Office of International Student Services Newsletter

Week of May 6, 2008

 Volume V, Number 29

In This Issue

· Plan ahead: Postage costs increase May 14!
· Borrowing Closet
· Airline Packing Tips

·
Important Information

· Information for F-1 & J-1 students completing studies in May 2008
· New OPT rules
·
Fraud Alert: IRS does not send you e-mails
· Travel Signature
· Special Registration Process when traveling home
· Summer Options for F-1 &
J-1 Students

Upcoming Events

· May 9  - End-of-the Year Picnic
· May 9 - Left to Tell
· May 17 - MSS & OISS Graduation Reception
· April -May - What is  Citizenship? Who is a Citizen? Exhibit at Weisman

Interesting Articles

· Preparing to go home-
To Do list
 
 

Contact Us
oiss@stthomas.edu

Phone: 651 962-6650
Fax: 651 962-6655
Office: 161 MHC
http://www.stthomas.edu/oiss

How to send us news

Who is a Citizen? What is Citizenship?
 

Artists have long explored representations of citizens and citizenship since the time of the ancient Greeks. A new exhibition drawn from the Weisman's permanent collection explores these themes in works from the early twentieth century through the present. Who is a Citizen? What is Citizenship? features thirty paintings, photographs, and prints, ranging from Lewis Hine's photographic portraits of immigrants at Ellis Island taken in 1905 to Twin Cities photographer Joseph Allen's contemporary portraits of American Indians. Other artists included in the exhibition are Jacob Lawrence, Robert Gwathmey, Isabel Bishop, Rockwell Kent, Walker Evans, Joseph Beuys, Jerome Liebling, Thomas Arndt, and Sue Coe.

The exhibition features three thematic sections. The first, "Who is a Citizen?," examines the artistic concern with status and representation; for example, Walker Evans's 1936 photograph of Allie Mae Burroughs in Hale County, Alabama, which helped to bring visibility and aid to the plight of poor sharecroppers during the Great Depression. "Civic Life in the City" explores how shared public space defines community, regardless of the legal status of individuals' citizenship. "The Artist as Citizen" demonstrates how artists have performed as advocates and activists in response to social and political issues.

Who is a Citizen? What is Citizenship? is the first in a year-long series of WAM exhibitions and programs examining the role of art and artists in a democracy.

Admission

Admission to the Weisman Art Museum is always free! Visit us in our gleaming home on the East Bank of the University of Minnesota's Twin Cities campus:

333 East River Road
Minneapolis, MN 55455
(612) 625-9494

Parking

The parking garage is located beneath the museum on East River Road. Public parking is available in the museum ramp at a rate of $2.75 per hour with a daily maximum of $12.00. The parking ramp and the museum are both handicapped accessible.

http://www.weisman.umn.edu/exhibits/Citizen/home.html