, and sizes, and I think this kind of collection is really unparalleled. Some of those fonts are wild, unimaginable, and they definitely don’t exist in your standard Microsoft Word program.ā€

‘It would have been impossible to realize this without the Dawson letterpress’

The Dawson Print Shop is not only a learning space for students, it is also a hub for visiting artists and creatives who want to push the possibilities of printmaking. For Withyman, the Dawson provided the space to teach declining skill sets that would be hard to find in a modern classroom.

ā€œAmongst the ongoing de-skilling of material practices and processes, it’s incredibly important to give students access to these alternative hands-on technologies and empower them to explore slower methods of text and image making,ā€ says Withyman. ā€œThis is what makes the Dawson such a unique place. ā€œ

Hosted by Kunstverein Toronto, the Wandering Calendar project explores the ways different cultures and communities have historically recorded time. Withymanā€™s contribution resulted in a series of 13 posters made with typeface and fonts that would have been popular decades ago or even hundreds of years ago, transforming them into a sort of time-travelling message that has inserted itself in a modern space. The vast variety of fonts and type available at the Dawson gave Withyman and Kajander the tools needed to bring the project to fruition.

ā€œIt would have been impossible to realize this work without access to the Dawson letterpress,ā€ says Kajander, who facilitated the workshop while Ashes joined remotely. ā€œYou can’t just fit something like a letterpress studio into your kitchen or in your basement. Even if you were able to access a small press or an independent letterpress, there’s no way that anyone else has the amount of material for you to work with.

ā€œI donā€™t think Ashes anticipated that there would be this richness of fonts available for us to try to incorporate into his work. It was really meaningful to see how happy he was with the outcome of the project,ā€ he continues

'It's a great example of print-related research-creation work that can be hosted in the Dawson'

NSCAD student, Lee Richard, had the opportunity to work with Withyman and Kajander during the Wandering Calendar project, and says it gave him the opportunity to work with established artists in the field.

ā€œAs a printmaking student, it was an exciting first step into working with established artists using print media in their work,ā€ he says. ā€œT³ó±š collection of wood and metal type at the Dawson is incredible, and you can get a sense of the potential the space has for projects like Wandering Calendar. I hope that through future classes and projects like this, the collection can continue to be used and cared for.ā€

NSCAD currently uses the Dawson Print Shop as a teaching space for short modules in classes across various divisions. Interim dean Dr. Jacqueline Warwick says a project like the Wandering Calendar is one of the many reasons the Dawson remains an invaluable resource at the university.

ā€œT³ó±š Wandering calendar is a great example of print-related research-creation work that can be hosted in the Dawson,ā€ says Warwick. ā€œT³ó±š shop will be active in the fall with more research projects, and NSCAD is in the process of designing new course offerings for 2025 that will focus on contemporary approaches to book arts, letter pressing, and post-digital forms of making.ā€

For Kajander, the Dawson Print Shop is a resource of historical importance that will hopefully continue to provide valuable learning experiences for students and teachers at NSCAD.

ā€œI could imagine really exciting possibilities for teaching a course there,ā€ he says. ā€œEven when I was helping Ashes realize his work, I had so many thoughts about works that I would love to make at the Dawson. Itā€™s been really inspiring to be there.ā€

A person stands in front a shelf. They are wearing a black shirt, blue denim and grey overalls.
NSCAD printmaking student, Lee Richard, working at the Dawson Print Shop during the 'Wandering Calendar' project. Credit: Paul Kajander.

To learn more about the Dawson Print Shop and upcoming workshops, visit .

