Request Information
Learn More About PUC
- Home
- About PUC
-
Academics
-
All Departments
- Aviation
- Biology
- Business Administration & Economics
- Chemistry
- Communication
- Data Science
- Education
- Emergency Services
- English
- Global Public Health
- History
- Honors
- Kinesiology and Health Science
- Mathematics & Physics
- Music
- Nursing & Emergency Management
- Paramedic
- Pre-Allied Health
- Pre-Professional Programs
- Psychology & Social Work
- Social Work
- Theology
- Visual Arts
- World Languages
- AS in Nursing with Adventist Health
- Faculty Directory
-
All Departments
- Admissions & Aid
- Alumni
-
Life at PUC
Gesture and My World at Rasmussen Art Gallery
By Lainey S. Cronk on December 18, 2007
Share this
海角视频’s Rasmussen Art Gallery presents “Gesture and My World” from November 1 to December 7. The show will exhibit the artwork of Martha Mason, a PUC alumna who is currently teaching at Walla Walla College in Washington.
“Gesture and My Word” will consist predominantly of Mason’s very recent work in acrylic and mixed media painting. Mason works spontaneously and directly, looking for “interrelationships, fast moving energy flow, and breaks in space.” The energy and texture that develop in her paintings lead to what the artist calls “atmosphere charged with feeling.”
One of the things Mason has been working on is a series of “portraits” — works that are about individuals, but not based on actual models. Mason says she is “trying to take [portraiture] away from likeness but find a spot where a quality of personality is found amidst the paint.” Several of these works will be included in the Rasmussen show.
“Gesture and My Word” will consist predominantly of Mason’s very recent work in acrylic and mixed media painting. Mason works spontaneously and directly, looking for “interrelationships, fast moving energy flow, and breaks in space.” The energy and texture that develop in her paintings lead to what the artist calls “atmosphere charged with feeling.”
One of the things Mason has been working on is a series of “portraits” — works that are about individuals, but not based on actual models. Mason says she is “trying to take [portraiture] away from likeness but find a spot where a quality of personality is found amidst the paint.” Several of these works will be included in the Rasmussen show.
-
Share this
Latest News
PUC鈥檚 Enrollment Increases for 2025-2026 Year
By Ally Romanes on October 30, 2025
Fall Week of Worship: Destined for God
By Marina Maher on October 23, 2025
200 Students Compete at PUC鈥檚 Girls Volleyball Tournament
By Ally Romanes on October 20, 2025
PUC鈥檚 Publication Workshop Continues to Support Academy Students
By Ally Romanes on October 17, 2025