A group of young people look on at paintings on the museum wall in front of them.
Arts & Humanities Graduate Exhibition 2023 (Hung Q. Pham Photography / Courtesy of the Manetti Shrem Museum)
UC Davis Arts & Humanities Graduate Students Showcase Their Work in Multidisciplinary Exhibition

Creativity on Display June 6–24 at Manetti Shrem Museum of Art

Every spring, UC Davis arts and humanities graduate students across the College of Letters and Science give their peers and the public a glimpse at what they've explored during their time at UC Davis. 

Participating Students

Anthropology: Ileanna Sophia Cheladyn, Ph.D.

Art History: Margaret Culuris-Harp, M.A.; Kayetana Klinghoffer, M.A.; Leea Kramer, M.A.; Allison Nakazawa, M.A.; Lawrence Stallman, M.A.  

Art Studio: April Camlin, M.F.A; Gracianne Kirsch, M.F.A.; Elaine Nguyen, M.F.A.; Nitheen Ramalingam, M.F.A; Nicole Rico, M.F.A.; Tyson Roberts, M.F.A.; Seongmin Yoo, M.F.A. 

Comparative Literature: Kelly Kagawa, Ph.D.

Creative Writing: Briel Brown, M.F.A. 

Design: Ladan Joharizadeh, M.F.A.; Damien Mitchell, M.F.A.; Dongqi Mo, M.F.A.; Pedro Ortiz, M.F.A; Satomi Zukeran, M.F.A.

English: Trevor A. Bashaw, M.F.A.; Grace Hayes, Ph.D; Rachel Wang, Ph.D.; Laurel-Rose Xenoresteia, M.F.A. 

Spanish and Portuguese: Sara de Blas Hernández, Ph.D.

The multidisciplinary Arts & Humanities 2024 Graduate Exhibition will feature the work of graduate students across eight disciplines, including anthropology, art history, art studio, comparative literature, creative writing, design and English as well as Spanish and Portuguese. In all, 25 Master of Fine Arts, Master of Arts and doctoral students are participating. 

Final projects will be on view June 6-24 at the Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art

A free, public opening reception will take place June 6 from 5:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Manetti Shrem Museum. The winners of the LeShelle & Gary May Art Purchase Prize, the Keister & Allen Art Purchase Prize and the Savageau Award in the Department of Design will be announced at the opening celebration. The art prizes enable the Manetti Shrem Museum to purchase graduate student work for the university’s Fine Arts Collection.

Art history students will present their research during the Annual Art History Graduate Colloquium and Reception on May 31 from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. at the museum.

“The graduate student exhibition is a wonderful showcase for the kind of artistic talent we foster in our college,” said Dean Estella Atekwana. 

“Letters and Science is the home of the arts at UC Davis and, from our founding to today, we have demonstrated true multidisciplinary and international leadership in the creative fields that our students are taking with them into their very bright futures,” Atekwana said.

This year’s participants utilize sculpture, poetry, painting, drawing, video, textiles, digital fabrication, installations, multimedia and augmented reality to explore emotional states, gender and cultural identities, sustainability and authenticity. 

“UC Davis arts and humanities students excel as experimental makers and thinkers,” said Rachel Teagle, the museum's founding director. “During this year of celebrating the Eggheads and the arts at UC Davis, we’re especially proud to highlight their innovative work, along with the unique collaboration among the museum, the Office of the Chancellor and Provost and the College of Letters and Science Dean’s Office that supports it.”

Five graduate student art pieces are displayed in a digital collage
Images of artwork provided by select Arts & Humanities Graduate Exhibition 2024 exhibitors, including Satomi Zukeran, Tyson Roberts, Ladan Joharizadeh, Nicole Rico, and April Camlin. (Courtesy of the artists)

A sampling of the work: 

Trevor A. Bashaw (English) is a poet whose work explores the entanglement of language, environment and spirit. He will give a live performance on June 6 that explores the process of poetic composition and encounter in public space. 

April Camlin (art studio) creates large-scale tapestries and stand-alone installations that combine hand-weaving and sculptural elements to help express grief and pain and also conjure resilience. 

Ileanna Sophia Cheladyn (anthropology) is a Canadian dance artist and a sociocultural anthropology Ph.D. candidate whose work is critical of prescriptive formulations of "the body" and hegemonic approaches to kinesthetic experience. "ADRIFT-DRAFT," an improvised dance installation created with Eva Anderson (B.A., Neurobiology, Physiology & Behavior and Dramatic Arts), will be performed at the June 6 opening. 

Sara de Blas Hernández (Spanish) will present a collaborative quilt to increase awareness about the Spanish-speaking community through visualizing the multiple and diverse realities of what speaking Spanish means to people with a connection to the language.

Damien Mitchell (design) merges craft and design within the practice of shoemaking, addressing issues of sustainability and circularity through the democratization of design. His work prioritizes the advancement of manufacturing accessibility to foster sustainable local economies by employing both traditional handcrafting and digital fabrication. 

Nitheen Ramalingam (art studio) is a figurative painter whose recent body of work meditates on the 2021 commemoration of the Kilvenmani martyrs, juxtaposing the joyful unity of the peasantry with a gloomy undertone hinting at the movement’s decline.

Tyson Roberts (art studio) ruminates on the complexity of painting by disassembling and reimagining historical approaches, combining immediate gesture with studied planning. His work weaves together painting and collage to create multi-dimensional layered canvases.

Laurel-Rose Xenoresteia (English) works primarily in creative nonfiction. "Gestation or, Time and Necessity," a condensed version of her thesis, is a looping, image- and narrative-driven depiction of Xenoresteia’s thoughts, feelings and flesh as she has transitioned from "male" to "female." She will perform the piece throughout the June 6 opening.

Seongmin Yoo (art studio) is a sculptor and installation artist interested in addressing power imbalances through multidimensional expression. Her life-size sculptural work unveils humanity's endeavor to control nature, unsettling ecosystems and causing chaos. 

Satomi Zukeran (design) explores artistic expression with advanced technology, and showcases her experimentation with AI through a web application that visually translates human emotions expressed in music, challenging artificial intelligence’s potential in the realm of art.

Dates to Remember:

  • May 31: The Annual Art History Graduate Colloquium and Reception will be held from 3-6 p.m.
  • June 6: The Arts & Humanities 2024 Graduate Exhibition Opening Reception will be held from 5:30 - 9 p.m. 

All events will be held at the Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art, where the Arts & Humanities 2024 Graduate Exhibition will be on display June 6 - June 24.  Public hours are  11 a.m. - 6 p.m. Monday, Thursday and Friday, and  10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Visit manettishrem.org for information.

Media Resources

Maria Sestito, College of Arts and Science, 530-754-3055, msestito@ucdavis.edu

Laura Compton, Manetti Shrem Museum, 530-304-9517, llcompton@ucdavis.edu

Primary Category

Secondary Categories

News & Noteworthy

Tags