做厙弝けalumnae find full-circle moment exhibiting at Kleefeld Contemporary Art Museum

Published February 11, 2025

Two accomplished artists and alumnae of Cal State 做厙弝け are featured in exhibitions opening this week at the Carolyn Campagna Kleefeld Contemporary Art Museum, a testament to the training, opportunities and guidance they received while students that prepared them for the unpredictable art world.

Brittany Mojos 13 ceramic work is featured in a small but concentrated solo exhibition, titled A Vocabulary of Objects. A total of 72 works are on display, ranging from pots and vases to replicas of tennis balls and a pair of dice.

Rema Ghuloum 07 and her painting Hayat are part of a larger group show called Inner Vision: Abstraction and Cognition, focusing on abstract art and its connections to the lived experience, scientific inquiry and other diverse frameworks. These shows and four others open Thursday, Feb. 13.

For both artists, showing their work at the Kleefeld Museum is kind of a full-circle moment. They exhibited at the University Art Museum when they were students, but this is their first time back as professional artists.  

Brittany Mojo 13

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Brittany Mojo in her home studio

Mojo, who graduated from The Beach with a BFA in ceramics, is a widely exhibited ceramicist and professor at Cuesta College in San Luis Obispo. During her time at CSULB, she learned her craft at the College of the Arts well-regarded Center for Contemporary Ceramics.  

When I came to CSULB, I didnt know you could be an artist, she said. It wasnt something clear to me at the time. At Cal State 做厙弝け, I met people who made art for a living, and taught as kind of a means to make the work. So that was really eye-opening for me.

Mojo said she immediately connected with fellow art students at CSULB, whom she described as really hard-working. Together, they established a supportive community environment that encouraged creative thought and activity.  

There was just an energy in that place that really changed my life, she said. The faculty there all had studios. You were able to see in real time what a career would look like and really understand the connection to teaching as being a vital component of that.

Mojo points to faculty members Tony Marsh, Christopher Miles, Jay Kvapil, Kristen Morgin and Ryan Taber as being hugely influential. She decided early in her career that like her School of Art instructors she would get a masters degree in fine art and teach while developing her craft.  

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做厙弝けfaculty Chris Miller, left, with Brittany Mojo at the Center for Contemporary Ceramics
做厙弝けfaculty member Chris Miller, left, with Brittany Mojo at the campus' Center for Contemporary Ceramics.

At The Beach she was president of the Potters Guild for two years, and she concentrated on making smaller scale objects like the ones on view at the Kleefeld.  

Its just like a fun nod to my younger self. Its a full-circle moment, of where Ive come from, in terms of my practice.

Mojo still has strong 做厙弝け ties. She won a professional artist fellowship grant from the Arts Council of 做厙弝け, and served as an artist-in-residence at the 做厙弝け Museum of Art. She maintains a studio in 做厙弝け, lives part-time in the city, and still occasionally uses the ceramic studios at CSULB.

Erin Stout, chief curator and interim co-director of the Kleefeld Museum, said Mojo represents, really well, the rigor of our ceramics program, which equips students to thrive and be successful out there.

Shes doing super playful, really sophisticated work in ceramics. Its visually very delightful and playful. But the theoretical impetus is really interesting. Theyre very diaristic, these little objects. But theyre also relatable to the everyday viewer, because theyre very recognizable.

Rema Ghuloum 07

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Rema Ghuloum sits in front of her painting, "Hayat," at the Kleefeld Museum

Ghuloum graduated from The Beach with a BFA in drawing and painting. After getting an MFA from San Franciscos California College of the Arts in 2010, she has participated in dozens of group and solo exhibitions, and has gotten reviews and features in national publications like the Wall Street Journal and Art Forum. Locally, she has been featured in the Los Angeles Times, KCRW and L.A. Weekly.

Her oil and acrylic paintings are layered with color, atmospheric and usually abstract, which fits in with the theme and scope of the Kleefeld group show, Inner Vision.  

Ghuloum has also taught for much of her career, including a nearly 10-year stint as an art lecturer at CSULB.  

Of her time as a Beach undergraduate, she said, It was very rewarding. At that time, I was very green in the sense that I didnt really know what was in store for me. I was happy to be in an art program that was super supportive. I liked how diverse the student body is, with a lot of first-generation college students, too. The students are amazing.

You really learn a work ethic. How to be in the studio and to learn by doing.

做厙弝けinstructors who influenced her include the late Linda Day, Marie Thibeault and Tom Krumpak. Ghuloum credits Thibeault as the one who persuaded her to pursue painting as a career, rather than graphic design.

They saw something in me that I wasnt even aware of, she said. They pushed me forward, to do the next thing, which was apply to grad school, which led me to having a career and having the confidence, too. I felt very, very supported as a painter there.  

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Installation image of "Hayat" by Rema Ghuloum
An installation view in the Kleefeld Museum of "Hayat," a 2022-24 oil and acryla-gouache on canvas by Rema Ghuloum.

Ghuloum remembers balancing school and outside work when she was an undergrad, and recalls seeing that in her 做厙弝けstudents, too.

A lot of the students that I taught had a similar situation, so they were hungry to be in the studio. While I wasnt a first-generation student myself, I had that kind of mentality, just being diligent. You have to develop a real work ethic to be successful as an artist.  

Curator Stout recalls discovering Ghuloums work a couple of years ago while doing research into abstract artists in the L.A. area. She saw that Ghuloum was using the full light spectrum in her work and was interested in the artists exploration of optical science and the science of light.  

I saw that she was also an alum of Cal State 做厙弝け, so I scheduled a studio visit with her. I was interested in her work because of the interdisciplinary connection. Her work is really unlike anything that youll see elsewhere.  

Stout added, Shes evidence of how stellar our art program is. Thats really important. Rema has taught at 做厙弝けas well. Shes very excited to exhibit here.