Student artwork in
spotlight at juried exhibition
The University of Toledo Department
of Art is showcasing the work of its students in an annual
juried exhibit that will be on display through Sunday, March 21,
2010, in the Center for the Visual Arts Gallery on the
Toledo Museum of Art Campus.
Eric Troffkin, sculptor and art
faculty member at Wayne State
University, will serve as juror. |

Julia LeBayShed |
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An opening reception will be held Friday, Jan. 22, from 6 to 9
p.m. in the Center for the Visual Arts Haigh
Auditorium.
UT President Lloyd Jacobs is
scheduled to speak. Troffkin will give a lecture about the
exhibit and his own work, and then he will present awards.
Troffkin joined the Department of Art and
Art History at
Wayne State in fall 2009. Prior
to that, he was a lecturer in sculpture at the
University of Wisconsin-Madison
from 2000 to 2002 and a visiting
assistant professor at
Washington University in St. Louis from 2002 to 2009. At
Washington University, Troffkin served terms as sculpture area
coordinator and director of graduate studies; he oversaw a
transition in the master of fine arts
curriculum to a multidisciplinary format to encourage
artistic dialogue and collaboration across media and fields of
inquiry.
He received the master of fine arts
degree in sculpture from Cranbrook Academy of Art in
Bloomfield Hills, Mich., and a bachelor
of arts degree in fine art and
English literature from Amherst
College in Massachusetts.
About his artwork, Troffkin wrote, “My interests lie at a
crossroads where expectations of future progress encounter these
uncertainties: Can the consequences of progress be foreseen? Is
the notion of progress itself a matter of faith? And if so, upon
what foundation is such faith built? My artworks mark and
investigate these crossroads. They are pieces of fiction,
fabricated from the familiar visual language of the commercial
products and industrial objects that inhabit our architecture
and dot our urban and rural landscapes. Through the reproduction
and alteration of such technological objects into sculptural
form, I aim to provide a focal point for considering their
psychic impact.”
The annual student exhibition can be seen Monday through
Saturday from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m., and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 10
p.m.
For more information on the free, public exhibit, opening
reception and lecture, call the Art
Department at 419.530.8300.

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