Exhibits
A collection of museum and archival projects since 2011
Reclaiming the Death of a Beautiful Woman: Female Voices Adapting the Lady of Shalott
April 2021
Lead curator/project manager
When considering the Lady of Shalott in the Victorian period, male authors and artists names are often at the forefront of the conversation. However, this virtual exhibit explores the overlooked women who explore feminist themes in the Lady of Shalott story from the Victorian period until today. My duties included research, curation, and website design through Omeka S.
Purdue at 150: A Visual History of Student Life
2019
Head graduate researcher/project manager
Spear heading the Purdue buildings digital humanities collection my duties included organizing and collecting historical data on each building. This project gave research and background to the exhibit “Purdue at 150: A Visual History of Student Life.”
NAU Berlin Wall Project
2013-14
Student consultant/designer
Permanent Collection, Northern Arizona University. I acted as a student consultant on the design and historical information displayed at NAU of a piece of the Berlin Wall. The goal of the project was to create a new museum space for the Berlin Wall in the University Union and compare and caution the narrative of divided bridge to contemporary politics.
Reflections of Flagstaff
2012-13
Curator/project manager
I received the highly competitive NAU’s Hooper Undergraduate Research Grant to curate a museum exhibit titled "Reflections of Flagstaff: A Student-Curated Photographic Exhibition."The exhibit promoted interaction between NAU students and the surrounding community in an interactive exhibit. I did community outreach, curation, gallery installation, marketing, and more.
The Beaux and The Bibelot
2011
Curator/project manager
I co-planed, researched, designed, and marketed an exhibit in the Beasley Gallery at NAU that studied the rhetoric of museum display exhibiting tourist items in the manner traditionally reserved for fine art, and fine art in ways typically used for display of tourist items in traditional trading posts. Using items from personal collections from various places as well as objects from the collections of the NAU Anthropology Department and the NAU Art Museum, students created a display posing the question “Why not Tourist Art?”
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