Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 22, 2002, edition 1 / Page 5
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% iaily ®ar Hrrl Undergrads Display Work At Art Awards Reception By Michelle Jarboe Staff Writer Eclectic and varied works dominated the Undergraduate Award Winners reception at the Allcott Gallery in Hanes Art Center on Thursday. The small gallery was filled with spectators, milling about the creatively displayed pieces and congratulating the award-winning student artists. Photographs, ragged-edged mixed media works, drawings and three-dimen sional pieces lined the gallery walls. Pedestals throughout the room held pho tography books and mixed media works, while a multitude of brilliant red sculpt ed feet lined a short section of floor. The George Kachergis Memorial Scholarships were among the five awards that studio art majors could receive in this year’s annual Department of Art pro gram. The scholarships provide funding for travel, art supplies, tuition or future works. Recipients were given the oppor tunity to display their works with other department award winners. “It’s important at my age to show - you start to learn what it takes to put a show on," said Lauren Adams, a senior winner of a Jonathan B. Sharpe Scholarship. She will use the award funding to complete her honors thesis. “It feels really good, especially because I don’t recognize most of the people here.” : $5 OFF I Good on any tanning package of I 10 or more visits with this coupon. | Good until February 22, 2002. l .j I ! TANNERY I 169 E Franklin Street • Near the Post Office & V. — 9 £1" 6 £2 3 J iBWWBWWTWfffH come our and puy... Sport Clubs Weekly. .. Sport Clubs The UNC Women s Rugby Club is open to all who are ® interested, regardless of experience. Practices are every Tuesday/Thursday from 6:45 to B:3opm on Ehaus BADMINTON GRAIL VOLLEYBALL Field. Rugby season spans both the fall and spring semesters and has taken us to places such as Washington • Sign-up Jan. 21 -29 • Today is the last day to sign-up! rk'M jft D.C., Charleston, SC, New Orleans during Mardi Gras, and Spain. For more information please contact Kacy • Single/Dual Entry • 6 Players m j Hunt at huntk@unc.edu or visit us at the Sport Clubs Membership Drive tomorrow Wednesday, January 23rd, ... - . _ _ K / / in the PIT from 10am-2pm. TEAM RACQUETBALL ARENA FOOTBALL IV ✓ I Tu . , This weekend the UNC Women s Rugby Team will take on NC State in a rematch of this year's state Sign-up Jan. 21-29 /(/rtjl ’ 6 Players One day event: Saturday, Jan. 26 jT \ championship. The Tar Heels were victorious at the state championship with a hard fought 5-0 decision and 4 Players I Last day to sign-up: Thursday, Jan. 24 Win pies, firmly cemented their title as one of the top teams in the south. Come out to Hooker Fields (formerly en s, omen s, 1 I turkeys, T-shirts!! Carmichael Fields) at noon this Saturday, January 26th, to cheer on the Lady Tar Heel Ruggers. & Co-Rec fcff vSjKKSdSY Open to All Students, Faculty, Staff, & their r . _ ... ..... Sport Clubs Action: m I*V —j, 1 Families and Fnends a _ I.Vf * i W OO January 25th *Sign-up for ALL sports and events in Woollen Gym 203. Call 843-PLAY for more information. /ce Hockey Sportsplex 10:45pm w f contact: Mike Hyland, 969-6954, mikeyhy@email.unc.edu — Men's Rugby Hooker Fields TBA i/ iB - M a contact: Justin Hicks, 968-6075, thicks@email.unc.edu f ■ Student Recreation Center TT!**. &V; 1 Ice Hockey Sportsplex 10:45pm yj contact: Mike Hyland, 969-6954, mikeyhy@email.unc.edu IAFAA APEX FITNESS CERTIFICATIONS f The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Student Recreation m * M Center will be hosting AFAA APEX 2002 Feb. 8-10.2002. M W The following workshops be offered: / * ( Primary Certification February 8 'W ft REPRCRTIdIf Kickßoxing Certification February 9 \\r r I— liCEplltiillUll W[ tlmlllllfl 1 \ ! k '/Zmj 111 11 A CjL v Mat Science I February W I www.une.edu/depf/camprec Mat Science II February 10 Ah7Y\ I V ... _. _ _ To reaisler call AFAA ,1 800.225.2322. 1 Q§ q # **OEC H ,ntEntrance K(M)00w MLrDiift Kb©d]? 1 (day Heart Healthy Terrific Thursday Wednesday January 31 Get the low-down on clothes, boots, tents, packs, sleeping bags and more! * S UnP give you the whole j anuary 30 Healthy nutrition and eating | jM 1 t about the Find out about your blood for peak performance. IV/lO: Open tO all UNC Students/Staff S*"*N n if composition pressure and learn what you * Computerized nutrition When- Wednesday February 6 APM *T\\ Qa 1 - ft ss & fatness). can do , 0 contro | jt analysis * *’ r _ e ° ri!a, Y ® I'M J\\ 1 - 1 position analysis ' Free blood pressure ' Spon nutrition handouts Where: Townsend and Bertram /a JA Y| Center ,62-330, . cZZZh",*, Student 8626355 |YCAWa\| ® or go to www.unc.edu/depts/catnprec/oec lASm.gAAI HIMII (kar^f ALWAVS COCA-COLA. ALWAYS CAROLINA!! 