Better Know a Collection: Student Art

Untitled by Hilary Stainaker, one of many fantastic works!

Have you seen the Student Art Collection in ScholarSpace?

The Art Department at JCCC has historically been able to procure exemplary student work to be added to the permanent art collection at JCCC. Larry Thomas, faculty member from the Art Department, spent a great amount of time photographing the collection around campus, and with other images provided by Bret Gustafson, we were able to provide access to them via ScholarSpace, our home for campus-borne creations ranging from articles, to presentations, to (obviously) art.

So check it out! there’s a lot of great stuff in there, and we’re proud to be making it available for your perusal.

New Art in Our Gallery

Untitled #10 by Jenny Clasen. No idea if this will be in the library, but hey, it's something!

This came across the InfoList, folks:

CLASEN, SANDS PHOTOS ON VIEW IN THE BILLINGTON LIBRARY GALLERY THROUGH MAY 21

“A Study in Contrasts” is the latest exhibition in the Billington Library Gallery.

Fine art photographs by Jenny Clasen, adjunct professor, photography, and commercial photographs by Craig Sands, adjunct associate professor, photography, will be on view in the gallery until Friday, May 21.

The gallery is on the second floor of the Billington Library.

(Image from Ms. Clasen’s Artist File Online page.)

Book of the Day Gets.. Month-ish

So, starting in February, and into this last week, I’ve been traveling, presenting, and not necessarily hitting this up proper.  So we’re going to hit up some highlights from today’s 250 item update to the New Item RSS feed.  Yeah… that’s a lot.

So first, we’ve got this Artists of the 20th Century series of DVDs, which covers everything from Warhol to Dali to Francis Bacon.  Yeah: Bacon. These DVDs take a look at one particular person, their life, their work, but also function as slideshows of their work.  Even if they aren’t the best made series on the planet, it is a lot easier than fishing around the Internet or traveling to where they’re kept to see them in person.

Next is a book called Wikipedia Revolution, which examines how the most comprehensive encyclopedia in the world is maintained by common folk and self regulated.  I’ll be the first to admit that I approach Wikipedia information with a skeptical eye, but I’ll also admit that I start a lot of research there to better form the searches I’m about to do in article databases, or to check referenced articles to see if they’re usable.  It is really a revolutionary product of the Internet, truly unique in its vision and scope, and this book does a great job researching some of the impact it has had.

AHHH !!  Dental implants!  You know, I was perusing the list of items, and a lot of them seem to be focused on terrorism.  This right here is real terror.  In Asbjorn Jokstad’s Osseointegration and Dental Implants you can learn all about putting scary things in your mouth.  As someone who had a dentist put in fillings, braces, permanent retainers, and then take out the fillings to replace them with prettier ones, I can attest to this: I live in fear of that chair.  My sympathy to those enduring dental implants, and my salute to those of you brave enough to enter the dental profession.  I do not hold against you what you must do to keep these teeth shining.

… but seriously… GAHH…