A&EMay 2, 2008 | Volume LXXXV, No. 21

Seniors display art with Roots of Revival exhibition

Outgoing students remember merging of departments through art

Katie Blatman - blatmaka@plu.edu

mast a&e reporter

Students, faculty and many other visitors packed into the University Art Gallery in Ingram April 30 for the opening night of the senior art exhibit called Roots of Revival. The exhibition showcases work from 14 Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Fine Arts graduating seniors and represents the graduating class and the School of Arts and Communication.

“This is the capstone of the art department,” said Assistant Professor of Communication Amanda Feller.

The Roots of Revival theme reminisces of the merge of the separate departments of communications and arts in to the School of Arts and Communication. Kate Kuhn, who has several photographs displayed in the exhibit, said the change “came as a surprise to all of us.”

A wide variety of art mediums are on display including works of graphic design, drawing, etching, painting, ceramics and photography. Kyle Muir displayed works of graphic design expressing not only artistic talent, but views of religion and current events. A graphic design piece by David Johnston of Anne Frank establishes a relationship between art and world history.

Maryanne Mason will graduate with a degree in art. Most of her work involves painting and photography. Her displayed paintings showed scenes of landscapes which often require 20 to 30 hours of time to complete.

“They’re all done from photographs,” Mason said. “They’re places I’ve actually been.”

One unusual medium of graphic design included a set-up of an area satirizing college with fictional board games like Tuitionopoly.

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Review

‘Iron Man’ throws first punch

Summer movie season kicks off with fun, fresh superhero fl

Matt Click -

mast a&e editor

Even as a kid, I always preferred the heroes who created themselves, rather than the ones who were simply born with incredible powers. There’s something much more intriguing to me about a hero born of circumstance and necessity. It’s the reason I’m drawn to characters like Batman and Iron Man. The latter receives his first big screen treatment with director Jon Favreau’s “Iron Man.” And if this summer movie season kickoff is any indication of what’s to come, we’ve got a great few months ahead of us, film fans.

Robert Downey Jr. excels here as billionaire industrialist and hedonist Tony Stark. During a visit to Afghanistan to demonstrate a few of his weapons manufacturing company’s latest products, Stark is caught in the crossfire of a roadside battle and captured by terrorists. Stark’s captors insist that he build them a bomb, but the wily engineer has a different project on his mind.

After constructing a large, robotic suit complete with bullet-resistant armor plating, flamethrowers and booster rockets, Stark escapes captivity and returns to the U.S. a changed man. He realizes that his inventions can help people, rather than simply hurt them, and redesigns the bulky prototype suit to become Iron Man, a heavily armored superhero bristling with crime-fighting tech.

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