1 -'War I ' jfIHKBifSHL. OTH/JESSICA WOOi'KN Cecelia Mathis and her grandmother, Gretchen Whalen, examine "Peter (or lack thereof)" displayed at Hanes Art Center. Taylor Dansby, who won the Alexander Julian Prize as one of the best students in the art program, has already spent his scholarship money. “It’s kind of a go-ahead for graduate school. It’s a nice reinforcement.” Angela Salamanca, a senior recipient of a George Kachergis Memorial Scholarship, praised the idea behind the awards program. “I think that (the awards are) a good incentive for artists Orange County Health Dept. Let’s Be Negative. FREE CONFIDENTIAL HIV COUNSELING & TESTING It’s not who we are, it’s the behaviors we engage in. Southern Human Services Center 2501 Homestead Rd. Chapel Hill, NC 919-968-2022 for an appointment to see JP (FREE syphilis test included.) Prevention is what we’re all about. Groups: call for free presentation. here at school to be more responsible and professional about their work.” The Arts & Entertainment Editor can be reached at artsdesk@unc.edu. "Study Abroad Can Change Your Life" Come and find out about UNC SUMMER SESSION IN MONTPELLIER FRANCE A Four : Week Program in French BB Language and Culture ftL INFORMATIONAL .BC meeting Where: Dey Mali, Room 113, UNC When: Wednesday, January 23, 2002 3:30-s:oopm Video of followed by discussion with last year's UNC Summer Session in Montpellier participants For more information please call (919) 962-0154 Web: http://www.unc.edu/depts/mont Email: mont@unc.edu "This program is perfectly designed for someone who can't go overseas for an entire semester." Arts Enlightenment Comes to Ackland By Elliott Dube Staff Writer The new exhibition at the Ackland Art Museum offers a healthy dose of normal mixed with a taste of the weird. “Reason and Fantasy in an Age of Enlightenment” opened on Jan. 20, including etchings and gravings from Francisco Goya, Giovanni Battista Piranesi and William Hogarth. The collection draws attention to the contradictory notions of European cul ture during the 18th century. Over the years, the Ackland has col lected many works dating from the Enlightenment. They are not displayed often - they make up only a tiny frac tion of the Ackland’s 15,000-piece col lection. “About every year we try to have a show that brings out part of that collec tion,” said Andy Berner, director of communications for the museum. The museum also rarely shows these works to the public because of a need to preserve its condition. Much of the exhibition is composed of paper artifacts, and increased expo sure to light speeds up their aging process. Berner said that now is as good a time as any to bring these works out for the public to appreciate. “The opportunities are only few and far between when we can bring these things out into the light,” he said. The exhibition was partly inspired by a graduate seminar led by UNC Professor Mary Sheriff last fall. The sem inar focused on 18th century art and the types of expression and illusion many artists used during the Age of Enlightenment. While rationali ty and common sense were cham pioned by great thinkers like Voltaire and Diderot, creativity and disorder found their way into the artwork of the peri od. For example, “The opportunities are only few and far between when we can bring these things out into the light. ” Andy Berner Ackland Director of Communications “The Oath 'of the Tennis-Court, Versailles, 19 June 1789” is just one piece in “Reason and Fantasy in an Age of Enlightenment” that features both the usual and unusual. The etching’s subject is a real and integral historical event that led to the French Revolution. But it also features the allegorical figures Liberty, France, Tyranny and Sin. Seniors, if you want some of these: Then you need to come to one of these: Make the Carolina Network for you! January 22.2002 6:30 pm. Greenlaw 222 Don't miss the chance to get valuable networking tips for the Alumni Career Connection No Job? No Worries! March 26, 2002 6:30 p.m., Greenlaw 222 Don't panic if you don't have a job when the blossoms start to bloom. Come to this program for some tips on finding the job that's the right fit for you. FREE set of business cards, plus dinner and a business folio, for seniors, compliments of the UNC General Alumni Association M „ 1 002 SeniorSuccessSerles-seniors.unc.edu Tuesday, January 22, 2002 The exhibit’s pieces have other mer its besides combining the fantastic with important parts of history. They reflect a change in artists’ means of expression, mainly through use of the subject’s body movement. The face, which had previously been so dominant in artwork, became only one of many indicators of emotion and feeling. This increased emphasis on emo tion conflicted with the 18th cen tury’s ingrained practices of rea soning and logic. “By showing some of these dif- ferent images in the show, it’s showing that the thinking wasn’t all just reason at the time,” Berner said. The exhibition will be on display until April 21. For more information call 406-9837. The Arts & Entertainment Editor can be reached at artsdesk@unc.edu. 5
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 22, 2002, edition 1
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