Water Object(ive)s: Artistic Intervention, Curriculum, and Public Pedagogy

Thu, September 26, 2013
All Day
Wexner Film/Video Theatre, 1871 N. High St.



B. Stephen Carpenter II will give a talk -- "Water Object(ive)s: Artistic Intervention, Curriculum, and Public Pedagogy".

The event is the first in the Working Group for the Center for Material Culture Studies 2013-14 speaker series, co-sponsored with the Humanities Institute; Department of Arts Administration, Education and Policy; Center for Material Culture Studies; and the Wexner Center for the Arts.

Artists have long created objects, images, and experiences as positive interventions that encourage others to engage meaningfully with the world. In response to the global water crisis, some artists have recently taken the lead in the production of low-cost ceramic water filters created from local materials to provide an affordable means for rendering disease-contaminated water potable. B. Stephen Carpenter II, Professor of Art Education at the Pennsylvania State University, is a leader in this movement. At this talk he discusses the global water crisis as a human-rights call to action and offers a response grounded in local materials, artistic interventions, and curricular possibilities.

Professor of Art Education and Professor-in-Charge of the Art Education Program at the Pennsylvania State University, Carpenter is a recipient of the National Art Education Association Eugene Grigsby Award and was named a NAEA Distinguished Fellow in 2013. His mixed-media installations and performance artwork have been exhibited in regional, national, and international exhibitions. He was founding codirector of the Texas Governor’s School in Arts and Humanities for Urban Leadership (2009–11), codirector of the TAMU Water Project, and chief executive artist of Reservoir Studio, an underground collective for transdisciplinary collaboration. Find out more about Carpenter and his work at sites.psu.edu/bscarpenterii.