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House of Purple Cedar
Anne Giangiulio
Book cover, author signed book plates, and interior template I designed for 'House of Purple Cedar' by Tim Tingle, published by Cinco Puntos Press. "The hour has come to speak of troubled times. It is time we spoke of Skullyville." Thus begins House of Purple Cedar, Rose Goode’s telling of the year when she was eleven in Indian country, Oklahoma. Skullyville, a once-thriving Choctaw community, was destroyed by land-grabbers, culminating in the arson on New Year's Eve, 1896, of New Hope Academy for Girls. Twenty Choctaw girls died, but Rose escaped. She is blessed by the presence of her grandmother Pokoni and her grandfather Amafo, both respected elders who understand the old ways. Soon after the fire, the white sheriff beats Amafo in front of the townspeople. Yet, instead of seeking vengeance, her grandfather follow the path of forgiveness. And so unwinds this tale of mystery, Chotaw mysticism, and deep wisdom. It's a world where one's values are tested again and again. Where a one-legged woman shop-keeper, her oaf of a husband, herbal potions, and shape-shifting panthers rendering justice. Tim Tingle—a scholar of his nation's language, culture, and spirituality—tells Rose's story of good and evil with compassion and even laugh-out-loud Choctaw humor.
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Oktoberfest designs
Anne Giangiulio
Designs done for local El Paso bar, The Hoppy Monk. These included my design on authentic earthenware drinking steins imported from Germany, a poster, a T-shirt and Facebook ad.
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Posters Against Ebola
Anne Giangiulio
Poster I designed and donated to the website project http://postersagainstebola.com/. All proceeds of the sale of this poster go to Doctors Without Borders. This poster featured a stylized traditional mask design of the Ivory Coast, where the Ebola outbreak was at its worst. This poster was produced as a limited edition screenprint with printing donated by local El Paso, TX print shop, Proper Print Shop.
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Pumpkin Beerfest Poster for The Hoppy Monk
Anne Giangiulio
Poster I designed for local El Paso bar, The Hoppy Monk, for their Pumpkin Beerfest 2014.
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Renoir to Remington: Impressionism to the American West
Anne Giangiulio
Catalog designed for the exhibition 'Renoir to Remington: Impressionism to the American West', on display from September 21, 2014 to February 1, 2015 at the Woody and Gayle Hunt Family Gallery of the El Paso Museum of Art. Organized by the El Paso Museum of Art in partnership with Tacoma Art Museum, Tacoma, Washington. 144 pages.
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Slump
Anne Giangiulio
Book cover and interior template I designed for 'Slump' by Kevin Waltman, published by Cinco Puntos Press. Derrick Bowman's sophomore year is a grind. He's been looking forward to the basketball season all summer, but his girlfriend Jasmine leaves him for putting too much focus on basketball. The promise his Marion East basketball team showed at the end of last season isn't materializing. And the sweet jumper D-Bow worked on all summer just isn't falling. When Derrick's father has a heart attack, Derrick is faced with a new reality where basketball can't be his only priority. 'Slump' is the second book in Waltman's D-Bow High School Hoops series.
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The Black Butterfly
Anne Giangiulio
Book cover and interior template I designed for 'The Black Butterfly' by Shirley Reva Vernick, published by Cinco Puntos Press. "When Penny's flaky, ghost-hunting mother sends her to a "friend's" inn in Maine for Christmas break, Penny doesn't believe in ghosts…or love…or family. That may all be about to change as Penny confronts her own supernatural gift, an alluring guy, and staggering family secrets. But will she lose her first love, her only parent, or her life in the process?"
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Work for '10 Squared: 100 Artists Celebrate UTEP's Centennial'
Anne Giangiulio
I was invited as one of 100 artists to create a 10" x 10" work to commemorate the Centennial of the University of Texas at El Paso as part of the exhibition "10 Squared" by the Rubin Center for the Visual Arts. I created an original design proclaiming "Go Miners!" in reverse backstitch embroidered on stretched burlap. All proceeds from the sale supported the Rubin Center's education and outreach programming, bringing the experience of contemporary art to a diverse and growing audience of all ages.
