Loyola University Maryland's Julio Fine Arts Gallery will feature "Headform for the Age of Magical Thinking," a video installation featuring a new body of work, including a 10-foot floating constructed head, by Laure Drogoul, from Monday, Jan. 24 - Sunday, Feb. 27. An artist talk/performance and reception will be held on Thursday, Jan. 27, from 5 - 7 p.m.
Drogoul's works are a hybrid of new media, sculpture, and performance that often incorporate audience participation. She has exhibited and performed nationally and internationally, most recently in St. Petersburg, Russia. A resident of Baltimore, Drogoul has received Maryland State Artist Awards, a Franklin Furnace Award for performance art, and a U.S./Japan Creative Artist Fellowship. In 2006, she received the Janet and Walter Sondheim Prize.
The Julio Fine Arts Gallery, located in the DeChiaro College Center on Loyola's North Charles Street campus, is open from 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Friday and from 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. on Sundays. It is closed on all University holidays. For more information on this event and other exhibits at the gallery, please contact Gallery Director Kay Hwang at khwang@loyola.edu.
Established in 1852, Loyola University Maryland is a Jesuit comprehensive university comprising Loyola College, its school of arts and sciences; the Sellinger School of Business and Management; and the School of Education. Loyola enrolls 3,700 undergraduate and 2,300 graduate students from across the country and around the world.
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