BUOB NAMED EMCC鈥橲 HUMANITIES TEACHER OF THE YEAR

91视频

16feb

CYNTHIA BUOB NAMED EMCC鈥橲 HUMANITIES TEACHER OF THE YEAR

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91视频 art instructor Cynthia Buob has been named the college鈥檚 Humanities Teacher of the Year Award recipient. Buob will present a lecture Feb. 23 on EMCC鈥檚 Golden Triangle campus.

February 16, 2021

91视频 Humanities Teacher of the Year Award recipient Cynthia Buob will present a lecture titled 鈥淒rawn to Life鈥 Feb. 23 at 2:30 p.m. in room 607 in the student union on the college鈥檚 Golden Triangle campus.

The lecture, which will be followed by a reception, is free and open to the public. Space will be limited to meet Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommendations for the novel coronavirus. Face masks are required.

Buob, a figurative artist who has garnered national recognition for her work, has taught art fulltime at EMCC for six years.

鈥淐indy is an exceptional artist and instructor who is devoted to her craft and her students,鈥 EMCC Vice President of Instruction Dr. James Rush said. 鈥淭he caliber of instruction Cindy provides to our art students is top notch.鈥

Each year the Mississippi Humanities Council presents the award to humanities faculty at each of the state鈥檚 colleges and universities. The recipients are tentatively scheduled to be recognized in March at the Mississippi Humanities Council鈥檚 annual Public Humanities Awards ceremony in Jackson.

Humanities Teacher of the Year Award recipients are nominated each year by their respective institutions鈥 presidents or department deans. Recipient receives a $400 cash award.   

Each recipient of the Humanities Teacher Award is required to prepare and deliver a public lecture. Buob鈥檚 lecture will focus on her art, which she views as a type of visual storytelling.

Buob said much of her art is inspired by stories told to her.

鈥淚 like to recreate the feelings and emotions behind the stories,鈥 Buob said.

Twenty-six pieces of Buob鈥檚 artwork are on display through Feb. 12 at the Mississippi University for Women. One of the displays that counts as one piece includes about 40 drawings and paintings in a 鈥淒rawn to You鈥 series that encapsulates the impacts COVID-19 has had on people鈥檚 daily lives. The series includes a drawing of a face mask hanging from a rearview mirror, another of an empty restaurant and one of a pair of hands over a bathroom sink, to name a few.

鈥淐OVID-19 has become such a big part of our shared experiences that I wanted to document it through my artwork,鈥 Buob said. 鈥淏eing able to express my thoughts of the pandemic through art was a form of catharsis for me.鈥

Buob is a former adjunct art instructor at both Mississippi State University and the Mississippi University for Women. A native of Peoria, Ill., she earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from Milliken University in Decatur, Ill., and a Master of Fine Arts degree in art from Southern Illinois University Edwardsville.

In March 2019, Buob earned 鈥淏est of Show鈥 in the Meridian Museum of Art鈥檚 45th Annual Bi-State Competition in which more than 170 pieces of artwork were submitted. A painting by Buob was among 50 pieces of artwork selected among more than 1,000 submissions for the 61st Annual Delta Exhibition at the Arkansas Arts Center in Little Rock in May of 2019.

Last January, a painting and drawing by Buob were chosen among entries from across the U.S. for display in The Art of Hope exhibit at Mississippi State University鈥檚 Cullis Wade Art Gallery in Starkville. That same month, one of Buob鈥檚 drawings was selected for inclusion in the 11th Annual Drawing Discourse Exhibition at the Holden Gallery on the campus of Warren Wilson College in Swannanoa, N.C.

鈥淚 am grateful for the opportunity to hone my craft as an artist while helping my students develop their own talents,鈥 Buob said. 鈥淭hat has been truly rewarding.鈥