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X-WR-CALNAME:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU
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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230223T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230223T163000
DTSTAMP:20260531T170427
CREATED:20230724T184528Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230724T184528Z
UID:10000536-1677169800-1677169800@museum.wsu.edu
SUMMARY:Artist Talk with Juventino Aranda
DESCRIPTION:Artist Talk with Juventino Aranda\nThursday\, February 23\, 4:30 p.m.\nFine Arts Auditorium\nLivestreamed via Zoom Webinar\nJoin us for a Lecture with artist Juventino Aranda! \nOn Thursday\, February 23 at 4:30 pm\, artist Juventino Aranda will be giving a public talk in the Fine Arts Auditorium about his work in the exhibition  Juventino Aranda: Esperé Mucho Tiempo Pa Ver. Aranda’s work expresses a search for identity and much of his recent work draws on family history and particularities of his childhood. Never fully ascribing to one cultural category\, his artwork blends and manipulates the categories of painting and sculpture\, craft and high art\, and manufacturing and the handmade\, as well as the formal and conceptual strategies of post-minimalist artists. Talk is free and open to the public.
URL:https://museum.wsu.edu/event/2023-artist-talk-with-juventino-aranda/
LOCATION:WSU Fine Arts\, 1535 NE Wilson RD\, Pullman\, WA\, 99164-7301\, United States
CATEGORIES:Artist Talks,Fine Arts,Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wpcdn.web.wsu.edu/wp-museum/uploads/sites/3189/2023/07/2023-WEB-BANNER-ARANDA-LECTURE-1296-x-432-pixels-scaled.jpeg
ORGANIZER;CN="Kristin%20Becker":MAILTO:kristin.carlson@wsu.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20241116T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20241116T150000
DTSTAMP:20260531T170427
CREATED:20240724T224321Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250624T155306Z
UID:10000573-1731758400-1731769200@museum.wsu.edu
SUMMARY:2024 | Mount St. Helens Flatware Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Join us on Saturday\, November 16th for a workshop creating Mount St. Helens ash-glazed flatware\nMount St. Helens Flatware Workshop\nSaturday\, November 16\, 2025\, 12:00pm–3:00pm\nFine Arts Building WSU: Ceramics Area on Level 4\nRegistration required: Nov 16 Workshop Registration (Registration is closed) \nMay 18\, 2025 marks the 45th anniversary of the eruption of Mount St. Helens. A significant portion of the 540 million tons of ash that spewed from the volcano settled across Central and Eastern Washington\, and inventive ceramists in the region collected the ash to make beautiful glazes. To commemorate the explosive history of Mount St. Helens\, the WSU Department of Art invites participation in the creation of 100 pieces of ash-glazed flatware. Workshop participants will learn about volcanic ash\, assist in rolling slabs of clay\, and shaping and decorating commemorative plates.* The commemoration will culminate on Wednesday\, March 5\, 2025 at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU in connection with The Art of Food\, From the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer and His Family Foundation: All 100 plates will be on display\, accompanied by a program about the historical significance of the eruption at WSU and in our region. \nThis workshop is free and open to the public\, but registration is required (see link above). \n*NOTE: Workshop participants will not take home flatware after the workshop. Plates will be fired and glazed after November 16\, and all participants are invited to the March 5 commemoration at the Schnitzer Museum to view all completed pieces of flatware.
