Popular Searches

Time Loops | By Christopher T. Wood

Christopher T. Wood, who has previously served as an adjunct professor of art at Ripon College, is hosting an artist talk on his solo art exhibit titled “Time Loops” on Oct. 25 in Ripon College’s Demmer Hall at 7 p.m.

Following the artist talk will be a reception at the CJ Rodman Center for the Arts in Caestecker Gallery. The exhibit gallery will be open to the public Oct. 25 through Nov. 22. Caestecker Gallery hours are Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 2-5 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday from 2-6 p.m.

“Through my studio practice I collaborate with forces of nature, embrace chance events and study narratives of human oversight to probe the space of human existence,” Wood said. “I research at the borderline where human will collides with the universe’s tendency toward disorder and decay.”

Wood has been working on a long-term project which he started on January 1, 2016, called “Daydrawing.”

“I create daily drawings, the accumulation of which, over time, expand into a broader endeavor in the form of an entity we can experience directly but is so distributed in space and in time that it does not exist anywhere in particular,” Wood said.

Every day, Wood creates a 9-inch-by-12-inch piece using powdered graphite. The collection is “both already complete and will never be completed.”

Although the collection is dispersed through various digital publications and platforms, and in curated collections and exhibitions worldwide, it’s important to understand that “Daydrawing” is a “single object, continuously in creation and existing in many locations at once.”

“As we enter the Anthropocene epoch, this project is of enormous importance in that it promotes a more sustainable approach to understanding a world that is increasingly dependent upon a shift in human perspective,” Wood said. “My ambition for this work is to assist such a shift in human awareness through the promotion of long-term thinking.”

Wood is also an Associate Lecturer at Peck School of the Arts and a Lecturer at the School of Architecture and Urban Planning at UW-Milwaukee. In 2022, he was named Artist-in-Residence at The Pfister Hotel in Milwaukee.

Christopher T. Wood

Caestecker Gallery Hours

Tuesdays, Thursdays & Fridays:
2-5 p.m.
Saturdays & Sundays:
2-6 p.m.

Artist Talk
10/25 7pm
Demmer Hall
reception to follow in
Caestecker Gallery

Pow-litical Comics: | From Ripon the the RNC

Ripon College is proud to host Pow-litical Comics: From Ripon to the RNC, on view in the Caestecker Art Gallery from Sept. 5 through Oct. 4. The exhibit features several Wisconsin artists, including Marvel and DC comic book artist Peter Poplaski and The New Yorker cartoonist Paul Noth. Ripon College alumnus James P. Danky ’70 is the guest curator for the exhibit.  

In addition to the exhibition, Ripon College will host a panel discussion about the power of political cartoons organized by the Center for Politics and the People to coincide with the opening reception at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 5, in Demmer Hall. Panelists include Professor Emeritus of Political Science Martin Farrell, Assistant Professor of Anthropology Ursula Dalinghaus and Danky, who serves as adjunct curator of comics at the Museum of Wisconsin Art. Professor of Political Science Henrik Schatzinger will moderate. 

Also concurrent with this exhibition, Ripon’s Little White Schoolhouse, heralded as the birthplace of the Republican party (1074 W Fond Du Lac St.), will offer programming and a pop-up exhibition of political cartoon imagery.

Pow-litical Comics: From Ripon to the RNC is a timely exhibition of political cartoons reflecting the current moment in U.S. politics. On loan from the Museum of Wisconsin Art, the exhibit was originally on display at the MOWA|DTN Gallery inside Saint Kate Art Hotel in Milwaukee. Curated by Danky, Pow-litical Comics features work from nearly 20 Wisconsin artists, including Poplaski and Noth. 

For 35 years, Danky was the newspapers and periodicals librarian for the Wisconsin Historical Society. He also served as a member of the faculty at the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Wisconsin-Madison where he taught a course on race and media, and often advised graduate students and faculty.

He also helped compile “Wisconsin Funnies” in 2020, the first exhibit to present the rich history of comics in Wisconsin, and he is the co-author of “Wisconsin Funnies: Fifty Years of Comics,” published by the Museum of Wisconsin Art in 2020.

American political cartoons have a long and storied history, notorious for using humor to comment – even influence – public opinion. Pow-litical Comics displays a range of social and political perspectives and explores their impact on American culture and democracy. The exhibition offers insights into Wisconsin’s tradition of political activism, from the birth of the Republican Party in 1854 to its present-day status as one of the nation’s most-watched battleground states.

“Art, history, politics and language combine to offer guests to this exhibition the best of the liberal arts in action, telling us important stories about our time,” says Rafael Francisco Salas, Ripon College professor of art. “Through it all, this show will make you laugh at the absurd and reflect on the real in new ways.”

Attendees can visit the gallery, located inside the C.J. Rodman Center for the Arts on Union Street, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 2 to 5 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday from 2 to 6 p.m.

Art Curated by James Danky Class of 1970
Ripon College Distinguished Alumnus 2020

Caestecker Gallery Hours

Tuesdays, Thursdays & Fridays:
2-5 p.m.
Saturdays & Sundays:
2-6 p.m.

Past Events from the 2022-2023 Season

Ben Rinehart | See Gallery

Lisa Marie Barber | See Gallery

Jessica Meuninck-Ganger See Gallery

Liz Miller | See Gallery

Chris Christion | See Gallery

Past Events from the 2021-2022 Season

Mel Kolstad | See Gallery

Zach Mory | See Gallery

Exhibition on Art, Activism, and Intersectionality | See Gallery

Michael Davidson | See Gallery