The Bell
September 8, 2012
Dates: September 8, 2012 - October 7, 2012
Location List Art Center Lobby
Tags 2010-2019 Past Exhibitions

Theresa Ganz | Don't get out much

Exhibition

Don’t Get Out Much includes a series of large-scale photographic collages and a 490 sq. ft. mural that covers the entire surface of the windows in the List Art Center entrance. The work of assistant professor Theresa Ganz, the series continues the artist’s exploration of nature. Having grown up in New York City, Ganz points out that her interest in nature is more aesthetic than actual, derived from the study of German Romantic painting and literature. The collages in the exhibition combine photographs of glacial rocks and tidal pools with loose washes of watercolor that softening the hard edges of the real. The window mural extends the watercolor onto the windows, thereby washing the gallery with soft colors and uniting the viewer and the work within a shared environment.

curated by Jo-Ann Conklin
image: Theresa Ganz, Tidal Pool III, 2012

Ganz Poster

Don’t Get Out Much includes a series of large-scale photographic collages and a 490 sq. ft. mural that covers the entire surface of the windows in the List Art Center entrance. The work of assistant professor Theresa Ganz, the series continues the artist’s exploration of nature.  Having grown up in New York City, Ganz points out that her interest in nature is more aesthetic than actual, derived from the study of German Romantic painting and literature.   

The collages in the exhibition combine photographs of glacial rocks and tidal pools with loose washes of watercolor that softening the hard edges of the real. The window mural extends the watercolor onto the windows, thereby washing the gallery with soft colors and uniting the viewer and the work within a shared environment.

A graduate of the San Francisco Art Institute, Ganz joined the faculty in the Department of Visual Art last year.  Her work has been exhibited at the Banff Center, Canada; the John Michael Kohler Art Center, Sheboygan, Wisconsin; and the Palo Alto Art Center and San Francisco Art Institute in California, among other venues.