Feb. 2: ‘Sculpting in Virtual Space’ exhibit extended

By Adriana Aumen, College of Arts and Sciences

sculpture viewedPULLMAN, Wash. – New sculptures by Washington State University Fine Arts students mix with miniature versions of iconic artworks in a free, public exhibit in Gallery 2 of the Fine Arts Building at WSU Pullman.

The show, “Sculpting in Virtual Space: Experiments in Teaching,” was extended through Friday, Feb. 2, to allow more people to see the diverse 3-dimensional prints created by students and fine arts faculty members Hallie Meredith, art historian and clinical assistant professor, and Jamin Kuhn, instructor of fine arts digital media.

Students look at electronically generated sculptureCurated by Meredith and Kuhn, the exhibit features 3D prints of sculptures from antiquity that Meredith utilizes in her classes. It also features works created by Kuhn while teaching students the processes involved in 3D printing and several prints the students created while learning.

“The series of prints of ancient sculptures provide innovative and effective tools for teaching art history,” Meredith said, “while also bringing versions of ancient art to WSU for many people to see.”

Some of the most recognizable of the historic prints are Myron’s “Discobolus” (“Discus-Thrower”), the Vatican’s “Laocoön” and Michelangelo’s “David” and “Pietà.”

Limitations on printing size and material in the versions on display highlight issues of originality, medium and scale, Meredith said.

“Once printed,” she said, “it becomes possible to create a myriad of forms by experimenting with scale, for example.”

The miniature versions also relate to the history of collecting, she said.

“Around the late nineteenth century, life-size reproductions of well-known sculptures were made using plaster casts. The few that survive remain useful as teaching collections,” Meredith said. “Such moments of reproduction used a new technology to contribute to the history of that object and our understanding of it. Today, 3D printing is doing that again in yet another iteration.”

The works Kuhn and his students created in virtual space reproduce everyday objects, such as shoes, figurines and roadkill. Kinetic forms also underscore the utilitarian nature of the students’ work.

When printed in plastic, such diverse objects become still lifes, Kuhn said.

“As still lifes,” he said, “the functional is rendered non-functional. Viewers are challenged to consider which elements are fundamental to the original.”

Designed exclusively at a distance, using a computer, the design-centered focus calls attention to the intangibility of the process of construction and execution, Kuhn said.

Conceptual pairings of the organic with the inorganic also draw attention to the materiality of the 3D-printing process, he said.

“This show really exemplifies the innovative ways the Department of Fine Arts, in the College of Arts and Sciences, utilizes tools to examine and share perspectives on the world,” said Squeak Meisel, chair. “Making happens here.”

Next Story

Provost finalists visiting the week of April 1

Finalists in the process of interviewing for the position of provost and executive vice president will present to the public during their visits to WSU next week.

Recent News

WSU to review administrative structure

President Kirk Schulz used his annual State of the University Address to highlight both achievements and challenges while also announcing a planned review of WSU’s administrative structure and academic programs.

WSU students report on refugee crisis in Armenia

Murrow College of Communication students traveled to Armenia over spring break to interview international conflict refugees and the aid workers helping to resettle them.