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World Cup Poster for The Hoppy Monk
Anne Giangiulio
Poster I designed for viewings of the 2014 World Cup at local El Paso bar, The Hoppy Monk.
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'A Century of Transformations' Exhibit Design
Anne Giangiulio
I designed this bilingual exhibit for the Centennial Museum located on the campus of The University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP) to commemorate the University's Centennial in 2014. 'A Century of Transformations' follows the Texas School of Mines and Metallurgy, which opened as a mining school in 1914, and evolved into the University of Texas at El Paso, a nationally recognized research university. Featuring over 40 text panels in English and Spanish, as well as video slideshows and an interactive sticky note feedback wall, the exhibit highlights the University’s rich history and traditions. It also features significant milestones, distinguished alumni and powerful international connections. The exhibit was on display starting September 23, 2013 throughout UTEP's over year-long Centennial Celebration until January 15, 2015.
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Chalk the Block 2013 Poster
Anne Giangiulio
I designed this poster for the annual Chalk the Block event which took place October 11–October 13, 2013 in downtown El Paso. For the pop-up gallery component of the event, I organized a group of 6 students from my 'Graphic Design 4: Typography' class at The University of Texas at El Paso. Their posters were judged and selected to be on sale in a downtown space, previously a vacant restaurant, which had been converted into a gallery for the three-day weekend event. All proceeds from the sale of the posters went directly to the students.
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Conquistador of the Useless
Anne Giangiulio
Book cover and interior template I designed for 'Conquistador of the Useless' by Joshua Isard, published by Cinco Puntos Press. Joshua Isard’s debut novel is a hoot. The hero Nathan Wavelsky moves into the burbs with his wife. Life is good. He’s a successful slacker. He doesn’t want to rock the boat. His definition of a good time is listening to his favorite bands on his iPod and staring at the grass and the poplar trees in his backyard. As a mid-level corporate manager, he does what his bosses tell him. If they want somebody fired, he fires them. No questions asked. But the boat does start to rock. He innocently gives a copy of Kurt Vonnegut’s 'Cat’s Cradle' to a teenage girl and his neighbors are righteously appalled. His wife’s hormones start to tango and now she wants a baby. Sure, he enjoys sex, but that doesn’t mean he wants a baby in the house. Worse, his best friend wants him to climb Mount Everest. Nathan likes to camp and hike, but climbing the Himalayas? He could die, for God’s sake. He just wants to be left alone. But no chance. Shit happens.
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Exhibition catalog for 'Navigating Art Languages: The James M. Shelton, Jr. Collection'
Anne Giangiulio
Catalog designed for 'Navigating Art Languages: The James M. Shelton, Jr. Collection' exhibition, on display from September 20, 2013 to February 2, 2014 at the Peter and Margaret de Wetter Gallery of the El Paso Museum of Art. 28-pages.
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Global Financial Crisis poster submitted for The Biennial of the Poster in Bolivia 2013
Anne Giangiulio
This 70 x 100 cm poster was designed and submitted for "Category D: Global Financial Crisis" topic of the The Biennial of the Poster in Bolivia 2013.
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Next
Anne Giangiulio
Book cover and interior template I designed for the young adult novel 'Next' by Kevin Waltman, published by Cinco Puntos Press in both hardcover and paperback. Derrick Bowen has one thing on his mind when basketball practice starts his freshman year: winning the starting point guard job. (Well, a girl too.) But his old-school coach makes him sit on the bench. An elite prep school wants him to transfer from his inner-city public school, but all the adults steering him there have ideas of their own.
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Rebecca & Adam's Wedding Invitations
Anne Giangiulio
I designed this wedding invitation for my good friends. It was inspired by a vintage Johnny Cash show poster that they both loved. The notched-cornered RSVP postcards are meant to resemble concert tickets, while still coordinating with the invitation. With matching lined envelopes and hand-calligraphy addresses, these hand silkscreened invitations helped complete the couple's music-themed wedding.