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Laurie Andersonā€Æto receive an honorary degree from NSCAD /laurie-anderson-to-receive-an-honorary-degree-from-nscad/ Wed, 17 Apr 2024 15:53:45 +0000 /?p=37638 NSCAD University will give groundbreaking artist Laurie Anderson an honorary degree at its May 14 convocation ceremony. During her visit to NSCAD, Anderson has a busy schedule. On May 13, she will give an artist talk to the NSCAD community, meet with NSCAD Student Art Award Finalists, and attend the Graduate Exhibition closing reception at […]

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Laurie Anderson

NSCAD University will give groundbreaking artist Laurie Anderson an honorary degree at its May 14 convocation ceremony.Ģż

During her visit to NSCAD, Anderson has a busy schedule. On May 13, she will give an artist talk to the NSCAD community, meet with NSCAD Student Art Award Finalists, and attend the Graduate Exhibition closing reception at the Anna Leonowens Gallery. On May 14, Anderson will deliver a convocation address to graduating students on the day.Ģż

ā€œWe are absolutely thrilled to welcome Laurie Anderson to NSCAD University. The last time she spoke here was in 1977. We are grateful to have this opportunity to formally recognize the incredible achievements of her ground-breaking career. Ó£ĢŅŹÓʵ students will benefit from her insights and advice,ā€ says President Peggy Shannon.ĢżĢż

Anderson is a writer, director, composer, visualā€Æartist,ā€Æmusician and vocalist whose works span the worlds of art, theater, experimental music, and technology. Her recording career was launched by O Superman in 1981.ĢżĢż

Anderson’s live shows range from simple spoken word to expansive multimedia stage performances such asā€Æthe eight-hour United States (1982), Empty Places (1990), Songs and Stories from Moby Dickā€Æ(1999), and Delusion (2010). In 2002, Anderson was appointed the first artist-in-residence of NASA which culminated in her 2004 touring solo performanceā€ÆThe End of the Moon.ĢżĢż

Anderson had created numerous audio-visual installations as well as films- the feature filmā€ÆHome of the Braveā€Æ(1986), Carmen (1992), and Hidden Inside Mountains (2005).ĢżĢż Her filmā€Æ Heart of a Dogā€Æ(2015) was chosen as an official selection of the 2015 Venice and Toronto Film Festivals.Ģż

ĢżIn the same year, her exhibitionā€ÆHabeas Corpusā€Æopened at the Park Avenue Armory to wide critical acclaim and in 2016 she was the recipient of Yoko Onoā€™s Courage Award for the Arts for that project.ĢżĢż

As a performer and musician, she has collaborated with many people including Brian Eno, Jean-Michel Jarre, William S. Burroughs, Peter Gabriel, Robert Wilson, Christian McBride and Philip Glass.Ģż

Her works for quartets and orchestras, Songs for Amelia (2001), has been played in festivals and concert halls around the world and she has invented a series of instruments and electronic sculptures.Ģż

Anderson has published ten books and been nominated for five Grammys throughout her recording career with Warner Records and Nonesuch. She released Landfall, a collaboration with the Kronos Quartet, which received a Grammy award in 2018.Ģż

As a composer, Anderson has contributed music to films by Wim Wenders and Jonathan Demme, dance pieces by Bill T. Jones, Trisha Brown, Molissa Fenley, and scores for theater productions including plays by Robert LePage. She has created pieces for National Public Radio, France Culture and the BBC. She has curated several large festivals including the Vivid Festival in Sydney (2010) and the Meltdown Festival at Royal Festival Hall in London (1997).Ģż

Her visual work has been featured in many galleries and museums including in 2003, the MusĆ©e d’art contemporain de Lyon in France produced a touring retrospective of her work entitled The Record of the Time: Sound in the Work of Laurie Anderson.Ģż In 2010 a retrospective of her visual and installation work opened in SĆ£o Paulo, Brazil and later traveled to Rio de Janeiro.ā€ÆAndersonā€™s largest solo exhibition at The Smithsonian’sā€ÆHirshhornā€ÆMuseum in Washington D.C., titledā€ÆThe Weatherā€Æ(2021-2022), showcased the artistā€™s storytelling process through her work in video, performance, installation, painting, and other media.Ģż

Her visual work is on long term display at MASS MoCA and her three virtual reality works, Chalkroom, Aloft, and To The Moon, collaborations with the artist Hsin-Chien Huang, won several awards including Best VR Experience at the 74th Venice International Film Festival in 2017 and were featured in the Cannes Film Festival in 2019.Ģż

