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October 3, 2008 From: Laura Harris, Director of Media Relations (318) 342-5447, lharris@ulm.edu Kauffman’s “Waterline” photo exhibit to return to New Orleans Oct. 26-30 |
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Ten thousand Starbucks employees from around the world are expected to attend the conference. Kauffman's participation in this event is at the invitation of the Crescent City Art Project, one of five non-profit organizations that have been invited to participate in a day of volunteerism, scheduled for Wednesday, Oct. 29. Through the Crescent City Art Project, Starbucks employees will create art for the public schools of New Orleans. Kauffman's Waterline will be one of several exhibits presented to help Starbucks employees understand the devastation New Orleans experienced from Hurricane Katrina and the post-Katrina flood. Kauffman will be on hand Oct. 29 to interact with Starbucks employees about the exhibit. More information about the conference and the Crescent City Art
Project's participation in it is available at: More about “Waterline”: Kauffman described her work: “The intent of the installation is to recreate to the extent possible the ubiquitous, equalizing and emotional power and effect of the actual flood line in the city of New Orleans.” The current version of Waterline in the Coolspace Gallery consists of just over 118 linear feet extending from door frame to door frame around the four walls of the exhibition space. Waterline is an interactive exhibit. Marking pens are available for visitors to record responses to the photos on the foam core above and below the photographs. Many have responded with expressions of passion, anger, hope and faith. It was originally installed in the St. Matthias Chapel of Grace Episcopal Church on Canal St. in New Orleans from August 29, 2007 through the end of the year, and for a two-week period in December 2006 as a part of Art with a View in Premiere Tower on North 18th Street in Monroe. More about the photographer: She has professional experience in still photography, videography, journalism, and public relations. She has exhibited photographs in The Bowl Room Gallery of the Iowa Memorial Union and in the School of Journalism at the University of Iowa, and has won awards in underwater photography competitions. Her honors thesis used photography to study cross-cultural uses of public space, her master’s thesis studied children’s ability to interpret and analyze news and advertising photographs, and her doctoral dissertation was an ethnographic study of women artists.
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