• Skip to Content
  • Skip to Main Navigation
  • Skip to Search

Indiana University Bloomington Indiana University Bloomington IU Bloomington

Open Search
  • About
    • Areas and Programs
      • Architecture
      • Ceramics
      • Comprehensive Design
      • Digital Art
      • Fashion Design
      • Fibers
      • Graphic Design
      • Interior Design
      • Merchandising
      • Metalsmithing + Jewelry Design
      • Painting
      • Photography
      • Printmaking
      • Sculpture
    • Facilities
      • Virtual Tour
      • Fabrication Labs
        • Fine Arts Fabrication Lab
        • Kirkwood Hall Fabrication Lab
        • Wood and Metal Shop
        • Columbus Fabrication Lab
      • ArtShop at Eskenazi School of Art
      • Museums + Libraries
    • Centers and Collections
      • Eskenazi Technology and Innovation Lab (ETIL)
        • Members
        • Research
      • Center for Innovative Merchandising
      • ServeDesign Center
      • Sage Collection
    • Accreditation
    • History
    • Careers/Opportunities
      • Part-time Position Descriptions
    • Community and Student Success
      • CASS Committee
      • Cultivate and Create Scholarship
      • Community Impact Fund
      • Kudos Corner
      • Canvas of Care Series
    • Emergency Preparedness
    • Staff Directory
    • Contact
  • Faculty
    • Leadership
    • Faculty Directory
    • Faculty Research
  • Undergraduate
    • Majors
      • Comprehensive Design B.S.
      • Fashion Design B.A.
      • Interior Design B.S.
      • Merchandising B.S.
      • Studio Art B.A.
      • Studio Art B.F.A.
    • Minors
    • Creative Core
    • How to Apply
      • Laptop Requirement
    • Scholarships + Financial Aid
    • Visit/Contact Us
  • Graduate
    • M.Arch (Architecture)
    • M.F.A. in Studio Art
    • M.DL (Master of Design Leadership)
    • A.M.P. (Accelerated Master's Program)
    • How to Apply
    • Graduate Student Funding
    • Schedule a Visit
  • Current Students
    • Career Preparation
    • Student Organizations
    • Student Resources
      • Curricular Forms
      • Academic Advising
      • Career Advising + Internships
        • Talk to a Career Advisor
      • Student Emergency Relief Fund
        • Eskenazi School Student Emergency Relief Fund Application
      • Applying to the B.F.A. Program
        • Studio Art B.F.A. Application
      • Scholarships + Awards
      • Studio Art Thesis Exhibitions
      • Graduation
      • Eskenazi Ambassadors
      • Student Special Project Fund
      • Undergraduate Teaching Assistant/Intern (UTA/UTIN) Application
    • Overseas Study Programs
  • Exhibitions
    • Grunwald Gallery
      • Exhibitions
      • Archive
        • 2025
        • 2024
        • 2023
        • 2022
        • 2021
        • 2020
        • 2019
        • 2018
        • 2017
        • 2016
        • 2015
        • 2014
        • 2013
        • 2012
      • Online Exhibitions
        • MFA / BFA Thesis Shows
        • Alumni Exhibition
    • Miller M.Arch Gallery
      • Exhibitions
      • Archive
    • Sage Collection
      • Archive
      • Exhibitions + Events
  • News
    • Recent News
    • 2024
    • 2023
    • 2022
    • News Archive
      • 2021
      • 2020
      • 2019
      • 2018
      • 2017
      • 2016
      • 2015
    • Vision: the Eskenazi School's annual report
      • Vision 2024–25
      • Vision 2023-24
      • Vision 2022-23
      • Vision 2021-22
      • Vision 2020–21
      • Vision 2018–19
  • Events
    • Speaker Series
      • McKinney Visiting Artist Series
        • Archive
          • 2024-2025
          • 2023-2024
            • Barbara Tannenbaum: Photography
            • Brad Vetter: Graphic Design
            • David Hytone: Painting
            • Reinhold Engberding
            • Lauren Fensterstock: Impermanent Conditions
            • Nina Sarnelle and Selwa Sweidan: Touch Praxis
            • Theresa Ganz
            • Roos van Haaften: Shadow Laboratory : light works based on Bloomington’s Astronomy Glass Photographic Plate Collection
            • Endi Poskovic: Dream and the Paradox of Image
            • Curtis Hidemasa Arima
            • Daniel Vlček and Tom Kotik
            • Sunshine Cobb
          • 2022-2023
            • Saša Bogojev: Painting
            • Thomas Madden: Metals
            • Kei Ito: Photography
            • Yuri Kobayashi: Creative Core
            • Akirash: McKinney International Artist in Residence
            • Christopher K. Ho: Sculpture
            • Tiare Ribeaux/Jody Stillwater: Digital Art
            • Ben Cuevas: Fibers
            • Wuon-Gean Ho: Printmaking
            • Nicole Dotin: Graphic Design
            • Paul S. Briggs: Ceramics
          • 2021–2022
          • 2020–2021
          • 2019–2020
          • 2018–2019
          • 2017–2018
          • 2016–2017
          • 2015–2016
      • Miller M. Arch Lecture and Exhibition Series
        • Archive
          • 2024-2025
          • 2023-2024
          • 2022-2023
          • 2021–2022
          • 2020–2021
          • 2019–2020
      • Design Speaker Series
        • Archive
          • 2024-2025
          • 2023-2024
          • 2022-2023
      • Bill Blass Speaker Series
        • Archive
          • 2024-2025
          • 2023-2024
          • 2022-2023
      • ETIL Noon Talk Series
        • Archive
          • 2024-2025
    • Special Events
      • Archive
        • 2025-2026 Events
        • 2024-2025 Events
        • 2023-2024 Events
        • 2022-2023 Events
        • 2021-2022 Events
        • 2020-2021 Events
        • 2019-2020 Events
        • 2018-2019 Events
        • 2017-2018 Events
        • 2016-2017 Events
  • Alumni
    • Alumni Connect
  • Giving
  • Connect
    • Contact Us
    • Staff Directory
    • Community + Collaboration