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Remember Dippy
Anne Giangiulio
Book cover and interior template I designed for the young adult novel 'Remember Dippy' by Shirley Reva Vernick, published by Cinco Puntos Press in both hardcover and paperback. Between helpings of mouthwatering shortcake, mysterious ferret disappearances, and a romance that misfires, thirteen-year-old Johnny discovers an unexpected, improbable friendship. 'Remember Dippy' is the 2014 Dolly Gray Children's Literature Award Winner for its focus on autism and a finalist for the The Texas Institute of Letters’ annual award—Fred Whitehead Award for Design of a Trade Book.
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San Patricios T-shirts
Anne Giangiulio
This is a logo I designed for a local El Paso Irish band called The San Patricios. The signos de exclamacion (¡!) refer to El Paso's location on the U.S.–Mexico border. The three-leaf clover depicts the numbers 915, which is the telephone area code of El Paso. The triple spiral is another Celtic symbol referring to the origin of the band' music. The band first wore T-shirts sporting the logo at their annual Saint Patrick's Day event at Ardovino's Desert Crossing in Sunland Park, NM on March 17, 2013.
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Silk Scarf designed for UTEP's Centennial Celebration
Anne Giangiulio
I watercolored over 20 buildings located on the campus of The University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP) to design this 100% silk scarf. It is being sold as commemorative merchandising to celebrate UTEP's Centennial Celebration in 2014.
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Wheatpaste Workshop / Large Typographic Panels Designed for Future Artspace El Paso Lofts Site
Anne Giangiulio
On March 1, 2013, I hosted a "Wheatpaste Workshop" for Department of Art students at The University of Texas at El Paso to learn the street art technique of wheat pasting. For the workshop, I designed a large-scale typographical graphic. The workshop wheat pasted the design over two, 4' x 8' plywood panels. These panels were then pieced side by side and installed upon the chain link fence on the 600 block of North Oregon Street in downtown El Paso, around the future site of Artspace El Paso Lofts. When completed in 2015, Artspace will blend 51 affordable live/work units for artists and their families with 7,500 square feet of multi-purpose nonprofit space.
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Chalk the Block 2012 Poster
Anne Giangiulio
I designed this poster for the annual Chalk the Block event which took place October 12–October 14, 2012 in downtown El Paso. For the pop-up gallery component of the event, I organized a group of 15 students from my 'Graphic Design 4: Typography' class at The University of Texas at El Paso. Their posters were judged and selected to be on sale in a downtown space, previously a vacant store front, which had been converted into a gallery for the three-day weekend event. All proceeds from the sale of the posters went directly to the students.
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Identity Campaign for a Local Jewelry Designer
Anne Giangiulio
This was a proposed identity and packaging campaign I designed for a local jewelry designer whose work is very much earthy and southwest influenced. The jewelery designer uses mainly sterling silver and copper along with semi-precious stones in the work. This is referenced by the use of metallic threads woven through the business cards, each unique. A rubber stamp was also created for packaging like the gift box. Flat-backed adhesive gems were applied to the various components for an added touch of whimsy and sparkle that juxtapose the utilitarian look and feel of the brown kraft paper.
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Make It, Take It
Anne Giangiulio
Book cover I designed for 'Make It, Take It' by Rus Bradburd, published by Cinco Puntos Press. Steve Pytel is an assistant coach and top recruiter for a university basketball program. His goals are simple. He wants to keep his job and be a head coach someday. Keeping his wife barely makes the list. The team staggers; everyone’s days are numbered. Pytel was responsible for landing prized recruits Leonard Redmond and Jamal Davis. Pytel’s duties now? Keep Leonard out of jail. Make sure Jamal ignores the advice of his preacher, sidesteps his girlfriend’s pregnancy, and puts the ball in the basket. Good thing Pytel doesn’t carry around a bagful of scruples. An inventive novel, Make It, Take It sneaks the reader past the press conferences, locker rooms, and huddles of college basketball. Without judgment or sentimentality, Bradburd lays bare the web of conflicts between players and coaches, blacks and whites, revealing the complex humanity of a team’s inner circle. Here, every choice has a very real cost.
