Division of the Arts News by Date
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July 2024
07-30-2024
Bard College’s Division of the Arts is pleased to announce the appointment of Ivan Lopez Munuera as Assistant Professor of Architecture. His appointment will begin in the fall of the 2024–25 academic year. Ivan L. Munuera is a New York–based scholar, critic, and curator working at the intersection of culture, technology, politics, and bodily practices in the modern period and on the global stage. His research has been generously sponsored by Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies and Canadian Centre for Architecture. In 2020, Munuera was awarded the Harold W. Dodds Fellowship at Princeton University. This fellowship recognizes scholars displaying the highest academic excellence and professional promise. Munuera has presented his work at various conferences and academic forums, such as the Society of Architectural Historians, Association for Art History, European Architectural History Network, Cornell AAP, Columbia GSAPP, Princeton University, Cooper Union, Penn University, Sussex University, the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London, Université de Montréal, Het Nieuwe Instituut, Manchester University, Politecnico di Milano, CIVA Brussels, Willem de Kooning Academy, UTS Sydney, University of Texas, University of Virginia, MICA, and ETSAM, among others. His work has been published in the Journal for Architectural Education (JAE), The Journal of Architecture (RIBA), Log, Perspecta, Thresholds, The Architect’s Newspaper, ARCH+, e-flux, Domus, and El País, among others. Munuera has curated several exhibitions and developed a series of projects that have been presented internationally at numerous venues including the 2023 and 2021 Venice Architecture Biennales.
07-30-2024
“The first question they ask when you want to start making a film is: who is your target audience?” said Ephraim Asili MFA ’11, associate professor and director of film and electronic arts, in an interview with ArtReview. Touching on topics as broad as the history of the avant-garde and the three-act structure functioning as a “cage,” Asili was also asked what defines the “Asili method.” His answer was that it all came back to that question of audience and, for Asili, the desire to make movies that would please him as a viewer. “I want to make something to the best of my ability that is compelling to me, as compelling as I can make it for myself, and then I assume that it might be interesting to other people.”
07-23-2024
Bard Architecture has selected Farah Alkhoury as its 2024–26 Architectural Fellow. Alkhoury, an Iraqi spatial designer and researcher, will join the College this fall for two academic years. Alkhoury’s work examines environmental violence and political entanglements as consequential to architecture and spatial thinking. Her work has been exhibited at the Venice Architecture Biennale 2023 and the Jewish Museum in New York. During her fellowship at Bard, Alkoury will work on the project: “Occupied Ecologies: Architecture of Toxic Proliferation”, which attends to the presence of military toxicity that remains embedded in the soil, water, and air long after wars end. This design research traces depleted uranium’s infrastructural, spatial, and material effects across three interconnected ecologies within Iraq, Puerto Rico, and the United States, engaging with activism that emerges against invisible forms of environmental violence. She will also have the opportunity to teach a total of three courses each academic year taught through the lens of her research. Alkhoury’s residency will culminate in a public presentation of her research work in the form of an exhibition, an event, or other form.
Bard Architecture’s two-year fellowship is awarded biennially to an emerging architect, urban designer, landscape architect or other spatial practitioner whose creative work and research advances new cultures of design that address a larger public. The fellowship is intended to support those embarking on a career in research and design pedagogy and to provide a context in which to develop new modes of thought relevant to the urgencies of the present.
Bard Architecture’s two-year fellowship is awarded biennially to an emerging architect, urban designer, landscape architect or other spatial practitioner whose creative work and research advances new cultures of design that address a larger public. The fellowship is intended to support those embarking on a career in research and design pedagogy and to provide a context in which to develop new modes of thought relevant to the urgencies of the present.
07-09-2024
Bard alumna Tiffany Sia ’10 thinks and works across text and film. Her newest book, On and Off-Screen Imaginaries, is a collection of six essays that grapple with the complexities of post-colonial experience. The first three essays focus on new Hong Kong cinema and examine the national security policies, censorship, surveillance that followed Hong Kong’s mass protests in 2019 and 2020. The second half of the book “abruptly drifts toward other geographies, specifically the US, as I challenge how dominant Asian American aesthetics conceive of a falsely unified imaginary of Asia and its politics,” says Sia. She reimagines the work of Vietnamese American photographer An-My Lê in one essay and the work of Taiwanese filmmaker King Hu in another. “The essays trace a shift in my focus beyond Hong Kong––toward the ‘elsewhere’ sites of the Cold War, such as Vietnam, Taiwan, and even Lithuania and Turkey, in brief mention––and facile East-West tensions to illuminate a lattice of North-South tensions and their vexing histories and politics,” says Sia, who recently won the prestigious 2024 Art Baloise Prize, which carries an award of approximately $33,400.
07-08-2024
Bard College will receive a $50,006 grant as part of New York State’s Higher Education Capital Matching Grant Program, which supports projects at colleges and universities across the state by providing construction and renovation of laboratory and research spaces, the purchase of instructional technologies and equipment, and other significant investments. The grant will support the purchase of pianos and equipment for Bard’s László Z. Bitó Conservatory building. The equipment will be available to Bard’s community of students, faculty, and staff, as well as to the greater Hudson Valley community that participates in the opportunities Bard provides for learning, enrichment, and enjoyment. “New York’s colleges and universities are second to none, offering students unparalleled opportunities to learn, explore, and prepare to launch their careers,” Governor Hochul said. “With this funding, my administration is reaffirming our commitment to providing our students—including those at our private, not-for-profit institutions—with a top-tier, New York education with the best possible resources and facilities that will help them succeed inside and outside of the classroom.”
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