Collection of the artist. Photo by Incredible Film

Art Faculty Summer Research

We are so proud of our faculty and the incredible achievements, creative projects, and research they’ve pursued over the summer. Their dedication and innovation continue to inspire our community. Here’s a glimpse into some of their recent work. Andrea Polli is currently a Professor and Director of STEAM NM with appointments in the College of Fine Arts and School of Engineering.
August 25, 2025
Noel Márquez, La Tierra, 1997, detail, acrylic on canvas. Collection of the artist. Photo by Incredible Film

We are so proud of our faculty and the incredible achievements, creative projects, and research they’ve pursued over the summer. Their dedication and innovation continue to inspire our community. Here’s a glimpse into some of their recent work. Andrea Polli is currently a Professor and Director of STEAM NM with appointments in the College of Fine Arts and School of Engineering. She is an artist working at the intersection of art, science, and technology whose proactive work includes media installation, public art, curating and directing art, and community projects, and writing. Over the summer, she was an Artist-in-Residence at the Space Department in Nara, Japan, where she worked to develop sculptures using Algae based bioplastics and locally sourced tsuchikabe and clay. She then presented this work at the Naramichi Center in Nara, at FabCare Kyoto, and the Bioclub Tokyo. The article, “Listen to Air, Mapping Climate-A conversation with Andrea Polli,” written by Hanna Gabo Karaso, states, “She [Poli] often turns climate and weather data into immersive art that helps people connect with environmental issues on both an emotional and intellectual level…Polli often dives into topics like air quality, pollution, and climate change, using her artistic skills to visualize complex data about weather, energy, and other big impacts.” Such incredible research!

Ray Hernández-Durán is the Professor of Spanish Colonial Art and Architecture and affiliated with Latin American Studies, Chicana/Chicano Studies, Africana Studies, and Museum Studies. Central to his research and teaching has been a critical exploration of historiography, colonialism, institutional histories and practices, and the political nature of knowledge production. Over the summer, he was featured in the Albuquerque Journal in an article written by Logan Royce Beitman, titled “In Review Roundup: Three Must-See Exhibitions,” written on August 17th, 2025. This article highlighted Ray’s recent exhibition “Voces del Pueblo” at the National Hispanic Cultural Center. This is a historic exhibition of six artists-activists who were instrumental in shaping New Mexico’s Chicana/o art movement from its origins in the early 1970s.

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
READ the full FabCafe Tokyo article at https://fabcafe.com/magazine/kyoto/spcs-talks-vol-14-report
READ the full Albuquerque Journal at https://www.abqjournal.com/lifestyle/article_3340ca18-2619-499a-bb1b-61c931dc1a3f.html#1
LEARN MORE about our faculty within the UNM Dept. of Art by visiting https://art.unm.edu/people/faculty

Stephanie Woods art

Stephanie Woods sculpture acquired by Perry Art Collection

Stephanie J. Woods’ sculpture Never Quite, Sweet Enough I was acquired by the nationally recognized Perry Art Collection following her 2025 residency at the Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts. The work explores memory, legacy, and historical survival through an abstract porcelain form rooted in Black cultural history.

The forest

Kaitlin Bryson Selected for 2026 Cohort for Monument Lab Re:Generation!

Congratulations to Kaitlin Bryson for being selected to take part in the 2026 cohort for Monument Lab Re:Generation! She received a $100,000 grant for her ongoing project, Bellow Forth. Bellow Forth is a community project focused on restoring soil health and environmental resiliency through storytelling and collaboration, community and ecosystem science, and social art practice in wildfire-impacted lands and communities in northern New Mexico.

Eric-Paul Riege stands in his studio wearing woven sculptural jewelry and face paint, surrounded by fiber materials and tools.

Alum Highlight: Eric-Paul Riege Receives 2025 Trellis Art Fund Grant

Eric-Paul Riege, a Gallup-based Diné artist and recent UNM graduate, has been recognized as a 2025 Stepping Stone Grantee by the Trellis Art Fund. His multidisciplinary practice uses weaving as both process and philosophy, blending ancestral knowledge, spirituality, and contemporary art to create works that are living, mobile, and deeply connected to cultural memory.