All Bard News by Date
listings 1-9 of 9
August 2023
08-31-2023
The Bard Conservatory Orchestra presents a live symphony performance of the music from one of the most enduring films in cinema history with A Symphonic Night at The Movies: The Wizard of Oz. Conducted by James Bagwell, the orchestra’s rendition will accompany a recently remastered screening of the film, performing the film’s original songs by composer Harold Arlen and Academy Award-winning score by Herbert Stothart, accompanied by Judy Garland’s original 1939 studio recordings.
The event will take place in two viewings on Saturday, September 23, at 7 pm, and on Sunday, September 24, at 2 pm, in the Fisher Center’s Sosnoff Theater. Tickets start at $25 and sales benefit the Bard Conservatory Scholarship Fund.
To reserve tickets, please visit here.
The event will take place in two viewings on Saturday, September 23, at 7 pm, and on Sunday, September 24, at 2 pm, in the Fisher Center’s Sosnoff Theater. Tickets start at $25 and sales benefit the Bard Conservatory Scholarship Fund.
To reserve tickets, please visit here.
08-29-2023
Beginning in fall 2023, the Bard College Dance Program is launching a two-year partnership with Villa Albertine, a cultural institution that supports exchanges in arts and ideas between the United States, France, and beyond. Each semester, artists selected by Tara Lorenzen, director of Bard’s Dance Program, and Nicole Birmann Bloom, Villa Albertine’s program officer for the performing arts, in collaboration with Centre National de la Danse (CN D, Pantin, France) and other French choreographic centers, will teach technique and repertory courses in Bard’s dance curriculum.
“The Bard Dance Program is thrilled to partner with Villa Albertine,” said Lorenzen. “There has always been a robust exchange of innovative dance ideas between French-supported artists and the US and I look forward to continuing this tradition with the next generation of dance students here in Annandale.”
During the spring semester, a choreographer will conduct a one week creative residency in the Luma Theater/Fisher Center with a public showing for the Bard community and masterclasses for the student body. A unique component of this partnership allows Bard dance students to participate in the international dance platform CAMPING at the CN D in Pantin, France, each June. CN D is a public institution created in 1998, devoted to the preservation of choreographic and dance culture. Its distinctive CAMPING dance festival gives students the opportunity to work with choreographers from around the globe, perform their own choreographic projects, and develop teaching practices by conducting morning classes with their peers.
The partnership is launching during Albertine Dance Season, the year-long exploration of dance from inception to performance that includes multi-city tours by French, France-based, African, and Caribbean companies, artistic residencies for up-and-coming choreographers, a dance-themed symposium featuring global leaders in the field, and more.
“The team at Villa Albertine shares with Bard College the deepest appreciation of the true value of educational exchange and the enduring cultural benefits of arts in education,” said Gaëtan Bruel, cultural counselor and director of Villa Albertine. ” We have the greatest confidence that this two-year partnership will uniquely support and sustain Bard students in the enrichment of their arts experience while at Bard and shape their future artistry.”
Since 2009, the Bard Dance Program has hosted an in-residence dance company or performing arts organization bringing professional technique and composition to the academic program in the form of teaching, educational licensing projects, master classes, full-Company production residencies, and public performances.
This fall, choreographers and performers Marcela Santander (Chile/France) and Volmir Cordeiro (Brazil/France) will join the Dance faculty in Annandale-on-Hudson. Wanjiru Kamuyu (Kenya/France/USA) will have a discussion on September 18, 2023, based on her current touring project “An Immigrant’s Story” and her unique creative process.
“The Bard Dance Program is thrilled to partner with Villa Albertine,” said Lorenzen. “There has always been a robust exchange of innovative dance ideas between French-supported artists and the US and I look forward to continuing this tradition with the next generation of dance students here in Annandale.”
During the spring semester, a choreographer will conduct a one week creative residency in the Luma Theater/Fisher Center with a public showing for the Bard community and masterclasses for the student body. A unique component of this partnership allows Bard dance students to participate in the international dance platform CAMPING at the CN D in Pantin, France, each June. CN D is a public institution created in 1998, devoted to the preservation of choreographic and dance culture. Its distinctive CAMPING dance festival gives students the opportunity to work with choreographers from around the globe, perform their own choreographic projects, and develop teaching practices by conducting morning classes with their peers.
The partnership is launching during Albertine Dance Season, the year-long exploration of dance from inception to performance that includes multi-city tours by French, France-based, African, and Caribbean companies, artistic residencies for up-and-coming choreographers, a dance-themed symposium featuring global leaders in the field, and more.
“The team at Villa Albertine shares with Bard College the deepest appreciation of the true value of educational exchange and the enduring cultural benefits of arts in education,” said Gaëtan Bruel, cultural counselor and director of Villa Albertine. ” We have the greatest confidence that this two-year partnership will uniquely support and sustain Bard students in the enrichment of their arts experience while at Bard and shape their future artistry.”
Since 2009, the Bard Dance Program has hosted an in-residence dance company or performing arts organization bringing professional technique and composition to the academic program in the form of teaching, educational licensing projects, master classes, full-Company production residencies, and public performances.
