Faculty & Staff
The School of Art and Design is comprised of more than 70 diverse faculty and staff members dedicated to supporting students in their studies and creative work. Browse or search our faculty and staff here, or view job opportunities at Texas State University.
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Sterling AllenAllenSterlingAssociate Director Facilities and Equipment and Coordinator, Associate Professor, Art FoundationsEmail: bsa25@txstate.eduJCM 2122A512.408.0457
Sterling Allen received his BFA from the University of Texas at Austin in 2003 and holds an MFA in Sculpture from the Milton Avery Graduate School of Arts at Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, NY. He is a co-founder and co-director of Okay Mountain, an artist collective and former gallery based in Austin, Texas. The group, founded in 2005, hosted over fifty exhibitions as a gallery and has work in the permanent collections of numerous national museums. As a solo artist he has exhibited, organized and completed projects at venues throughout the United States and received a number of residencies including the Artpace International Artist-In-Residence Program in San Antonio, Texas and a residency at the Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts in Omaha, Nebraska. He lives and works in Austin and is currently an Assistant Professor in Studio Art at Texas State University.
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Alaina ArcherArcherAlainaShe/Her/Hers/HerselfAdministrative Assistant IIIEmail: asa65@txstate.eduJCM 2112B512.245.2617
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Sulo Bee BartlettBartlettSulo BeeLecturer, StudioEmail: sulobee@txstate.eduJCM 1112B512.408.8384
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Brigid BeckerBeckerBrigidShe/Her/Hers/HerselfAdministrative Assistant IIEmail: rrj47@txstate.eduJCM 2112A512.245.2613
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Mark BrinkmanBrinkmanMarkAssistant Professor of Practice, Communication DesignEmail: sft27@txstate.eduJCM 3102G512.408.5419
Mark Brinkman studied graphic design at California State University, Long Beach. Prior to opening MBA Design in 2002, he worked for seven years at internationally recognized Sibley Petite Design.
Mark has specialized in brand identity encompassing logos, packaging, environmental graphics, e-media, books, and advertising for corporations, small businesses, and nonprofits in almost every vertical market. He has created and managed brands and sub-brands for Coca-Cola, Nike, The United Nations, ESPN, IBM, Boys and Girls Club, Texas School for the Deaf, and Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation. His award-winning work has appeared in all major industry books and publications, including Graphis, Communications Arts, How, Print, Step-By-Step, and I.D. Magazine.
As his company's model changed to more senior-level associates, the absence of young designers in the studio made him realize that mentorship was just as important a part of his life as design. He now shares his time between teaching, MBA Design, and fly fishing in high-altitude streams for wild trout.
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Austin BuckBuckAustinAssistant Professor of Practice, Communication DesignEmail: austinbuck@txstate.eduJCM 3102G512.408.6838
No, I’m not from Austin. Over the last 10 years, I’ve led CoPilot Creative to award winning creative in all types of media. Identity, print, web, photography + video.
I have a passion for vitamin D, cycling and craft beer.
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Andréa CaillouetCaillouetAndréaShe/Her/Hers/HerselfAssistant Professor of Instruction, Communication DesignEmail: ancaillo@txstate.eduJCM 3122512.245.7422
Andréa Caillouet is an artist and graphic designer interested in discovering and fostering creativity wherever possible and in whatever shape or form it may take. As an artist, her work has employed an endless variety of media while continually exploring notions of the self, relationships with others, and the concept of home. As a freelance graphic designer she has had the pleasure of working with many clients who share common interests in the worlds of art and socially oriented non-profits. She has designed work for print, the web, and the built environment. She earned BFA degrees in both Graphic Design and Painting & Drawing from Louisiana State University and holds an MFA in Painting from the University of Texas. To learn more about her work, visit her website at www.andreacaillouet.com
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Jimmy James CanalesCanalesJimmy JamesAssociate Professor of Instruction, Studio ArtEmail: jrc308@txstate.eduJCM 4103512.408.1862
Jimmy James Canales is a San Antonio-based artist working in sculpture and expanded media. Canales received his BFA from the Museum School of Fine Arts in Boston, and his MFA from the University of Texas at San Antonio. His work has been shown throughout the state of Texas as well as nationally, including Boston, MA; Los Angeles, CA; and Las Cruces, New Mexico. Canales is the recipient of numerous awards and honors, most notably the Arch and Anne Giles Kimbrough Award for Artists (2015), the Tanne Foundation Award (2016) and the Vermont Studio Center Artist Grant (2015). Recently he was selected for the 2018-2019 Blue Star Contemporary Berlin Residency Program at Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin, DE. He works as a Lecturer in Studio Art: Expanded Media at Texas State University in San Marcos.
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Andrew ChenChenAndrewHe/Him/His/HimselfAssistant Professor, Art HistoryEmail: ahc45@txstate.eduJCM 3110512.245.8309
Andrew Chen is Assistant Professor of Early Modern Art in the School of Art and Design. He received an AB from Harvard University in 2011 and his PhD from the University of Cambridge in 2016. His book, Flagellant Confraternities and Italian Art, 1260–1610: Ritual and Experience, was published by Amsterdam University Press in 2018. Since then, his co-written and single-author articles have appeared in The Burlington Magazine, Res: Anthropology and Aesthetics, and Viator. He is currently working on a series of articles on allegory, allegoresis, and other topics. Dr. Chen's work has benefited from the support of institutions such as The Huntington Library, the Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation, the Kunsthistoriches Institut in Florenz—Max-Planck-Institut, St John's College, Cambridge, and Villa I Tatti, the Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance Studies.
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Jesse ClineClineJesseAssistant Professor of Instruction, Studio Art: CoreEmail: lie7@txstate.eduJCM 4109512.408.8803
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Courtney ConeConeCourtneyAssistant Professor of Instruction, Art Foundations: Basic Drawing/Expanded MediaEmail: ab73@txstate.eduJCM 4110512.408.0557
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Chris CooperCooperChrisShe/Her/Hers/HerselfLecturer, Art Education: Student Teaching SupervisorEmail: cmc15@txstate.edu512.408.8839
A graduate of Southwest Texas State University, Chris has spent the past 30 years teaching Visual Art at high school-level for San Marcos CISD. She served as a Texas State University Cooperating Teacher for most of those years, mentoring student teachers, block interns, and teachers new to education on her campus.
As part of an Apple Education Grant-winning team comprised of San Marcos High School teachers, Texas State University professors, and a local community arts activist, Chris connected high school students with art + technology for the first time at San Marcos High School, teaching Graphic Design for 20 years. Other educational opportunities she provided Visual Art students include awarding credit-in-escrow for Austin Community College in Graphic Design, and preparing students for College Board Advanced Placement credits in Art History and Studio Art & Design.
In addition to supervising student teachers, Chris is active in Texas Art Education Association, having served on the Executive Board, and currently serving as State Director of High School VASE, a competition structure for high school artists that attracts over 35,000 artwork entries across Texas. She continues to serve as a volunteer Visual Arts advocate and exhibition facilitator for SMCISD.
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Jeffrey DavisDavisJeffreyProfessor, Communication DesignEmail: jd29@txstate.eduJCM 3113512.245.2919
Jeffrey Davis (AKA "Jefe") is an award-winning designer and design educator, teaching Communication Design in the School of Art and Design at Texas State University-San Marcos since 2000. Prior to joining the faculty Texas State, he worked as the creative director at Judson Design Associates and Senior Designer at Hill Branding in Houston, Texas.
Jeff’s focus in teaching and professional practice is in human centered design, design at enterprise scale, and design centered innovation. He has a quarter-century of design experience in international and national corporate marketing and branding for a broad array of Furtune 500 and Fortune 100 clients across four continents including: Ritz-Carlton Residences, JCB Bank—Japan, Cushman Wakefield, Continental Airlines, Pepsi/Frito-Lay, Houston Rockets, Chevron, Exxon, HP, Mitchell Energy, ConocoPhillips, Cooper Industries, Howard Hughes, The Woodlands Development Company, Texas Medical Center and Hines.
Throughout his 25-year career Jeff has continually donated his time and talent for cause-based organizations. He has received international peer recognition for his designs, which have raised international awareness for education, global conflict, environmental issues, cancer, human rights, universal healthcare, and marine preservation.
Jeff has been recognized for excellence by leading communication design organizations, publications, and journals, which include: The New York Art Directors Club, Type Directors Club, Communication Arts, Print, How, Good50X70, Logo Lounge, and Graphis Press. He has also served as a board member for AIGA.
His passion for design and design education is both tempered and fueled by a deep love of the outdoors—mainly surfing and fly fishing. He shares these outdoor adventures with his family — daughters Jess and Elli and three rescue dogs, always under the watchful eye of Shannon, his amazing wife of 15 years.
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Jeffrey DellDellJeffreyHe/Him/His/HimselfProfessor, Studio Art: PrintmakingEmail: jd33@txstate.eduJCM 4117512.245.1306
Jeffrey was born in California and grew up in Oregon. He completed his BA at Hamline University in St. Paul, MN. He did a two-year assistantship at Bucknell University in Lewisburg, PA, where he ran a printshop and helped teach. He completed graduate studies in Printmaking at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque.
From 1998-2000 Jeffrey was a Fellow at the Scuola Internazionale di Grafica in Venice, Italy, where he worked and taught print and book. In 2000, he accepted a position in printmaking at Texas State University, where he is currently a professor.
Jeffrey shows at Art Palace Gallery in Houston.
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Nicole DesChamps-BenkeDesChamps-BenkeNicoleProfessor of Instruction, Studio Art: Metals; Fabrication Lab ManagerEmail: nd14@txstate.eduJCM 1120512.245.3763
Embodying science and technology into art; Heightening awareness on environmental injustice by human civilization worldwide; Amplifying disturbing health issues associated with nutrition: These issues have inspired Nicole DesChamps-Benke's artwork over the past 20 years. Nicole teaches classes that integrate 3D digital fabrication technologies with traditional studio making processes at Texas State University and maintains her art practice in several studios and maker spaces in southern Texas. The Walker Art Museum Shop Gallery (Minneapolis), Aaron Faber Gallery (New York), American Craft Museum (New York), Gallery Okariya (Ginza District of Tokyo), Yamawaki Art college Gallery (Tokyo, Japan) and Tsubame Industrial Materials Museum (Nigata, Japan) have exhibited her work. Additional showcases can be found in publications, such as The Metalsmith’s Book of Boxes and Lockets; Mokume Gane: A Comprehensive Study; Metalsmith Magazine; and The Four Seasons of Jewelry Japanese quarterly journal. Nicole was a featured copresenter at the 1999 Society of North American Goldsmiths conference in St. Louis, Missouri, for being an early adopter of computer aided technologies. The Museum of Art and Design, formerly American Craft Museum, (New York) and Racine Art Museum (Racine) hold her work in their permanent collections.
