SMU student art depicting human struggle on exhibit

'The Art of Remembrance,' an exhibit featuring 22 years of SMU student artwork reflecting the global human struggle for tolerance and dignity, runs though May 27 at the Goodrich Gallery of First United Methodist Church, 1928 Ross Ave. in Dallas.

DALLAS (SMU) — “The Art of Remembrance,” an exhibit featuring 22 years of SMU student artwork reflecting the global human struggle for tolerance and dignity, runs though May 27 at the Goodrich Gallery of First United Methodist Church, 1928 Ross Ave. in Dallas.

The 35 works, from photography to mixed-media, “don’t represent the uplifting themes that generally inspire works of art,” says Rick Halperin, director of the Embrey Human Rights Program in SMU’s Dedman College of Humanities & Sciences, whose course “America’s Dilemma: The Struggle for Human Rights,” inspired much of the artwork. “But art is a universal media that everybody can use to powerfully depict issues that resonate.”

All of the work, Halperin says, "is phenomenal."

The wide variety of human rights issues represented — from genocide and country-sponsored torture to LGBT intolerance and death penalty injustices — “is a tribute to all who have inspired the students to be empathetic to difficult subject matters involving bad human behavior,” Halperin says. “It’s also a tribute to the students themselves, many of whom are now parents hoping to help their own children be empathetic to such issues.”

For more details, including gallery hours, visit the Goodrich Gallery site or contact the SMU Embrey Human Rights Program at 214-768-3284.

From the Exhibit:

Artwork by Kelsey Moser
By Kelsey Moser
 Artwork by Evan Frey
By Evan Frey
 Artwork by Leigh Fransen
By Leigh Fransen
Artwork byLuis Borges
By Luis Borges 
Artwork by Bethany Stevens
By Bethany Stevens 
 Artwork by Matthew Helfrich
By Matthew Helfrich
Artwork by Jamie Woolridge
By Jamie Woolridge 
Artwork byDonimique Ouellette
By Dominique Ouellette 
 

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