The Summer Undergraduate Research Program (SURP) enables students to conduct extended, focused research in close cooperation with a Pomona faculty member. Research projects, which receive funding from Pomona and from public and private foundations, take place both on campus and in the field. Although the natural sciences account for the largest number of projects, the humanities, social sciences and interdisciplinary disciplines are also well represented.
Summer of 2020, due to the coronavirus pandemic, Â鶹´«Ă˝ launched Remote Alternative Independent Summer Experience Program (RAISE). RAISE provides a multi-week fellowship opportunity for students that could take whatever form works best virtually, and which either facilitates students' independent projects or connects students with faculty research programs.
2021 Museum RAISE Fellows including Getty Marrow Undergraduate Intern
Maggie Allegar (’23): curatorial research assistance for two upcoming exhibitions Parisian Ecologies: The City Transformed in 19th-Century Prints and Drawings and Art and Science of Optics in the Long 17th Century and related courses
Zaid Al Zoubi (’24): curatorial research assistance for Parisian Ecologies
Hannah Avalos: producing season 3 of our podcast “Inside the Benton,” which she co-founded last summer
Aitzin Cornejo-Reynoso (Harvey Mudd College ’22): a Getty Marrow Undergraduate Intern in registration and collections research, Aitzin will undertake projects focused on our permanent collection
Ananya Goel (’24): research (and an eventual digital guide for visitors and students) on the public art at Â鶹´«Ă˝ and beyond for an ID1 course “Public Art: Monuments and Monumentality”
Austin Kim (’23): creating a series of quilts on the themes of post-war memory construction experienced by the Korean diaspora, engaging with personal family narratives, the poetry of Isabella Cho (Harvard ’24), and resources at the Benton and elsewhere relating to borderland studies, emotional citizenship, and statehood
Vivian Kuo (’23): research for the upcoming exhibition and publication on Fred Eversley, which was just awarded a grant from the Getty Foundation for Pacific Standard Time 2024
Eva Molina (’23): creating a book of poetry, and possibly a virtual art gallery, inspired by her project Poiesis of the Self from her Visual Poetics class
Ansley Ngando (’24): curatorial research assistance for Parisian Ecologies
Jeffrey Pendo (’24): curatorial research assistance for Parisian Ecologies
Noor Tamari (’22): curatorial research for Art and Science of Optics in the Long 17th Century
2020 Museum RAISE Fellows
Sam Chan (2022), Noor Tamari (2022), and Kali Tindell-Griffin (2022); Mentors: Victoria Sancho Lobis, Sarah Rempel and Herbert S. Rempel ’23 Director; Claire Nettleton, academic curator
In Our Care: Institutional History in Material Form
Mei Ge (2022); Mentor: Rebecca McGrew, senior curator
Madeleine Mount-Cors (2022), Maelvi Nunez (2022), and Grace Sartin (2021); Mentor: Dr. RosalĂa Romero, Chau Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Art History
CrossBorder Photography: Images from the US and Mexico Border in the Permanent Collection
2018 Museum SURP Fellow
Vivienne Yixuan Shi (2019); Mentor: Kathleen Howe
Mutuality in Dichotomy: Photography from the Permanent Collection
Mutuality in Dichotomy: Photography from the Permanent Collection is curated by Vivienne Yixuan Shi (2019). It is the fifth in a series of exhibitions developed by student curators under the Benton Curatorial Internship and Summer Undergraduate Research Program (SURP) at the Â鶹´«Ă˝ Museum of Art. The exhibition will be accompanied by an illustrated brochure.
2017 Museum SURP Fellow
Dmaia Curry (2019); Mentor: Kathleen Howe
Establishing Justice: Selections from the Permanent Collection
Establishing Justice explores one facet through which we construct justice in the United States—the criminal justice system. The artworks in the exhibition explore the mechanisms by which the criminal justice system operates and take us through the often-closed doors of the jails, courtrooms, and police departments that encompass our justice system.