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Annie DonovanDonovanAnniePhotography Lab ManagerEmail: anniedonovan@txstate.eduSABN 118512.245.2243
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Erina DuganneDuganneErinaProfessor, Art HistoryEmail: ed17@txstate.eduJCM 3111512.245.3765
Erina Duganne teaches courses on contemporary art, photography, and visual culture. She is also a contributor to the participatory arts and education project Borderland Collective, with whom she organized the traveling exhibition Northern Triangle. Her research and writing address three interrelated areas: artist activism and solidarity practices; documentary photography and its histories; and race and its representation. She is a co-author of Global Photography: A Critical History and author of The Self in Black and White: Race and Subjectivity in Postwar American Photography. Her editorial work includes the forthcoming anthology Cold War Camera; a special issue of the journal photographies; and the exhibition catalogues Art for the Future: Artists Call and Central American Solidarities and Beautiful Suffering: Photography and the Traffic in Pain. Her writings have also appeared in the journals Latin American and Latinx Visual Culture, The Art Bulletin, Photography & Culture, and English Language Notes. Her co-curated exhibition on Artists Call Against U.S. Intervention in Central America opened at the Tufts University Art Galleries in January 2022 and, in February 2022, she co-chaired the Feminist Art Project’s Day of Panels at the College Art Association’s annual conference on the theme of “Feminist Solidarities and Kinships.” Her current book project, Visual Solidarities: Art, Activism, and Central America, is supported by The Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant.
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Rosana Durán GaribiDurán GaribiRosanaAssistant Professor of Practice, Communication DesignEmail: rosana.dg@txstate.eduJCM 3102G512.408.4789
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Joshua DuttweilerDuttweilerJoshuaHe/Him/His/HimselfAssistant Professor, Communication DesignEmail: joshdutt@txstate.eduJCM 3107C512.408.9030Joshua Duttweiler is a designer, artist, researcher, and educator. His multi-disciplinary practice encompasses personal, collaborative, and client-based projects focused on social justice and community building. His work is a critical exploration of local societal systems and constructs that makes way for new voices to be heard. Joshua exhibits work nationally and internationally and has presented and published research through AIGA, CAA, USDA, and APHA conferences and journals. He is the co-founder of Riso-Rama, an annual independent publishing symposium in Texas.Joshua holds a BFA in Applied Design and Visual Communication from Houghton University and an MFA in Graphic Design from Boston University.Teaching Interests:
Publication Design, Risograph, Design History, Interactive Design, UI/UX Design, Social Justice, Community Engagement, TypographyResearch interests:Archival research, community engagement, emerging technologies, conceptual frameworks, collaborative making -
Jonathan FaberFaberJonathanAssociate Professor, Art Foundations: Painting, DrawingEmail: jjf28@txstate.eduJCM 2122C512.408.1700
Jonathan Faber received his BFA from Alfred University in 1994 and a MFA from the University of Texas Austin in 2003. His work has been exhibited at numerous galleries and museums across the country, including Cue Art Foundation, the Galveston Arts Center, David Shelton Gallery, and the Blanton Museum of Art. Among his awards are those from the Pollock-Krasner Foundation and the Joan Mitchell Foundation. Faber is currently an Assistant Professor at Texas State University in the School of Art and Design. He lives and works in Austin, Texas.
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Shannon FaselerFaselerShannonAssociate Professor of Instruction, Art HistoryEmail: shf6@txstate.eduJCM 3102512.408.3437
Shannon Faseler earned a BFA from the University of Texas at Austin by following her life long passion for studying and producing art. An MFA from the School of The Art Institute of Chicago followed shortly after. It was during graduate school, as a teaching assistant, that a love of teaching developed. After graduation, and a move to the more temperate climate of the west coast, Faseler accepted teaching positions in both studio and art history departments at several Orange County colleges. In addition to teaching, Faseler was appointed Gallery Director at Irvine Valley College. Recently, she has returned home to Texas and is currently establishing her studio practice while teaching at Texas State University. She continues to exhibit her personal work both locally and nationally. You can read Faseler's full CV here.
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Joey FauersoFauersoJoeyProfessor, DrawingEmail: jf37@txstate.eduJCM 2122A512.245.3764
Joey Fauerso is an artist and Associate professor at Texas State University. Her work resides at the intersection between painting, drawing, and performance. Over the last ten years she has been working on a series of paintings, drawings and video that rely on gesture and improvisation to explore themes of nature, gender, family, and humor. The inspiration for the work is rooted in her experiences growing up in a Transcendental Meditation community in Iowa, an ongoing interest in the ways gender is expressed and defined in Western art, and most recently her experiences as a parent and observer of the cognitive and creative processes of children. Recently her work has been included in exhibitions at the Drawing Center in New York, The David Shelton Gallery in Houston, and Antenna Gallery in New Orleans. She lives with her family in San Antonio, Texas.
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Veronica FernandezFernandezVeronicaAssociate Director Student Success; Assistant Professor of Instruction, Studio ArtEmail: vf10@txstate.eduJCM 2112B512.408.3776
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Thomas FitzpatrickFitzpatrickThomasProfessor, Studio Art: PaintingEmail: tf13@txstate.eduJCM 4106512.408.3658
For over 20 years Tommy Fitzpatrick has been creating a large and diverse body of work. Beginning with painting architecture as a geometric representation and then beginning to push towards abstraction, his work allows viewers to see the world through his perspective. By continuing to creatively push himself he now creates his subject matter by piecing it together from found materials and painting from these sculptures he created.
Born in Dallas in 1969, Tommy Fitzpatrick received a B.A. in Fine Art from the University of Texas in Austin in 1991, followed by an M.F.A. from Yale University School of Art in 1993. His work has been included in over 20 solo and numerous group exhibitions in Dallas, Houston, New York, Madrid, London, Berlin and Seoul. He recently finished a commission for the federal reserve bank of Dallas and his work is in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Menil Collection as well as the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth. Fitzpatrick is currently an Associate Professor of painting at Texas State University in San Marcos, Texas. He resides in Austin.
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Anthony FrancisFrancisAnthonyAssociate Professor of Instruction, PhotographyEmail: acf90@txstate.eduSABN 115512.408.0130
Anthony Francis is full-time lecturer in Texas State’s Photography department in the School of Art and Design and currently lives and runs a studio in San Antonio, Texas. He holds a bachelor’s degree in English, a M.A. in Educational Leadership and Human Development from George Washington University and an MFA from The Academy of Art University. His photographic interests engage issues of power and love within the medium, specifically the process of portraiture and matters of the body.
He has delivered talks at Society of Photographic Educator’s national conference, Black Portraitures II, and collaboratively at Discrit for Atlanta Contemporary and more. His work has been exhibited widely and is in the private and public permanent collections of The McNay Contemporary Art Museum, Lone Star Colleges, and others.
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Mike GuardiolaGuardiolaMikeMicrocomputer Lab Coordinator IIEmail: mg60@txstate.eduJCM 3102F512.245.4693
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Mateo GutiérrezGutiérrezMateoHe/Him/His/HimselfLecturer, Studio Art: CoreEmail: pgi18@txstate.eduJCM 4104512.408.5041
Mateo Gutiérrez is a multidisciplinary artist who brings into question the underlying ethos of violence endemic to American history, culture and daily life. In his most recent work Mateo constructs large scale hand-embroidered paintings that tell a story of the traumatic conditions of modern American society through the lens of immigration and mass shootings. He sources his images exclusively from online news sources.
Mateo was born in Geneva, Switzerland and raised in Tokyo, Japan before moving to the U.S. at the age of sixteen. In Tokyo, he experienced firsthand a culture struggling between a traditional way of life and the contemporary influences of American globalism. After moving to the United States in his late teens, he struggled with his own conflicted relationship to the US.
His work is both a sociopolitical and a deeply personal reflection on what it means to be American. Mateo presents a powerful critique of the traumatic effects of the so-called "American way of life" and also what it means to be an outsider as both foreign born and Latino. He cites his complex experience with the United States as central to his understanding of American cultural practices that are defined by racial and socioeconomic hierarchies engendering violence. Mateo sources his images online from news stories that he feels best depict a contemporary view of the traumatic effects of the underlying cultural code of violence in American society, stories that themselves make headlines for a short period of time and then are discarded from the cultural discussion, much like the people in the images themselves.
In his work, Mateo seeks to bring these all too often forgotten tragedies that litter the American landscape back to life, to make us look at them in excruciating detail by meticulously hand-embroidering them in artworks that, contradictory to the minute-by-minute social media news cycle attention span, take many months to make.
Mateo has exhibited nationally in galleries in Los Angeles and New York, and multiple museum exhibitions, including the Austin Museum of Art, MexicArte Museum and a solo exhibition at the Brownsville Museum of Fine Art in 2023. Mateo has been featured in New American Painters, Hyperallergic, the Austin American Statesman, The Hartford Courant, Glasstire and other notable journals. Mateo was shortlisted for the NXTHVN residency in New Haven CT and the Field Projects residency in NYC, and was a resident in the Bronx Art Space Governors Island Residency on Governors Island New York City in 2021. Mateo has a BA in philosophy from the University of California at Berkeley and his MFA in studio painting from the University of Texas at Austin. He lives and works in Austin Texas.
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Sydney GuzmanGuzmanSydneyLecturer, Studio Art: CoreEmail: scg73@txstate.eduJCM 4116512.408.8572
Sydney Guzman (b.1997, McAllen, TX) earned her Master of Fine Arts degree from the LeRoy E. Hoffberger School of Painting at the Maryland Institute College of Art in the spring of 2023, following her Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from Texas State University in 2021. Sydney’s work has been showcased at venues such as The Peal Museum in Baltimore, MD, The Lazarus Gallery at The Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore, MD, Rockport Center of the Arts in Rockport, TX, and Texas State Galleries in San Marcos, TX. Currently, Guzman resides in Austin, TX where she serves as a lecturer in The School of Art and Design at Texas State University.
