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May 19, 2003
Irwin Scholars for 2003 honored at Sesnon Art
Gallery
By Scott Rappaport
Julia DeGuzman decided to apply to UCSC four years ago during a trip
down from Oakland to visit friends on campus.
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Irwin Scholar Kimberly Seiferheld: "UCSC has allowed
me to find my own style in art. They really pushed me to do that:"
Photo by Scott Rappaport
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| Irwin Scholar Julia DeGuzman:
"UCSC has definitely given me a body of work I can leap out
of into the future." Photo: Scott
Rappaport |
"I saw the Art Department and I thought to myself,
this is where
Id like to create my work," the 21-year-old
senior recalled.
Apparently, she made the right decision.
DeGuzman has been chosen as a 2003 Irwin Scholar, one of 15 select
UCSC students who will receive a $2,500 merit award to further their
art education.
Established in 1986, the William Hyde and Susan Benteen
Irwin Scholarship
fund has now grown to more than $700,000, providing annual
acknowledgment
to the Art Departments finest students.
"These scholarships are considered as recognition given by the
faculty to the top 5 percent of the program," noted
Norman Locks,
chair of the Art Department.
DeGuzmans work will be showcased along with her fellow honorees
at the Sesnon Art Gallerys annual exhibition of Irwin Scholars
from May 21 to June 14 at Porter College. The opening reception is on
Wednesday, May 21, from 5 to 7 p.m. and will include an awards ceremony.
This event is free and open to the public.
The Sesnon show will feature a wide variety of art forms including
painting, photography, printmaking, sculpture,
installation, and mixed
media. DeGuzman said that her contribution will be a
performance/installation
piece.
"Theres a lot of digital work in this show, and
I feel like
Im going to be the analog piece," she explained. "The
main idea is that participants will come into an
environment I created
and will pose a question or comment, and Ill give
them a response.
On the walls Ill have photographs that are
significant to me that
Ive taken in the past three years, and strips of text
about current
events or my own personal history will dangle like streamers. It will
all take place in an enclosed space with curtains.
"Its all about process and
self-exploration," DeGuzman
added. "I want to learn more about how I work with other people.
I plan to come in twice a week during the gallery exhibit to continue
the performance."
Irwin Scholar Kimberly Seiferheld will have four
sculptures on display
at the show. She noted that she likes to experiment with a variety of
different materials such as nails, wax, and resin in the creation of
her highly personal artwork.
"Im always changing techniques and trying to
perfect them,"
Seiferheld said. "Mostly Im just drawn to
materials and once
I create a structure, it evolves from that. Most of the time I have
an idea in my head, but the materials take me there."
Seiferheld noted that her art serves as a significant
outlet for experiences
and feelings that she has gone through as a woman.
"Its my way of working through issues that I
otherwise wouldnt
know how to deal with," Seiferheld said. "UCSC has allowed
me to find my own style in art. They really pushed me to do
that."
Both DeGuzman and Seiferheld plan to take a year off before applying
to graduate school in art. DeGuzman said she will apply her
scholarship
funds toward the purchase of a video camera to help document her work
and improve her portfolio.
"The Art Department has given me a good, solid foundation and
direction," she noted. "UCSC has definitely given me a body
of work I can leap out of into the future."
For more information, call the Sesnon Gallery at (831)
459-3606 or visit
online.
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