PCAL Calendar
Sunday, April 2nd
- Location: FAC Corridor Gallery
- Time: 8:00am - 4:30pm
Cavallo, a professional artist living in New Jersey, creates dramatic, large-scale watercolors focusing on the figure. His work explores issues of human rights and champions individual voice. Exhibited works include those from his Comfort Women series, exploring the tragedy and resilience of women, many of whom were Korean, forced into sexual slavery during WWII. In conjunction with the Year of South Korea.
Artist talk: Weds, March 29 @ 5:30 pm in FAC 156; reception to follow in gallery
- Location: FAC Main Gallery, 2nd Floor
- Time: 8:00am - 4:30pm
Eunkang Koh’s Printstallation Invasion combines printmaking, soft sculpture and installation, focusing on social phenomena in our contemporary consumerist society. As lifestyle and thinking processes are ruled by money and capitalism, society’s goals are to become richer and wealthier so that we can consume even more. Consumption, driven by endless desires, triggers an identity crisis. Koh creates animal-human hybrids through which she expresses the absurdity of our world. Her ironic creatures portray a mixture of humor and grotesqueness, reflecting life in our consumerist society.
- Location: FAC Main Gallery, 2nd Floor
- Time: 8:00am - 4:30pm
This exciting exhibition includes work from three contemporary Korean Printmakers: Hyeyoung Shin, Sang-Mi Yoo and Yoonmi Nam, with each artist exploring the printmaking process in a unique and refreshing way.
- Location: MMTH Gallery and Atrium, 1666 Normal Drive, WKU Campus
- Time: 3:00pm - 9:00pm
The School of Journalism & Broadcasting is excited to offer a photographic and interactive exhibition of photographs that promises to change the way you look at the world.
Living On A Dollar A Day: The Lives and Faces of the World’s Poor, is a powerful and extraordinary series of photographs and profiles by Pulitzer Prize winning photojournalist Renée C. Byer, whose work illuminates the human faces of people who live in extreme poverty around the world. Traveling to 10 countries on four continents, Byer sought out individuals and families on the brink of survival – living on about one U.S. dollar each day.
The people in Byer’s compelling profiles share their hardships, their joys, and their dreams for the future with her. Often with little hope of changing their own destiny, they dream of something better for their children. In her searing and tender images, accompanied by stories shared by people whose trust she gained, Byer gives voice to those who would not otherwise be heard.
The exhibit will be available beginning Thursday, Feb. 16, through Friday, April 28.
Gallery Hours for the Exhibit
Sundays - 3 to 9 p.m.
Mondays through Thursdays - 9 a.m to 9 pm.
Fridays - 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Some of the links on this page may require additional software to view.