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Courtney HandselHandselCourtneyMFA Administrative Assistant IIEmail: crh168@txstate.eduJCM 2112F512.245.7516
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Claire HendrenHendrenClaireAssistant Professor of Instruction, Art HistoryEmail: c_h629@txstate.eduJCM 2110512.408.0490
Claire Hendren received her M.A. in Art Museum Studies from Georgetown University and her Ph.D. from Université Paris Nanterre in 2019. She has also worked as a lecturer at the Institut Catholique de Paris and as an assistant to the directors of the NEH Summer Institute Museums: Humanities in the Public Sphere at Georgetown University.
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Estéban HinojosaHinojosaEstébanAssociate Professor of Instruction, Art HistoryEmail: egh16@txstate.eduJCM 3102H512.408.1115
Estéban Hinojosa is an alumnus of both the design and art history programs of the University of Texas at Austin. Prior to joining Texas State, he taught Italian Art History and Culture for multiple semesters at Southwestern University in Georgetown, Texas. He has taught Ancient Art at St. Edward's University and Art Appreciation at Austin Community College. As a graphic designer and publications assistant at UT's Institute of Classical Archaeology, he contributed to several books on excavations in southern Italy and the Black Sea. His lectures are peppered with his own pictures documenting the buildings, sculptures, and images of the art historical canon, and each semester he leads field trips to museums in Houston, San Antonio, Fort Worth, and Austin. In 2023, he earned the College of Fine Art and Communication's Department Distinction in Teaching Award. Before joining the full-time faculty, he was the recipient of the 2016–2017 Part Time Faculty Excellence in Teaching Award, granted by the Faculty Senate of Texas State University.
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Sarah HirneisenHirneisenSarahShe/Her/Hers/HerselfAssistant Professor of Instruction, Studio Art: SculptureEmail: sbh66@txstate.eduJCM 1112B512.245.3772
Sarah Hirneisen uses three-dimensional materials and processes to elevate familiar and everyday objects. She received a BFA in glass from Rhode Island School of Design in 2001 and her MFA in sculpture in 2011 from Mills College. Sarah has received a Community Initiatives Grant through the City of Austin, was awarded a residency through the Hungarian Multicultural Center, has received an Individual Artist Grant through the City of Oakland’s Cultural Art’s Program and a Phelan, Murphy & Cadogan fellowship from the San Francisco Foundation for graduate students in the arts. She teaches Sculpture at Texas State University and has taught at Mills College, Cabrillo College, and City College of San Francisco. Sarah has exhibited her work extensively throughout the US as well as Hungary, Korea and England.
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Aryel René JacksonJacksonAryel RenéThey/Them/Theirs/ThemselvesLecturer, Studio Art: CoreEmail: jab759@txstate.eduJCM 2111512.408.7323
Jackson is an alum of theUniversity of Texas at Austin (2019),Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture (2019), Royal College of Art Exchange Program (2018), and The Cooper Union (2013). Their work has been shown nationally and internationally at various galleries and institutions such as the Digital Arts Resource Centre in Ottawa, ON, Canada; the Dallas Contemporary (2021); Jacob Lawrence Gallery, Seattle (2021); Contemporary Art Center, New Orleans (2018); Depaul Art Museum, Chicago (2018); Rhode Island School of Design Museum (2017); and Studio Museum in Harlem (2016).
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Laritza Garcia JanigaJanigaLaritza GarciaAssociate Professor of Instruction, Studio Art: Metals/3D DesignEmail: lg1179@txstate.eduJCM 1115512.245.9164
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Kevin JenkinsJenkinsKevinHe/Him/His/HimselfAssistant Professor, Art EducationEmail: kevinjenkins@txstate.eduJCM 1108512.408.6027
Dr. Kevin Jenkins is an Assistant Professor of Art Education. He earned his Ph.D. in 2018 at the University of North Texas. His dissertation, titled Dis/appearance, In/visibility and the Transitioning Body on Social Media: A Post-Qualitative & Multimodal Inquiry, earned the 2019 university-wide Toulouse Dissertation Award, in the social sciences division and was nominated for the National Art Education Association 2020 Elliot Eisner Doctoral Research Award in Art Education.
He is an artivist, vlogger, and educator of trans experience. His research specializations are transgender theory and trans masculinities, contemporary art and visual culture art education, post-qualitative inquiry, teacher preparation, online curriculum design, and emergent technologies. His work has been presented and published nationally and internationally, including in the journals Visual Arts Research, Visual Culture & Gender, the Journal of Social Theory in Art Education, and the International Journal of Education through Art as well as chapters in edited books Pedagogies in the Flesh: Case Studies on the Embodiment of Sociocultural Differences in Education and Women's Caucus Lobby Activism: Feminism(s) + Art.
He has extensive experience teaching art to underserved populations including 15 years at community colleges in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. In the community college setting, he taught art appreciation, studio art, and art history survey courses and utilized art museums and gallery spaces as "immersive textbooks" in his courses. This allowed him to create openings for adult students with diverse backgrounds and limited prior exposure to art find connections and build relationships with the artworks, art-making techniques, artists, and art institutions in their communities and beyond. Prior to joining Texas State, Dr. Jenkins taught undergraduate and graduate courses as a doctoral fellow of art education and from 2019-2021 as a postdoctoral scholar of art education at Penn State University.
Dr. Jenkins served as Co-President (2020-2022) of the National Art Education Association Coalition for Feminisms in Art Education (formerly Women's Caucus).
Select Journal Articles and Book Chapters
- Jenkins, K. (2021). Vagina dialogues: Un/mediated, un/censored. In K. Keifer-Boyd, L. Hoeptner-Poling, S. Klein, W. Knight, & A. Pérez Miles (Eds.), Women’s Caucus lobby activism: Feminism(s) + art (pp. 356-366). National Art Education Association.
Jenkins, K. (2020). Cissexism and precarity perform trans subjectivities. Journal of Social Theory in Art Education, 40, 83-89. https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/jstae/vol40/iss1/6/
Jenkins, K. (2018). Jumping the gun: Uncritical trans ally artivism post-HB2.Visual Culture & Gender, 13(1), 45-53. http://vcg.emitto.net/index.php/vcg/article/view/116
Jenkins, K. (2018). Ontology of the Pee-Cock Gen2 3-in-1. In A. Pérez Miles & N. Kalin (Eds.), special issue, Speculative realism(s): Objects/matter/entanglements of art and design education. International Journal of Education Through Art, 14(1), 111-116. doi: 10.1386/eta.14.1.111_3
Pérez Miles, A., & Jenkins, K. (2017). (Re)Born Digital – Trans-affirming research, curriculum, and pedagogy: An interactive multimodal story using Twine. In A. Knochel & R. Patton (Eds.), special issue: Born Digital: (Im)Migrating to Digital Art Education. Visual Arts Research, 43(1), 43-49. doi: 10.5406/visuartsrese.43.1.0043
Jenkins, K. C. (2017). Which way did he go, George?: A phenomenology of public bathroom use. In S. Travis, A. M. Kraehe, E. J. Hood, & T. Lewis (Eds.), Pedagogies in the flesh: Case studies on the embodiment of sociocultural differences in education (pp. 53-59). Palgrave Macmillan.
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Bethany JohnsonJohnsonBethanyShe/Her/Hers/HerselfAssociate Professor, Art FoundationsEmail: bjj53@txstate.eduJCM 2122D512.408.0397
Bethany Johnson is an artist currently living in Austin. Johnson's work, largely drawings and collage works, investigate the natural world and human attempts to understand, translate, and capture geological and weather phenomena. The works provide sites for the juxtaposition of informational, diagrammatic imaging with more poetic, intuitive compositional structures.
Johnson received her BA in studio art from the Kalamazoo College in Michigan in 2007 and MFA in Painting at The University of Texas at Austin in 2011. Her work is represented by Moody Gallery in Houston, and has been featured in New American Paintings, Hyperallergic, and the Austin Chronicle, among others. Johnson has held residencies at the Vermont Studio Center, Denkmalschmiede Höfgen in Germany, and the Soaring Gardens Artist Retreat in Pennsylvania. Johnson will be having her third solo show with Moody Gallery in 2019, as well as completing three residencies in Texas, Vermont, and Germany.
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Brian JohnsonJohnsonBrianHe/Him/His/HimselfProfessor of Instruction, Studio Art: PrintmakingEmail: bj12@txstate.eduJCM 4115512.408.0392
Brian Johnson holds an MFA from the University of Texas, Austin (1997) and a BFA from the University of South Dakota (1994). Brian was the Master Printer for the Serie Project, where he collaborated with over forty artists, creating several limited edition screen prints. The Serie prints have been exhibited around the world and included in museum collections and publications.
Brian’s personal prints have been included in over two hundred regional, national and international exhibits. Some notable jurors that have selected his work include, Sarah Suzuki, Curator at MOMA, David William Kiehl, Curator at the Whitney, and Roberta Waddell, Curator Emerita at The New York Public Library. His prints are part of several public and private collections. Brian lives and works in Austin TX
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Tamara JohnsonJohnsonTamaraAssistant Professor, Studio Art: SculptureEmail: tjohnson@txstate.eduJCM 1121512.408.8825
Tamara Johnson is an artist, educator and curator working primarily in sculpture, installation, and public art. Her work delves into the nuances of domestic objects, binding humor, sensuality and vulnerability tightly together. Using a wide range of materials from bronze to silicone rubber, Johnson unravels the meaning and metaphors embedded in the familiar. Johnson obtained her BFA from the University of Texas at Austin and her MFA in Sculpture from the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD). Her projects have been exhibited at The Nasher Sculpture Center, the Saint Louis Art Museum, The Blanton Museum of Art, Carillon Gallery at Tarrant County College, the Utah Museum of Contemporary Art, the Fort Worth Modern, Keijsers Koning Gallery, Lora Reynolds Gallery, Jonathan Hopson Gallery and in New York; Socrates Sculpture Park, The CUE Art Foundation, Wave Hill Public Garden and Cultural Center, International Objects and Maria Hernandez Park in Brooklyn. Johnson has been awarded grants from the Brooklyn Arts Council, The Foundation for Contemporary Art, the Santo Foundation, Southern Methodist University (SMU), the Meadows Museum 2022 Moss/Chumley Award, and recently a National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Project Grant for Sweet Pass Sculpture Park. In 2018, Johnson and partner, Trey Burns, opened Sweet Pass Sculpture Park - a nonprofit art space featuring outdoor projects by emerging and mid-career artists on a rotating basis.