Funding Provided by: Janet Inskeep Benton
2016 Museum SURP Fellows
Romario Ramirez (2018); Mentor: Rebecca McGrew
Project Series 51: Incendiary Traces
Project Series 51: Incendiary Traces presents artist Hillary Mushkin’s newest project. Incendiary Traces is an experimental art, research and media initiative investigating how landscape imagery is used in international conflict. It brings groups of artists, scholars, and students to active, local militarized sites to draw, observe and otherwise “trace” locations that have included the 29 Palms Marine Corps Base, the US/Mexico border, San Clemente Island Naval Weapons Testing Range, among others.
Funding Provided by: Janet Inskeep Benton
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Andy Starr (2018); Mentor: Kathleen Howe
Now Screening: Andy Warhol Prints
Now Screening: Andy Warhol Prints explores changes in technique and subject matter in Warhol’s screen prints and features a recent gift of seven prints from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts as well as other Warhol works from the permanent collection.
Funding Provided by: Janet Inskeep Benton
2015 Museum SURP Fellow
Davis Menard (2017); Mentor: Rebecca McGrew
R.S.V.P. Los Angeles: The Project Series at Pomona
R.S.V.P. Los Angeles: The Project Series at Pomona celebrates the milestone of 50 Project Series exhibitions by connecting the extraordinary artists who have been part of the program with a new generation of artists based in the Los Angeles area. The exhibition features seven artists—Justin Cole, Michael Decker, Naotaka Hiro, Wakana Kimura, Aydinaneth Ortiz, Michael Parker and Nikki Pressley
Funding Provided by: Janet Inskeep Benton
2014 Museum SURP Fellow
Zoë Jameson (2015); Mentor: Kathleen Howe
Project Summary: I’m researching contemporary Native American artists to prepare for a Â鶹´«Ă˝ Museum of Art exhibition that will happen in about 3 to 5 years. A contemporary native artist will come in and show their art side-by-side with objects from the museum’s Native American collection, which is really big and full of things from the late 1800s and early 1900s. This exhibition will enliven the collection and make sure it’s still getting seen. I’ve read a bunch of books and done tons of Googling, trying to find younger artists whose work might be particularly interesting. In the last week or so, the options narrowed down to a group of about 10 people. Because I’m graduating this year, I won’t be the one who’s here when final decisions are being made, so I’m making sure that whoever is doing this job in the future isn’t going to have to redo all my research or go digging through sloppy notes that are in six different places. Full Interview
2013 Museum SURP Fellows
Nidhi Gandhi (2015); Mentor(s) Terri Geis, Kathleen Howe
Resonant Minds: Abstraction and Perception
Abstract: Abstract art in all its forms - from expressionism to minimalism - echoes neuroscientific theories about how the brain works. Whether exploring a precise order or practicing more chaotic techniques, the subtle aspects of abstraction provide a platform for questioning how the brain processes our perceptions. It can provide a window into the mind's unceasing efforts to make sense of the human experience. Abstract art may be viewed in relationship to theories and explorations of the mind, as we consider how it prompts the viewer to interpret the unexpected and indeterminate. Abstract artists often based their artistic premises on theories about how subtle shifts in form and color alter our absorption of an artwork. Similarly, neuroscientists have explored perception from different perspectives, investigating how impressions received while viewing images can trigger neuronal impulses and unconscious reactions. Resonant Minds: Abstraction and Perception explores different ways in which our perceptions of abstract art reveal our mental processes, and asks us to reflect on the ways we perceive.