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Pop-Up Gallery for Chalk theBlock 2012
Anne Giangiulio
2012 marked the fifth anniversary of Chalk the Block, an annual weekend-long arts festival held in downtown El Paso that attracts over 30,000 visitors. The pop-up galleries portion of the festival takes empty, for-lease spaces and turns them into art exhibition venues for the duration of the weekend. I was asked by the event organizers to curate my own pop-up gallery. For my gallery, I assigned students from my Spring 2012 Graphic Design 4: Typography class to design posters for the event. These posters were judged by the other UTEP graphic design faculty and the best 15 selected were screenprinted by the local Proper Printshop. UTEP University Relations paid the cost of the printing so that all profits made from selling the posters in the gallery space went directly to the students. Students prepped, decorated, and staffed the gallery space, in addition to chalking the ground on campus to drum up publicity prior to the event. All was done with a budget of close to nothing using recycled cardboard, spray paint, and stencils. Bags to hold the rolled posters were sewn by the UTEP Dept. of Theatre & Dance's costume shop out of scraps of fabric they had on hand from both past productions and fabric the art students donated. The Dept. of art students spray painted the fabric with stencils of the 'DoArt' (Department of Art) logo. T-shirts were "upcycled" with the same stenciled and spray painted logos and also sold in the gallery.
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Poster for the El Paso Community Foundation's Classroom Fund Grant Recipients
Anne Giangiulio
For the second time, this poster was commissioned from me by the El Paso Community Foundation to be awarded to their annual Classroom Fund Grant Recipients at a reception honoring the grantees, area teachers. Limited edition screenprint.
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That Mad Game: Growing Up in a Warzone, An Anthology of Essays from Around the Globe
Anne Giangiulio
Book cover I designed for 'That Mad Game: Growing Up in a Warzone, An Anthology of Essays from Around the Globe, published by Cinco Puntos Press. Seventeen writers contribute essays about how they became adults in times of war. Essays focus on modern history but take no sides. Vietnam from both sides. Bosnia. The Gulf War. Rwanda. Juárez. El Salvador. The list goes on and on. There are no winners, just the survivors left behind. Picking up the pieces. Essays in the anthology are: A Talib in Love by Qais Akbar Omar / AFGHANISTAN No Longer Young by Phillip Cole Manor / VIETNAM Holland 1944-45 by Elisabeth Breslav / THE NETHERLANDS Across the River by Nikolina Kulidžan / BOSNIA Hand-Me-Down War Stories by Jerry Mathes / U.S. Left Behind in El Salvador by René Colato Laínez / EL SALVADOR Ways of the Khmer Rouge by Peauladd Huy / CAMBODIA My War and His War by Alia Yunis / LEBANON, PALESTINE, U.S. Our America by Marnie Mueller / JAPANESE INTERNMENT CAMPS, U.S. Exiled to Gansu Province by Xiaomei Lucas as told to Becky Powers / CHINA Brass Shells by Aria Minu-Sepehr / IRAN Half a Continent, Step by Step by Andie Miller / RWANDA, DRC, SOUTH AFRICA Statistical Life by David Yost / BURMA, THAILAND The Light of Gandhi's Lamp by Hilary Kromberg Inglis / SOUTH AFRICA From Fear to Hope: Raising Our Children in the World's Most Violent City by Fito Avitia / JUAREZ, MEXICO A Separate Escape: The Chin of Burma & the Unaccompanied Refugee Minor Program by Rebecca Henderson / BURMA, MALAYSIA, U.S. Symphony No.1 (In Memoriam, Dresden, 1945) by David Griffith / U.S., IRAQ, GERMANY 'That Mad Game' won a 2013 Silver ADDY® Award for its design from the Advertising Federation of El Paso.
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UTEP Department of Art in Rome Poster
Anne Giangiulio
I designed this poster for the Summer 2012 program of the UTEP Department of Art in Rome, Italy program.
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Ailbhe & Johnny's Wedding Invitations
Anne Giangiulio
I designed this pop-up wedding invitation for my good friends. It was inspired by a much simpler, handmade pop-up card from Oaxaca, Mexico that the groom had bought the bride when they were dating and that they both loved. The hands of bridesmaids, family, and friends were enlisted for the measuring, cutting, tying and gluing that these invites required. With coordinating lined envelopes, hand-calligraphy addresses and metallic gold wax seals, These invitations were truly a labor of love. We even made confetti out of any leftover paper scraps!