Eskenazi School
of Art, Architecture + Design

  • Home
  • About
    • Areas and Programs
    • Facilities
    • Centers and Collections
    • Accreditation
    • History
    • Careers/Opportunities
    • Community and Student Success
    • Emergency Preparedness
    • Staff Directory
    • Contact
  • Faculty
    • Leadership
    • Faculty Directory
    • Faculty Research
  • Undergraduate
    • Majors
    • Minors
    • Creative Core
    • How to Apply
    • Scholarships + Financial Aid
    • Visit/Contact Us
  • Graduate
    • M.Arch (Architecture)
    • M.F.A. in Studio Art
    • M.DL (Master of Design Leadership)
    • A.M.P. (Accelerated Master's Program)
    • How to Apply
    • Graduate Student Funding
    • Schedule a Visit
  • Current Students
    • Career Preparation
    • Student Organizations
    • Student Resources
    • Overseas Study Programs
  • Exhibitions
    • Grunwald Gallery
    • Miller M.Arch Gallery
    • Sage Collection
  • News
    • Recent News
    • 2024
    • 2023
    • 2022
    • News Archive
    • Vision: the Eskenazi School's annual report
  • Events
    • Speaker Series
    • Special Events
  • Alumni
    • Alumni Connect
  • Giving
  • Search
  • Connect
  • Home
  • News
  • Recent News
  • Amanda Smith

Painting faculty Amanda Smith shows at Parkland College's Giertz Gallery

By: Peter Floess

Thursday, October 23, 2025

Amanda Smith, "Unless we close our eyes...," oil on canvas, 2024. Installation view. Amy Penne

Artists at the Giertz Gallery remind us why we need to go outside

Source: Smile Politely

During October and early November, at Parkland College’s Giertz Gallery, five artists explore their relationship with the outdoors in a themed exhibit titled The Great Outdoors: A Group Exhibition.

When I first entered the gallery from the hallway, I noticed the painting by Amanda Smith entitled “Unless we close our eyes, we can’t see where we used to be” (2024). The painting depicts four unfilled lawn chairs situated around a burning firepit. The wooden table at the bottom of the painting, situated between the chairs, features a mug and a beer bottle. The wooden table at the top of the painting has two beer cans on it. The firepit casts dancing light across the scene, which Smith masterfully captures. The chairs are surrounded by the plants of “the great outdoors.”

