California State University, San Marcos

01/29/2026 | News release | Distributed by Public on 01/29/2026 17:51

New Gallery Showcases Student Art in Library

29
January
2026
|
15:42 PM
America/Los_Angeles

New Gallery Showcases Student Art in Library

By Brian Hiro

Art, media and design professor Ghazal Foroutan stands in front of the Cougar Gallery on the second floor of Kellogg Library. To the right of her is the poster created by one of her students, Sonia Ellis. Photo by Brandon Pollard
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The event that inspired the class project was imaginary. But for Sonia Ellis and fellow Cal State San Marcos art students, the payoff was very real.

Last year, Ellis was a student in AMD 409: Advanced Graphic Design and Visual Arts, an upper-division class taught by Ghazal Foroutan. The assignment: Using only typography, create a promotional poster for a hypothetical California architecture conference being hosted by CSUSM.

The twist: Some of the posters that resulted would be displayed as part of a new student art gallery in Kellogg Library. Ellis made a poster about acclaimed Israeli-Canadian-American architect Moshe Safdie, and hers was one of 19 selected for the exhibit.

"I was thrilled and honored to have my work chosen to be displayed in the library and kept in the archive," said Ellis, an art, media and design major who's scheduled to graduate this spring. "It gave a greater sense of purpose to the project."

The 19 posters compose the first installment of the Cougar Gallery, which is located on the library's second floor, occupying the wall space between the Makery's entrance and the stairwell down the hall. Foroutan said the idea came from a conversation with fellow art, media and design professor Kristin Moss, and it was brought to fruition through a collaboration with multiple employees of the library: associate dean Char Booth, outreach librarian Irma Ramos Arreaga, arts and humanities librarian Torie Quiñonez, and administrative coordinator Arely Ayala.

The initial exhibit has adorned the library's walls since the start of the fall semester.

"Seeing the students' work displayed in a prominent campus space has been incredibly meaningful," Foroutan said. "As a professor, I am proud to share their work with the broader campus community and to see it recognized by the department and the library.

"For students, the exhibition validates their efforts beyond the classroom. Many have already photographed their posters and plan to list the show as a group exhibition on their CVs, as well as include the work in their portfolios."

The new Cougar Gallery has been on display in the library, near the entrance to the Makery, since last fall. Photo by Brandon Pollard
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The Cougar Gallery, Booth said, fulfills a longstanding desire to increase the presence and visibility of student art in the library. As a prominent display of creative student work, it joins the Data Stackson the library's fourth floor.

"By establishing this new gallery, we are showcasing the creative talents of CSUSM student artists and designers and dedicating a highly visible area of the library to School of Arts students and faculty as a much-needed supplementary gallery space," Booth said.

Once she was assigned Safdie as her subject (other famous architects featured include Frank Lloyd Wright and Frank Gehry), Ellis set out to make a poster that would promote a hypothetical discussion with the architect at the conference while also channeling the style and philosophy of that architect. In researching Safdie's life and work, Ellis was drawn to his design theory, "For Everyone a Garden."

"He envisions architecture as a living, evolving environment, integrating gardens and green space into almost all of his designs," she said. "That phrase became my guiding concept and tagline for the poster, inspiring my color palette and imagery."

Ellis incorporated both physical art and digital design in the creation of her poster. She also designed an accompanying booklet in the same style as the poster to round out the promotional material.

"Over the weeks of working on the project, we all watched each other's concepts evolve in the studio, so seeing them printed professionally and displayed in a space where so many students pass through was very meaningful," said Ellis, who plans to apply for the CSUSM teaching credential program, with a goal of becoming an art educator.

Foroutan hopes to work with the library to rotate the exhibition at least once a year to showcase as many as much student artwork as possible.

"While the overall framework of the project will remain consistent, I plan to subtly revise the assignment each year to introduce new constraints, tones or conceptual directions, allowing the exhibition to evolve over time," she said.

Media Contact

Brian Hiro, Communications Specialist

[email protected] | Office: 760-750-7306

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California State University, San Marcos published this content on January 29, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on January 29, 2026 at 23:51 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]