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A River Interrupted: Making the Case for Changing our Management of the Rio Grande
Anne Giangiulio
Designed and helped to install the exhibit 'A River Interrupted: Making the Case for Changing our Management of the Rio Grande' on display May 17–December 22, 2011 at The Centennial Museum at The University of Texas at El Paso. This bilingual exhibit's content was created by faculty and students of UTEP's Department of Biology and Center for Environmental Resource Management. The exhibit features data gathered by them and the World Wildlife Fund. Please be patient when downloading as file is 2.7 MB
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Building a City and a Nation: Immigration Stories from El Paso, Texas
Anne Giangiulio
Designed and helped to install the exhibit 'Building a City and a Nation: Immigration Stories from El Paso, Texas' on display March 1, 2011 to May 15, 2011 at the Main Branch of the El Paso Public Library. This bilingual exhibit's content was created by faculty and students of UTEP's Department of History. The exhibit features historic portraits taken at the Casasola Photography Studio in El Paso, Texas and documents the experiences, struggles and triumphs of people crossing into the United States from Mexico with images of immigrants hailing from Mexico, Lebanon, China and beyond. The exhibit later traveled to The Houston Public Library and The University of Texas at Brownsville. For more information about the exhibit, go to: http://academics.utep.edu/Default.aspx?tabid=68203
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Dealing Death and Drugs: The Big Business of Dope in the U.S. and Mexico
Anne Giangiulio
Excerpt from the book I designed, 'Dealing Death and Drugs: The Big Business of Dope in the U.S. and Mexico' by El Paso City Representatives Susie Byrd and Beto O’Rourke. Published by Cinco Puntos Press. Byrd and O’Rourke soon realized American drug use and United States' failed War on Drugs are at the core of problem. In Dealing Death and Drugs—a book written for the general reader—they explore the costs and consequences of marijuana prohibition. They argue that marijuana prohibition has created a black market so profitable that drug kingpins are billionaires and drug control doesn’t stand a chance. Using Juárez as their focus, they describe the business model of drug trafficking and explain why this illicit system has led to the never-ending slaughter of human beings. Their position: the only rational alternative to the War on Drugs is to end to the current prohibition on marijuana.
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'Dear Juarez' Poster Protesting Drug Violence in Juárez, México
Anne Giangiulio
I designed the poster 'Dear Juárez' originally for 'Peace of Art: Design for Change' (www.peaceofartshow.org). This exhibit presents posters of social protest designed by professional and student designers to create awareness of the situation of violence in Cd, Juarez. To give a face to the violence and help people understand that the violence changes people’s lives. It is a display of Peace and/or protest on both sides of the border. More importantly, Peace of Art raises funds that will aid Cd. Juarez victims and their families. The theme of 2011's show was "Perspectives."
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'European Treasures at the El Paso Museum of Art' Exhibit Catalog
Anne Giangiulio
Excerpt from the The 313-page book celebrating the 50th anniversary of the museum's founding and the arrival in 1961 of about 60 pieces of art from the Kress collection. That gift from the Samuel H. Kress Foundation was instrumental in launching the city-run art museum, hard cover with dust jacket and end papers exhibition catalog I designed for the El Paso Museum of Art. This catalog won a 2011 Gold ADDY and a Special Judges' Award from the Advertising Federation of El Paso. 6 MB.
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'Regina Silveira: Limits & In Absentia (Collection)' Exhibition Catalog
Anne Giangiulio
'Regina Silveira: Limits & In Absentia (Collection)' catalog designed for the exhibits at the Stanlee and Gerald Rubin Center for the Visual Arts and The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, CT. Please be patient when downloading as file is 17 MB.
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Segunda Llamada: Actions for Sustainable Use of Water Poster Submission
Anne Giangiulio
With the aim to raise awareness over the current environmental situation: Segunda llamada, the Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana (Autonomous Metropolitan University) and Natura Mexico extended the invitation to participate in the 2nd International Poster Competition with the theme: Actions for sustainable use of water. I submitted this poster which translates to "Why save water today? For tomorrow."