URL:https://museum.wsu.edu/event/2024-mount-st-helens-flatware-workshop/
LOCATION:WSU Fine Arts\, 1535 NE Wilson RD\, Pullman\, WA\, 99164-7301\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Workshop,Fine Arts,Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU,Museum of Art,WSU Schnitzer
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wpcdn.web.wsu.edu/wp-museum/uploads/sites/3189/2024/07/Mt-St-Helens-Workshop_2-scaled.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Kristin%20Becker":MAILTO:kristin.carlson@wsu.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250613T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250613T180000
DTSTAMP:20260531T170427
CREATED:20250519T042458Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250623T213304Z
UID:10000601-1749830400-1749837600@museum.wsu.edu
SUMMARY:2025 | Slow Light Workshop: Sun Prints & Found Object Stories
DESCRIPTION:Sign up for the first workshop in the Slow Light Series\, engaging alternative process photography and place-based storytelling\nSlow Light Workshop: Sun Prints & Found Object Stories\nFriday\, June 13\, 2025\, 4:00-6:00pm\nDepartment of Fine Arts WSU\, Pullman\, WA (meet at the entrance) \nRegistration Link \nParticipants will explore the cyanotype process—a historic\, camera-free method of creating rich blue-hued prints using paper coated with light-sensitive chemistry. Using found and natural objects with interesting shapes and varying transparency\, participants will compose and expose images under sunlight\, revealing how simple materials and time may shape compelling visual narratives. This workshop centers on experimentation\, tactile making\, and connections between memory and material. \nThis is the first workshop in the Slow Light Series\, which engages alternative photography processes such as cyanotype and pinhole cameras\, as well as place-based storytelling and imagery. See the museum’s event calendar for additional workshops. Participants may register for any Slow Light Workshop: You are welcome to take just one\, or all of them! Each workshop is free and open to the public\, though registration is required. See link above. \nAbout the Teacher | Keegan Baatz is a photographic artist and MFA candidate at Washington State University. His work explores themes of infrastructure\, fragmentation\, and place through experimental photographic processes including CMYK separation\, physical intervention\, and analog techniques. Baatz’s practice bridges documentary and material experimentation to reframe how we see rural and infrastructural landscapes\, often engaging with systems theory\, archival impulse\, and ecological observation. \nFunding | Provided by a Publicly Engaged Fellowship from the David G. Pollart Center for Arts and Humanities. Organized by Keegan Baatz\, MFA Candidate\, Department of Art WSU and the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU. \nImage  | Courtesy of Keegan Baatz \n\n\n\n\nLocation & Parking\nThis workshop takes place at the Fine Arts Center on Wilson Road across from the south entrance to Martin Stadium on the WSU Pullman campus. Hourly parking is available in the Smith Center Garage off Stadium Way. See the 2024-25 WSU Pullman Parking map and/or contact the Brelsford Visitor Center for additional campus parking advice.
URL:https://museum.wsu.edu/event/2025-slow-light-workshop-sun-prints-found-object-stories/
LOCATION:WSU Fine Arts\, 1535 NE Wilson RD\, Pullman\, WA\, 99164-7301\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Workshop,David G. Pollart Center for Arts & Humanities
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wpcdn.web.wsu.edu/wp-museum/uploads/sites/3189/2025/05/Sun-Prints-Found-Object-Stories_Web-scaled.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Kristin%20Becker":MAILTO:kristin.carlson@wsu.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250711T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250711T173000
DTSTAMP:20260531T170427
CREATED:20250519T122702Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250623T213253Z
UID:10000602-1752249600-1752255000@museum.wsu.edu
SUMMARY:2025 | Slow Light Workshop: Photographic Histories and Place-Based Storytelling
DESCRIPTION:Sign up for the second workshop in the Slow Light Series\, which meets in the museum’s Collection Study Center\nSlow Light Workshop: Photographic Histories and Place-Based Storytelling\nFriday\, July 11\, 2025\, 4:00-5:30pm\nCollection Study Center (room 5092)\, Department of Fine Arts WSU\, Pullman\, WA \nRegistration Link \nIn collaboration with the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art’s Collection Study Center\, this session offers participants a special look at place-based and alternative process photography from the museum’s collection. Historic and modern/contemporary examples will be on view. Through guided viewing\, discussion\, and sketching activities\, participants will consider how photography shapes cultural memory and will begin developing ideas for their own place-based image-making practices. Please bring a sketchbook and a pencil to this workshop. \nThis is the second workshop in the Slow Light Series\, which engages alternative photography processes such as cyanotype and pinhole cameras\, as well as place-based storytelling and imagery. See the museum’s event calendar for additional workshops. Participants