A retrospective of her work opened in 2023 at Moderna Museet in Stockholm.Ģż

She has received numerous honorary doctorates, prizes and awards including the Guggenheim Fellowship, Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize, and the Wolf Prize. In 2024 she received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Recording Academy.Ģż

In 2021 she served as Charles Eliot Norton Professor of Poetry at Harvard University and delivered the Norton lectures as video, now available online. She has worked on numerous projects in AI with the Machine Learning Institute in Adelaide, Australia where she was artist in residence in 2020. Anderson continues to tour her evolving performanceā€ÆThe Art of Falling and is working on an opera, ARK, commissioned by the Manchester International Festival, premiering in 2024.ĢżĢż

Her life partner as well as her collaborator was Lou Reed from 1992 onward. They married in 2008 and worked on numerous projects together until his death in 2013. Anderson lives in New York City.ĢżĢż

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Make Your Mark: ±·³§°ä“”¶Łā€™s new alumni ring is fully customizable to ensure each student graduates with a unique piece /make-your-mark-nscads-new-alumni-ring-is-fully-customizable-to-ensure-each-student-graduate-with-a-unique-piece/ Wed, 17 Apr 2024 14:36:17 +0000 /?p=37618 Using ethically sourced materials, the new NSCAD alumni ring is a testament to the academic achievement of the students and the ethical values of the university. ±·³§°ä“”¶Łā€™s new alumni rings comes in gold, silver and stainless steel. Credit: NSCAD Art Supply Store. As plans for convocation are underway at NSCAD University, graduating students are excited […]

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Using ethically sourced materials, the new NSCAD alumni ring is a testament to the academic achievement of the students and the ethical values of the university.

±·³§°ä“”¶Łā€™s new alumni rings comes in gold, silver and stainless steel. Credit: NSCAD Art Supply Store.

As plans for convocation are underway at NSCAD University, graduating students are excited to make that unmistakable stride of pride across the stage. In addition to having a diploma in hand, there is another significant emblem of academic achievement ā€”an alumni ring.

Designed by NSCAD student, Erin Fleming, the alumni ring is created with students in mind. As a Jewelry Design and Metalsmithing student, Fleming has used all the knowledge she learned at NSCAD to make a piece of customizable art that graduating students can look at with fond memories.

ā€œI wanted something that felt personal for everyone,ā€ she says. ā€œArt school is such an individual experience, and the challenge was making it relatable for everybody in all different departments. So, I came up with the idea of everyone having their own personal mark that would be put on the ring.ā€

With Flemingā€™s design, students will be able to fully customize their alumni ring and digitally create their own patterns; this will then be etched onto the rings by the jeweler and sent to students.

The premise of Flemingā€™s ā€˜make your markā€™ design resonated with the judges during the NSCAD Alumni Ring Redesign competition in 2023. She ultimately won the competition and was awarded a $1,000 prize, plus consideration for a design purchase and production agreement.

ā€œI never really paid that much attention to the alumni ring before that point. So, I found it very difficult in the beginning,ā€ she says. ā€œI made several samples to make sure it was even possible to map a pencil mark onto a ring, and it was all digital, which was pretty far out of my realm of experience, but I had a lot of help along the way.ā€

MAKING A RING THAT SUIT THE TIMES

Some of that help came from Greg Sims, assistant professor in the division of craft, jewelry and metalsmithing, who saw aĢżchance to update ±·³§°ä“”¶Łā€™s alumni ring design. With the previous ring being phased out of production, Sims put together a design competition for current students.

ā€œI recognized that there was an opportunity to make it more current and make it more reflective of the students that are going through the institution now,ā€ he says. Ģż

At the same time, Sims was spearheading ±·³§°ä“”¶Łā€™s first ever Fairmined Agreement, which allows jewelry design and metalsmithing students access to ethically sourced gold and silver in their program. The same ethically sourced materials will also be used to make the alumni rings.

ā€œWhen the question came up as to whether or not this ring should be using ethically sourced or responsibly sourced materials, we all said yes,ā€ says Sims. ā€œBecause otherwise, it’s a glaring issue that doesn’t really reflect the values of our students or the institution.ā€

With every ring purchase, students will receive a Fairmined Certificate that will allow them to trace the source of their rings; they will be able to see the supply chain, the record of sales, all the way to the time and location of the mines that the minerals were sourced. Each actor in the supply chain is audited every three years to ensure that the standards of Fairmined are being adhered to.

