Archive for January, 2007

Web of Knowledge Training set for Feb 7

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007

library catalog

The Library is pleased to announce that training sessions for Web of Knowledge (previously known as Web of Science) have been scheduled for Wednesday February 7, 2007 in Lamson 102. Two sessions are available:

  • 9:30 am – Noon While this session will be tailored to librarians, ALL are welcome
  • 1:15 pm – 3:00 pm

Brought by popular demand, the Web of Science Database became available for use last December 2006. The following products are part of the package:

  • Science Citation Index Expanded 1900 – present
  • Social Sciences Citation Index 1956 – present
  • Arts & Humanities Citation Index 1975 – present

Learn more about this wonderful resource and come to a training session!

For more information, contact Bill Kietzman, Electronic Resource Librarian at 535-2638 or via email billk@plymouth.edu.

arts and humanities citation index, databases, library, science citation index, social sciences citation index, web of knowledge, web of science

Rachel Gross “Pictorial Illusion” on display at Lamson

Monday, January 29th, 2007

gross exhibit spring 07

Pictorial Illusion: The Graphic Art of Rachel Gross
Lamson Library January 31 – March 16, 2007

Opening Reception January 31, 4 – 6 p.m.

Vermont printmaker, Rachel Gross, has this to say about her work:

“I have always been interested in the narrative possibility of pictorial illusion. The images of furniture, interior spaces, and details of floral wallpaper and upholstery patterns, create a surreal, dream-like atmosphere. The ghost-like images are reminiscent of plans or blueprints, implying a future manifestation, while at the same time they are traces from a past event.

Time is also an important part of the process. When making the etchings the process of scratching, scraping, sanding is literally embedded in the plates. The linear images in many of the panel pieces are made by tracing from photographs onto the panels using a type of carbon paper made out of powdered pigment. The resulting image is a record of the activity of tracing.

In much of the work the sense of space alternates between depth and flatness through the layering of linear elements. This flat/deep dialectic is underscored by the illusion of depth in the drawings and paintings versus the concrete nature of the wooden panels and shaped etching plates. The rounded corners of the surfaces themselves suggest desktops, mattresses, or old television screens. These surfaces become like containers for human activity and design, psychological spaces on which to project visions for the future and memories of the past.”

, exhibits, lamson learning commons, library, pictorial illusion, printmaking, rachel gross, , printmaking