Browsing by Author "Borland, Jennifer"
Now showing items 1-7 of 7
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Alison Knowles: A Feminist Recipe for Subjectivity or How to Cook Your Life
Petrazzi, Cassidy Sunshine (2019-05-01)This study shows how the work of contemporary artist and founding member of Fluxus, Alison Knowles (b. 1933) performs choice, meaning, and subjectivity into being through holistic and temporally based corporeal experience ... -
Anxiety of Influence in Medieval Seville: Reexamining Hierarchal Concepts of Style in the Alc�zar
Nies, Amy Elizabeth (Oklahoma State University, 2015-05-01)Fourteenth-century Iberia was a complicated and intricate place of intertwining cultural and religious entities; this mingling is particularly evident in the architecture of the Kingdom of Castile. In 1364, Pedro of Castile ... -
Bite out of History: A Feminist Reevaluation of Judy Chicago's "The Dinner Party"
Martucci-Fink, Bianca Josephine (2019-05-01)For the purposes of this project, I examine Judy Chicago's monumental work of feminist installation art, The Dinner Party, through a contemporary intersectional feminist lens as a means to resolve the problematic elements ... -
Controversy about French Influence: Nineteenth-century American Artists in France, 1850-1900
Provencher, Jessica Provencher (2016-05-01)While it is well-known that many nineteenth-century American artists were encouraged to travel to the art center of Paris to study, there were also many critics and artists who opposed this idea. Through exploring both ... -
Fragility, Mortality, and Emptiness: Animal Fiber as Sculptural Material in Contemporary Art
Brewer, Krystle Kaye (Oklahoma State University, 2014-05-01)Born out of the performance art of the 1960s, which focused on the artist's body as an artistic medium, artists and curators of the last three decades have looked to skin as a manipulative material and metaphor for art ... -
Fragmented visions: Architectural and religious entwinement in the Cathedral of Seville
May, Hayla (2021-05)This study analyzes the affectivity of the Cathedral of Seville on its fifteenth and sixteenth century audiences through a phenomenological assessment of spatial experience on its viewer. In so doing, I contend that the ... -
Interdisciplinary re-examination of American flag imagery in late nineteenth cenutry Lakota beadwork
Murphy Adams, Molly (2023-05)This thesis reexamines the deployment of American flag imagery in in late nineteenth century Indigenous Lakota beadwork. The profusion of flag imagery by Lakota women artists is well documented as a phenomenon, yet despite ...