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Which Side Are You On? The Story of a Song
Anne Giangiulio
Excerpt from the graphic novel I designed, 'Which Side Are You On? The Story of a Song' by George Ella Lyon, in collaboration with Brooklyn illustrator Christopher Cardinale, published by Cinco Puntos Press. 'Which Side Are You On?' tells the story of a song which was written in 1931 by Florence Reece in a rain of bullets. It has been sung by people fighting for their rights all over the world. Florence’s husband Sam was a coal miner in Kentucky. Many of the coal mines were owned by big companies, who kept wages low and spent as little money on safety as possible. Miners lived in company houses on company land and were paid in scrip, good only at the company store. The company owned the miners sure as sunrise. And that’s why they had to have a union. Miners went on strike until they could get better pay, safer working conditions, and health care. The company hired thugs to attack the organizers like Sam Reece. Writer George Ella Lyon tells this hair-raising story through the eyes of one of Florence’s daughters, a dry-witted pig-tailed gal, whose vantage point is from under the bed with her six brothers and sisters. The thugs’ bullets hit the thin doors and windows of the company house, the kids lying low wonder whether they’re going to make it out of this alive, wonder exactly if this strike will make their lives better or end them, but their mother keeps scribbling and singing. “We need a song,” she tells her kids. Please be patient when downloading as file is 1.7 MB.
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El Paso: The Other Side of the Mexican Revolution
Anne Giangiulio
Designed and helped to install the exhibit 'El Paso: The Other Side of the Mexcian Revolution' on display on display October 1, 2010 to January 10, 2011 at the El Paso Museum of History. This bilingual exhibit's content was created by faculty and students of UTEP's Department of History and coincided with the 2010 100th anniversary of the start of the Mexican Revolution. As a strategic base for revolutionaries and home to the largest ethnic-Mexican population in the United States at the time, the city of El Paso became a major site of cultural production by journalists, writers, businessmen, photographers, filmmakers, and musicians. This culture not only chronicled the Revolution, but was itself a battleground of images and ideas. A portion of the original exhibit is on permanent display on the museum's second floor. For more information about the exhibit, go to: https://academics.utep.edu/Default.aspx?tabid=65492
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'Into the Desert Light: Early El Paso Art 1850-1960' Exhibit Catalog
Anne Giangiulio
Excerpt from the 135-page, hard cover, cloth-bound exhibition catalog I designed for the El Paso Museum of Art. 4.6 MB.
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Mr. Mendoza's Paintbrush
Anne Giangiulio
Excerpt from the graphic novel I designed, 'Mr. Mendoza’s Paintbrush' by Luis Alberto Urrea, published by Cinco Puntos Press in collaboration with Brooklyn illustrator Christopher Cardinale. Please be patient when downloading as file is 1.8 MB.
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Posters Protesting Drug Violence in Juárez, México
Anne Giangiulio
I designed the posters 'Juárez: Once a City, Now Statistics' and 'Stop the Violence in Juárez' originally for 'Peace of Art: Design for Change' (www.peaceofartshow.org). This exhibit presents posters of social protest designed by professional and student designers to create awareness of the situation of violence in Cd, Juarez. To give a face to the violence and help people understand that the violence changes people’s lives. It is a display of Peace and/or protest on both sides of the border. More importantly, Peace of Art raises funds that will aid Cd. Juarez victims and their families. Both posters were later also named finalists in the 2010 Eleventh International Biennial of the Poster in Mexico City, Mexico and were on display at the Museo Franz Mayer in Mexico City.
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'Voices in Freedom' poster
Anne Giangiulio
I am one of only one hundred graphic designers worldwide invited to participate in the 2010 poster exhibit 'Voices in Freedom' sponsored by the International Biennial of the Poster in Mexico, celebrating the Bicentennial of Mexican Independence and the Centennial of the Mexican Revolution.