Funding Provided by: Janet Inskeep Benton
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Benjamin Kersten (2015); Additional Collaborator(s): Kathleen Howe; Mentor(s): Frances Pohl; Rebecca McGrew; Steve Comba
Pages: The Poetry of Mirella Bentivoglio
Abstract: Despite an early career as a verse poet, Mirella Bentivoglio’s prolific career spans many artistic genres. A poet, sculptor, performance artist, concrete poet, and visual poet, she explores the relationship between language and image using a critical approach and wry humor to challenge the given meanings and systems of authority in our society. Bentivoglio has achieved international success; however, a retrospective of her multimedia practice from the past five decades will fill a gap in the scholarly material available in the United States. My work followed key steps in the process of preparing an exhibition. The first included reading past materials, including the exhibition proposal written by Professor Pohl and key articles in order to prepare for a visit to Bentivoglio’s home and workplace in Rome. Over the course of our visit, we collected information on specific works, including interpretations and installation instructions. I also compiled answers for an interview that will be published in the accompanying catalog. Back at the museum, I photographed, accessioned, and entered new works into the museum database while cleaning up the exiting archive. This public information will be necessary for constructing an exhibition layout and checklist. Bentivoglio’s subversive work draws connections between the language and images of everyday life, falling in line with significant and experimental art that blurs lines between disciplines and power structures.
Funding Provided by: Â鶹´«Ă˝ SURP
2012 Museum SURP Fellows
Zoë Jameson (2015); Additional Collaborator(s): Steve Comba; Gary Murphy; Mentor(s): Kathleen Howe
Making an Exhibition – Marking/Remarking: Aerial Photographs by Marilyn Bridges
Abstract: This SURP was an eight-week internship, culminating in the mounting of an exhibition, Marking/Remarking: Aerial Photographs by Marilyn Bridges, at the Â鶹´«Ă˝ Museum of Art. The exhibition complements the Mellon Elemental Arts Initiative: this year's theme is Earth. The photographs included examine marks left on the earth by ancient and modern civilizations as well as geologic processes, while giving each mark equal weight through an impartial aerial view. Offering an alternative to the ancient-natural/modern-intrusive dichotomy, Marking/Remarking investigates the necessary cooperation between land and civilization as marks on the earth are made, erased and altered. From ancient geoglyphs to industrial farmland and impressive volcanoes, the photographs of Marilyn Bridges provide a different view of the earth, its history and our marks upon it. During my eight weeks, I learned about Marilyn Bridges and her photographs and about museum processes. I was given a lot of freedom with the project, in both analysis and action. I was primarily responsible for research and the selection and sequencing of images for the exhibition. I wrote the wall texts, press information and a short essay that details my analysis of Bridges's photographs, which we published in an exhibition brochure. My work with the exhibition acquainted me with each step of the curatorial process as well as various other museum tasks and functions, such as installation and collections management.
Funding Provided by: Janet Inskeep Benton
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Hannah Pivo (2014); Mentor(s): Rebecca McGrew
Adam Overton, The Bureau of Experimental Speech and Holy Theses, and Social Practice
Abstract: The essay “Adam Overton, The Bureau of Experimental Speech and Holy Theses, and Social Practice,” represents the culmination of my research project. As the Â鶹´«Ă˝ Museum of Art’s curatorial assistant, I contributed to the conception and planning of the upcoming exhibition with Los Angeles artist Adam Overton, entitled Project Series 44: The Bureau of Experimental Speech and Holy Theses. This project explores issues of speech, power, and performance through weekly participatory events for museum visitors led by Overton and his collaborators. Overton engages in “social practice,” a term describing the recent emergence of trans-disciplinary art practices that focus on social interaction as a means of community involvement and public engagement. Social practice is currently thriving in the Southern California art scene,and in the past ten years many Los Angeles area art museums have begun to collaborate with artists and organizations engaging in social practice. Through research, personal interviews, and by working with Overton during the planning of his project at Pomona, it became clear that this type of collaboration poses many challenges to the artists and the institutions involved, yet it also represents some of the most experimental and innovative activity in the art world today. The essay will be published in the Museum of Art’s forthcoming exhibition catalogue in November 2012.
Funding Provided by: Graham “Bud” ’55 and MaryEllen ’56 Kilsby Endowment Fund for Student Interns at the Â鶹´«Ă˝ Museum of Art