FAIRMINED EVERY STEP OF THE WAY

NSCAD commissioned ā€” who specializes in ethically traded gems and Fairmined metalsā€”to create the rings. Owner John Esposito is excited that institutions like NSCAD are seeing the value in Fairmined and sustainable jewelry.

ā€œT³ó±š biggest reason why I work with Fairmined is I wouldn’t want to put someone through the abhorrent abuses that come with the mining industry; I donā€™t want my jewelry to be part of that legacy,ā€ he says. ā€œT³ó±šre are millions of people that depend on mining to support their families worldwide, and while we canā€™t completely eradicate mining, we can do it differently. We can make sure people can still support their families and also have an ethical supply chain, which we can source from.ā€

When Esposito started Malleable in 2017, it was one of the first and only Fairtrade Licensed Goldsmiths in Canada. He wants other jewellers to normalize the use of Fairmined metals, not just to fit the trend of sustainability, but to change the system of jewelry making for the better.

ā€œI feel that a lot of jewelry designers see Fairmined and look at it like a competition in a negative way,ā€ he says. ā€œBut really, this is a ā€˜co-petitionā€™; we can all be in the same industry and working together to create a community of people and create change through business for good.ā€

DESIGNING YOUR NSCAD ALUMNI RINGS

Fleming will also be graduating this year and is excited to see her work on the hands of her peers.

ā€œI’ve had alumni reach out to me and say, ā€˜I already bought the old ring, but I really want this ring.ā€™ And that’s the best feedback I could have,ā€ she says. ā€œDuring the process of going through art school, I never thought I would get such enthusiastic anticipation for something that I created.ā€

As a former jewelry student himself, Esposito believes the alumni rings are just as important as an engagement ring or wedding ring, because they symbolize an integral part of someoneā€™s life.

ā€œI know how hard it is to go into jewelry arts as an academic venture, and even more so how difficult it is to be a jewelry designer out in the big wide world,ā€ he says. ā€œSo, the ring can be grounding and a physical reminder of how far youā€™ve come.ā€

Sims has spent the winter developing and testing the software students will use to design their rings. He wants to ensure everyone has a positive experience creating their final piece of art as a NSCAD student.

ā€œWe want students to feel confident in their mark making,ā€ he says. ā€œWe recognize that there are going to be some people that are maybe hesitant to commit to a design and we are here to make sure that they come out on the other side with a ring that truly represents them.ā€

The will begin selling the new alumni rings to graduates at the ceremony on May 14, offering one-on-one design appointments to students and alumni both in-person and online.

ā€œWe want to ensure that everyone can bring their ideas to life and honor the design as their own, so itā€™s really important to us that the NSCAD community feel supported throughout the process from idea to the first time they slide on their new ring,ā€ says the NSCAD Art Store in a statement.

Jewelry Design and Metalsmithing student, Erin Fleming, designed the new alumni rings.
Greg Sims is the assistant professor in the division of craft, jewelry and metalsmithing.
Toronto-based jeweller, John Esposito, is the owner of Malleable.
The NSCAD Art Supply Store will begin selling the new alumni rings to graduates at the ceremony on May 14.

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NSCAD President launches I.D.E.A. Fund for Miā€™kmaw, African Nova Scotian, and underrepresented students /nscad-president-launches-new-funding-initiative-for-mikmaw-african-nova-scotian-and-underrepresented-students/ Wed, 10 Apr 2024 14:04:40 +0000 /?p=37426 The new funding initiative aims to empower students with the funds needed to pursue their creative ambitions. Credit: Keely Hopkins NSCAD Universityā€™s President, Dr. Peggy Shannon, is launching The I.D.E.A. Fund to financially assist students from Miā€™kmaw, African Nova Scotian and underrepresented backgrounds that want to pursue an education in art and design.Ģż The initiative […]

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The new funding initiative aims to empower students with the funds needed to pursue their creative ambitions.

