Alexis Childress (1993) is a mixed media artist born in Illinois. She received her BFA from Georgia State University (2020), and is currently pursuing an MFA at the University of California Santa Barbara. Her work visualizes an investigation of identity, systems and Afrofuturistic dreams. Using 2D and 3D digital collage to craft creatures and imagine worlds that symbolize the Black American consciousness. Alexis has exhibited in venues such as the Morean Arts Center (FL), MINT Gallery (GA), Atlanta Photography Group Gallery and the Rhode Island Center of Photographic Arts. As an established writer, her contributions extend to publications like Burnaway Magazine, Create! Magazine and the New York Public Library Zine. She has been recognized with the Red Bull Arts Microgrant, the Georgia Visual Artist Grant as well as selected to present at the 2021 Society of Photographic Education National Conference.
Saturday, November 29, 2025
Art 1A Artist Talk Featuring Alexis Childress on Wednesday, December 3
Saturday, November 22, 2025
GLASSBOX GALLERY EXHIBITION: NON SCIMUS
Friday, November 21, 2025
Art 1A Artist Talk Featuring Maiza Hixson on Wednesday, November 26, 2025
About the Dr. Maiza Hixson:
The Art of New Media Theatre: Staging Site-Specific Performances from the White Cube to the Black Box and Beyond.
Multimodal artist, painter, performance scholar, curator, and theatre director Dr. Maiza Hixson will present on contemporary art as a transdisciplinary aesthetic practice that merges the visual and performing arts.
Hixson holds a PhD in Theatre, Dance, and Performance Studies from the University of California, Santa Barbara. She served as Chief Curator of the Delaware Center for the Contemporary Arts from 2010-2015, during which time she taught, performed, and lectured at Towson University in Baltimore and the University of the Arts in Philadelphia. She studied Art History, Theory, and Criticism at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and holds an MFA in Fine Art from UC Santa Barbara, as well as an MA in Critical and Curatorial Studies, and BA in French from the University of Louisville. She was a recent grant panelist for the National Endowment for the Arts, and her curatorial work was featured on the Emmy Award-winning PBS TV show Articulate with Jim Cotter. She was a Warhol Foundation grant recipient for Radical Participation: A Series of Four Interactive Exhibitions. Hixson also designed and curated a 5,500 square-foot group exhibition, American Idyll: Contemporary Art and Karaoke, featuring Candice Breitz, Phil Collins, and Christian Jankowski, for the Cincinnati Contemporary Arts Center, designed by Zaha Hadid.
Hixson has exhibited and performed nationally and internationally at venues such as Eisenwunderwelt in Berlin; Little Tokyo Arts Complex in Los Angeles; the Art, Design, and Architecture Museum in Santa Barbara; Highways in Santa Monica; Brooklyn Museum of Art in New York; Baltimore Contemporary; Soap Factory, Minneapolis; Portland Institute for Contemporary Art in Portland, Oregon; Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art in Winston-Salem, NC; Haverford College; and many others. She is a member of the American Society for Theatre Research (ASTR), Independent Curators International (ICI), Performance Studies International (PSi), and a Lead Jury Member of Art Papers for the ACM/SIGGRAPH Vancouver 2025 Conference. SIGGRAPH stands for the Special Interest Group on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques, a special interest group within the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) focused on computer graphics and interactive techniques.
Thursday, November 13, 2025
UCSB AD&A MUSEUM FIELD TRIP ON MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24
Friday, November 7, 2025
ART 1A ASSIGNMENTS TO CLEAR UNEXCUSED ABSENCES
If you have missed a lot of classes, with unexcused absences throughout the quarter, then you should do these assignments to clear them. As you know, 5 or more unexcused absences will result in failing the class. However, if you had emergencies, and can provide me with a note from your doctor, from Student Health, or from your CAPS, DSP, CARE Counselor (for the specific dates in question)– then those absences will be excused. These are not extra credit assignments to improve your grade. These papers are due no later than Friday, December 5 by 5:00 PM. Submit them to Alexis via email.
Please note: If you did not go on the museum field trips, or the alternate museum field trip, then you have 2 unexcused absences for each of the trips, and you will also be missing the graded weekly assignment those weeks.
Friday, October 3, 2025
Mechanics of a Formal Research Paper & Scholarly Research Training Workshops
Scholarly Research Training Workshop: Monday, October 20 from 12:30-1:45 in lecture with Heather Nisen.
