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Washington State University

Goldwater Scholarships for 2017-18 awarded to two WSU Honors College junior women STEM majors

Goldwater Scholarships for 2017-18 awarded to two WSU Honors College junior women STEM majors

The Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship and Excellence in Education Foundation has announced that Washington State University juniors Julianna Brutman and Keesha Matz have each received $7,500 awards for the 2017-18 academic year. Goldwater’s are among the top, nationally competitive distinguished scholarships; they cover tuition, room and board, and fees. » More …

WSU SURCA poster event leads to 16 awards for Honors College undergraduate researchers

WSU SURCA poster event leads to 16 awards for Honors College undergraduate researchers


PULLMAN, Wash.—Washington State University Honors College students won 16 awards for presentations on their research, scholarship, and creative activities at the sixth annual Showcase for Undergraduate Research and Creative Activities (SURCA) on March 27.

Honors was well represented among the nearly 225 students who presented posters detailing their faculty-mentored work, said Honors Dean M. Grant Norton. » More …

Exploring the Art of Portraiture

Exploring the Art of Portraiture

Honors 280.2 – Summer Class
Instructor: Pamela Lee

Monday – Friday
May 8 – June 2, 2017
9:00-11:30 a.m.
Elmina White Honors Hall, Room 142


An oft repeated adage states that before twenty you have the face that you were born with, after that you have the face you deserve. The adage may stem from Shakespeare’s Hamlet: “God has given you one face, and you make yourself another.”

Character is revealed in the face. Can we shape our character, and thus the face we wear through life? Can we look ahead and anticipate who we might be at fifty, sixty, or eighty? Or, are we simply batted about and patted into shape by the vicissitudes of fate? In this increasingly global era, do we retain a national identity communicated through the human visage? Or, is “face reading” universally understood? We will ask these underlying questions as we encounter and explore the art of visual portraiture, dipping across time, continents and cultures to investigate painted, sculpted, and photographed faces. We will question the various applications of portraiture, past and present, considering how life’s large human themes – love, mortality, disability, beauty, power, joy, sadness –affect the human countenance and the art portrait. What lies behind the faces artists have portrayed? How do their lives critically compare to ours?  We will practice critical and speculative analysis, research and information literacy.

Selected articles and films will be provided; purchase of text is not required.