All Bard News by Date
listings 1-13 of 13
August 2013
08-30-2013
Opus 40, the sculptural masterwork (now museum) of the late Bard alumnus and professor Harvey Fite '30, hosted the Felice County Fair last weekend, featuring Béla Fleck, the Felice Brothers, Amy Helm, and more.
08-23-2013
Independent theater companies like Skin Horse Theater are finding fertile ground for experimentation in the city.
08-22-2013
Bard Graduate Center founder and director Susan Weber talks about the books that inspire her in the field of interior design.
08-22-2013
Professor Heiferman, faculty in the International Center of Photography–Bard Program, discusses the proliferation of digital images and the rapidly changing nature of photography.
08-21-2013
“The first photo books that registered with me were a few Aperture titles at the bookstore at Bard College," writes Michelle Dunn Marsh. "Stephen Shore’s Uncommon Places, Larry Fink’s Social Graces ..."
08-16-2013
You may never look at a hamburger the same way again. “Despite the rather disgusting quality of many of these images," writes Feinstein, "there is still an allure.”
08-15-2013
How are conflicts and cultural shifts in the Middle East affecting the region's contemporary art? Dina Ramadan and colleagues explored this rapidly shifting area at a recent conference in London.
08-14-2013
Hannah Bronfman '11 is a woman of many talents—among them DJ, restaurateur, and brand creator. In this interview, she talks about her new mobile app and gives advice to enterprising college students.
08-11-2013
Bard Conservatory graduate Ming Aldrich-Gan '10 is the music director for Bradley Cole at the New York International Fringe Festival.
08-08-2013
Amii LeGendre writes about the complex interplay of freedom and constraint in teaching dance to men who are prison inmates.
08-07-2013
Over the past decade, Bard’s Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts has become a hub for the arts, both for the Hudson Valley community and the greater New York City region.
08-02-2013
"Both exhibitions are strong individually," writes Roberta Smith, "but what they form in tandem is a delirious, perhaps volatile exegesis on objects both real and digital; found, made and remade; art and nonart."
08-01-2013
Bard alumnus, performer, screenwriter, and playwright Nick Jones '01 talks about how the Netflix approach of making an entire series available at once enables a different kind of viewing experience.
listings 1-13 of 13