This fall, choreographers and performers Marcela Santander (Chile/France) and Volmir Cordeiro (Brazil/France) will join the Dance faculty in Annandale-on-Hudson. Wanjiru Kamuyu (Kenya/France/USA) will have a discussion on September 18, 2023, based on her current touring project “An Immigrant’s Story” and her unique creative process.
08-22-2023
Maria Q. Simpson, professor of dance at Bard College, has launched Three Ballet Teachers... (3BT) in collaboration with Zvi Gotheiner and Hannah Wiley. 3BT is an online resource featuring video documentation of original ballet class choreography by the three contemporary ballet teachers. “The website provides teachers of all levels of experience with choreographed center-floor sequences that can be used in full or in part, or as inspiration for their own classes,” Simpson said. The project came out of the mutual belief among Simpson, Gotheiner, and Wiley that ballet class choreography represents a huge body of unrecognized creative work, and that this work should be accessible. “3BT is looking to both highlight and exalt the training space and the choreography that occurs there as representative of the living history of the art form,” Simpson said.
08-22-2023
Joining a growing list of fellows from Bard College, Bard faculty members Jessie Montgomery and Angelica Sanchez both received 2023 Civitella Ranieri Fellowships, spending their time in Umbria, Italy, working on individual projects and collaborating. Since 1995, Civitella Ranieri has hosted more than 1,000 fellows and director’s guests, including Bard faculty members Mary Caponegro and Jenny Xie, as well as Simon’s Rock alumna Alison Bechdel SR ’77, among others. Fellows are chosen through a nomination and jury process by a rotating group of distinguished artists, academics, and critics. They then spend four to six weeks living and working at the 15th-century castle the fellowship calls home.
“It has been great to have the time and space to work on these big projects surrounded by the beauty of the countryside, without the usual distractions that I face in the city,” said Montgomery, composer in residence at Bard College. “It has been especially nice to get to know my colleague, Angelica Sanchez, more as a person and artist. We are looking forward to a short upcoming presentation of a piece she wrote for violin and piano.” During her time at Civitella, Montgomery completed a new work for percussion quartet to be premiered at the Percussive Arts Society International Convention in November in Indianapolis. She is also at work on a new percussion concerto for Cynthia Yeh, principal percussionist of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Montgomery said she is looking forward to returning to Bard after this productive summer: “It will feel good to return to the academic year with new perspectives on my work and stronger connection to and understanding of our work.”
“My time at Civitella Ranieri has been wonderful,” said Sanchez, assistant professor of music. “Many Bard faculty have been fellows, and I’m happy to add my name to the list.” While at Civitella, Sanchez worked on a commission from the Jazz Gallery, to premiere this September. She is also at work on a piece for solo piano to debut in 2024. To have a Bard connection so far from home was not something she’d expected. “It was a nice surprise to meet Jesse Montgomery,” Sanchez said. “Her artistry inspired me to compose a piece for her that we will premiere at Civitella Ranieri.” Like Montgomery, Sanchez is excited about the prospect of translating her experience as a fellow back to Bard: “Having this uninterrupted time to work and develop my ideas has been invaluable to me, and I’m looking forward to sharing my experience at Civitella with Bard students.”
“It has been great to have the time and space to work on these big projects surrounded by the beauty of the countryside, without the usual distractions that I face in the city,” said Montgomery, composer in residence at Bard College. “It has been especially nice to get to know my colleague, Angelica Sanchez, more as a person and artist. We are looking forward to a short upcoming presentation of a piece she wrote for violin and piano.” During her time at Civitella, Montgomery completed a new work for percussion quartet to be premiered at the Percussive Arts Society International Convention in November in Indianapolis. She is also at work on a new percussion concerto for Cynthia Yeh, principal percussionist of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Montgomery said she is looking forward to returning to Bard after this productive summer: “It will feel good to return to the academic year with new perspectives on my work and stronger connection to and understanding of our work.”
“My time at Civitella Ranieri has been wonderful,” said Sanchez, assistant professor of music. “Many Bard faculty have been fellows, and I’m happy to add my name to the list.” While at Civitella, Sanchez worked on a commission from the Jazz Gallery, to premiere this September. She is also at work on a piece for solo piano to debut in 2024. To have a Bard connection so far from home was not something she’d expected. “It was a nice surprise to meet Jesse Montgomery,” Sanchez said. “Her artistry inspired me to compose a piece for her that we will premiere at Civitella Ranieri.” Like Montgomery, Sanchez is excited about the prospect of translating her experience as a fellow back to Bard: “Having this uninterrupted time to work and develop my ideas has been invaluable to me, and I’m looking forward to sharing my experience at Civitella with Bard students.”
