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Contact
: Facilities : Directions : Staff
Instructional Space
Allyn
The Allyn Building, opened in 1908 and located in the historic central quadrangle of the SIUC campus, houses
the central administrative and advisement offices of the School
as well as the Art
Education and Art
History programs, the Slide Library, and instructional space
for Drawing, Painting and Printmaking. Faculty in Art History and Graduate Assistants for
AD 101 (Introduction to Visual Culture) and AD 207 (Introduction
to Art History) hold their classes in rooms
equipped with slide projectors and video monitors.
Glove Factory, Studio Arts Facility
Formerly the home of the Good Luck Glove
Company, the Glove Factory is now a renovated facility containing
premium studio, instructional, and exhibition space. The Sculpture
facilities include a large open area for undergraduate instruction,
in addition to a well-equipped woodworking shop, a welding
area, and a large adjoining fabrication space. The following
machines are available for student use: an industrial-size planer,
a radial arm and cut-off saws, table saws, drill presses, lathes,
pedestal sanders and grinders, a jointer, three band saws, a
horizontal band saw for metal, a Hasenfeld bender, an oxy-acetylene
rig, and a MIG welder. Classroom space for Painting and Foundations can also be found in the Glove Factory.
Quigley
The Quigley Building houses the School of Art and Design's main
computer lab which serves as well as all art majors and Communication
Design students. Over 30 Macintosh workstations are available
to undergraduate and graduate students. Professional authoring
software, black and white and color laser, as well as large
format color inkjet printers are available. Various multimedia
input and output devices, such as scanners and CD burners are
also part of the lab facilities.
Design Barracks
The Design Barracks provides the central location for
coursework and classroom space for Communication
Design and Industrial
Design courses. A secondary computer lab houses 15 PC workstations
with professional 3D modeling software, as well as various input
and output devices. The Industrial Design workshop and studio
are also available for design, modeling and fabrication of student
projects. Design and foundation faculty offices are also housed
in the Design Barracks.
Pulliam Hall
Built in 1954, Pulliam Hall is a modern masonry and glass building
located near the center of campus. The Industrial Wing of Pulliam Hall houses well-equipped studios
for the Ceramics,
Glass, and
Metalsmithing/Blacksmithing programs, as well as private studios for graduate ceramics, glass and blacksmithing
students.
Foundry
The Foundry complex consists of two large metal buildings and
is located approximately 3 miles from campus. It houses facilities
for all ferrous and nonferrous metal-casting techniques, graduate
student studios and undergraduate programming in Sculpture.
Surrounding the Foundry are concrete pads and an adjacent grass
and wooded area, which provide ample space for outside work
and the display of large sculptures.
Studio Space
The Metals House, 805 South Oakland Street, located near the Glass House, contains several
individual studio spaces for graduate students in Metalsmithing
as well as some shared studio space for undergraduates and a
resource library with books and A-V materials.
The Glass House, located near the Metals House, functions as
the cold shop for the glass department. It contains several
individual studio spaces for graduate students in Glass,
shared studio space for undergraduates, and a classroom. This
is also the venue for the Glass Programs annual Christmas
Sale.
Formerly the home of the Good
Luck Glove Company, the Glove Factory is now a renovated facility
containing premium studio, instructional, and exhibition space.
The studios for Painting,
Drawing, and Printmaking
graduate students are unrivaled in their spaciousness and light.
There are also seven studio spaces for graduate students and
undergraduates in Sculpture
(majors carrying 6 credits in Sculpture are given studio space).
Exhibition Space
Located in the Allyn Building, the Vergette Gallery is a naturally
lit space of over 400 square feet available to students at the
School of Art and Design.
Located in the Glove Factory, the Surplus Gallery is an
area of roughly 6,000 square feet. It is a raw space where experimentation
is encouraged and where Art and Design students (as well as
some Cinema and Photography students) frequently exhibit their
work.
Please see Exhibitions
under News and Events for more
information.
The Southern
Illinois University Museum at Carbondale has been serving
the campus, the community, and region since 1874. The Museum
provides exhibitions in the arts, humanities and the sciences,
as well as functioning as a regional archive for the preservation
of our past and present for future generations. The Museum Galleries
are located on the first floor of Faner Hall North. The Museum
Offices are located at 2469 Faner Hall on the Southern Illinois
University Carbondale campus. The Museum
is in the North end of Faner Hall, in the heart of campus; a
short walk south from the clock tower on top of Pulliam Hall,
or north of the two-story parking structure next to the Student
Center.
In 1869, the charge to begin assembling a museum collection
for SIU was given to Dr. Cyrus Thomas, a nationally known entomologist,
an attorney in Murphysboro, brother-in-law to General John A.
Logan, principal for the school at DeSoto, and a minister in
the Lutheran Church in 1869. In 1874, the University Museum
was opened in the first Old Main Building. Since then, the University
Museum has been relocated numerous times: to the second Old
Main, to Altgeld, to Parkinson, and, currently, to Faner. By
2000, the University Museums collection had grown to more
than 53,500 objects. The three major areas of collecting include:
more than 4,500 objects in fine and decorative arts; more than
23,000 artifacts reflecting archaeology, history and world cultures,
and over 26,000 geological specimens.
The Museums fine arts collection has an emphasis on 20th
Century works and a collection of works created by artists employed
by the federal government during the Great Depression. The Museums
humanities collection is noteworthy for its world-renowned Melanesian
artifacts. The Museums science collection includes the
George Fraunfelter geology collection, museum quality specimens
of paleobotany, paleontology, and geology.
The University Museum is accredited by the American Association
of Museums.
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