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Jules Buck JonesJonesJules BuckAssociate Professor of Instruction, Studio Art: Watercolor/DrawingEmail: jbj37@txstate.eduJCM 1116512.408.1562
Jules Buck Jones creates art inspired by the mechanics and mysteries of the natural world. His body of work ranges from dense, organic watercolors and drawings, to large-scale performances employing costumes and puppetry. He is a founding member and now president of the collective, non-profit, MASS Gallery. MASS Gallery shows local and national artists of all levels, runs an annual artist residency, and houses a small art store. Jules has been accepted and invited to art residencies in Maine, New York, Tennessee, Vermont, and the Florida Everglades. He shows extensively throughout TX with solo shows and representation in Austin, Dallas and Houston. Jules designed the official 2016 Austin City Limits Music Festival poster, and is currently creating a 40’ Mosasaur skeleton for the 2016 Waller Creek Conservancy’s Creek Show. Jules currently teaches painting and drawing at TX State University in San Marcos.
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Briana JuarezJuarezBrianaLecturer, Communication DesignEmail: bj11292@txstate.eduREMOTE512.408.9506
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Soomin Jung-RemmlerJung-RemmlerSoominAssociate Professor of Instruction, Studio Art: DrawingEmail: s_j171@txstate.eduJCM 4114512.408.3315
Soomin Jung Remmler was born in Seoul, South Korea, and relocated in San Antonio, Texas where she earned an MFA from the University of Texas at San Antonio in 2008. In 2007, Soomin was awarded a residency at the Santa Reparata International School of Art, Florence, Italy. She is a nationally and internationally internationally exhibiting artist and a full-time lecturer at Texas State University in San Marcos, Texas. Recent exhibitions include: McNay museum of art in San Antonio TX (2022), grayDUCK gallery, Austin, TX (2022), Southwest School of Art, San Antonio, TX (2021); Blue Star Contemporary Art Museum, San Antonio, TX (2021); Swedish Institute, Minneapolis, MN (2020); Hopkins Arts Center, Hopkins, MN (2020); Brea Gallery, Brea, CA (2019); Culture Commons Gallery, San Antonio, TX (2019); the Bridgeport Art Center, Chicago, IL (2018); Gallery Hye, Seoul, South Korea (2017) and the Hunting Art Prize (2015). Her work is part of private and public collections including Aspen Art Collection UK, City of San Antonio, University of Texas at San Antonio and Independent Bank Art Collection, Texas.
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Sean JusticeJusticeSeanAssociate Professor, Art EducationEmail: sbj19@txstate.eduJCM 1111512.245.0383
Dr. Sean Justice, Associate Professor, Art Education, teaches and writes about maker education, material inquiry pedagogy, and teacher education in the digital age. His book, Learning to Teach in the Digital Age: New Materialities and Maker Paradigms in Schools was published in 2016 by Peter Lang, Inc. He holds a doctorate in Art and Art Education from Columbia University, Teachers College, where he taught digital fabrication, physical computing, creative coding, and photography, to pre- and in-service teachers from across the curriculum. While at Teachers College, he designed and directed the Myers Media Art Studio, a center for exploratory art and technology research. As an artist he has exhibited photographs, videos and computer animations both nationally and internationally.
Projects
Exploring Early Childhood Teachers' Abilities to Identify Computational Thinking Precursors to Strengthen Computer Science in Classrooms. National Science Foundation award to study computer science education in preK-5 teacher education. (Abstract #2006595)Families Learning Together (FLT): Building Sustainable Computational Fluencies in Classrooms and Communities in San Marcos, Texas. A community education project across the curriculum at Texas State University. (FLTSMTX)
Material Inquiry Collaboration and Research Consultancy: http://materialinquiry.com
Sean Justice Studios: http://seanjustice.com
Media
Future teachers integrate technology into art classes with new program. (University Star)
How to Bring Hands-On Learning Back to the Classroom. (100 Mentors Blog)
Makerspace User Group. Association of Technology Leaders in Independent Schools (Webinar)Recent Journal Articles and Book Chapters
- Justice, S., Morrison, E., & Yorks, L. (2020). Enacting Reflection: A new approach to workplace complexities. Advances in Developing Human Resources. https://doi.org/10.1177/1523422320927300
- Justice, S., Bang, A., Lundgren, H., Marsick, V. J., Poell, R. F., & Yorks, L. (2020). Operationalizing reflection in experience-based workplace learning: A hybrid approach. Human Resource Development International. https://doi.org/10.1080/13678868.2019.1621250
- Justice, S., Cabral, M. & Gugliotta, K. (2019). The crayon doesn’t do that: Early childhood and advanced technology. In R. Garner (Ed.) Exploring Digital Technologies for Art-Based Special Education: Models and Methods for the Inclusive K-12 Classroom. New York, NY: Routledge.
- Justice, S., & Yorks, L. (2018). Incidental learning as an enacted encounter with materiality. New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2018(159), 91-102. doi.org/10.1002/ace.20289
- Cabral, M. & Justice, S. (2018). “Material Inquiry: Digital Materials, People, and the Relationships Between Them”. In E. Garber, L. Hochtritt, & M. Sharma (Eds.), Makers, crafters, educators: Working for cultural change. New York, NY: Routledge.
Book
Justice, S. (2016). Learning to Teach in the Digital Age: New Materialities and Maker Paradigms in Schools. (New Literacies and Digital Epistemologies) New York, NY: Peter Lang, Inc.
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Ariel KayKayArielShe/Her/Hers/HerselfAssistant Professor of Practice, Art EducationEmail: arielkay@txstate.eduJCM 1112A512.408.9686
Ariel Kay received her B.S. in Anthropology with a minor in Education from Bryn Mawr College, located west of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She holds a M.A. in Art Education from the University of Texas at Austin. Kay is from Austin, TX and taught elementary art for eight years in Austin ISD, six consecutive years at a Title 1 school in East Austin. She continues to teach weekly after school art programming for the upper grade levels at the elementary, as well as volunteer with the 2nd graders in collaboration with the Contemporary Austin Seeing Special Things Program. She is the co-founder of the Art All Summer program, providing art supplies and summer art programming, in collaboration with Creative Action, to elementary school students in East Austin. Ariel Kay is currently an Assistant Professor of Practice in Art Education, Supervisor of Art Education Student Teachers, and the Office of Educator Preparation Liaison.
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Jieun Beth KimKimJieun BethShe/Her/Hers/HerselfLecturer, Studio Art: FoundationsEmail: ios12@txstate.eduJCM 4104512.408.3719
Jieun Beth is a visual artist, entrepreneur, and educator based in Austin, TX. She received her Master of Fine Arts in Studio Art at the University of Texas at Austin (2013) and a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Painting at the Savannah College of Art and Design (2009). Jieun Beth has exhibited regionally, nationally, and internationally. Notable recent exhibitions include the Korea Art Show in Suwon, South Korea (2022), a solo exhibit at CANVAS ATX in Austin, TX (2022), and at ARTIFACT Gallery, New York, NY (2021). She participated in the Desert Door Residency hosted by Big Medium and Desert Door Distillery in Drayden, TX (2022).
Her diverse creative practice is rooted in an autobiographical quest to understand a personal identity. Based on her research on various religions, philosophies, ancient knowledge, sociologies, sciences, and esoteric teachings, her works are diverse in aesthetic, medium, and subject matters to demonstrate the various vantage points of identity formation.
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MiHyun KimKimMiHyunShe/Her/Hers/HerselfAssociate Professor, Communication DesignEmail: mihyun@txstate.eduJCM 3107A512.408.2403
MiHyun Kim is a designer, an artist and an educator. Her research agenda focuses on creating meaningful connections between people and their communities. By using digital technology, human experience design, and data visualization, her interdisciplinary nature of projects serves to create a sense of belonging and to enhance humanity.
Prior to coming to the United States to earn her MFA in Visual Design from the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth, she worked as a graphic designer at COEX (Convention and Exhibition) center in Seoul, South Korea, one of the biggest cultural venues in Asia.
Her projects have been recognized from numerous international and national design organizations including Interaction Design (IxD) Association, ico-D, Ars Electronica, CAA, Cumulus, AIGA Design Educator Community, UCDA Design Education Summit, and eyeO festival.
Her design projects are in the permanent collection at Lonsford Collection at Purdue University Galleries and Denmark Poster Museum in Aabyhøj, Denmark.
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Grayson LawrenceLawrenceGraysonAssociate Professor, Communication DesignEmail: gl16@txstate.eduJCM 41095512.408.1276
Grayson was born in Austin, Tx and earned his BFA and MFA in Communication Design from Texas State University. After working in the field as a brand, advertising, interaction, and game designer, he returned to TxState to teach in 2004.
Other than wearing geeky t-shirts, slinging tons of “dad-jokes”, and drooling over British motorbikes, Grayson loves to teach Web and Mobile Application Design in both the graduate and undergraduate programs. He also teaches User Experience in our MFA graduate program. Grayson co-hosts an annual hackathon, creating teams of Communication Design, Computer Science, and Business students to solve real-world interaction design problems.
From a research perspective, Grayson has created mobile applications for museums, high-school Government classes, physician-physician communication, and campus safety. Currently, he is developing new rapid prototyping techniques for virtual reality (VR) and working with his students and co-researchers, designing environments to help veterans cope with PTSD and to train EMS personnel.
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Alice LeeLeeAliceShe/Her/Hers/HerselfAssociate Professor, Communication DesignEmail: ajl174@txstate.eduJCM 3104512.408.0189
Alice J Lee 이정연 is a second-generation Korean American, designer, researcher, and educator. She researches alphabetic systems, concepts of interconnectedness, and the impacts of cultural imperialism. Her practice engages interdisciplinary strategies to explore the dynamics of opposing technologies, formats, and ideas. She has exhibited bodies of work and interactive installations at Auburn University, the Franklin in Chicago, Washington Pavilion in Sioux Falls, and other galleries, and presented her research at international conferences, including TypeCon and CAA, and other venues that include the Sejong Institute, Notre Dame University, and the University of Houston. Recent design commissions include the artist monograph, Bethany Collins: A Pattern or Practice, and the exhibition catalog, An Infinite and Omnivorous Sky, both funded by the Warhol Foundation. She received her BA from Yale University and her Master’s in Design from the University of Illinois at Chicago.