may register for any Slow Light Workshop: You are welcome to take just one\, or all of them! Each workshop is free and open to the public\, though registration is required. See link above. \nAbout the Teacher | Keegan Baatz is a photographic artist and MFA candidate at Washington State University. His work explores themes of infrastructure\, fragmentation\, and place through experimental photographic processes including CMYK separation\, physical intervention\, and analog techniques. Baatz’s practice bridges documentary and material experimentation to reframe how we see rural and infrastructural landscapes\, often engaging with systems theory\, archival impulse\, and ecological observation. \nFunding | Provided by by a Publicly Engaged Fellowship from the David G. Pollart Center for Arts and Humanities. Organized by Keegan Baatz\, MFA Candidate\, Department of Art WSU and the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU. \nImage  | Courtesy of Keegan Baatz \n\n\nLocation & Parking\nThis workshop takes place at the Fine Arts Center on Wilson Road across from the south entrance to Martin Stadium on the WSU Pullman campus. Hourly parking is available in the Smith Center Garage off Stadium Way. See the 2024-25 WSU Pullman Parking map and/or contact the Brelsford Visitor Center for additional campus parking advice.
URL:https://museum.wsu.edu/event/2025-slow-light-workshop-photographic-histories-and-place-based-storytelling/
LOCATION:WSU Fine Arts\, 1535 NE Wilson RD\, Pullman\, WA\, 99164-7301\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Workshop,David G. Pollart Center for Arts & Humanities,Fine Arts,Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wpcdn.web.wsu.edu/wp-museum/uploads/sites/3189/2025/05/Place-Based-Storytelling.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Kristin%20Becker":MAILTO:kristin.carlson@wsu.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250808T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250808T180000
DTSTAMP:20260531T170427
CREATED:20250519T124307Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250723T232341Z
UID:10000603-1754668800-1754676000@museum.wsu.edu
SUMMARY:2025 | Slow Light Workshop: Seeing Light Part 1 — Building and Using a Pinhole Camera
DESCRIPTION:Sign up for the third workshop in the Slow Light Series and make a pinhole camera: Aug 8 & Aug 15 (NOTE: Aug 1 workshop has been changed to Aug 8!)\nSlow Light Workshop: Seeing Light — Building and Using a Pinhole Camera\nFriday\, August 8 and Friday\, August 15\, 2025\, 4:00-6:00pm\nDepartment of Fine Arts WSU\, Pullman\, WA (meet at the building entrance) \nRegistration Link \nParticipants will learn about pinhole photography\, construct their own cameras\, and use them to make photographic exposures inspired by the Palouse. This hands-on workshop invites participants to slow down and engage deeply with light\, time\, and material. We’ll explore the roots of photography through simple optical tools\, and develop prints that reveal subtle shifts in perception and presence. \nOn August 8\, participants will learn how pinhole photography works\, construct their own cameras using 3-D printed kits (provided)\, and expose and develop their first image in the Department of Fine Arts darkroom. Then\, before the follow-up workshop on August 15\, participants will be encouraged to make their own place-based images as they explore local landscapes. On Friday\, August 15\, participants will return to the darkroom to develop images and discuss what they learned. This will also be an opportunity to help curate “Slow Light\,” a pop-up exhibition of work produced during the summer workshops. \n\n\nThis is the third workshop in the Slow Light Series\, which engages alternative photography processes such as cyanotype and pinhole cameras\, as well as place-based storytelling and imagery. See the museum’s event calendar for additional workshops. Participants may register for any Slow Light Workshop: You are welcome to take just one\, or all of them! (If you register for Seeing Light\, make sure you are ready to attend on both August 8 and August 15.) Each workshop is free and open to the public\, though registration is required. See link above. \nAbout the Teacher | Keegan Baatz is a photographic artist and MFA candidate at Washington State University. His work explores themes of infrastructure\, fragmentation\, and place through experimental photographic processes including CMYK separation\, physical intervention\, and analog techniques. Baatz’s practice bridges documentary and material experimentation to reframe how we see rural and infrastructural landscapes\, often engaging with systems theory\, archival impulse\, and ecological observation. \nFunding | Provided by a Publicly Engaged Fellowship from the David G. Pollart Center for Arts and Humanities. Organized by Keegan Baatz\, MFA Candidate\, Department of Art WSU and the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU. \nImage | Courtesy of Keegan Baatz \n\n\n\n\nLocation & Parking\nThis workshop takes place at the Fine Arts Center on Wilson Road across from the south entrance to Martin Stadium on the WSU Pullman campus. Hourly parking is available in the Smith Center Garageoff Stadium Way. See the 2024-25 WSU Pullman Parking map and/or contact the Brelsford Visitor Centerfor additional campus parking advice.
