Home Directories Calendar of Events
Share on facebook

Notice Board

14 May 2012
ULAB Response - Dear ULABians, By now many of you have seen the... see detail

Calendar of Events
Previous month Previous day Next day Next month
By year By month By week Today Search Jump to month
Digital Art, Visual Art and Photography Exhibit “Emerging Faces, Portraits and Identities of Banglad Print
Thursday, August 19 2010, 11:00am - 3:00pm
Digital Art, Visual Art and Photography Exhibit
“Emerging Faces, Portraits and Identities of Bangladesh”.

 The Media Studies and Journalism (MSJ) Department of the University of Liberal Arts Bangladesh (ULAB, http://www.ulab.edu.bd ) will launch on August 19, 2010, 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., an exhibit entitled “Emerging Faces, Portraits and Identities of Bangladesh” at the Lobby and Seminar Room, ULAB Campus B, House 719/A, Road 7/A (Satmasjid Road), Dhanmondi, Dhaka.  The exhibit features three communication campaigns, 30 plaster masks, 32 face paintings, 32 photographs, 40 digital masks, the film adaptation of Syed Walliullah’s  novel “Death before Dawn” and research findings on the Identity Construction and Visual Texts of Bangladeshi Youth.  The exhibit will run until September 20.

All items produced by students of the Media Studies and Journalism (MSJ) Department from the courses:  Development Communication (with Marium Akther as lecturer); Visual Communication (with Marium Akther as lecturer); Social Context of Media (with Abul Mansur Ahmed as lecturer); Introduction to Photography (with Razibul Hossain as lecturer); Multimedia Production (with Imtiaz Ahmed Chowdhury as lecturer); Video Communication 2 (with Razibul Hossain as lecturer); and Research Methodologies (with Anis Pervez as lecturer).

The exhibit takes off from the Face Negotiation Theory of Stella Ting-Toomey, which divides cultures into collectivistic and individualistic.  Based one’s culture, he/she constructs a public face and a private face.  For Ting-Toomey, people who belong to individualistic cultures do not have distinct public and private faces but those who come from collectivistic cultures have very distinct public and private faces.  However, Ting-Toomey added that people are not imprisoned by their cultures. They can have identities of their own choosing. As applied to Bangladesh, the country can be considered collectivistic where there is a huge gap between private and public faces.

The exhibit is part of the Department’s Curriculum Integration Program, which was established to facilitate faculty and students from various year levels and study concentrations to work together and learn from each other.  It has two primary objectives.  First, it utilizes active learning approaches to enhance the educational experience of students.  Second, it encourages students to look inward – to reflect on their own personalities, aspirations and identities.  The Department believes that students must be comfortable and confident with themselves before they can positively contribute to others.

The exhibit is the culminating activity under the Summer 2010 MSJ Department Curriculum Integration Programme.  The first forum entitled “Portraits of Bangladesh” was held on June 17 with Abul Mansur Ahmed (Associate Professor, Dhaka University) and Anis Pervez (Associate Professor, MSJ Department, ULAB) as speakers.  The second activity was conducted on July 8 with ULAB Senior Lecturer Marium Akhter tackling “Visual Texts of Bangladesh” at the ULAB Auditorium.  

    Aside from these, students from the “Development Communication” course will feature the communication campaigns they produced for Spanish NGO Aid, Exchange and Development (AIDA).  Three communication campaigns on raising awareness on women empowerment in Bangladesh will be presented, along with prototype posters and other communication materials.

Back