Tag: scholarships

illustrASIA: a year of drawing

This week, The Hearth features a compilation of drawings and anecdotes recorded over the span of one year spent traveling, studying, bicycling, and climbing around South and Southeast Asia. Architecture student Brent Sturlaugson used scholarships such as Louis C. Rosenberg Traveling Fellowship and Freeman ASIA Award as propelling factors in accumulating a body of work exceeding 75 A4 drawings, 150 A6 sketches, 100 A7 entries, and 75 A8 doodles. Samples can be seen at: http://uoregon.edu/~bsturlau/portfolio.html and the inked originals are on display now in the Lawrence Hall café. A closing reception is scheduled for 6:00 PM, Friday, November 16th. For information regarding the mentioned scholarships, visit: http://www.iie.org/programs/Freeman-ASIA/ and http://architecture.uoregon.edu/index.cfm?mode=programs&
page=scholarships

2008 Cavin Family Traveling Scholarship

The 2008 Cavin Family Traveling Fellowship has established a First Prize of $10,000 for self-devised foreign travel-study. A design competition will determine the scholar. Candidates must be a U.S. citizen under 35 years of age on March 1, 2008. Candidates must have a professional architecture degree from Cal Poly Pomona or the University of Oregon. Applications are due on or before February 15, 2008. The Cavin Fellowship website provides general information, a description of the scholarship requirements, and previous submissions at http://www.cavinfellowship.org.

Contacts:

Patrick M. Sullivan, FAIA, CFTF Secretary

Patrick Sullivan Associates

110 Harvard Avenue

Claremont, California, 91711

(909) 624-4051

patrick@psarchitects.com

Debra Boudreau, Director

Pasadena &Foothill Chapter AIA

555 South Oak Knoll Avenue

Pasadena, California, 91101

(626) 796 7601

director@aiapf.org

UO Arts and Administration Program Hosts Fulbright Student Scholars

The Arts & Administration Program is honored to host three of the six Fulbright student scholars beginning their studies at the University of Oregon in fall 2007. The Arts & Administration Program has a strong international focus, with a higher than average international student body, a faculty whose research is focused on international cultural policy and traditional forms of art making, students and faculty who regularly present at international conferences, and a growing connection to the Fulbright Program.

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Fullbright Student Scholars