She serves as an Associate Professor in Communication Design at Texas State University, teaching critical making, motion, and typography courses in the MFA and BFA programs.
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Ryan LewisLewisRyanLecturer, Communication DesignEmail: ryanlewisdesign@gmail.comREMOTE512.408.6568Ryan is a multidisciplinary designer & illustrator working out of San Marcos, TX. He studied in the ComDes program at Texas State University graduating in 2011. Since that time, Ryan has worked for a variety of clients from Texas A&M to Pluralsight.In recent years, Ryan has specialized in creating illustration systems for brands wanting to express themselves in fun and unique ways.
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Jeffrey LieberLieberJeffreyAssociate Professor, Art HistoryEmail: jdl188@txstate.eduJCM 3114512.408.1604
Jeffrey Lieber is an art and architectural historian, author of Flintstone Modernism or the Crisis in Postwar American Culture (MIT Press, 2018). Highlighting canonical works within the contexts of Hollywood films and philosophical, political, and literary debates, his book surveys anxieties about the fate of the Classical tradition and durability of art in the post-WWII era. Lieber's wide-ranging interests in the field have been sponsored by the Delmas Foundation Grant for Independent Research in Venice among others. A visiting professor at Harvard University (2015-2016), his articles have appeared in the New York Times and international magazines as well as peer-reviewed journals. In recent years, Lieber has been invited to present lectures at museums and universities in the United States, Australia, England, and Germany. He received his AB from Vassar College and his PhD from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
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Jessica MalliosMalliosJessicaShe/Her/Hers/HerselfAssociate Professor, PhotographyEmail: jm221@txstate.eduSABN 110512.408.1774
Jessica Mallios’ photographs and video work examine how objects are seen—dislocating them, suspending their recognition for the viewer, and exploring the relationship between spectacle and artifice. Mallios was born in Austin, Texas, and holds an MFA from the Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts at Bard College and a BFA from Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. Her most recent exhibitions include Photography Sees the Surface at Higher Pictures in NY (2015); Local Time at The Center for Ongoing Research & Projects (COR&P) in Columbus (2015); Sightings at Disjecta Contemporary Art Center in Portland (2014); and Sight lines at Artpace in San Antonio (2014). Mallios is currently Assistant Professor in the School of Art & Design at Texas State University and lives and works in Austin.
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Rebecca MarinoMarinoRebeccaAssociate Gallery Director, Texas State GalleriesEmail: RebeccaMarino@txstate.eduJCM 2123512.245.8085
Rebecca Marino is a visual artist and curator currently living in Austin, TX. She graduated from St. Edward’s University with a BA in Photocommunications and a minor in Art History. From 2015-19 she was co-editor and co-founder of Conflict of Interest, an online publication highlighting literature and visual art in Texas. Previously the Gallery Director for both Flex Space Gallery and Pump Project in Austin, she has been the Associate Director for Texas State Galleries in San Marcos, TX since 2017.
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Tom MayMayTomProfessor of Instruction, Art Foundations and Studio Art: CeramicsEmail: tm22@txstate.eduJCM 1120512.408.3703
Tom May received his MFA in Studio Art from the University of Texas at San Antonio. Originally from Chicago, Illinois he moved to Austin and opened Clear as Mud Ceramic Studio, producing works for Museum gift shops and Fine Arts festivals. His works have been shown nationally as well as throughout Texas. He started working for Texas State University in 2003 and is currently a full-time Lecturer, teaching courses in Ceramics, Sculpture, and Foundations.
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Joshua McCormickMcCormickJoshuaVisiting Assistant Professor, StudioEmail: wan20@txstate.eduJCM 1115512.408.2935
Joshua M G McCormick received his BA in 2008 and MFA in 2019 from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He has also trained at The Ox-Bow School of Art in Michigan. He has exhibited and performed widely at institutions including Camayuhs, Atlanta; the Soap Factory, Minneapolis; 2nd Floor Rear Festival, Chicago; Links Hall, Chicago; and the Chicago Artist Coalition. McCormick has participated in the ACRE Residency in Wisconsin and collaborated with Project Firebird in Chicago and Juxtaposition Arts in Minneapolis. He is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor at Texas State University's School of Art and Design, 2023-2024, he lives in San Antonio, Texas; he was previously a lecturer at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and an instructor and technician at Northwestern University. McCormick has previously taught at After School Matters, Art Reach, and ElevArte Community Studios in Chicago.
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Jack McGilvrayMcGilvrayJackLecturer, PhotographyEmail: jf1400@txstate.eduSABN 115512.408.7342Jacqueline Saragoza McGilvray is an artist, educator, and curator living in San Antonio, Texas who grew up in the Central Valley of California. McGilvray earned an MFA in Photography and Integrated Media from Ohio University and BFA from Texas State University in Photography. Since 2014 she has curated exhibitions and special projects for Contemporary at Blue Star in San Antonio, TX. Prior to working at the Contemporary, McGilvray did collections research and writing for the Linda Pace Foundation, taught photography courses at Ohio University, coordinated exhibitions, and worked in multiple art education programs.
McGilvray’s photographic practice is focused on exploring how identity develops and shifts through family, home, place, and culture. Her work is influenced by the history of photography and interests in the nuances of language, gesture, and the body. McGilvray’s work has been exhibited at various galleries including with Minneapolis Photo Center; Houston Center for Photography; Fotofest, Houston, TX; Clifton Cultural Arts Center, Cincinnati, OH; Co-Lab, Austin, TX; ROY G BIV, Columbus, OH; The McNay, San Antonio, TX; St. Edward’s University, Austin, TX and more. Her work has been reviewed or featured in publications including Glasstire, San Antonio Express News, Texas Monthly, and more. In 2023 McGilvray was selected for ICI’s Curatorial Forum Cohort and in 2023-2024 was a fellow in AAMC’s Propel Program. -
Jean McKettaMcKettaJeanLecturer, Art HistoryEmail: xws19@txstate.eduREMOTE512.408.8499
Dorothy Jean McKetta received her degrees in Studio Art and Art History (BA and BFA, 2007; MA, 2012; PhD, 2024) from the University of Texas at Austin, most recently earning her PhD in 2024 with the dissertation “Giorgio Morandi: Los Angeles, 1961.” Her art historical work draws connections between post-war art worlds in Italy and the United States. As a writer and instructor, McKetta often incorporates elements of her studio training into her approaches to art history and criticism.
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Zach McSwainMcSwainZachMicrocomputer Lab Coordinator IEmail: fuj4@txstate.eduJCM 3102F512.245.3772
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Bill MeekMeekBillProfessor, Communication DesignEmail: wm08@txstate.eduJCM 3112512.245.0311
Professor Meek earned his MFA, with a major in Visual Communication Design, from Kent State University, Kent, Ohio; his BFA, with a major in Printmaking, from University of North Texas (UNT), Denton, Texas; his Texas State Teachers Certification, Secondary Education, from UNT; and doctoral studies in Curriculum and Instruction for Online Learning, Capella University, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
His design and research interests are advertising art direction, branding voice and systems, emerging circular design, design strategy, and design pedagogy including learning outcomes assessment. His professional outcomes have been featured in national and international design competitions and publications including Communication Arts Magazine; New York Art Directors Annual; Graphis Poster Annual, NY; American Advertising Federation competitions; LogoLounge; and Print Regional Magazine.
He has 32 years of teaching experience in the Communication Design MFA and BFA programs at Texas State University. He was the principle investigator, author, and advocate for the Communication Design MFA Substantive Program Proposal, School of Art and Design, Texas State University. He and the Communication Design graduate faculty launched the MFA program in the fall 2007. His graduate and undergraduate student learning outcomes have been featured in competitions and publications including Graphis New Talent Annual, NY; Graphis Poster Annual; AIGA Flux Blueridge Competition; LogoLounge; CYMK Magazine; Posters for Tomorrow; and Good 50 X 70, Competitions and Anthology Annual, Milan, Italy.
His personal interests range from cultivating fruit orchards to Italian motorcycles.
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Mark MenjivarMenjivarMarkAssociate Professor, Art Foundations/Expanded MediaEmail: mjm309@txstate.eduJCM 4107F512.245.3802
Mark Menjivar is a San Antonio based artist and Associate Professor in the School of Art and Design at Texas State University. He holds a BA in Social Work from Baylor University and a MFA in Art and Social Practice from Portland State University. Mark's work explores diverse subjects through photography, archives, oral history and objects. Mark has engaged in projects at venues including the Rothko Chapel, the Bemis Center for Contemporary Art, The Houston Center for Photography, The San Antonio Museum of Art, The Puerto Rican Museum of Art and Culture, Blue Star Contemporary Art Museum and the Krannert Art Museum.
Mark's work has been featured by Artforum, TED, NPR, The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Village Voice, Gastronomica, National Geographic, Orion Magazine, GUP Magazine and more.
Mark is the artist-in-residence with the Texas After Violence Project which uses oral history and archives to create dialogue and action around capital punishment in Texas. He is also a member of Borderland Collective, which utilizes collaborations between artists, educators, youth, and community members to engage complex issues and build space for diverse perspectives, meaningful dialogue, and modes of creation and reflection around border issues. -
Annie MillerMillerAnnieAssociate Professor of Instruction, Studio ArtEmail: abm114@txstate.eduJCM 4110512.408.0117
Annie Miller is an Austin-based artist whose work explores the cultural expectations of femininity, fecundity, and aging. Miller holds an MFA in Studio Art with a concentration in Women and Gender Studies from The University of Texas at Austin and a BFA in Painting and Drawing from California State University Fullerton. Exhibition of her work includes: FL3X Space Gallery, MASS Gallery, New American Painting, Cage Match Project at The Museum of Human Achievement, The Courtyard Gallery, and CoLab Projects (Austin); WANUSAY (Montreal); McSweeney’s Believer Logger; and Icebox Project Space (Philadelphia). Miller is a full-time lecturer in the School of Art and Design at Texas State University.
