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Elmhurst College to show works by four senior art majors

Elmhurst College art majors graduating this fall will explore timely societal themes in thought-provoking, innovative ways during the school art department's 52nd annual Fall Capstone Art Exhibition.

Four senior art majors are showcasing their work in the exhibition, which runs through Dec. 12 in the Barbara A. Kieft Accelerator ArtSpace.

The culminating event for every graduating art major, the capstone exhibition requires students to create a body of work in their area of concentration (painting, sculpture, digital art, graphic design or printmaking), then plan the exhibition and design the promotional materials for it.

Juan Mora, a graphic design major and a first-generation college student from Chicago, has created an organization that spreads awareness about the immigration situation at the U.S. southern border and dispels myths about immigrants.

Mora's project uses a mix of digital and print media to create posters, a map infographic of the border, a shirt and a website to create materials for the organization.

Nicole Paglia, a photography major from Rolling Meadows, digitally and physically manipulated 10 photographs to depict her friends' biggest fears. Paglia has placed first or second in some of Elmhurst College's other art exhibitions, and is a 2016 Golden Apple Scholar.

Ian Stong, a printmaking and graphic design major from Mesa, Arizona, says his artwork tries "to shed light on the issues humanity is facing, and the moral implications." Influenced by his love of punk rock, his work features bold imagery and bright color combinations, and involves some form or combination of handmade printing techniques.

Nova Uriostegui, a graphic design major from Morton Grove, created five deity character portraits and the branding for a false religion. She created advertisements, an overall brand style sheet with logos, a religious textbook cover, business cards and a pamphlet for each deity, along with instructions on how to worship each one and what each deity governs.

The Fall Capstone Art Exhibition is on display in the Barbara A. Kieft Accelerator ArtSpace, 200 W. Park Ave. Built around a 20-foot-high particle accelerator dating to the 1950s, the Accelerator ArtSpace is open from noon to 4 p.m. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.

The exhibition is one of about a dozen art shows Elmhurst College sponsors each academic year in two campus venues. The college also is home to a collection of Chicago Imagist and Abstractionist Art, which explores the vibrant, often outrageous, works of Chicago artists between 1950 and the present.

For details, call Suellen Rocca, director of exhibitions, at (630) 617-6110 or email srocca@elmhurst.edu.

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