BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
PRODID:iCalendar-Ruby
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251010T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251009T190000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468556215
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251011T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251010T190000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468558264
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251014T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251013T190000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468559289
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251015T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251014T190000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468561338
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251016T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251015T190000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468563387
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251017T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251016T190000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468565436
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251018T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251017T190000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468567485
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251021T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251020T190000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468568510
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251022T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251021T190000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468571583
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251023T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251022T190000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468572608
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251024T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251023T190000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468574657
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251025T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251024T190000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468576706
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251028T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251027T190000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468578755
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251029T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251028T190000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468580804
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251030T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251029T190000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468582853
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251031T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251030T190000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468584902
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251101T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251031T190000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468588999
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251104T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251103T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468591048
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251105T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251104T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468593097
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251106T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251105T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468595146
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251107T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251106T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468598219
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251108T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251107T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468600268
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251111T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251110T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468602317
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251112T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251111T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468604366
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251113T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251112T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468606415
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251114T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251113T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468608464
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251115T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251114T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468610513
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251118T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251117T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468612562
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251119T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251118T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468614611
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251120T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251119T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468616660
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251121T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251120T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468619733
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251122T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251121T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468623830
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251202T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083756Z
DTSTART:20251201T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468627927
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251203T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083757Z
DTSTART:20251202T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468632024
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251204T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083757Z
DTSTART:20251203T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468634073
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251205T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083757Z
DTSTART:20251204T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468637146
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Department of Art & Art History\, the 11th Ann
 ual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition showcases a campus-wide selection of ar
 twork by twenty-two Stanford undergraduate students. \n\nMy Playground\, My
  Dreams...\n11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition\nOn View: October 9
 –December 5\, 2025\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 9\, 4–6pm\nCo-cur
 ated by Gabriel Harrison & Camille Utterback \nVirtual Gallery View\n\nFeat
 uring works by: Joanna Baker\, Deven Bansal\, Kylie Creighton\, Iyanu Dare\
 , Bryan Defjan\, Sisely DeLisi\, Lisa Do\, Alexander Gu\, Kostadin Hadzhiiv
 anov\, Rachel Liu\, Diego Maglione\, Rahsaan McFarland II\, Gregory Medina-
 Kenyon\, Iris Qu\, Aileen Rubio\, Darren Shiao\, Katherine Stewart\, Maryam
  Tsegaye\, Jude Wolf\, Richard Yin\, Chuyi Zhang\, and Emily Zhang\n\nThis 
 11th annual juried exhibition of undergraduate student works brings togethe
 r a range of voices from every corner of campus exploring the deep\, layere
 d relationship between gaze and embodiment. Here\, the gaze is not passive\
 ; it’s questioned\, confronted\, subverted. The body is not a fixed form\, 
 but a site of play\, performance\, memory\, and transformation.\n\nFor thes
 e young artists\, many of them non-art majors\, the studio becomes a kind o
 f playground—where identities can be tested\, masks worn and removed\, new 
 selves invented. At the same time\, their dreams—personal\, political\, poe
 tic—are made material through form\, gesture\, and image. In this space\, t
 o look is not neutral. To be looked at is not simple. The act of making bec
 omes a way of seeing oneself differently and of reshaping how one is seen\,
  or one’s physical absence felt.\n\nSome works speak quietly\, with tendern
 ess. Others shout. Some use the body directly\; others explore its absence\
 , its distortion\, or its refusal. In one work\, empty industrial chairs ar
 e transformed into a metallic envelope of implied human intimacy\; in anoth
 er\, an over scaled aluminum beverage can harbors a set of eyes that might 
 be critiquing the economic structures that produced it or challenging the u
 ser who consumes it\; in a third\, a couple rendered in charcoal denies the
  viewer their gaze\, drawing us into their private world\, emphasizing the 
 sincerity and gravity of the apology unfolding between them.\n\nBut across 
 all of them runs a shared urgency: to take control of the narrative\, to re
 imagine how the self—embodied\, imperfect\, dreaming—can exist in the eyes 
 of others and in one's own.\n\nMy Playground\, My Dreams... invites viewers
  into this ongoing negotiation of body and gaze\, asking: What does it mean
  to show up in your own image? What does it mean to be both the subject and
  the maker of your dream?\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\, co-curator\n\nOn a person
 al note\, I am grateful to my co-curator\, Professor Camille Utterback\, fo
 r her insight and partnership throughout the curatorial process. I also wis
 h to thank Maggie Dethloff\, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media
  at the Cantor Arts Center\, for lending her expertise as a member of our j
 ury. Behind the scenes\, this exhibition would not have been possible witho
 ut the invaluable support of Daniel Brickman\, our Museum Preparator\, whos
 e care and precision brought the works to life in the gallery space. I am e
 qually thankful to Julianne Garcia\, our Events and Communications Manager\
 , whose coordination and dedication ensured the exhibition reached our comm
 unity with clarity and impact.\n\n- Gabriel Harrison\n\nImage: Kostadin K. 
 Hadzhiivanov\, My Playground\, My Dreams\, My Trash\, 2025. Spray paint gra
 ffiti on ready-mades\; marker illustration on sticky notes.\n\nVISITOR INFO
 RMATION: Stanford Art Gallery is located at 419 Lasuen Mall\, off Palm Driv
 e. The gallery is open Monday–Friday\, 12–5pm\, and will be closed the week
  of November 24–28. Visitor parking is available in designated areas and pa
 yment is managed through ParkMobile (free after 4pm\, except by the Oval). 
 Alternatively\, take the Caltrain to Palo Alto Transit Center and hop on th
 e free Stanford Marguerite Shuttle. This exhibition is open to Stanford aff
 iliates and the general public. Admission is free. \n\nConnect with the Dep
 artment of Art & Art History! Subscribe to our mailing list and follow us o
 n Instagram and Facebook.
DTEND:20251206T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260306T083757Z
DTSTART:20251205T200000Z
GEO:37.428023;-122.16772
LOCATION:Stanford Art Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:11th Annual Undergraduate Juried Exhibition: My Playground\, My Dre
 ams...
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50393468640219
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/11th-annual-undergraduate-juried-exhi
 bition
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
