Wednesday, December 9, 2009

This Week At Metro: Graduates cover a broad spectrum of experiences, Adesola Owolabi


An artist, a soccer coach, an entrepreneur, and an anthropologist are among the 1,066 students expected to receive their diploma at the commencement ceremony at 2 p.m. on Sunday at the Colorado Convention Center. Their journeys represent a sampling of the widely varied experiences of Metro State students in earning their college degrees.

Adesola Owolabi
Adesola Owolabi's (Ad-dee-sola O-wo-la-bee) husband thought she was crazy when she decided to switch her studies from computer information systems to art with an emphasis in ceramics. It started in 2006 with a simple glance into a ceramics class. From that point, she was hooked. On Sunday, the 35-year-old Nigerian-born art major will graduate from Metro State.

When her husband Bola, a 2001 Metro State grad in engineering technology, took a software engineer job in Kansas City, Missouri in 2007, the couple created a plan where she could remain in Denver to finish her program. Adesola stayed in Denver with their son, Justin, who was three at the time. Then they had another son, Jordan, who stays with Bola. It has worked, but Adesola is looking forward to joining her husband in Kansas City. She also plans to go to graduate school.

She is exhibiting her work, along with that of other students, at the BFA Thesis Exhibitions that run through Dec. 10 at the Center for Visual Art. Her exhibit "Ikoko Ibile" features a series of vessels -- averaging two feet tall -- which take a critical view of decoration within her cultural identity, the Yoruba culture.

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