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Wilco Show Poster
Anne Giangiulio
Designed a gig poster for the June 17 Wilco show at the Abraham Chavez Theatre. The poster was stenciled and spray painted with metallic silver paint on speckletone green French paper. Black hemp twine attached adds texture and the headphone cord for the local Gambel's quail enjoying the music.
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Beck show poster
Anne Giangiulio
Designed a gig poster for the September 25 Beck show at the Abraham Chavez Theatre. The downloadable file here does not depict well that the poster was screenprinted with metallic gold ink on speckletone brown French paper. A photo of me with the poster appeared in Vanity Fair online in an article about Beck's "secret" show he played after the scheduled Abraham Chavez performance. See the online article at: http://www.vanityfair.com/online/culture/2008/09/29/becks-secret-show-in-el-paso-tx.html
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Building a Bosque: 10 Years of Habitat Restoration at Rio Bosque Wetlands Park
Anne Giangiulio
Designed and installed the exhibit 'Building a Bosque: 10 Years of Habitat Restoration at Rio Bosque Wetlands Park' at UTEP’s Centennial Museum. This exhibit celebrated a 10-year collaboration between the University's Center for Environmental Resource Management and other local entities in caring for the Wetlands and helping restore it to the plant and wildlife habitat it once was prior to the channelization of the Rio Grande in the mid-1930s. For more information about the Park, go to: http://research.utep.edu/Default.aspx?PageContentID=891&tabid=18875
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'Claiming Space: Mexican Americans in U.S. Cities' Exhibition Catalog
Anne Giangiulio
'Claiming Space: Mexican Americans in U.S. Cities' catalog designed for the exhibit at the Stanlee and Gerald Rubin Center for the Visual Arts. This catalog won a 2009 Silver ADDY Award from the Advertising Federation of El Paso. Please be patient when downloading as file is 30 MB.
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Global Warming Posters
Anne Giangiulio
I designed the environmentally-themed posters 'You Can Reduce Global Warming' and 'Stop Global Warming'. Both were named finalists in the 2008 Tenth International Biennial of the Poster in Mexico City and on display at the Museo Franz Mayer in Mexico City.
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'In the Weave: Bhutanese Textiles and National Identity' Exhibit logo and panels
Anne Giangiulio
'In the Weave: Bhutanese Textiles and National Identity' logo and informational wall panels designed for the exhibit at the Stanlee and Gerald Rubin Center for the Visual Arts. The photography used in these panels was taken by 2008 Guggenheim Fellow and New Mexico State University Professor David Taylor. I isolated and monotoned all the hand-painted Buddhist symbols used in the panels from a single shot of Taylor's taken of a Bhutanese temple wall.
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Pitch Black
Anne Giangiulio
'Pitch Black' by Anthony Horton and Youme Landowne is a graphic tale I designed. Published by El Paso's Cinco Puntos Press, 'Pitch Black' was honored by the American Librarian Association as one of 2008's top ten graphic novels for young adults. The book also received a rave Kirkus review on September 15, 2008 noting its design “...and the fluid black-and-white sequential panels tell it well.” Finally, on October 7, 2008, The New York Times did a feature on the book both in print and online in its 'City Room' page: http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/10/07/rules-for-living-in-subway-tunnels/?hp Please be patient when downloading as file is 6.6 MB.
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Proposed logo for 'Music Under the Stars'
Anne Giangiulio
Logo chosen as a top ten finalist for Music Under the Stars’ logo contest held by El Paso’s Museums and Cultural Affairs Department for the 25th Season of 'Music Under the Stars', a free summer outdoor concert series held at the Chamizal National Memorial.
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To the Ends of the Earth: UTEP at the Poles
Anne Giangiulio
I designed the exhibit 'To the Ends of the Earth: UTEP at the Poles' at UTEP’s Centennial Museum. This exhibit displayed the photography and research findings of the IPY-ROAM (International Polar Year–Research and Educational Opportunities in Antarctica for Minorities) program hosted by the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP), especially as they pertain to global warming. For more information about the program and this exhibit, go to: http://ipyroam.utep.edu/ The exhibit was also the featured cover story of 'UTEP Magazine's Winter 2008 issue. For a Flash version of this issue go to: http://utepmagazine.utep.edu/winter2008/
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