08-15-2023
Sarah Hennies, visiting assistant professor of music at Bard College, has been awarded a Foundation for Contemporary Arts Emergency Grant. Hennies, who is a composer, received an emergency grant to support her premiere of two major compositions at the Darmstadt Summer Festival in Darmstadt, Germany, with performances in August. Hennies participated in the Darmstadt Summer Course, where her two new hour-long works were each premiered. French ensemble Dedalus performed Hennies’ Motor Tapes, a work inspired by findings of neuroscientists Oliver Sacks and Rodolfo Llinás, the latter who “speaks of ‘motor tapes’ in connection with our motoric memory and compares it with neuronal processes underlying human creativity.” Hennies’ other new work, Borrowed Light, written for and performed by New York string ensemble Mivos String Quartet, “derives from a technique developed by American Shakers to install windows in interior walls of buildings to let in light from adjacent rooms with exterior windows.”
The Foundation for Contemporary Arts (FCA) was founded by John Cage, Jasper Johns, and other artists in 1963 with a mission to encourage, sponsor, and promote innovative work in the arts created and presented by individuals, groups, and organizations working in dance, music/sound, performance art/theater, poetry, and the visual arts. FCA’s Emergency Grants provide urgent funding for visual and performing artists who have sudden, unanticipated opportunities to present their work to the public when there is insufficient time to seek other sources of funding, or who are set to incur unexpected or unbudgeted expenses for projects close to completion with committed exhibition or performance dates. Emergency Grants is the only active, multidisciplinary program that offers immediate, project-based assistance of this kind to artists living and working anywhere in the United States, for projects occurring in the US and abroad.
The Foundation for Contemporary Arts (FCA) was founded by John Cage, Jasper Johns, and other artists in 1963 with a mission to encourage, sponsor, and promote innovative work in the arts created and presented by individuals, groups, and organizations working in dance, music/sound, performance art/theater, poetry, and the visual arts. FCA’s Emergency Grants provide urgent funding for visual and performing artists who have sudden, unanticipated opportunities to present their work to the public when there is insufficient time to seek other sources of funding, or who are set to incur unexpected or unbudgeted expenses for projects close to completion with committed exhibition or performance dates. Emergency Grants is the only active, multidisciplinary program that offers immediate, project-based assistance of this kind to artists living and working anywhere in the United States, for projects occurring in the US and abroad.
08-15-2023
Inheritance, a new installation inspired by the 2020 film of the same name by Ephraim Asili MFA ’11, program director and associate professor of film and electronic arts at Bard, is on view at the Whitney Museum of American Art. In paintings, sculptures, videos, photos, and time-based media installations spanning from the 1970s to present day, the show is a meditation on the impacts of the past and legacies across the interwoven contexts of family, history, and aesthetics. “Inheritance reflects on multiple meanings of the word, whether celebratory or painful, from one era, person, or idea to the next,” reads the exhibit text. “The exhibition takes a layered approach to storytelling by interweaving narrative with documentary and personal experiences with historical and generational events.” The show, on view through February 2024, includes works by 43 leading artists, including Asili; An-My Lê, Charles Franklin Kellogg and Grace E. Ramsey Kellogg Professor in the Arts at Bard; Kevin Jerome Everson, former MFA visiting artist 2011; Kevin Beasley, former MFA visiting artist 2017; former MFA faculty in photography David Hartt and Emily Jacir, and WangShui, MFA ’19.
08-08-2023
“I met Laura Steele while studying photography at Bard College,” writes Alice Fall ’22. “Her steadiness, intelligence, wit, and engagement with the world is grounding and immediately magnetic. Laura’s constant reminder to me, both inside and out of school, has been to trust my vision and intuition. I’m thankful for her for bringing me back to myself, again and again.” In this conversation for Lenscratch, the Bard alumna and Bard faculty member talk about the contours of collaboration, the tension between creative work and the imperative to market that work, and how a given tool or artistic process can limit or liberate the art.
Read the Conversation in Lenscratch
Further Reading
Alice Fall ’22 Wins Second Place in Lenscratch Student Awards
Read the Conversation in Lenscratch
Further Reading
Alice Fall ’22 Wins Second Place in Lenscratch Student Awards
08-08-2023
Bard alumnus Dan Whitener ’09 MM ’12 plays banjo for Gangstagrass, a hip-hop and bluegrass group that Farah Stockman called “a band that is making music that actually unites us” in a New York Times opinion piece. At a time when American culture is especially polarized, Gangstagrass makes music that seeks to invite social cohesion rather than division, and hopes to alleviate people’s fear of one another. “Those who are lucky enough to stumble on their live shows are likely to get sucked in by the oddball energy. They have die-hard fans who came for the bluegrass and stayed for the rap, and vice versa. Instead of pitting rural America against urban America,” Stockman writes, “Gangstagrass tries to appeal to both at the same time.”
08-08-2023
Asher B. Edelman Professor in the Arts Joan Tower discusses more than 60 years of composing music, her inspirations (including visitations from dead composers), the changing landscape for women in composition, and her long tenure of teaching music at Bard with NPR’s music producer Tom Huizenga. When asked to describe her music, Tower confesses that it is hard to know one’s music but she can describe what she cares about. “My music is about rhythm, predominantly, the rhythm of ideas. And it's also organic, and it has a large-scale narrative. Usually, I only write in one movement, so I try to create an overall architecture for that one moment. It's also very important for me to be clear: I don't think my music ever gets complicated enough that you don't hear everything,” she says.
listings 1-9 of 9