2024 Senior Art Majors Exhibition
April 18th — May 19th, 2024
The Department of Art and Art History is proud to present the work of this year’s graduating senior art majors: Amy Cazares, Ina Quadrio Curzio, Jessica Delgado, Peyton Kelleher, Lexie Meger, and Alison Talty. The 2024 Senior Art Majors Exhibition showcases the culmination of their artistic achievements
at Georgetown and we are delighted to share them with you.
As Studio Art majors, these students have explored a variety of media, including painting, drawing, sculpture, photography, digital art, animation, and more. Mentored by our dedicated Studio faculty members, the students honed their artistic skills, learning to translate complex themes into uniquely individual modes of visual expression.
Amy uses her gift for storytelling to create animated and live action films that call attention to social justice and equity. In her paintings, Ina layers brushstrokes to capture the energy of the parties she depicts. Jessica’s graphic designs interweave images like hands and photographs with typography to interrogate the definition of “self.” Peyton incorporates features of animals to generate feelings of unease as she explores such existential topics as anxiety. In images that capture the happiness of a boat day or even the action of crawling into bed, Lexie argues that such gladness does not need to come to an end. And Alison’s vibrantly colored images of nudes challenge stereotypically sexualized female forms.
The de la Cruz and Spagnuolo Art Galleries serve as the venues for the exhibition, providing elegant settings for the students’ accomplishments. I encourage you to take the time to gather together in the spaces, experience, discuss, and celebrate the work of these artists. Their talent and energy, which radiate from each of their pieces, exemplify the very aims and values of the Georgetown University Studio Art program.
– Dr. Elizabeth Prelinger
Department Chair
Keyser Family Professor of Art History
Department of Art and Art History
Featured artists:
Amy Cazares | Ina Quadrio Curzio | Jessica Delgado | Peyton Kelleher | Lexie Meger | Alison Talty
2023 Senior Art Majors Exhibition
April 20th — May 21st, 2023
The Department of Art and Art History is pleased to present the work of this year’s graduating senior art majors: Isabella Callagy, Yasmin Haddad, Deborah Han, and Carly Rutledge. The 2023 Senior Art Majors Exhibition represents the culmination of their artistic achievements at Georgetown, and we are proud to share them with you.
As Studio Art majors, students explore a variety of media, including painting, drawing, sculpture, photography, digital art, animation, and more. Under the guidance of committed faculty mentors, and through a revelatory process of self-discovery, students transform such themes as heritage, identity, power, gender, and joy into uniquely individual modes of visible expression.
Isabella’s portraits narrate the stories of powerful women in lush brushstrokes and ornate patterns. Using such varied materials as rope and wire, Yasmin creates abstract sculptures that examine life’s everyday wonders. Deborah’s Korean-American heritage inflects her portraits, which she tints with cool green tones to heighten somber emotions. Meanwhile, the bold colors and elegant lines of Carly’s designs celebrate life’s passions.
The Maria and Alberto de la Cruz Art Gallery serves as the venue for the Senior Art Majors Exhibition, providing an elegant setting for the students’ accomplishments. I encourage you to take the time to gather in the space, experience, discuss, and celebrate the work of these artists. Their talent and energy, which radiate from each of their pieces, exemplify the very aims and values of the Georgetown University Studio Art program.
– Dr. Elizabeth Prelinger
Department Chair
Keyser Family Professor of Art History
Department of Art and Art History
Please join us for the opening reception on Thursday, April 20th, at 6:00 pm in the Maria and Alberto de la Cruz Art Gallery.
Featured artists:
Isabella Callagy | Yasmin Haddad | Deborah Han | Carly Rutledge
2022 Senior Art Majors Exhibition
April 21, 2022 – May 22, 2022
The Department of Art and Art History is delighted to present the work of this year’s graduating senior art majors: Alexandra Bowman, Tyler McConville, and Daimon Squier. After almost two years of distance learning, they finally – thankfully – returned to the Walsh Building studios last semester, where they have worked together in spaces dedicated to making art.
During their time as Studio majors, our students acquire skills in artistic media such as painting, drawing, photography, sculpture, animation, and digital art, to name some of our offerings. Drawing upon the specific visual languages of these media, the students can then explore and give form to their unique individuality, a mission that the Studio faculty enthusiastically nourish. The resulting work exhibits varied and imaginative insights into the very nature of what it means to be human.
Alexandra’s trenchant political cartoons interrogate the state of American democracy and the limits of free speech. Through digital prints in particular, Tyler examines the phenomenon of consumption, from pictures of eating to close-ups of colorful, oddly aesthetic trash. And Daimon, with his provocative, quasi-Surrealist imagery, argues that he does not present us with “photographs of imagination, but with contemplations of it.”
The Senior Art Majors Exhibition is installed in the Maria and Alberto de la Cruz Gallery, which has now reopened to the public. I invite you to join us there, in a place where we can gather to discuss, enjoy, and celebrate the achievement of these young artists. Their inspiration and courage to share what they create are what the Studio art experience at Georgetown is all about.
– Dr. Elizabeth Prelinger
Department Chair
Keyser Family Professor of Art History
Department of Art and Art History
Please join us for the opening reception on Wednesday, April 20th, from 1-3 pm!
Featured artists:
Alexandra Bowman | Tyler McConville | Daimon Squier
2022 Senior Art Majors Exhibition Catalog
2021 Senior Art Majors Exhibition
May 6, 2021 – May 23, 2021
The Department of Art and Art History and the Georgetown University Art Galleries are proud to present the remarkable work of ten students whose ideas and efforts have flourished despite the adversity of the last year. Given the limited availability of campus studios, these artists have had to extend their creativity to improvising workspaces at home and elsewhere. But you wouldn’t know that, to look at the ambition and ingenuity of their sculpture, painting, printmaking, photography, and drawing.
While visitor access to the Maria & Alberto de la Cruz Art Gallery is necessarily very limited, we are delighted to be able to provide two viewing options: a virtual exhibition online, and a physical exhibition with bold signage and lighting that allow clear views from the windows at 1221 36th St. NW.
Featured artists:
Jahvon Blair | Daphne Blunt | Grace Bowman | Kate Gregory | Onrei Josh Padua Ladao |
Yulissa Lopez Lavias | Jamorko Pickett | Carmen Puig | Christina Shoucair | Amalia Stahl
2020 Senior Art Majors Exhibition
The Georgetown Department of Art and Art History is honored and delighted to present the 2020 Senior Art Majors Exhibition. The show of work by our graduating students is a venerable tradition of the Department, which celebrated its fiftieth anniversary in 2017. While every annual exhibition is unique, this one is unlike all its predecessors at Georgetown in the most fundamental of ways: it is presented exclusively online rather than in our galleries. For reasons everyone understands and will never forget, it is impossible in Spring 2020 to install work and experience it together in shared space.
But this lost immediacy will be less memorable than the extraordinary work at the heart of the exhibition. Across a range of media and with fresh insight, the students probe elemental themes that resonate now more than ever around the globe: memory, identity, perception, race, beauty, journeys, waste, redemption, and more. Some of the work feels unsettling, while other pieces are more sly, haunting, or hopeful. Together they reflect the magnetic humanity of art in a time that has pulled us away from each other.
In the absorbing work they have shared this Spring, these young artists signal futures we are very eager to see.
– Al Acres
Department Chair
Wright Family Term Associate Professor in Art History
Department of Art and Art History