St. John's News

Fine Arts Senior Eirene Jacobs’ Photos Featured in Manhattan Campus Solo Show

March 30, 2006

For the first time ever, St. Johns’ University is giving a Department of Fine Arts student a solo exhibition of her work. The artist, senior Eirene Jacobs, is displaying 24 abstract digital photographs on the second-floor mezzanine gallery of the Manhattan campus at 101 Murray Street. The exhibit, “Ship’s System Series,” which runs through May 30, will be featured at a reception on April 19, from 6-8 p.m. The show is free and open to the public from Monday – Friday, 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.

Photo Gallery

The show features framed images, approximately 24" x 32 "in size, that are abstractions of photos she took of the mechanical workings of a SUNY Maritime College training ship’s engine room. This may seem like unusual subject matter for a young woman who has studied fine arts at St. John’s Queens campus on a full scholarship, but Eirene says she was intrigued by the engine room’s contents while touring the ship based at the maritime college her boyfriend attends. “It was subject matter that hadn’t been explored,” she says.

Through cropping, overlaying and manipulation of files that may be a gigabyte or larger on her custom-built computer, Eirene translates this nuts-and-bolts equipment into abstract images. She describes her process as one of visually flattening the images and manipulating them as pure elements of design, “using them much the same way that the abstract expressionists used line, shape, value and form.”

Best in Student Art Show
Newsday, in a review of the University’s student art exhibition last spring on the Queens campus, characterized her ship’s system work displayed then as “using digital technology to turn photographs of ordinary nautical equipment into hallucinogenic mirages.” Eirene received the “Best in Show” award from the Department of Fine Arts faculty at the exhibit.

She likens her objective in taking on what many people describe as “very masculine work” to the spirit she sees in noted photographer Minor White pieces: “to take ordinary, man-made objects and help one see them as exceptional art,” she explains.

And, according to Fine Arts Chairman Paul Fabozzi, her work is exceptionally strong, definitely worthy of a solo show.

Glad She Came to St. John’s
Glad that she chose to attend St. John’s for fine arts — where she took classes in sculpture, three-dimensional design, aqueous media (watercolor), drawing, photography and digital photography — she believes she benefited from a liberal arts education. “I enjoyed taking other subjects to broaden my education, and I wouldn’t have been able to do that at an art school,” she says. “I’ve also appreciated the individual attention the art faculty gives students.”

Eirene has been guided at St. John's by her advisor, Professor Diane Himmelbaum, Assistant Department Chair, who encouraged her to produce enough work to qualify for her solo “Ship’s Systems Show.” She also credits Digital Photography Professor Louis DiGena, whose course — which she took when she was closed out of traditional photography — opened up new vistas.

Eirene, a resident of the Richmond Hill section of Queens, came to St. John’s from Mary Louis Academy for girls located near the University in Jamaica Estates. In this private high school, she studied art under Ellen Fee, who works closely with St. John’s Fine Arts department in placing talented students. And talent runs in Eirene’s family as her father is also an artist. After graduation, she hopes to work as an artist and would like to connect with a gallery that will represent her work.