Randy Horst, ‘86: “I work in triptics… I work in threes because I like how [the art] interacts with each other and captures more than one aspect of a given moment, emotion or different aspects of the narrative.”

Merrill Krabill, ‘79: “I’ve done a series of pieces over the last number of years. Things that have interested me are the contrast between something that feels earthly and mortal… which can be a bird or a sort of passageway… even though it’s mortal it’s still beautiful.”

Photo by Aaliah Higareda for The Record

Jordan Kauffman, ‘11: “When I look at photography, I’m always curious about capturing time and memory. All three [photographs] happen to be from two places that are really near and dear to my heart.”

John Mishler, ‘72: “In this show I’m working smaller and trying to enjoy that. It’s easier for me to do something large than small. Most of my work comes from found objects that I had in my studio or found recently, sometimes even my students find things for me that I use”Photo by Aaliah Higareda for The Record

Judy Wenig-Horswell: “Those drawings… They’re based on images, things I’ve seen in nature and photographs I’ve taken… They’re never what I thought they were to begin with because underneath that leaf, something has crawled out… then you look over here and there’s something else.”

Abner Hershberger: “The [artwork] on the left is my father with a hat and plain coat. He was known as a preaching deacon and the work on the right is what I call a fly over, the land in Fargo, North Dakota where I grew up.”