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Monica MohnotMohnotMonicaLecturer, Studio Art: DrawingEmail: m_m805@txstate.eduJCM 1116512.408.9009
Monica Mohnot (b.1982, India) is an artist, a teacher, and a mother who lives and works in Bee Caves, Texas. Her paintings frequently depict abstract bodily forms, simplified landscapes, and idiosyncratic patterns. Monica received her MFA in Studio Arts from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2023 and her BFA in Studio Art from Texas State University in 2019. She has shown her work throughout Texas, as well as nationally. Monica is a member of the Austin-based ICOSA Collective. You can view her work on her website.
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Ryan MontgomeryMontgomeryRyanAssistant Professor of Instruction, Studio ArtEmail: zch9@txstate.eduJCM 4116512.245.7786
Ryan Sandison Montgomery is a multidisciplinary artist currently based in Austin, TX. He holds a MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a BFA from Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. His work has recently been featured on Artnet and Glasstire and is held in the City of Austin’s permanent collection. He attended Ox-Bow Art School and Artist’s Residency in Michigan and the Vermont Studio Center. Prior to becoming an educator, Montgomery was a window-dresser in Manhattan, overseeing large installations and managing artist teams.
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Jennifer MooreMooreJenniferLecturer, Art FoundationsEmail: jm1845@txstate.eduJCM 3102G
Jennifer Moore is an interdisciplinary artist who works primarily in sculpture and drawing. Her preferred materials are household objects, thrifted textiles, broken electronics and papier-mâché which she applies to her work centering around themes of body and home. Jennifer has shown her work at ICOSA(Austin, TX), Spellerberg Projects(Lockhart, TX), MotherShip Studios(San Marcos, TX), and other art spaces around Central Texas. She received her BFA from Texas State University and her MFA from Maharishi International University.
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Theresa Newsome-GarrardNewsome-GarrardTheresaLecturer, PhotographyEmail: t_n147@txstate.eduSABN 116
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Devi NortonNortonDeviAssistant Professor of Instruction, Communication DesignEmail: dr1249@txstate.eduJCM 3102G512.408.1697
Devi Norton is a freelance graphic designer who lives and works in San Antonio. Devi completed her BFA in 1996 at the Rhode Island School of Design and her graduate work in 2013 from Texas State University. Throughout her studies, Devi developed a particular interest in designing books and catalogs for publication. She also works on brand identity, logos, environmental design, brochures, product packaging, posters, presentations, mailers and invitations.
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Beverly PennPennBeverlyProfessor, Studio Art: MetalsEmail: bp08@txstate.eduJCM 1122512.408.0439
Beverly Penn is the recipient of numerous grants and awards including a Rockefeller Foundation residency in Bellagio, Italy; a Connemara Conservancy Artist Grant; grants from the Texas Commission on the Arts and a Fulbright Fellowship in Barcelona, Spain. She has also received nine Texas State University Faculty Research Grants involving research in Mexico, Italy, Spain, and New York.
Penn's sculptures are included in over 100 private collections and in the permanent museum collections of: the Cooper Hewitt Museum in New York City; the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C., the Austin Museum of Art; the Wustum Museum of Fine Arts in Wisconsin; the Dorsky Museum at SUNY New Paltz; the El Paso Museum of Art; and the Monarch Center for Contemporary Art in Washington.
Beverly Penn has been commissioned for several Public Art Projects, including Unity in Diversity in Las Cruces, NM; the Community Core Sample Project and the Threshold Project with Steve Wiman in Austin, TX; the Natives Project in Austin, TX; the Ceremonial Mace for the University of Texas at El Paso; and sculpture for the 719 Ash Hilton hotel in San Diego. Her work has been reviewed nationally in publications such as Sculpture Magazine; The New Art Examiner; Metalsmith; American Craft Magazine; ArtPapers; Circa; ArtLies; and The New Orleans Art Review.
Penn received a B.F.A. at the University of Texas at El Paso in 1982; an M.A. at New Mexico State University, Las Cruces in 1987; and an M.F.A. at the State University of New York at New Paltz, New York in 1989.
Penn is currently represented by:
D. Berman Gallery in Austin
McMurtrey Gallery in Houston
Lisa Sette Gallery in Scottsdale -
Adetty Pérez de MilesPérez de MilesAdettyShe/Her/Hers/HerselfAssociate Professor and Coordinator, Art EducationEmail: adetty@txstate.eduJCM 1109512.245.3770
Adetty Pérez de Miles, Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Art Education Program, earned a dual Ph.D. in Art Education and Women’s Studies at The Pennsylvania State University. Her research interests include contemporary art and theory, socially engaged art practices, the intersection of art and technology, postcolonial and feminist theory, post-qualitative inquiry, and teacher education in the visual arts. At Texas State University, Pérez de Miles teaches courses in curriculum and pedagogical design to prepare preservice teachers to enter the field of art education and earn Texas Teacher Certification (EC-12). Professor Pérez de Miles’s teaching is guided by arts-based and inquiry-based approaches to learning, digital pedagogies, socially responsive teaching centered on equity and diversity, and exploring critical and post-critical frameworks to support inclusive LGBQ+ and transgender curriculum and instruction. Prior to her teaching experiences in tertiary education, Pérez de Miles earned All-Level Teacher Licensure and was an art educator in public schools. She taught Advance Placement Art History, AP Studio (drawing, photography, ceramics), and led her schools’ International Baccalaureate Diploma Program in the Visual Arts.
Dr. Pérez de Miles is the author of numerous peer-reviewed scholarly articles and book chapters on dialogic pedagogy, art as social practice, decolonial street art, visual culture, new media, material inquiry (New Materialism), feminist epistemology, and Latin American art. She has given numerous presentations at national and international conferences in the US, Portugal, Turkey, Australia, and Germany. Prof. Pérez de Miles has taught graduate and undergraduate seminars in Brazil, and was the keynote speaker for Cross | Trans Cultural Communication: Art & Design as Social Practice, at the Graduate School of Creative Industry at the National Taiwan University of Art (NTUA), Taipei, Taiwan, 2017.
Select Journal Articles and Book Chapters
- Pérez Miles, A. (2019). Unbound philosophies & histories: Epistemic disobedience in contemporary Latin American art. In J. Baldacchino (Ed.), The international encyclopedia of art and design education, volume 1. Histories and philosophies of art & design education. Wiley-Blackwell and the National Society of Art and Design Education (NSEAD). Link
- Pérez Miles, A. (2019). Street art interventions: Nuclear cake & atomic ray goats on the rez. In A. Wexler & V. Sabbaghi (Eds.), Bridging communities through the arts (pp. 204-210). New York, NY. Routledge. Link
- Pérez Miles, A. (2018). Journey notes of Panamerica: The social practices of art—a conversation between Pablo Helguera and Adetty Perez de Miles. In E. Gonzales & S. Reisman (Eds.), Mobilizing pedagogy: Two social practice projects in the Americas by Pablo Helguera and Suzanne Lacy. Amherst, MA. Amherst Press. Link
- Pérez Miles, A., & Kalin, N. (2018). Speculative realism(s) objects / matter / entanglements of art and design education: Special issue. International Journal of Education through Art, 14(1), 3-12. Link
- Pérez Miles, A. (2018). The social expulsion of the migrant: Aesthetic and tactical interventions. Journal of Social Theory in Art Education (JSTAE), 38, 5-15. Link
- Pérez Miles, A., & Jenkins, K. (2017). (Re)Born digital – Trans-affirming research, curriculum, and pedagogy: An interactive multimodal story using Twine. In A. Knochel & R. Patton (Eds.), Special Iissue: Born digital: (Im)Migrating to digital art education. Visual Arts Research, 43(1), 43-49. Link
- Pérez Miles, A., & Libersat, J. (2016). ROAM: Walking, mapping, and play: Wanderings in art and art education. Studies in Art Education, 57(4), 341-357. Link
- Pérez Miles, A. (2016). The antinomy of autonomy and heteronomy in contemporary art practices. Special issue: Ranciére, art education, and politics. Knowledge Cultures, 4(5), 43-60. Link
Book
Keifer-Boyd, K., Hoeptner Poling, L., Klein, S., Knight, W. B., & Pérez Miles, A. (Eds.). (in-press) National Art Education Association Women’s Caucus Lobby Activism: Feminism(s) + Art Education. National Art Education Association. (Anticipated publication date, 2021).
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Elvia PerrinPerrinElviaAssociate Professor of Instruction, Studio Art: Printmaking / FoundationsEmail: ep13@txstate.eduJCM 4115512.408.1155
Elvia Perrin received her MFA from the University of North Texas at Dention in 2002. She was a collaborator, printer and artist at Flatbed Press + Gallery in Austin, Texas for seven years. She has taught printmaking and foundation courses locally for over a decade. She currently is a Lecturer of Art at Texas State University and working in her own printmaking studio. Elvia is the Founding Executive Director: PrintAustin, a city-wide contemporary print event. She has collaborated with Retailers Pottery Barn, Crate and Barrel and TRNK, NY and has shown nationally and internationally. Elvia is currently represented by Wally Workman Gallery and lives in Austin, Texas.
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Jessie PlottsPlottsJessieLecturer, Studio ArtEmail: jlp148@txstate.eduJCM 4108512.408.5083
Jessamyn Plotts is an artist living and working in San Marcos, TX. She received her BFA from Texas State University in San Marcos, TX in 2015 and my MFA from Southern Methodist University in Dallas, TX in 2019. Her work, a combination of painting, drawing, and performance, deals with boundaries, particularly how we differentiate art, life, and subjective experience. She studies perspective and the use of the picture plane to explore relationships between her body, pop culture figures, identity and subjectivity, and the way we contain those ideas in the neat rectangular packages of pictures. Influences include Adrian Piper, Carolee Schneeman, Julia Kristeva, Marcel Proust, Francis Bacon, Rackstraw Downes and Pieter Schoolwerth. Jessamyn has exhibited work both regionally and nationally, with solo shows at Inner Space: a Chamber Gallery in Dallas Texas and Texas State Universities FLEX Space. Her work has been featured in the publications New American Paintings, D Magazine, Holding Pattern, and Peripheral Visions. Additionally, she was the recipient of a Merit Scholarship award at the Vermont Studio Center in 2019.