Credit: Keely Hopkins

NSCAD Universityā€™s President, Dr. Peggy Shannon, is launching The I.D.E.A. Fund to financially assist students from Miā€™kmaw, African Nova Scotian and underrepresented backgrounds that want to pursue an education in art and design.Ģż

The initiative was launched by Shannon in March 2024, with the mission to cultivate creativity, foster innovation, and nurture talentā€”which embodies ±·³§°ä“”¶Łā€™s values of inclusion, diversity, equity, and anti-racism (I.D.E.A.).

Specifically designed to support Miā€™kmaw, African Nova Scotians, and youth emerging from foster care, this fund aims to support students with financial need and lighten their educational costs. In the spirit of enriching ±·³§°ä“”¶Łā€™s creative community, Shannon has pledged to match every donation up to $25,000 in contributions to the fund.

ā€œT³ó±š I.D.E.A. Fund represents our unwavering commitment to creating a more equitable and inclusive environment within our NSCAD community,ā€ says Shannon. ā€œAt NSCAD, we firmly believe that diversity is our greatest strength and that by investing in the next generation of creative minds, we are paving the way for a brighter and more inclusive future.ā€

Jude Gerrard, ±·³§°ä“”¶Łā€™s Ombudsperson and Inclusion, Diversity and Equity Consultant, says this fund will go a long way in diversifying the wider creative sector in Nova Scotia.

ā€œInitiatives like the I.D.E.A. Fund not only foster diversity in the creative industry but also serve as pathways to amplify voices that have historically been underrepresented,ā€ he says. ā€œBy investing in the education and opportunities of Miā€™kmaw and African Nova Scotian students, as well as students who have been part of the foster care system, we can continue to grow the creative industry and have it truly represent the social and cultural landscape of Nova Scotia. Diverse perspectives, experiences, and talents will help to create a more vibrant and inclusive industry for all.ā€

The I.D.E.A. Fund will be available as entrance scholarships for eligible students, starting in the Fall Semester of 2024.

Dr. Jacqueline Warwick, Interim Dean at NSCAD, says for students, the fund will make a difference between living their dreams or putting them on holdā€”sometimes, permanently.

ā€œAs higher education across Canada strives to be more inclusive, we need to create pathways for students who might not otherwise see themselves in an art university program,ā€ she says. ā€œT³ó±š I.D.E.A. Fund will help NSCAD train students who will go on to share their talents and brilliance professionally. Through these pathways, the fields of art and design will benefit enormously, and the art world will be more vibrant and diverse.ā€

Donate to The I.D.E.A. Fund today and help students get one step closer to achieving their dreams. Your contribution, no matter the size, will directly support talented individuals at a pivotal moment in their lives.

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NSCAD grads launch Halifax Art Book Fair /halifax-art-book-fair-launches/ Wed, 10 Apr 2024 10:26:17 +0000 /?p=37402 Poster detail from the Halifax Art Book Fair. With the popularity of art book fairs in recent years growing beyond the pale of major cities like London, New York, or Frankfurt to smaller cities around the world, four art publishers and art book enthusiasts are launching a book fair in Halifax. The inaugural edition of […]

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halifax art book fair - poster detail
Poster detail from the Halifax Art Book Fair.

With the popularity of art book fairs in recent years growing beyond the pale of major cities like London, New York, or Frankfurt to smaller cities around the world, four art publishers and art book enthusiasts are launching a book fair in Halifax.

The inaugural edition of the (HABF) and conference will take place on April 13th from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. at the All Nations Church,ĢżĢż(corner of Robie and Charles).ĢżAdmission is free.

Organized by Andrew Hill (BFA Expanded Media 2023), Marite Kuus, Neil Kehler (BFA Photography 2023) and Nick Chapman (BFA Interdisciplinary Arts/Art HIstory 2019), it marks a significant step in the contemporary art scene in Halifax, and of course, many NSCAD alumni are behind it.

The HABF prioritizes artistsā€™ books, catalogues, monographs, periodicals, zines and related printed materials. There will also be live events programming, featuring hourly talks on aspects of print culture. You can on their website.

