Student Spotlight: Nicole Tsosi

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Art By Nicole Tsosi

By Whitney Browneller, Staff Reporter

Nicole Tsosie is a Fine Arts and Digital Media major at CNM who was recently featured in the exhibition “Codes” at the Freestyle gallery on Central Avenue.

She primarily works with digital media to create her artwork but plans to keep working with different mediums in the future.

“I love to work with Photoshop when making my art. I love digital media but don’t want to tie myself down to one label. I think it’s great for artists to venture into as many things as they can get their hands on and it only seems healthy to get out of our own comfort zones,” she said.

She said she has always enjoyed art throughout her life, any type of art.

Nicole got into the arts while she was in school and remembers making a pattern that got a lot of recognition from her classmates, she said.

She got attention for her art more so than any other thing in school and found that her classmates were intrigued by her art.

“Growing up, I have always felt as though I am constantly stuck in my own head,” she said.

Nicole uses her art to overcome her own struggles and difficulties.

“I learned to turn my flaws around and use them as a gift,” she said.

Nicole’s artistic vision allows her to share her imagined world that is relatable to others.

“We all have our own flaws but with help we can use them for something good,” she said.

Nicole took several different types of classes during her first few semesters at CNM, including art classes.

“I realized that my art classes felt more right and natural,” she said.

Majoring in Fine Arts was a decision she made based on how she felt in her heart, and what she thought she would be happy with in the long run, she said.
She plans to one day bring her art to hospitals and senior homes to uplift peoples’ spirits, she said.

“I want to be able to brighten someone’s day with my artwork, who otherwise might not have any hope in their lives at the time,” she said.

After graduation with her digital media degree she wants to work on graphics and websites so she is able to use her art skills daily but also have stability for her family, she said.

She plans to still work on art in her free time and hopefully sell or donate art to places like hospitals and nursing homes that could use it, she said.

Nicole gets her inspiration from God, she said.

“I don’t have to look very far to find beauty and inspiration from nature,” she said.

Nicole specifically remembers using a cloud concept for one of her art projects a few semesters ago, she shaped different pieces of fabric in a way where each person could recognize something different but respond to same thing differently, she said.

“I feel like nature has a beauty that we cannot even begin to fathom, and I love putting organic and colorful ideas into my own art,” she said.

Nicole uses more of a mystical bright fantasy theme for her projects, it is how she is able to take her viewers into another world, she said.

She likes that this theme takes viewers out of their usual world, their usual way of things, and maybe get them to think differently, she said.

Nicole hopes to continue that in one way or another with her future art projects.

She said that she experiences artist block all the time and has a lot of self-doubt that she has to work around daily which keeps her from coming up with ideas.

She said the advice that she gives is to take a lot of breaks and know that it is okay to give oneself a lot of time because some of the best things in life take a lot of time.

Nicole also advises on having a good support group to help with problems of self-doubt.

“We all have amazing qualities to offer to this world, and sometimes we just need someone there to remind us,” she said.

Trash today, art tomorrow; Students create sculptures from old cardboard

By Dan Chavez, Staff Reporter | Photos by Dan Chavez

Party Rhino -Kristen Saiz, and J. Achen
Party Rhino
-Kristen Saiz, and J. Achen
The Kite -Amelia Sierra-Wilkerson and R. Karcher
The Kite
-Amelia Sierra-Wilkerson and R. Karcher
The Planar Problem Frustration -James Carrasco, Sandra Lopez, and G. Birkholz
The Planar Problem Frustration
-James Carrasco, Sandra Lopez, and G. Birkholz
The Feast - Krisitan Fleming and Kale Beck
The Feast
– Krisitan Fleming and Kale Beck
The Metamorphosis -B. Flowler, J. Hyland, H. Shih
The Metamorphosis
-B. Flowler, J. Hyland, H. Shih

Walking by the Student Resource Center one can see that some Art students have put together a sculpture garden for other students to admire, made out of card­board to not only represent conservation but to also go with the theme of the RecycleMania competition CNM is competing in this Spring semester.

Art Instructor, Jennifer Johnson’s 3-dimensional design art class designed and set up the garden on January 28, with plans to dismantle it on February 11, provided the weather does not destroy the exhibit before then, Johnson said.

All of the projects were made with recycled materials that students pulled from nearby dump­sters, as well as reusing old wire clothing hangers to tie the pieces together, Johnson said.

“Instead of using costly art supplies, they decided that they would use recycled mate­rials,” she said.

Johnson said that painting the sculptures was not allowed because the overall project theme was about recycling, and painting the card­board would make them non-recyclable.

Johnson said there were teams of two or three students and they worked collectively to come up with the theme.

The students in this project could not construct closed sculptures, which means construction had to be open and transparent for people to be able see through, she said.

“They came up with a concept and they had to create in planer or sliced form con­struction, which is planes that are slotted and attached to create the dimension of the form. It’s also known as open sculpture,” she said.

Johnson said the stu­dents had a week and a half to develop a concept, complete the sculpture, and install it on the grass area near the SRC.

Johnson said the students worked during class time and in open studio hours to com­plete their projects.

Fine Arts major, Amelia Sierra-Wilkirson said she helped to create a sculpture titled “The Kite.”

Sierra-Wilkirson said her group’s concept was chil­dren climbing a tree, which she thought became ironic, because the team was com­bining a tree with cardboard made from wood, which is also recyclable.

Sierra-Wilkirson said her group began to like the con­cept so they went with it.

Once Sierra-Wilkirson’s group had all the pieces cut out, their sculpture took about five hours to construct, she said.

“We had it all planned out and we thought, ‘this is going to so be easy!’ It wasn’t,” she said.

Double major of Film and Veterinary Technician, Kristen Saiz said she was part of the group that constructed “Party Rhino,” who was sitting on the ground holding a bottle and having a good time.

Saiz’s team worked freestyle to create the sculp­ture’s pattern which made for a somewhat difficult task, she said.

She said that the project was a lot of work for a very short period.

“Party Rhino” took about 12 hours to complete and Saiz said she was happy with the outcome, she said.

“I’m pretty pleased with it, overall,” Saiz said.

Art major, Kristin Fleming and studio arts major Kale Beck constructed “The Feast,” which was a cooked turkey with ants marching toward it and a large fork stuck in the ground.

Fleming said some of the other teams had living animals in their projects, so for a dif­ferent approach, they decided to construct a cooked animal.

Beck said this proj­ect took between 10 to 15 hours to construct over the course of a week, and that designing the sculpture was not too difficult.

“We kind of just winged it most of the way,” he said.

Their sculpture prop was of a fork, which was a chal­lenge to keep in the ground, he said.

Beck said despite the long hours, he mostly enjoyed this project.

“But it’s been pretty fun,” he said.

Double major of Fine Arts and Mechanical Engineering, James Carrasco said he worked on a team with Sandra Lopez to construct a sculp­ture titled “The Planar Problem-Frustration.”

Their concept was an elephant trying to figure out a ball, which he finds compli­cated, he said.

Carrasco said his team’s sculpture took about 16 hours to complete.

Fleming said that one requirement for the proj­ect was that the sculp­ture has to consist of two things interacting with a prop, which limited them to animate objects.

“The hardest part, I think, was figuring out how to put it all together, we had a good design but then getting it to actually fit together,” she said.