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Grace PrestonPrestonGraceLecturer, Communication DesignEmail: gracepreston@txstate.eduJCM 3122512.408.8276
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Nishra RanpuraRanpuraNishraAssistant Professor, Communication DesignEmail: blt112@txstate.eduJCM 3117512.408.9525
Nishra Ranpura is an interdisciplinary designer, researcher, and creative technologist. She earned her Bachelor in Textile Design from National Institute of Fashion Technology (NIFT), in Gandhinagar, India, and holds an MFA with honors in Design and Technology from Parsons School of Design, The New School, in New York, along with a minor in Anthropology and Design. Her work explores the interactions between the physical and the digital through experimental and speculative narratives. She researches, practices, and teaches across the disciplines of new media, digital fabrication, digital design, creative technology, and design research. Essentially, she makes things and breaks things. Sometimes, she writes, and oftentimes, she wonders.
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Jason ReedReedJasonProfessor and Coordinator, PhotographyEmail: jr68@txstate.eduSABN 111512.245.5568
Jason Reed is Texas-based artist and educator. With a background in geography, his work deals with the confluence of land, politics, and visual histories. He is a Professor of Photography and the Jones Professor of Southwestern Studies at Texas State University and holds a BA in Geography from the University of Texas and an MFA in Photography from Illinois State University. Reed has created gallery and public space exhibitions at venues such as Artpace in San Antonio, Krannert Museum at the University of Illinois in Champaign-Urbana, storefront windows in Miles, Texas, Galerie Reinthaler in Vienna, Austria, Dallas Contemporary, La Asamblea Legislativa in Mexico City, and the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin.
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Randall ReidReidRandallProfessor, Studio Art: Drawing/2D DesignEmail: rr25@txstate.eduJCM 2124512.408.3236
Professor Randall Reid has obtained both a national and international record. His artworks have been added to private collections in Australia, Canada, England, Indonesia, Mexico, Netherlands, Switzerland and The United States totaling over 68 cities. His work has also been added to 28 public collections including the Austin Museum of Art. Three scholarly monographs, Randall Reid: Layers of Perception (56 pages), Recontextualized: Ordered Layers (100 pages) and Full Circle: Randall Reid (88 pages) were produced about his artwork and process. These three artist’s books have won a total of 6 awards from regional, national and international design competitions. Randall Reid is represented by the following galleries: the William Campbell Contemporary Art Gallery, Ft. Worth, TX, Costello/Childs Contemporary, Scottsdale, AZ, Davis Gallery, Austin, TX, and Nuart Gallery, Santa Fe, NM. He has participated in solo shows at: The Galveston Art Center, Galveston, TX, Grace Museum, Abilene, TX, Joan Grona Gallery, San Antonio, TX, McNay Museum, San Antonio, TX, Nuart Galery, Santa Fe, NM, Poissant Galery, Houston, TX, D.M. Allison Gallery, Houston, TX, St. Edwards University, Austin, TX and William Campbell Contemporary Art Gallery, Ft. Worth, TX and had a retrospective totaling 93 works at the Katy Contemporary Art Museum in Katy, TX.
Mr. Reid has given artist talks at the McNay Museum, the Grace Museum, the Galveston Art Center, St. Edwards University, the Katy Contemporary Art Museum, and the Paia Contemporary Gallery, Maui, HI. He has received the Presidential Seminar Award and the Dean’s Seminar Award for Scholarly/Creative Research, he also received a Research Enhancement Grant and was awarded two Developmental Leaves at Texas State University.
One of his works Sky Chief hung for three years at the American Embassy in Kuwait. Sky Chief was the cover image for the Art in Embassies Exhibition Catalog, which included a review, essay and biography. Additionally, many critical essays and published articles have been written about his work.
Mr. Reid received his B.F.A. from Louisiana Tech University in 1978 and a M.F.A. from Texas Tech University in 1981. After six years as an artist-in-resident he began his teaching career at Texas State University in 1988 where he teaches foundation courses in drawing and design. He has shown his work in over 350 exhibitions spanning 36 states and 4 countries including Kuwait, Chile and Canada.
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Rand RenfrowRenfrowRandAssistant Professor of Instruction, Art FoundationsEmail: rr1279@txstate.eduJCM 4103512.408.3230
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Tyler RicoRicoTylerAssistant Professor of Instruction, Communication DesignEmail: trr86@txstate.eduJCM 3107L512.408.8351
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Liz RoddaRoddaLizShe/Her/Hers/HerselfProfessor, Studio Art: Expanded MediaEmail: ecr29@txstate.eduJCM 4107G512.408.1098
Liz Rodda is an interdisciplinary artist living in Austin, Texas. Her work involves investing found materials, primarily video, with meanings unintended by the original maker. Since joining the faculty at Texas State University, she has initiated and headed Expanded Media, a new area of specialization within the Studio Art Program. Encompassing theory and practice, Expanded Media is an interdisciplinary approach to art making that includes, but is not limited to, video/sound, performance, socially engaged projects, and site-specific installation.
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Mariangela RodriguezRodriguezMariangelaLecturer; Communication DesignEmail: mariangela_rdz@txstate.eduJCM 4104
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Vic Rodriguez TangRodriguez TangVicThey/Them/Theirs/ThemselvesAssistant Professor, Communication DesignEmail: vrr24@txstate.eduJCM 3116512.408.8662Vic (they/them) is a queer Peruvian-Chinese creative human from Lima, Peru. Before transitioning to higher education, they practiced as a designer and art director in the Dallas and Austin areas since 2008. They hold an MFA in Graphic Design from the Vermont College of Fine Arts and a BFA in Design Communication from Texas A&M Commerce. Before joining Texas State as an Assistant Professor, they taught in The School of Design and Creative Technologies at The University of Texas in Austin from 2021 to 2024 as an Assistant Professor of Practice in Design, where they taught across all their undergraduate and graduate design programs.Vic's main research area focuses on the ever-evolving topic of gender biases in graphic design. Their research has speculated and continues to discover that creatives sometimes don't realize that they're biased when creating new work since these biases have been ingrained in us since an early age. Throughout the years, they have worked to develop different tools based on their research and findings that address simple questions with more complex roots, such as "Why is pink typically associated with femininity?"As an educator, their goal was to develop an approachable tool to help others facilitate conversations about this topic, especially in design. They have done so through their book, "Pink Circles, Blue Squares: A Practical Guide to Help Fight Gender Biases in Graphic Design." Their approach was to create an accessible and inviting resource that compiles historical and sociological aspects of the origins of gender biases in graphic design and provides information that can be used as a starting point. Their book also provides exercises, workshops, tips, and other critical information that others can take to facilitate a safe space and further the conversation regarding gender biases in graphic design. As they continue their research, their goal is to continue expanding their research to bring that information in a digestible manner and apply it to their pedagogy.Vic's work has been recognized by TEXAS Research's Hamilton Book Awards, The Dallas Society of Visual Communication, The One Show in New York, HOW's Logo Design Awards, Fast Company, PRINT Magazine, and HOW's International Design Awards.
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Claudia RöschmannRöschmannClaudiaProfessor, Communication DesignEmail: cr29@txstate.eduSTAR 109512.408.0741
Claudia Röschmann is a Professor in the Communication Design program in the School of Art and Design; Adjunct Doctoral faculty in the Materials Science, Engineering and Commercialization (MSEC) program; Honorary Professor of International Studies and Associate Director for Entrepreneurship in the Materials Applications Research Center (MARC) at Texas State University. She was head of the Communication Design program from 2014 to 2020, and directed the MFA program, a non-traditional low residency program that utilizes emerging technologies to support digitally engaged learning, from 2010 to 2020. She brings 25+ years of international design experience and strategic entrepreneurial thinking to the university where she teaches typography, conceptual strategies, editorial and typeface design, as well as entrepreneurship. In her new role as part of innovation and entrepreneurship efforts on campus she runs virtual Entrepreneur Boot Camps, and leads community efforts in the Central Texas Innovation Corridor. She gets very excited about international and cross-disciplinary projects, and speaks at conferences about typography, design thinking and digitally engaged learning.
Originally from Germany, she moved to New York in the 90s to work for Vignelli Associates before moving to Austin with her husband, where she runs ROESCHMANNdesign, a design studio focused on brand experiences for non-profit clients. She holds a BFA and MA from the Hochschule für Künste, Bremen, and an MFA from Texas State University.
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Tammie RubinRubinTammieAssociate Professor, Studio Art: CeramicsEmail: trubin@txstate.eduJCM 1123512.408.2818
Tammie Rubin, a ceramic sculptor and installation artist, is known for her unique approach that explores the inherent power of objects and coded symbols as signifiers, wishful contraptions, and mythic relics. Her work intertwines familial, historical, and literary narratives of Black American citizenry, migration, and faith. Rubin's academic journey includes a BFA in Ceramics and Art History from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, and an MFA in Ceramics from the University of Washington in Seattle. Rubin is the 2022 Tito's Prize winner and a 2024 USA Fellow in Craft.
Rubin's work has been exhibited at numerous venues, including Project Row Houses, Houston, TX; the Hessel Museum of Art at Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, NY; AGBS Christian-Green Gallery at the University of Texas at Austin, Mulvane Art Museum, KS; George Washington Carver Museum, Austin, TX; Indianapolis Art Center, Indianapolis, IN; The Houston Center for Contemporary Craft, TX; Women & Their Work Gallery, Austin, TX; Rivalry Projects, Buffalo, NY; and Ruiz-Healy Art, San Antonio, TX. Rubin is represented by Galleri Urbane, Dallas, TX., and C24 Gallery, New York, NY.
Born and raised in Chicago, Rubin moved to Austin in 2015. She was an Associate Professor of Ceramics & Sculpture at St. Edward's University. She is delighted to join Texas State University as an Associate Professor in the School of Art and Design.
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Molly ShermanShermanMollyAssociate Professor, Communication DesignEmail: mas518@txstate.eduJCM 3107B512.408.2461
Molly Sherman is an artist, graphic designer, and Associate Professor of Communication Design at Texas State University. Her practice consists of socially-engaged projects and client-based collaborations. She has worked at Project Projects in New York and with a range of cultural institutions including the Hammer Museum and Amherst College. Her work has been exhibited at the Centre Pompidou, the Matisse Museum in Le Cateau-Cambrésis, New Seasons Market, the Parthenon Museum, the Portland Art Museum, the San Francisco Museum of Craft and Folk Art, and the Institute of the Arts and Sciences at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She holds a BFA in Graphic Design from the Minneapolis College of Art and Design and an MFA in Art and Social Practice from Portland State University.