Co-organizer Andrew Hill spoke with us about the fair.Ģż

Why an art book fair in Halifax?

There is a significant art book history in Halifax that has largely gone unnoticed in the international circuit of art book fairs. The closest art book fairs to Nova Scotia are in Montreal and New York, which makes it difficult for many Maritime artists to attend these events. HABF wants to reignite the Atlantic art book scene and foster a space for new friendships, connections and ideas.

Can you talk about the research and travel you did preparing for this?

We tabled as Special Characters at Printed Matter’s Los Angeles Art Book Fair, as well as VOLUME fair in Montreal. We also talked with a lot of community members in Halifax to design an event that meets the needs of our community. Among them were people who had represented Halifax INK at the New York Art Book Fair before the pandemic.Ģż

You co-run Special Characters. It started at NSCAD. How does your small press, NSCAD, and this book fair all intersect?

was started by myself, Nick Chapman and Soren Wilde in 2021. Since then, we have collaborated with many NSCAD students, alumni and artists in the NSCAD network. We have also hosted exhibitions and other events with a goal to foster more artist-run projects in Halifax. Ó£ĢŅŹÓʵ goal is to provide a platform for artists and publishers in the community, and foster exchange between the Maritimes and beyond. This is what the idea for the Halifax Art Book Fair grew out of.

What’s your ultimate goal for all this?

Ó£ĢŅŹÓʵ current goal is to build a scene for art book publishing in Halifax, with a longer-term goal of opening a project space with a focus on art books and publishing. A free learning space for performances, lectures, a reading room/library, with the possibility of printing and binding in-house. Think in Brooklyn, in New York, in Norway, orĢż in Holland.

About the fair:

Halifax Art Book Fair (HABF)Ģż April 13th from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. All Nations Church, Admission is free.

The Fair acknowledges the generous financial support fromĢżĢżandĢż.Ģż

Ģż

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Mark Verabioff to hold artist talk on April 17 /artist-talk-with-mark-verabioff-on-april-17/ Wed, 10 Apr 2024 09:00:49 +0000 /?p=37218 The post Mark Verabioff to hold artist talk on April 17 appeared first on NSCAD.

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Wednesday, April 17, 2024

12 p.m.

Academy Building

Host: David Clark

Mark Verabioff’s artistic journey from New York to Los Angeles reflects a commitment to cultural insurgency, employing guerrilla actions, appropriation, and collage to challenge dominant power structures in contemporary art. His work has been exhibited internationally, and he continues to engage with critical inquiries and interviews across various cultural publications.

Verabioff’s practice is characterized by a subversive contextual critique of source material from art history and popular culture, often laced with acid humor and antagonistic wit. He currently serves as a visiting artist adjunct faculty at ArtCenter in Pasadena, CA.

Instagram:

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Masters of Design Studio 2 Class: End of Semester Show /masters-of-design-studio-2-class-end-of-semester-show/ Tue, 09 Apr 2024 12:19:45 +0000 /?p=37356 Together with students from Saint Maryā€™s University, ±·³§°ä“”¶Łā€™s Master of Design Studio 2 class will showcase their latest innovations, products, and services. The MDES-6520-2 class has been invited to join the: SMU Sparks ExpoFriday April 12, 12:00 to 4:00PM At the Arthur L. Irving Entrepreneurship Centre, Inspiration Studio (SH212)5907 Gorsebrook Ave.Halifax Nova ScotiaB3H 1G3 ±·³§°ä“”¶Łā€™s […]

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Together with students from Saint Maryā€™s University, ±·³§°ä“”¶Łā€™s Master of Design Studio 2 class will showcase their latest innovations, products, and services. The MDES-6520-2 class has been invited to join the:

SMU Sparks Expo
Friday April 12, 12:00 to 4:00PM

At the ,

Inspiration Studio (SH212)
5907 Gorsebrook Ave.
Halifax Nova Scotia
B3H 1G3

±·³§°ä“”¶Łā€™s current first-year Master of Design cohort will showcase their intriguing projects between design, innovation, and entrepreneurship. Join us for an exclusive glimpse into the visions of a talented group of graduate design students, who have formulated new and critical responses to modern problems, with fresh perspectives and innovative solutions.Ģż

