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Campus & Community

In Her Research and Practice, Alexa Kulinski ’09 Explores the Transformative Power of Visual Journaling

Tuesday, November 15, 2022, By Martin Walls
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College of Visual and Performing ArtsGraduate SchoolSchool of Education
self-portrait drawing of Alexa Kulinski

Self-portrait by Alexa Kulinski ’09

Meet Alexa Kulinski ’09: “artist + researcher + teacher,” as she describes herself on social media.

A graduate of the University’s bachelor of fine arts program with a 2017 master’s degree from the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA), Kulinski returned to 鶹Ƶto pursue a teaching and curriculum doctorate in the School of Education.

Her research and practice explores art making and visual journaling with the aim of helping students—and their teachers—”make meaning and explore their voices.”

Page from Alexa Kulinski journal that includes field notes and reflections

Kulinski began visual journaling during her master’s degree studies at MICA. “It just clicked with me,” she says. In particular, she found that journaling helped her document experiences in the Enfield, Connecticut, public school district, where “Miss K” taught from 2009-20: “Journaling helped me reflect on my teaching, on educational equity and assessment, and the inequities that I saw. It was a transformative practice.”

Page from Alexa Kulinski's journal titled "A Visual Map of my Goals for This School Year"

As a doctoral student, Kulinski shares her visual journaling experiences with school teachers, to help them bring the concept into their lives and their classrooms. It can be used as a metacognitive, goal-setting and problem-solving act for themselves and their students. “Journaling can help with social and emotional learning. It can let students reflect on what has gone well with their learning, what they are in control of, and what they can improve,” Kulinski says.

page from Alexa Kulinski's journal that includes a drawing of a tree and explores her purpose and why she became an art teacher

Although fully trained as an oil painter, Kulinski enjoys cartooning in her visual journal because of how that genre mixes the visual and the narrative. “I encourage journalers to do a page or two a day, or whatever they can do.” Not that oil painting isn’t able to tell a story, Kulinski adds. You can explore her work through her Instagram account, . This oil on canvas piece is titled, “Moment in Time.”

An oil painting by Alexis Kulinski featuring iris flowers

As a graduate assistant, Kulinski is teaching Creative Processes and Curriculum Structures in the College of Visual and Performing Arts. This course encourages “experimentation, divergent thinking, and openness to discovery” in order to explore “curricular ideas and opportunities for creative learning.” According to Kulinski, “I’m doing journaling practice with my students, along with exploring art making, to help them find ways to use both practices for K-12 content that diverges from a traditional school arts curriculum and integrates contemporary art making practices.”

example of visual journaling with brightly colored clippings

Kulinski has presented her ideas on visual journaling across New York State. More than 50 art teachers joined her August 2022 New York State Art Teachers Association “Visual Journaling for Art Teachers” professional development program. In September, she presented “Problem Solving Through Visual Journaling” at Buffalo State College, encouraging participants “to learn how to use visual journaling as a teacher to solve problems and help your students do the same.”

page from Alexa Kulinski's journal that includes a visual depiction of her process for making comics

During summer 2022, Kulinski taught , part of 鶹ƵUniversity’s long-running pre-college program. High school students learned about comics, the graphic novel and other forms of visual storytelling.

Visual journaling was central to her course. It gave Kulinski—as a researcher—excellent opportunity to observe what stories her students chose to tell, why they chose to tell them and how they went about it: “Examination of student work revealed that the self was a starting point for their narratives, students remixed dominant narrative arcs, and students continually explored and pushed conventions of the artform” (from Kulinski’s paper, “Stories We Live By: Exploring Graphic Novels with High Schoolers.”)

a page from a student's visual journal depicting a comic book character named Split Johnson

One student—”Trey”—created the comic book character “Split Johnson,” heavily influenced by the character Two-Face from the 1990s TV series “Batman: The Animated Series.” Her Summer College students told Kulinski they wanted to explore the kinds of characters they would like to see in popular culture and that spoke to them. For “Trey,” his shadowy gangster/anti-hero character was a way to address his interest in a criminal justice career.

page from a student's visual journal that includes drawings of the same person at various ages and stages of life

Two students struck up a friendship while working together on a graphic novel that explored alternative versions of themselves. “Felix” created “Maja Wyzkiewicz” a 22-year-old archaeology student who enjoys debating, is “confident and focused” and wears patched-up clothes. “Maddie’s” alter ego—”Velma Thatcher”—is “a 14-year-old quirky middle schooler who is extremely confident in herself but misses social cues.” After developing their characters, the two students wondered what it would be like if Maja and Velma were to become roommates, so they collaborated “to explore what happens when these two worlds come together.”

a page from a student's visual journal that includes various drawings of "Velma Thatcher" a character envisioned during Summer College

In addition to her work on visual journaling, Kulinski’s research explores how the use of materials in art classes can offer a more equitable approach to art education. “The use of found objects, for instance, can open up students’ art making ideas and make art much more accessible. Art materials, after all, can be expensive, and there is an exclusivity to that,” she says.

Ever observant to student expression and storytelling, Kulinski adds that the use of found or recycled materials can provide “an opening for students to tell their stories and find their voice so they are empowered to create work that counters injustices in the world.”

or contact Rebecca Pettit, inquiry and application specialist, at rrpettit@syr.edu or 315.443.2956

  • Author

Martin Walls

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