
Events and exhibitions
We invite you to be an active part of our vibrant creative community.
Explore our events and exhibitions
An education in art goes beyond building knowledge and technical skills, it’s about finding one’s voice, igniting curiosity, connecting with others, making meaning of the present and discovering a place in the world. It is important to celebrate successes together because the experiences and relationships one creates here will inform the rest of their life.
Exhibitions
New Graduate Exhibition 2025
Monday – Thursday | 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fridays | 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. | Closed on weekends and university holidaysSept 2 to Oct 1 | Harry Wood Gallery
Opening reception | Sept 2 | 5 to 7:30 p.m.
New Graduate Exhibition 2025 is an annual exhibition of work by new graduate students in the School of Art. This year’s incoming cohort represents a diverse set of practices that explore the intersections of identity, materiality and place. Working across ceramics, expanded arts, painting and drawing, photography, printmaking, sculpture and textiles, these artists navigate complex cultural landscapes while transforming everyday materials and rituals into explorations of belonging, resilience and transformation. Together, these works demonstrate art's capacity to navigate the spaces between cultures, materials and meaning. Artists: Alixandria Vengoechea, Allie Thurgood, Carolyn Hazel Drake, Dustin Hesser, Grace Gittelman, Grace Piontek, Heather G. Weller, Jai Knight, Jerrie Fabrigas, Liliana Flores, Lily Regalia, Oscar Montes, Scout Heckel and Sonora James.
Design: Ruth Aragón.

Of Light and Alchemy
Sept 5 to Oct 3 | Norhtlight Gallery
Opening reception and artist talk with Brenda Biondo | Sept 5 | 6 p.m.
Artist talk with Joshua Mokry | Sept 19 | 6 p.m.
Closing reception and artist talks with Ariel Wilson and Meg Gould | Oct 3 | 6 p.m.
“I am burning with desire to see your experiments from nature.” – Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre
Nascent photographic technology was a delicate dance with light and chemistry fueled by curiosity and experimentation. In 1839, two processes were announced, first in France and later in England, with great fanfare. However, Louis Daguerre and William Henry Fox Talbot were not the only ones toiling in their labs, “burning with desire” as Daguerre described his excitement in a letter to his collaborator Nicéphore Niépce in 1828. Many others endeavored with various processes to capture the potential of an image created by light bouncing off a subject onto a flat surface. Some were motivated by commerce, others by science and still others by beauty; they could not have known how photography would transform the world by advancing the dissemination of information, shaping our relationship to representation and thus influencing culture and history.
In the exhibition, “Of Light and Alchemy,” the desire still burns in these artists as they continue the rich and multi-faceted tradition of experimentation and discovery that was marked by those announcements nearly 200 years ago. Through various iterations of photo-sensitive materials, the artists delve into the human relationship to time, perception and metaphor in collaboration with light and nature to further expand the boundaries of experience.
Guest curator: Liz Allen
Participating artists: Brenda Biondo, Meg Gould, Joshua Mokry, David Shannon-Lier and Ariel Wilson
