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Belmont University - Department of Art Welcome to Belmont University's Art Department!

Belmont University offers a wide variety of study options for students interested in the visual arts. Our experienced faculty and well-equipped facilities help foster an environment where students are offered numerous opportunities to explore their creative talents.

The study of art and design at Belmont is an exciting opportunity, and we invite you to use our Web pages to find out more about our programs, our facilities and our faculty.

If you have any questions about the department or about Belmont, please feel free to contact us or visit us in person.  To contact us directly, call Stacey Bryan, Art Department Office Manager at 615-460-6770

The Department of Art at Belmont University is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Art and Design (NASAD).

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Christine Nuell: Laser Engravings - Nuell, a printmaking professor at MTSU, creates laser engraved prints that have a playful sense of improvisation by mixing imagery from the Victorian Era with images of technology.  The exhibition will be shown in the Leu Art Gallery through December 3.  The exhibition are free and open to the public.
 
Strength Identified
- A collaboration between the Department of Art and Residence Life, this exhibit features photos of Belmont students with items that make the student feel strong. This project is part a Residence Life project that helps students identify personal strengths. The exhibit will be in Gallery 121 through December 15 and is free and open to the public. 

William Morris Commissions Art Students for 'Musica' Works

allisonworking.jpgThe William Morris Agency recently commissioned Belmont Art students to create interpretations of Alan Lequire's "Musica" sculpture, which is located on the Music Row roundabout. Students involved with the project included Hannah Crabtree, Allison Dodson, Ellie Caudill and Sable Royal.

Pictured at right is Dodson preparing her piece. All of the art was delivered to William Morris last week and is currently on display in their Nashville building at 1600 Division Street (on the roundabout).

 

 


Art Professor’s ‘Green’ Bag Project Earns Growing Fan Base

GreenBagLady.JPGTeresa Van Hatten-Granath, associate professor in the Art Department, held her first “Green Bag Lady Performance Event” this past Saturday in Green Hills, adding another 66 fabric bags to her growing list of giveaways while also obtaining local and regional media coverage. (Pictured from left to right are Van Hatten-Granath, her friend Alicia Steinhilber and Radio Free Nashville talk show host Dawn Kirk.)

Van Hatten-Granath, who primarily teaches digital imaging and photography at Belmont, began the Green Bag Lady project earlier this year in an effort to inspire artists to think about the ecological impact of their art as well as to produce work that has a direct, positive impact on the environment. “The project started one day I when was scolding my husband for getting plastic bags at the grocery. I decided to go through my fabric bins and I just started making bags. Eventually, I figured out what size worked best, and that is the size of the pattern I now give out as a PDF. I started by bringing the bags to the college kids in my classes and then my friends. It has just grown from there, and now it has taken on a life of its own.”

Her performance events involve setting up her sewing machine in public spaces and creating bags to giveaway to anyone who requests one. The only cost? The receiver of the free bag must promise to use them instead of paper or plastic. To date, Van Hatten-Granath has sent more than 600 fabric bags to 37 states and six foreign countries.

NBC sent a camera crew to Saturday’s event and footage aired on Nashville’s WMSV-4 as well as on affiliates in 20 different states and Canada.

For more information, visit www.greenbaglady.org.