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Student Work Gallery: Fall 2025

Creativity is the through line uniting each of the college’s majors, and nowhere is that more apparent than in the work of our students. Whether it’s a class assignment, work done for a club, an internship or a passion project, our students’ talents remain a source of pride and inspiration for the college. Here are a few standouts from the fall.

Dylan Thomas Doyle (MInfoSci’24; PhD’25)

Dylan Thomas Doyle (MInfoSci’24; PhD’25)

Kinsey Anger (EnvDes’25)

Kinsey Anger (EnvDes’25)

Hannah Howell, media production

Hannah Howell, media production

Emme Clymer, journalism

Emme Clymer, journalism

Skylar Berman, psychology; journalism minor

Skylar Berman, psychology; journalism minor

Amy Mahoney, business; journalism minor

Amy Mahoney, business; journalism minor

Eric Durigan (EnvDes’25)

Eric Durigan (EnvDes’25)

Campbell Tsung, Jess Sastra, Georgia Cook, Morgan Braun-Jenson (all StratComm’25)

Campbell Tsung, Jess Sastra, Georgia Cook, Morgan Braun-Jenson (all StratComm’25)

Samantha Russo, strategic communication

Samantha Russo, strategic communication

Aramis Loma-Guzman, journalism

Aramis Loma-Guzman, journalism


Թ the cover: ‘Eerie beauty’

Leif Lomo didn’t intend to stop at this abandoned factory at Valmont Butte, in Boulder—he was actually looking for another ruined location to photograph when he stumbled on this building. He got this photo after climbing to the top of one of its smokestacks.

“What gripped me was the texture. It almost had a personality—the corrugated roofing, the decaying wood, the shadows, the small bits of graffiti,” said Lomo, who’s studying media production. “It struck me as a very human image—people took stuff out of the earth to make things here. Then, it was forgotten. Now, it’s both a canvas and a place where people who don’t have housing live.”

Lomo made this image as part of his Digital Photographic Practices class, which covered the New Topographics movement—when landscape photography shifted from pastoral beauty to documenting the human alteration of those landscapes. “In that course, I found a reason to explore and show some of the eerie beauty I found in the world,” he said.

Photo of a derelict building