Over the course of two semesters, this group of 10 designers has embarked on a journey of exploration and discovery. From reimagining the shopping experience for seniors to developing smart devices aimed at reducing calorie intake, and even creating specialized information platforms for Canadaā€™s growing community of snake-pet owners.Ģż

Through informed design research and thoughtful analysis, they have identified social and cultural problems and validated their solutions through customer and user development processes. The class developed branding effectively as a tool to communicate values and benefits and harnessed the power of emerging technologies such as Augmented Reality (AR) and generative Artificial Intelligence (AI), to created immersive brand experiences that inform and engage their users.

Save the date and meet our next generation design professionals to listen to their elevator pitches and chat about their visions, target audiences, and product market fit.

<Ó£ĢŅŹÓʵ style="font-weight: 400;">Project list

ā€™P²¹³Ł³¦³óā€™Ģżā€“ Junwen HuĢż

A wearable muscle detection and relaxation device

Ģż

ā€˜S±õ±Ź³§³¢±õ²Ńā€™Ģżā€“ Jialin CaoĢż
A motivational hydration tracking deviceĢż

Attachable sensor (hardware) with health app/platform for monitoring, education & community building

Ģż

ā€™S±·“”°­±«µžā€™Ģżā€“ Hanying LiĢż

A platform for the deeper understanding of snakes

Ģż

ā€˜S°æ“”³§±õ³§ā€™Ģżā€“ Angela QiaoĢż

A multi-functional space that provided Ai supported mental support, using smart home technology for personalized ambience linked to user profiles.

Ģż

ā€˜W±õ“Üā€™Ģżā€“ Shima SoltaniĢż

A virtual shopping assistant for seniors, using AR for in-store navigation.Ģż

Ģż

ā€˜M.°æ.²Ń.ā€™Ģżā€“ Jewell TanĢż

A smart-mat and pregnancy care kit, for recovery exercise and training, guided through integrated vibration and light pads.

Ģż

ā€˜M±«³§“ܱõ°æā€™ā€“ Lin JiangĢż

A collaborative platform for musicians and visual artists, connecting creatives and related industry partners with each other.Ģż

Ģż

ā€˜M°æ°æ±õā€™Ģżā€“ Han HuĢż

An outdoor fashion brand, that reuses micro plastics, with educational, and community building online retail platform.

Ģż

ā€˜VERIDGEā€™Ģżā€“ Xiaotong ZhangĢż

A newcomer guiding platform that is built around trust, connecting immigrants with services and local businesses.

Ģż

ā€™TURBOTRANā€™Ģżā€“ Behnaz GhorbaniĢż

An information app that improves local transportation experie

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NSCAD alumna and game developer Anne Macmillan to hold artist talk on April 9 /nscad-alumni-anne-macmillan-to-hold-artist-talk-on-april-9/ Fri, 05 Apr 2024 15:39:55 +0000 /?p=37208 Tuesday, April 9, 2024 11 a.m. ā€“ 12 p.m. Academy Building (A208) Anne Macmillan is a Nova Scotian artist, motion designer and the co-founder of the game-dev studio, Max Inferno Games. Born in Wolfville, Macmillan completed her masterā€™s degree in Art, Culture and Technology at MIT on a Fulbright scholarship and holds a BFA (2008) […]

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Tuesday, April 9, 2024

11 a.m. ā€“ 12 p.m.

Academy Building (A208)

Anne Macmillan is a Nova Scotian artist, motion designer and the co-founder of the game-dev studio, .

Born in Wolfville, Macmillan completed her masterā€™s degree in Art, Culture and Technology at MIT on a Fulbright scholarship and holds a BFA (2008) from NSCAD University. Her art practice has been supported by numerous residencies, awards, and grants; such as the Sobey Art Award, Wiesner award and the Schnitzer Art award, to name a few.

Macmillan is interested in observation, structured ways of knowing the world and the limits of such structures.

Website:

Instagram:

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