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New exhibitions at FSU Museum of Fine Arts featuring Indigenous art, work by graduating MFA artists

By: Jamie Rager , Anna Prentiss “Organ Exchange” (2011), by the De La Torre Brothers, on…

Exciting Leadership Update from the Department of Art Education

We have some exciting news to share about recent changes to leadership in the Department…

FSU Museum of Fine Arts brings Irish contemporary art to Tallahassee

Florida State University’s Museum of Fine Arts (MoFA) presents a multidisciplinary exhibition that considers relationships between…

New exhibitions at FSU Museum of Fine Arts featuring Indigenous art, work by graduating MFA artists

By: Jamie Rager , Anna Prentiss

Florida State University’s Museum of Fine Arts will open two new exhibitions this month, focusing on Latin American Indigenous art and showcasing the work of FSU’s graduating Master of Fine Arts (MFA) studio art students.


“Conversaciones: Latin American Indigenous Art”

April 3 – Dec. 5, 2025


Kukuli Velarde (Peruvian), San Cristobal, 2014, on loan from RoFA Projects. (Museum of Fine Arts)

“Conversaciones: Latin American Indigenous Art” will open Thursday, April 3, highlighting contemporary Latin American art alongside rarely exhibited treasures from FSU’s collections and include Mayan textiles, ancient Andean ceramics, metalwork and other artifacts.

This exhibition is presented in partnership with FSU’s Native American and Indigenous Studies Center (NAIS) and co-curated by the museum’s director, Kaylee Spencer, as well as Michael Carrasco, professor of art history and associate dean for research in the College of Fine Arts.

“The NAIS Center and I are thrilled that MoFA has put this marvelous exhibit together,” said Andrew Frank, director of NAIS. “Indigenous artists are often excluded from discussions of modern art and discussed only in the past tense. This exhibit lets us see the living creativity of Latin American Indigenous artists past and, perhaps most notably, present.”

“Conversaciones” draws on FSU faculty expertise in ancient Latin American art history and archaeology and aims to spark dialogue about the meaning of the featured works across time.

“We’re excited to bring rarely exhibited works from FSU’s collections into dialogue with powerful pieces by contemporary artists,” Spencer and Carrasco said in a joint statement. “‘Conversaciones’ offers a space for reflection on how Indigenous traditions endure, adapt and innovate — challenging us to rethink the boundaries between past and present, resilience and reinvention.”


“‘Conversaciones’ offers a space for reflection on how Indigenous traditions endure, adapt and innovate challenging us to rethink the boundaries between past and present, resilience and reinvention.”

— Kaylee Spencer and Michael Carrasco, co-curators of the exhibition.


“Pretty Marsh,” by Chloe Sailor, studio art MFA graduate student. (Department of Art)

“Origins & Afterlives”

April 11 – May 3, 2025


“Origins & Afterlives” showcases works from the 2025 graduating class of FSU’s Studio Art MFA Program. Featuring painting, sculpture, installation and digital media, this exhibition explores themes of memory, bodies, environments and identity.

“This exhibition marks the culmination of three years of hard work for our graduating MFA students,” said Jeff Beekman, chair of the Department of Art. “We are so excited for them to share their work with the community and hope the public will join us in enjoying the show and in celebrating their incredible growth and achievements.”

The museum will host an opening reception for both exhibitions at 6 p.m. Friday, April 11.

Attendance for the reception and admission to these exhibitions is free and open to the public. For more information, visit mofa.fsu.edu

Exciting Leadership Update from the Department of Art Education

We have some exciting news to share about recent changes to leadership in the Department of Art Education. We are pleased to announce Dr. Sara Scott Shield’s well-deserved promotion to Associate Dean of Academic Affairs of the College of Fine Arts at Florida State. Over the past 9 years Sara has been with us (more than 3 of those as Department Chair), she has consistently demonstrated unwavering support for those who have been fortunate enough to have worked alongside and learned from her. Her communication, organization, and time management skills have significantly bolstered departmental operations. More than that, however, Sara has a special combination of integrity and empathy, making her a unique part of our “art ed family,” as she would say. We are confident that she will bring the same level of excellence to her new role.

Messages from faculty & staff:

Sara carried the Department—with grace, humor, and warmth—through the disruption of COVID, and helped us emerge from that experience as a more caring, collaborative, and supportive team of faculty and students. Under her leadership, she fostered a sense of collective purpose that inspired our Department to find sustainable methods for a continual evolution and improvement. Her gift to the Department of Art Education was her belief that a department can be a forward-thinking space for rigor, excellence, and solidarity; she provided the tools we needed to meet this aspiration.

I am delighted for Sara, who, as a representative of the Art Education faculty, has taken on the role of Associate Dean for the College. Even though I’ve worked with Sara for a short time, I am sincerely grateful for the opportunity to know her as a wonderful person and colleague. From the moment I was a job candidate for my current position, she consistently provided care, support, and transparency. I am eagerly anticipating the positive impact her leadership will have on the future of the College.

Sara is not only an extraordinary leader, but also led during extraordinary circumstances. She took on the role of Departmental Chair amidst the throes of a global pandemic, during social and political upheaval, and immediately after being tenured herself – leading the Department to new heights in that process through vision, wisdom, and a caring attitude for both students and faculty.

Sara has led our Department as Chair with gracious intelligence, clear vision, a collaborative spirit, and empathic compassion over the past several years. Her presence and leadership have helped us become a productive and loving family. I am not surprised that her stellar work and humanity has resulted in a promotion. We will miss her, but she leaves a strong legacy. I am so glad others will benefit from her wisdom and skill.

Sara’s warm welcome and encouraging mentorship made my entry into the Department as a newer faculty truly enriching. Her invaluable constructive feedback and confidence boosts were instrumental in my professional growth, and I deeply admire her organizational skills and dedication to fostering departmental growth. I am confident that she will excel in her new role.

Working with Sara was one of the best experiences I’ve had in my professional career. Sara stepped into her role as Chair at the height of the COVID pandemic, and to say she handled it with grace would be an understatement. She was and remains an incredible source of information, strength, and support to faculty, students, and staff alike.

 


Now, we are delighted to say that Dr. Rachel Fendler has stepped into the role of Department Chair. Her responsibilities as Associate Chair have prepared her for this new management position, and we know we are in very capable hands under her leadership.