In Smith’s artistic statement at the gallery, she mentions that during the COVID-19 pandemic she explored her backyard in Indiana from the perspective of an artist. This could be reflected in the painting, which may symbolize Smith’s contentment with life while creating the artwork. Her contentment in life is passed on to the viewer through her delicate brushstrokes.

At least one of the paintings by Smith is being shown for the first time at the Giertz Gallery. The painting is entitled “Nature Center” (2025). Smith used acrylic paints to capture the moment when a nighttime observer at a closed nature center sees a male deer in the light of their flashlight. The deer is startled by the security lights at the nature center. In the painting, a snake is resting on the bottom rung of the wooden fence. Anyone who has seen a deer startled by light will be impressed by how Smith captures the scene in the painting.

© Amanda Smith, “Unless we close our eyes, we can’t find where we used to be anywhere,” oil on canvas, 2024.  Photo by Amy Penne

Near the door of the gallery is a terra cotta piece of pottery by Pattie Chalmers entitled “Rush, Sedge, and Grass Vase.”. The vase has a light brown color reminiscent of soil. Chalmers designed the piece with prints of rush, sedge, and grass enclosed in white circles. The vase does remind me of a riverbank or moist ground.

On the other side of the divider in the Giertz Gallery are pieces of artwork from three artists: Travis Head, Beth Shadur, and Hannah Buchanan.

In the exhibition, Travis Head has drawings and photographs. Two drawings in the exhibit by Head are entitled “Extinction Event circa 1985” and “An Extinction Event circa 2010.” In these drawings, Head records single living organisms that have died in the past year. These drawings emphasize each organism as an individual rather than part of a collective — the death of a single tree becomes its own extinction event, equal in significance to a mass extinction. I believe that Head was hoping the drawings would make the viewer think before they killed any living organism.

Head took photographs of himself holding a notebook of his drawings while he was outside. The scenery behind the notebook matches the subject of the drawings. Head’s photographs are supposed to make the viewer contemplate the object in the drawing.

Beth Shadur presented artwork about the National Parks. Several of Beth Shadur’s artworks are collages of the National Parks. These collages portray animals, plants, fungi, Native American history, Settler history, and geological features. The exhibition featured watercolor collages from various National Parks, including Mammoth Cave National Park in Kentucky and the Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park in Colorado, among others. These watercolor collages were quite large and very full of information. I enjoyed these collages, and I thought they were beautiful.

The artist Hannah Buchanan explores her love of fishing through various mediums, including acrylic painting, oil painting, and plaster sculptures of bobbers. The bobber is a small float placed on a fishing line to keep the hook at a desired depth in the water. Buchanan’s plaster bobbers are tiny and colorful.

One of Buchanan’s pieces is a fishing inventory entitled “Inventory.” The main painting features a green background with various fishing items scattered across it. It is surrounded by three small paintings of different items related to fishing inventory, including “Green Nightcrawlers,” and “Trout Worms.” The main painting is also surrounded by two boxes featuring two types of lures, painted with both acrylic and oil paint. The painting is quite involved for the viewer, with a large amount of detail. It’s striking to stand back in the room and absorb the colorful detail.

In her artwork, Buchanan’s love of fishing is evident and quite infectious. Buchanan’s artwork inspires people like me to get out there and find my own fishing pole.

© Amanda Smith, The Birds, acrylic and oil on canvas, 2025 Amy Penne

I really enjoyed the Great Outdoors exhibit. Each of the artists shows their love of exploring the Great Outdoors in different ways, and that feeling is evident throughout the gallery’s inviting space.

The Great Outdoors
Giertz Gallery at Parkland College
2400 W Bradley Ave
Champaign
Exhibit runs through Nov 8th
Mon-Wed: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Th: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sa: Noon to 3 p.m.
Free, donations always welcome

  • Recent News
  • 2024
  • 2023
  • 2022
  • News Archive
  • Vision: the Eskenazi School's annual report

Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design resources and social media channels

  • Faculty & Staff Intranet
  • COLLEGE OF ARTS + SCIENCES
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn

Indiana University

Accessibility | College Scorecard | Open to All | Privacy Notice | Copyright © 2025 The Trustees of Indiana University