Mechanics of a Formal Research Workshop: Wednesday, October 22 from 12:30-1:45 in lecture.
hnisen@ucsb.edu
http://guides.library.ucsb.edu/art1a
Paper Format (PAPER TOPIC HERE):
QUESTIONS TO ASK YOURSELF WHEN WRITING & EDITING YOUR PAPER:
1) Do I have the proper number of citations and sources?
2) Did I properly format my citations using MLA or Chicago?
3) Do I have a properly formatted formal bibliography?
4) Did I adhere to the proper paper length?
5) Do I have a clear, and specific thesis statement?
6) Does my thesis statement specifically relate to the final draft of my paper?
7) Did I run spell check (repeatedly)?
8) Did I carefully edit to make sure that I used proper grammar, and were my tenses consistent?
9) Did I formulate clear arguments and substantiate all of my claims with clear and concrete examples?
10) Did I avoid sweeping generalizations and vague assertions?
11) Did I use casual colloquial language in my formal research paper? If so, find more precise ways to describe the point being made.
12) Did I use scholarly research sources such as peer-reviewed journal articles, scholarly articles and books rather than sources such as blogs, Wikipedia, encyclopedias etc (that are not acceptable sources for a formal research paper).
13) Did I properly cite quotes and summaries of other people's intellectual property (footnotes and in-text citations)?
14) Did I avoid excessive biographical information about the artist? Instead I should only include biographical information that is directly relevant to their artistic practice.
15) Would anyone reading my paper understand what I am trying to convey, or do I need to more clearly define the scope of my research and ultimately the point of my paper?
16) Did I place the pictures at the end of my paper? If I embedded them in the text, I need to remove them and place them at the end of my paper.
17) Did I remember to put my name, perm number and section time on my paper?
18) Did I remember to frequently save, backup and email drafts of my paper to myself (just in case my computer crashes)?
19) When I had questions, or needed help, did I reach out to my TA, professor or CLAS?
GENERAL TIPS ON WRITING YOUR PAPER:
1) The selection of a good thesis and supporting examples is an important part of producing a good paper. Be selective. The paper is about how to look closely at works of art and how your evaluation of objects and images is expanded by the specific context in which they are presented.
2) Write primarily with nouns and verbs. Avoid unnecessary (especially vague and imprecise) adjectives and adverbs.
3) Revise and rewrite. Proofread your work. Do not rely solely on "spell check."
4) Use the dictionary to refer to words you do not fully understand.
5) Do not overstate, or excessively use qualifiers (such as very, rather, little, etc.).
6) Use orthodox diction and accurate spelling. ("Its" is possessive; "It's" is a contraction for "it is," "Its' " doesn't exist. "Their" is possessive, "They're" is a contraction of "they are," There is declarative).
7) Be clear. Make references clearly. (Do not use the word "this" as the subject of a sentence).
8) Do not let your opinions get in the way of your writing.
9) Avoid using Wikipedia, blogs, newspaper articles and other materials that are not scholarly. These ARE NOT research materials for a formal research paper.
10) Get to the point quickly. Concentrate on quality of writing not quantity of words.
11) For help with formatting MLA and Chicago citations, visit Purdue Owl: https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/purdue_owl.html
For help writing the paper contact CLAS at 893-3269. They have a writing lab that will help you with papers, and will even proofread your papers. They also offer help specifically to students for whom English is a second language. CLAS site: http://www.clas.sa.ucsb.edu/
Friday, September 5, 2025
Welcome to Art 1A Fall Quarter 2025
Hello everyone,
Welcome to Art 1A: Visual Literacy! I wanted to reach out to let you know that everything that you need to know about Art 1A will be posted here on the Art 1A website, not on Canvas. Please read everything carefully, I will go over this information in class when we meet, and I will answer any questions that you may have.Art 1A lectures and sections will be taught in-person. However, the first lecture, on Monday, September 29 will be taught via Zoom from 12:30-1:45 (sections will be in-person in Arts 1344 from 3:00-3:50 and 4:00-4:50). Zoom link: https://ucsb.zoom.us/j/83111992304
Please fill out the Art 1A Questionnaire (HERE), and return it to me and your TA ASAP. This will help us get to know you, and it will also let us know whether you are having any technology issues. You can find our contact information HERE.