URL:https://museum.wsu.edu/event/2025-slow-light-workshop-seeing-light-building-and-using-a-pinhole-camera/
LOCATION:WSU Fine Arts\, 1535 NE Wilson RD\, Pullman\, WA\, 99164-7301\, United States
CATEGORIES:David G. Pollart Center for Arts & Humanities,Fine Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wpcdn.web.wsu.edu/wp-museum/uploads/sites/3189/2025/05/Pinholes_Web.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Kristin%20Becker":MAILTO:kristin.carlson@wsu.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250815T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250815T180000
DTSTAMP:20260531T170427
CREATED:20250519T125818Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250723T232414Z
UID:10000604-1755273600-1755280800@museum.wsu.edu
SUMMARY:2025 | Slow Light Workshop: Seeing Light Part 2 — Developing Images from Your Pinhole Camera
DESCRIPTION:This is part 2 of the third workshop in the Slow Light Series\nSlow Light Workshop: Seeing Light — Developing Images from Your Pinhole Camera\nFriday\, August 15\, 2025\, 4:00-6:00pm\nDepartment of Fine Arts WSU\, Pullman\, WA (meet at the building entrance) \nRegistration Link \nParticipants will learn about pinhole photography\, construct their own cameras\, and use them to make photographic exposures inspired by the Palouse. This hands-on workshop invites participants to slow down and engage deeply with light\, time\, and material. We’ll explore the roots of photography through simple optical tools\, and develop prints that reveal subtle shifts in perception and presence. \nOn August 8\, participants learned how pinhole photography works\, constructed their own cameras using 3-D printed kits (provided)\, and exposed and developed their first image in the Department of Fine Arts darkroom. Then they were encouraged to make their own place-based images before part 2 of the workshop. On Friday\, August 15\, participants will return to the darkroom to develop images and discuss what they learned. This will also be an opportunity to help curate “Slow Light\,” a pop-up exhibition of work produced during the summer workshops. \n\n\nThis is the third workshop in the Slow Light Series\, which engages alternative photography processes such as cyanotype and pinhole cameras\, as well as place-based storytelling and imagery. See the museum’s event calendarfor additional workshops. Participants may register for any Slow Light Workshop: You are welcome to take just one\, or all of them! (If you register for Seeing Light\, make sure you are ready to attend on both August 8 and August 15.) Each workshop is free and open to the public\, though registration is required. See link above. \n\n\nAbout the Teacher | Keegan Baatz is a photographic artist and MFA candidate at Washington State University. His work explores themes of infrastructure\, fragmentation\, and place through experimental photographic processes including CMYK separation\, physical intervention\, and analog techniques. Baatz’s practice bridges documentary and material experimentation to reframe how we see rural and infrastructural landscapes\, often engaging with systems theory\, archival impulse\, and ecological observation. \nFunding | Provided by a Publicly Engaged Fellowship from the David G. Pollart Center for Arts and Humanities. Organized by Keegan Baatz\, MFA Candidate\, Department of Art WSU and the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU. \nImage | Courtesy of Keegan Baatz \n\n\n\n\nLocation & Parking\nThis workshop takes place at the Fine Arts Center on Wilson Road across from the south entrance to Martin Stadium on the WSU Pullman campus. Hourly parking is available in the Smith Center Garage off Stadium Way. See the 2024-25 WSU Pullman Parking map and/or contact the Brelsford Visitor Center for additional campus parking advice.
