Mjournal of modern craft12/16/2023 ![]() ![]() ![]() Taitano’s work investigates modern Indigeneity, decolonization, and cultural identity in the context of diaspora. She is the author of Inside Me an Island and A Bell Made of Stones. Taitano is a queer CHamoru writer and interdisciplinary artist from Yigu, Guåhan (Guam), familian Kabesa yan Kuetu, and co-founder of Art 25: Art in the Twenty-fifth Century. When he’s not writing, drawing, or thinking about museums, you can find Mike on long trail runs in the forests and mountains of the Pacific Northwest. In 2016, he co-founded Super Nature Adventures LLC, a place-based education and creative design agency that partners with parks, government agencies, schools, and non-profits to expand learning in the outdoors and public spaces. Mike is the author of Museums as Agents of Change: A Guide to Becoming a Changemaker (2021), and is co-producer of Museums Are Not Neutral, a global advocacy campaign calling for ethics-based transformation across museums. After more than 20 years of work in education and museums, Mike brings his personal core values of collaboration and care along with a deeper understanding of placed-based connections into the work that he leads within organizations, non-profits, schools, and communities. Mike Murawski: Consultant, change leader, and author living in Portland, Oregon. Mentor to Jill DiMassimo (‘23) and Joanna Weiss (‘23). View her full bio on our Core Faculty + Teaching Fellows page. Tiffany Momon is a Teaching Fellow in our program during the fall semester, and serves as a student mentor and advisor during the spring. Worked with Darrah Bowden and Matt Haugh. Current pedagogical research takes the studio critique as site of study, with emphasis on collective undoing/remaking of the form. Her writings have been included in the anthologies Beyond Critique (Bloomsbury, 2017), Collaboration Through Craft (Bloomsbury, 2013), and The Object of Labor: Art, Cloth, and Cultural Production (School of the Art Institute of Chicago and MIT Press 2007). in Fiber and Material Studies from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Leemann is Professor of Fine Arts 3D/Fibers at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design and holds an M.F.A. A long-standing collaboration with the Boston-based Design Studio for Social Intervention grounds much of this thinking. Judith Leemann is an artist, educator, and writer whose practice focuses on translating operations through and across distinct arenas of practice. Recent projects include curating and coordinating the exhibition, conference, and catalogue Path of the Teabowl for the Alfred Ceramic Art Museum. Her research focuses on the histories of ceramics, modern art, and craft theory in Japan and in international perspective. Meghen Jones is Associate Professor of Art History at the School of Art and Design of the New York State College of Ceramics, Alfred University. Second-year students continue working with their Fall 2021 mentors through the Spring 2022 semester.įirst-year students work with a new mentor this semester: PHOTO: Center for Craft, MACR graduate Mike Hatch’s exhibit Crafted Roots: Stories and Objects from the Appalachian Mountains, on view August 3 – October 23, 2020.
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