Art Out Exhibition 2024
"ART OUT" celebrates the creative talent of RIT students from across the College of Art and Design and other colleges at the university. Entries are selected by an invited juror.
The 2024 exhibition runs from Nov. 15-Dec. 14 in Bevier Gallery. A reception is set for 5-7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 15.
For viewers, ART OUT offers a small glimpse of the diverse talent in RIT's student population. Because the exhibition has an open theme, viewers are able to sample a wide range of content, mediums and disciplines from both graduate and undergraduate students who are active in studio art, design, film and animation, illustration, photography and more. For students, ART OUT is a chance to have their work seen by a curator or arts professional working in the field.
2024 Exhibiting Artists:
Katthew Arthur
Hartley Bauer
Grace Bloom
Hannah Craft
Grady Crossland
Francesca Delaney
Anna Dias
Parker Dubiel
Andy Foster
Skylier Grooms
Ana Joyce
Noah Kiehne
Aria Kingsley
Jay Leuschner
Shushan Li
Jonathan Mills
Chatham Monk
Borgan Mutarelli
Zoe Nast
Hannah Nettikadan
Emmanuel Okechukwu
Lauren Oliver
Sofia Orlando
Alex Paat
Charlotte Partin
Felicity Rysdam
Evan Seeling
Mikayla Stolarsky
Myles Vasta
Annelise Wall
Keely Wu
About the juror
Hernease Davis is a multimedia artist and educator living and working in Rochester, N.Y. Her work has been exhibited throughout the U.S., including the Houston Center for Photography (Texas), Transformer Station (Cleveland, Ohio), the International Center of Photography (Philadelphia, Pa.) and Tiger Strikes Asteroid (NYC). Hernease's work has also been profiled in Hyperallergic, Lens Culture, Lenscratch and Front Runner magazines.
Davis is associate curator at Visual Studies Workshop, where she runs the artist residency program and hosts the monthly Project Space podcast, where discussions thrive around experimental approaches to art, visual culture and criticism.
Check out her creative work: herneasedavis.com
Event Snapshot
When and Where
Who
Open to the Public
Interpreter Requested?
No