All Bard News by Date
listings 1-13 of 13
November 2018
11-30-2018
New Annandale House, the two-story multipurpose media studio that houses the Bard College Center for Experimental Humanities, has won a New York Design Gold Award from DRIVENxDESIGN.
11-22-2018
One of New York City’s most exciting young theater companies, New Saloon, founded by three Bard alumni, returns to Bard with their kaleidoscopic adaptation of Uncle Vanya.
11-21-2018
The Bard College Conservatory Orchestra performs at the Fisher Center on Saturday, December 1, at 8:00 p.m. with guest conductor Xian Zhang.
11-18-2018
Interdisciplinary artist Alisha Wormsley MFA ‘19, whose work is inspired by the collective memory of African American culture, will receive a $15,000 prize with the award.
11-17-2018
Eva LeWitt ‘07 talks about studying sculpture with Judy Pfaff at Bard, founding an artists’ residency in Italy, and how art is in her DNA.
11-17-2018
CCS Bard’s Tom Eccles and Luma Foundation’s Maja Hoffmann pen the introduction for the book accompanying the exhibition presented at the Parc des Ateliers, Luma Arles and at CCS Bard.
11-15-2018
Josephine Sacabo’s solo exhibit in New Orleans, Tagged, responds to the everyday misogyny of graffiti in the streets.
11-12-2018
Award-winning actress and filmmaker Isabella Rossellini talks about her new theatrical lecture on the science of animal minds. She will perform "Link Link Circus" on November 17 at 7:30 p.m.
11-10-2018
TŌN's free concert series will offer two performances led by associate conductor James Bagwell and one led by resident conductor Zachary Schwartzman during the holiday season.
11-09-2018
Matalon's hire fulfills the museum’s commitment to furthering community outreach through exhibitions and maintaining a feminist perspective in its curatorial practice.
11-09-2018
As part of BGC's Agents of Faith exhibition, Adrián Viajero Román built an altar for those who have died crossing the Mexican border or were victims of Hurricane Maria.
11-09-2018
When the composer Joan Tower went to Bennington College to study music, her teachers told her she needed to compose something.
“So I wrote a piece,” she recalled recently, laughing, “and it was a disaster from beginning to end. I said, ‘I know I can do better than that.’ So I did that for the next 40 years, trying to create a piece that wasn’t a disaster.”
Read the full article from the New York Times
“So I wrote a piece,” she recalled recently, laughing, “and it was a disaster from beginning to end. I said, ‘I know I can do better than that.’ So I did that for the next 40 years, trying to create a piece that wasn’t a disaster.”
Read the full article from the New York Times
11-09-2018
Joan Tower, Asher B. Edelman Professor in the Arts, talks with the New York Times about her more than 50-year career as a composer and educator, and the milestone of turning 80 this fall.
listings 1-13 of 13