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Steven SmithSmithStevenLecturer, MFA ProgramEmail: vrl33@txstate.eduREMOTE512.408.5059
After several (arguably misspent) post-college years in NY performing improv and sketch comedy, Steven studied design at the School of Visual Arts and tipped headlong into a multi-disciplinary design career. He's worked at design agencies, consultancies and on dedicated digital product teams, leading teams that scale Design Operations and Human-Centered Design at USAA, Realtor.com and Nike. Through teaching undergraduate design, he discovered a passion for coaching and 1:1 personal and professional development. He likes design, but he loves helping artists and designers discover their creative voice and do their best work. Steven lives in South Austin with his partner Claire and their canine son, Clover.
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Holly SterlingSterlingHollyAssociate Professor, Communication DesignEmail: hs04@txstate.eduJCM 3106512.245.8133
Holly Sterling is an Associate Professor of Communication Design. After graduating with a BFA from Middle Tennessee State University, she worked as an art director and creative lead for the Tombres Group, The Drawing Room, A. Richard Johnson, Stone + Ward, Undercover Books, and Y&R SicolaMartin. Her client roster included firms such as IBM, Dell, Motorola, Nickelodeon Network, Ruby Tuesday, The Rockefeller Foundation, and TCBY. After joining Texas State in 1995, she has continued to remain active as a creative strategist and pro bono designer partnering with area firms to work with clients including: Pervasive Software, Texas Department of Health Services, Glaxo Smith Kline, Abbott Spine/Zimmer, Motive, Profitfuel, Ivyworldwide, The Phoenix Center, American Cancer Society, Girlstart, etc.
Holly Sterling also serves as Communication Design Internship Coordinator.
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Jennifer StobStobJenniferShe/Her/Hers/HerselfAssociate Professor and Coordinator, Art HistoryEmail: j_s515@txstate.eduJCM 3109512.408.1500
Art historian Jennifer Stob received her BA from Grinnell College in 2000 and her MA and joint PhD degree from the Department of the History of Art and the Film Studies Program at Yale University in 2010. Her research interests lie at the intersection of contemporary art, experimental cinema and artists’ video. She teaches courses on art after 1945, time-based media, the history of cinema from within the visual arts, avant-garde collectivity and aesthetic theory. In the classroom and in her scholarship, she focuses on the ideological contexts of art and visual culture as well as the different ways that art depicts and engages with social space. Her work has been published in Criticism, Evental Aesthetics, French Studies, Moving Image Review and Art Journal (MIRAJ), Parallax and Studies in French Cinema. Her film programing is a vital supplement to her research and teaching. The screenings she organized for The Black and Blue Danube Symposium at Colgate University in 2013 yielded two essays for anthologies: one for European Cinema After the Wall: Screening East-West Mobility on transnational filmmaker Goran Rebić and the second forthcoming in Watersheds: Poetics and Politics of the Danube River on experimental film and video artist Péter Forgács. She is finishing a manuscript on film theory and the Situationist International and has begun a second project on the Austria Filmmaker’s Cooperative.
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Barry StoneStoneBarryProfessor, PhotographyEmail: bs36@txstate.eduSABN 112512.245.7708
Barry Stone was born in Lubbock, Texas, and earned a BA in Biology and an MFA in Studio Art in Photography from the University of Texas at Austin.
His work is represented by Klaus von Nichtssagend Gallery in New York and Gaa Gallery in Provincetown MA and Cologne, Germany and was the founding member of the artist collective, Lakes Were Rivers. His work has been nationally and internationally exhibited, notably at the Center for Art and Media, (ZKM) in Karlsruhe, Germany, The Lianzhou Photography Festival in China, and with Klaus von Nichtssagend Gallery in New York City. Stone is the author of three monographs of his photographs including, Daily in a Nimble Sea, published by Silas Finch which was a finalist for the Lucie Photobook Awards in New York City, shortlisted for the National Gallery of Victoria Cornish Prize in Australia and was chosen a photobook of note for 2017 by Jeffrey Ladd for Photobooks UK and Elizabeth Avedon, Drift, which was reviewed by Collector Daily, and Lost Pines slated for release in the summer of 2022. His photographs have been acquired by many public and private collections including the Cleveland Clinic, Fidelity Mutual Corporation Collection, The Center for Art and Media (ZKM), The Henry Art Gallery in Seattle, The Athenaeum of the University of Georgia, The Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library at Yale University, University of Texas at Austin, and the Museum of Fine Arts Houston. His work has been reviewed or featured in publications including Harper’s Magazine, Dallas Morning News, Glasstire, Artforum, Artlies, Artnet, Washington City Paper, The New York Sun, TimeOut New York, Texas Monthly, and the New York Times.
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Gina McDaniel TarverTarverGina McDanielProfessor, Art HistoryEmail: gt17@txstate.eduJCM 2110512.245.1480
Gina McDaniel Tarver specializes in modern and contemporary Latin American art and visual culture with a particular interest in the relationship between art and its institutions, issues of gender and representation, and ecopolitics. She teaches courses in modern and contemporary as well as Spanish Colonial and Pre-Columbian art history and its methodologies. Her book, The New Iconoclasts: From Art of a New Reality to Conceptual Art in Colombia, 1961–1975 (Ediciones Universidad de los Andes, 2016), was supported by a Fulbright grant. Tarver co-edited the anthology Art Museums of Latin America: Structuring Representation (Routledge, 2018). Tarver’s peer-reviewed articles have appeared in the international journals Third Text (London), Artelogie (Paris), and The International Journal of the Inclusive Museum (United States), she has published chapters in several anthologies, and she has presented papers at various conferences and symposia in Chile, Colombia, Portugal, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States. In 2015, she curated En Medellín todo está muy Caro, a retrospective of the Colombian conceptual artist Antonio Caro, for the Museo de Arte Moderno de Medellín. She is the author of numerous essays and entries for exhibition catalogs and was co-editor of The New York Graphic Workshop, 1964–1970 (Blanton Museum of Art, 2009). Tarver is the book reviews editor for the journal Latin American and Latinx Visual Culture.
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Dimitry TetinTetinDimitryAssociate Professor and BFA Coordinator, Communication DesignEmail: d_t303@txstate.eduJCM 3116512.245.1496
Dimitry Tetin's multi-disciplinary design practice grew out of his background in ecology, European literature and interest in language. Places and their relationships to the popular American imagination and identity act as an organizing principle for the content and form for the majority of the projects in his experimental publishing practice. He also works independently and collaboratively on publication, web, identity, motion, signage and wayfinding projects for clients in the commercial and not-for-profit sectors.
He is the coordinator of the Undergraduate Communication Design Program. Prior to moving to Austin to teach and do research at Texas State, he was an Assistant Professor in the Graphic Design Design Program at the State University of New York at New Paltz. He also taught as an adjunct at Rhode Island School of Design and Parsons the New School for Design. He earned his BA in literature, ecology and evolutionary biology from the University of Chicago, BFA in Visual Communication from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and MFA in Graphic Design from the RISD.
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Beth ThomasThomasBethDirector, School of Art and DesignJCM 2112D512.245.2611
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Ana TreviñoTreviñoAnaShe/Her/Hers/HerselfAssistant Professor of Instruction, Art FoundationsEmail: alt162@txstate.eduJCM 4110512.408.6528
Ana Treviño is an artist and educator living and working in Austin, TX. Her practice bends the rules of filmmaking and is informed by cultural histories. She uses a feminist lens to think about the concept of borders, whether visible, invisible, or blurred. Her connection to the U.S./Mexico border deeply influences her work and the stories she engages with. Through video installation and performance, she explores how she can reinvent subjugated narratives. She has been invited to lecture for the Capstone Lecture Series at Eastern Washington University, led graduate workshops at the University of Texas at Austin, and worked with underrepresented youth in the greater Austin area. Her writing has been published in Gender/Sexuality/Italy, a peer-reviewed journal focusing on gendered identities. Films she has collaborated in have screened at Sundance Film Festival and South by Southwest. She received her MFA in Art and Technology from the University of Florida and a BS in Television and Film Production from Florida International University.
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Holly VeselkaVeselkaHollyAssociate Professor, Art FoundationsEmail: hev16@txstate.eduJCM 2122B512.245.4801
Holly Veselka holds a BFA from The University of Texas at Austin, 2004, and an MFA from the Boston University, 2009. Her recent solo projects include The Inanimate Vastness of Sidereal Space, Wave Hill, the Bronx, NY, 2015; Mars Recruitment Center, Heliopolis, Brooklyn, NY, 2014; and Comet Contemplation Center, DUMBO Arts Festival, Brooklyn, NY, 2013. She is the recipient of multiple awards including being listed in Creative Capital’s 2016 On Our Radar, a 2015 Puffin Foundation Artist Grant, and she was an artist in residence at the Lower East Side Studio Program, New York, NY in 2015. Formerly based in Brooklyn, NY, she managed the contemporary art journal, Paper Monument as well as the Estate of Benny Andrews.
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Michael VillarrealVillarrealMichaelAssistant Professor of Instruction, Studio Art: PaintingEmail: mv1211@txstate.eduJCM 4114512.408.2758
Michael Villarreal received a Bachelor of Fine Arts at Texas State University in San Marcos, TX, and a Master of Fine Arts at the University of Nebraska. He has exhibited in solo exhibitions at Spellerberg Projects in Lockhart, TX; Doane University in Crete, NE; ACA Gallery at Angelina College in Lufkin, TX; Art Palace Contemporary Art Gallery, Houston, TX; and Project Project, Omaha, NE. He’s been in numerous group exhibitions at galleries such as The International Quilt Museum in Lincoln, NE; Undercurrent in Brooklyn, NY; DATELINE in Denver, CO; Barbara Davis Gallery, Houston, TX; Bemis Center for Contemporary Art, Omaha, NE; Northern-Southern, Austin, TX; LA Artcore: Brewery Annex Gallery, Los Angeles, CA; and Austin Community College- Highland Campus, Austin, TX. He was an artist in residence at the Navasota Artist in Residency Program in Navasota, TX and the Kimmel Harding Nelson Center in Nebraska City, NE. His work has been featured in several publications such as Huffington Post, New American Paintings, and Art Maze Magazine. In 2019, he was a recipient of the Nebraska Arts Council Individual Artist Fellowship. Villarreal is a San Marcos-based visual artist and lecturer at Texas State University.
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Jordan VonderhaarVonderhaarJordanLecturer, PhotographyEmail: jv1245@txstate.eduSABN 116512.408.4349