URL:https://museum.wsu.edu/event/2025-slow-light-workshop-seeing-light-part-2-developing-images-from-your-pinhole-camera/
LOCATION:WSU Fine Arts\, 1535 NE Wilson RD\, Pullman\, WA\, 99164-7301\, United States
CATEGORIES:David G. Pollart Center for Arts & Humanities,Fine Arts,Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wpcdn.web.wsu.edu/wp-museum/uploads/sites/3189/2025/05/Pinholes_Web_2.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Kristin%20Becker":MAILTO:kristin.carlson@wsu.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250822T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250822T170000
DTSTAMP:20260531T170427
CREATED:20250519T132623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250723T232459Z
UID:10000605-1755878400-1755882000@museum.wsu.edu
SUMMARY:2025 | Shared Light: Pop-Up Exhibition for the Slow Light Series
DESCRIPTION:An opportunity to see the images created during the Slow Light Workshops\nShared Light: Pop-Up Exhibition for the Slow Light Series\nOn view August 18 to 22\, 2025\nClosing reception and discussion Friday\, August 22\, 2025\, 4:00-5:00pm\nDepartment of Fine Arts WSU\, Pullman\, WA \nThe Slow Light Series concludes with a collaborative pop-up exhibition featuring work created during the workshops. Hosted in one of the WSU Art Department galleries\, this informal celebration will showcase cyanotypes\, pinhole photographs\, and documentation of the process. Participants will help curate the show\, which invites public reflection on shared landscapes\, memory\, and the slow process of seeing. \n\n\nWorkshops in the Slow Light Series included: \n\nSun Prints & Found Object Stories (June 13)\nPhotographic Histories & Place-Based Storytelling (July 11)\nSeeing Light Part 1: Building & Using a Pinhole Camera (August 8)\nSeeing Light Part 2: Developing Images from Your Pinhole Camera (August 15)\n\n\n\nAbout the Teacher | Keegan Baatz is a photographic artist and MFA candidate at Washington State University. His work explores themes of infrastructure\, fragmentation\, and place through experimental photographic processes including CMYK separation\, physical intervention\, and analog techniques. Baatz’s practice bridges documentary and material experimentation to reframe how we see rural and infrastructural landscapes\, often engaging with systems theory\, archival impulse\, and ecological observation. \nFunding | Provided by a Publicly Engaged Fellowship from the David G. Pollart Center for Arts and Humanities. Organized by Keegan Baatz\, MFA Candidate\, Department of Art WSU and the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU. \nImage | Courtesy of Keegan Baatz \n\n\n\n\nLocation & Parking\nThis workshop takes place at the Fine Arts Center on Wilson Road across from the south entrance to Martin Stadium on the WSU Pullman campus. Hourly parking is available in the Smith Center Garage off Stadium Way. See the 2024-25 WSU Pullman Parking map and/or contact the Brelsford Visitor Center for additional campus parking advice.
URL:https://museum.wsu.edu/event/2025-shared-light-pop-up-exhibition-for-the-slow-light-series/
LOCATION:WSU Fine Arts\, 1535 NE Wilson RD\, Pullman\, WA\, 99164-7301\, United States
CATEGORIES:David G. Pollart Center for Arts & Humanities,Exhibit,Fine Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wpcdn.web.wsu.edu/wp-museum/uploads/sites/3189/2025/05/Shared-Light_Exhibition.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Kristin%20Becker":MAILTO:kristin.carlson@wsu.edu
END:VEVENT
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