- May 15, 2023
Sisc Johnson, a 亚洲AV School of Art student and staff member, will be the first in her family to graduate from college this May.
- February 22, 2023
The first time Katherine Ashby saw her artwork installed at Gunston Hall, the historic home of U.S. Founding Father George Mason IV, it was surreal. 鈥淚 had never done something that felt that important or that had been installed physically,鈥 the senior painting major from 亚洲AV said.
- November 22, 2022
In 1995, Mason staff photographer Neil Adams took aerial photos of the Fairfax Campus from a Huey helicopter.
- November 22, 2022
Mason alum Neil Adams talks about taking aerial photos of the Fairfax Campus from a helicopter in 1995.
- October 4, 2022
Mason student Nadya Steare recently completed a two-month residency at the Akureyri Art Museum in Iceland where she worked full time on a new series.
- August 17, 2022
This summer Mason seniors Mirella Guzman-Escobar and Jacques Lykes are interning in the office of the House Creative Services, Chief Administrative Officer (CAO) at the U.S. House of Representatives.
- August 2, 2022
Mason artist in residence Abdulrahman 鈥淎bi鈥 Naanseh studied interior design at Damascus University in Syria, but his true passion is art, specifically Arabic calligraphy.
- June 10, 2022
Mason Exhibitions is honored to present Abdulrahman Naanseh: Pressure, Movement, Effect, a solo exhibition of the artist鈥檚 recent Arabic calligraphy on paper and canvas, on view June 17 through August 6, 2022. The opening reception for Pressure, Movement, Effect will kick off with the Arlington Collective Art Walk the evening of June 17, featuring self-guided art experiences open to the public that connects seven local galleries.
- June 7, 2022
The 15 students in the special topics class Facial Reconstruction started the semester with a generic plastic skull. Week by week, they sculpted different parts of their own faces, creating a portrait of themselves in clay and learning the forensic skills needed to put a face on a skull.
- May 6, 2022
School of Art professor Christopher Kardambikis was determined to focus his operations and curriculum on printmaking processes that are nontoxic, energy efficient, and supportive of the repurposing of paper scraps into new usable sheets.