by Sagar | Aug 13, 2025 | Uncategorized
Vernon Pratt Following his untimely death in a cycling accident at the age of 59, Vernon Pratt’s entire body of work—including “Three, Four, Five” and numerous other paintings, drawings and sculptures—was transferred to a series of unconditioned warehouses, where they...
by Sagar | Aug 12, 2025 | Uncategorized
Luke Jerram “Past, Present, Future” represents the variola virus (smallpox), the SARS-CoV-2 virus (the coronavirus that causes COVID-19), and an unknown future viral mutation. False colors are often added to images of viruses to help viewers visualize their structure...
by Sagar | Aug 12, 2025 | Uncategorized
Saba Taj Saba Taj created this work for the Calla Campaign art exhibition titled “(In)visible Organ,” which was held in the spring of 2019 at Duke University. The interactive, multimedia exhibit drew together a diverse group of artists whose works...
by Sagar | Aug 11, 2025 | Uncategorized
Envisioning the Invisible (Various) Sponsored by the Duke Engineering Graduate Student Council, the Envisioning the Invisible photo and image competition challenges members of the Duke Engineering community to create visually striking representations of the unseen...
by Sagar | Aug 11, 2025 | Uncategorized
John Gunther While a student at Michigan State University, Gunther received the gift of a weaving loom. Gunther had begun college as an engineering student before switching to the College of Arts and Letters to pursue the study of philosophy; working with the loom, he...
by Sagar | Aug 11, 2025 | Uncategorized
John Hiigli John Hiigli passionately believed in art as an educational tool. As a young artist living in New York City in the late 1970s, his duplex studio space doubled as a French-English preschool, where children modeled clay and painted alongside him as he worked...