Free and open to the public
Location: South Corridor, 2nd Level, Hilton New York
Poster sessions are informal presentations displayed on poster boards by an individual. The poster display is usually a mixture of a brief narrative paper intermixed with illustrations, tables or graphs, and other presentation materials. With a few concisely written areas of focus, the poster display communicates the essence of the presenter’s research, synthesizing its main ideas and research directions.
Poster displays will be on view for the duration of the conference, beginning on Thursday morning.
On Thursday and Friday, from 12:30 to 2:00 PM, presenters will be available at the Poster area to discuss their presentations.
How the Sausage Is Made: A Model of Graphic Design Practice and Teaching
Alexander Egner, University of North Texas
Staff Diversity in Museums
Kimberli Gant, Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts
ARTLab: Thinking Globally, 2009–2010
Barbara Jaffee, Northern Illinois University
Art Education Drawing Books: A Historical Context
Ami Kantawala, Teachers College, Columbia University; G. James Daichendt, Azusa Pacific University
Walt Disney: Undergraduate Research and Critical Thinking
Diane E. Kontar, University of Findlay
Distance Learning in the Visual Arts: Online Communities, Critiques and Second Life Teaching
Susan Miller, State University of New York, New Paltz
Reinterpreting Savoldo’s Magdalen Paintings
Charlotte Nichols, Seton Hall University
Analysis of University Press Production in Art and Art History, 1991–2007
Henry Pisciotta, Pennsylvania State University Libraries; and James Frost, Minitab, Inc.
Fueling Inquiry-Driven Learning: Emerging Artists as Emerging Educators
Mary Stewart, Florida State University; and Richard Siegesmund, University of Georgia
The Artist Proletariat and the Rise of Modernism in the Hungarian Art Market
Jeff Taylor, Central European University, Budapest
Use It or Lose It? Student Attitudes Towards Library Use
Eamon Tewell, Moore College of Art & Design
Passing: The Art of Drag
Kremena Todorova and Kurt Gohde, Transylvania University
JeopARTy: A Game Show Produced at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design that Asks: When Is Artistic Appropriation Fair and When Is It Not?
Gregory Wallace and Paul Dobbs, Morton R. Godine Library, Massachusetts College of Art & Design





