Kathryn Heidemann, Senior Vice President, Academic Affairs and Dean of Faculty + Chief Operating Officer/Chief Academic Officer, announced June 2 the following faculty appointments. These appointments are effective July 1.
Dinara Mirtalipova
Assistant Professor, Illustration
Dinara Mirtalipova is a professional illustrator and folk artist. Born and raised in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, and raised in Soviet Uzbek culture, Dinara inhabited Uzbek/Russian folklore that still influences her work. She uses a wide range of materials and tools, like carving lino blocks, gouache, acrylics and many others. Dinara has a vast national client portfolio, with clients including Moleskine, Anthropologie, American Greetings, and more, and has published illustrated books and exhibited her work in Cleveland, Akron, and New York. As an educator, she has conducted workshops at the Akron Art Museum, Cuyahoga Public Library, Cleveland Museum of Art, and Cleveland Institute of Art. She received her BA in Information Technology from Tashkent State University of Economics (Uzbekistan).
Nick Leysens
Assistant Professor, Illustration
Nick Leysens is a designer, storyboard artist, illustrator and animator who has been working for the last 10 years in the tv/film, tech, and commercial industries. His clients include Nickelodeon, Warner Brothers, Titmouse, ShadowMachine, Miley Cyrus, Duolingo, Cinemax, Fox, and Adult Swim. Originally from the Cleveland area, Nick went to Los Angeles to study at Laguna College of Art & Design. After receiving his BFA, Nick remained in California to work on shows such as Animaniacs, Looney Tunes, BoJack Horseman, Spongebob Squarepants, The Simpsons, Baby Shark’s Big Show, and Mike Judge Presents Tales from the Tour Bus. Nick is currently working as a designer and storyboard artist on the recently revived Clone High series.
Linda Post
Associate Professor, Photography/Video
Linda creates video installations intended to be experienced as sculpture: walked around and through to shift one’s vantage point. The work is often interactive and site-specific. Her work has been exhibited nationally and internationally in such venues as MOMA, PS1, and the Sculpture Center in New York and in solo exhibitions in New York, Berlin, London, and Turin, Italy. Linda received her MFA in Film/Video from Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts - Bard College, a BFA in Film/Video from Massachusetts College of Art, and a BA from School of the Museum of Fine Arts. She has previously held teaching positions in photography and digital media at the School of Visual Arts, University of Houston School of Art, and Stephen F. Austin State University.
Gemma Sharpe
Assistant Professor, Art History
Gemma is an art historian most recently based in New York. She specializes in modern and contemporary art from South Asia, Cold War histories of art, and museum and exhibition studies. She received her PhD from the Graduate Center (City University of New York) in 2019 and was a Postdoctoral Research Associate at the same institution between 2019 and 2021. Most recently, she served as Visiting Faculty at Sarah Lawrence College, New York, and has also taught at The Graduate Center, Indus Valley School of Art and Architecture, and School of Visual Arts (Karachi University).
Note: Gemma will begin teaching at CIA in Fall 2023, as she was awarded the prestigious 2022 Getty/ACLS Postdoctoral Fellowship in the History of Art. The ten awards allow these scholars to advance innovative research in art history and amplify voices, narratives, and regions of the world that have been historically excluded and under-studied in the academy.
Colby Chamberlain
Faculty-in-Residence/Visiting Faculty, Art History
(one-year appointment)
Colby earned his PhD from the Department of Art History and Archaeology at Columbia University, a MPhil and MA in Art History from Columbia College, and a BA from Williams College. His research and criticism have appeared in publications including ArtForum, ARTMargins, Art Journal, Art in America, and CAA Reviews, Grey Room, October, and Parkett, and he has held editorial positions at Cabinet and Triple Canopy. Areas of research include the international neo-avant-garde, global modernism, intermedia, performance, artists’ magazines, experimental film, paperwork, legal studies, media theory, feminism, queer theory, disability studies, and critical race theory. Colby has previously taught art history at Columbia University, the Cooper Union, and the City College of New York.
Original source can be found here.