Division of the Arts News by Date
Results 1-4 of 4
November 2025
11-25-2025
My Town, a semi-autobiographical show written by Bard Assistant Professor of Theater and Performance Jack Ferver, was reviewed in the New York Times. The play, a one-person retelling of Our Town by Thornton Wilder, follows a schoolteacher and interrogates rural American life through dance-theater. Gia Kourlas writes that My Town, which Ferver performed at NYU Skirball last week, is “purposefully enigmatic” and “a feat of constant storytelling and choreography.”
Ferver discusses their inspirations for My Town, including industrialization, Martha Graham’s choreography, and the Wizard of Oz. They say the questions that animate Our Town, and by extension My Town, are, ‘How are you living? And are you really paying attention? Are you present?’”
Bard’s Theater and Performance Program offers an interdisciplinary, liberal arts-based approach to the making and study of theater and performance, and embraces a wide range of performance practices, from live art and interactive installation to classical theater from around the globe.
Ferver discusses their inspirations for My Town, including industrialization, Martha Graham’s choreography, and the Wizard of Oz. They say the questions that animate Our Town, and by extension My Town, are, ‘How are you living? And are you really paying attention? Are you present?’”
Bard’s Theater and Performance Program offers an interdisciplinary, liberal arts-based approach to the making and study of theater and performance, and embraces a wide range of performance practices, from live art and interactive installation to classical theater from around the globe.
Photo: Assistant Professor Jack Ferver.
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Dance,Division of the Arts,Theater and Performance Program |
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Dance,Division of the Arts,Theater and Performance Program |
11-18-2025
Assistant Professor of Art History and Visual Culture Anne Hunnell Chen was recognized with the 2025 Award for “Outstanding Professional Advancing Open Access to Cultural Heritage” from the Wikimedia Foundation. This international award was given for Chen’s work on the International Digital Dura-Europos Archive (IDEA), which she founded. IDEA is an initiative using digital tools and a Linked Open Data set (LOD) to facilitate archaeological knowledge about the Dura-Europos site in Syria, funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
The awarding committee said, “Anne Chen’s work is worthy of the highest recognition, by the advanced use of LOD methods, the sheer scope of collaboration between the digital humanities and across Wikimedia projects, and the focus on an immensely important and underrepresented cultural geography like Syria.” They also recognized the importance of her work at the present moment, “when the organizations that helped fund this work are currently being severely defunded.”
The Art History and Visual Culture Program at Bard introduces students to visual material across a broad range of periods and societies.
The awarding committee said, “Anne Chen’s work is worthy of the highest recognition, by the advanced use of LOD methods, the sheer scope of collaboration between the digital humanities and across Wikimedia projects, and the focus on an immensely important and underrepresented cultural geography like Syria.” They also recognized the importance of her work at the present moment, “when the organizations that helped fund this work are currently being severely defunded.”
The Art History and Visual Culture Program at Bard introduces students to visual material across a broad range of periods and societies.
Photo: Professor Anne Hunnell Chen.
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Art History and Visual Culture,Bard Undergraduate Programs,Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Art History and Visual Culture,Bard Undergraduate Programs,Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
11-05-2025
In an op-ed for the New York Times, Distinguished Visiting Writer M. Gessen wrote about how Americans can learn from citizens of other countries that grapple with human rights issues. Speaking to Jewish citizens of Israel, Gessen discusses what it means to benefit from government actions one disagrees with. Gessen spoke with Michael Sfard, a human rights lawyer who represents Palestinians in Israeli courts, and Ella Keidar Greenberg, who refused to enlist in the Israeli army. “Being an idle bystander is doing something,” Greenberg says of her decision. “I’m either maintaining the system or dismantling it.”
“To be a good citizen of a bad state, one has to do scary things,” Gessen concludes. “It may be using your body to shield someone more vulnerable, [or] withdrawing your economic cooperation, weighing… flying under the radar against taking a risk.”
“To be a good citizen of a bad state, one has to do scary things,” Gessen concludes. “It may be using your body to shield someone more vulnerable, [or] withdrawing your economic cooperation, weighing… flying under the radar against taking a risk.”
Photo: M. Gessen. Photo by Lena Di
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs,Division of the Arts,Russian Independent Media Archive (RIMA),Written Arts Program |
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs,Division of the Arts,Russian Independent Media Archive (RIMA),Written Arts Program |
11-05-2025
Bard College Artist in Residence Jeffrey Gibson was featured in the Financial Times ahead of his recent exhibition coinciding with Art Basel Paris. Gibson reflects on the trajectory of his artistic career, following his ups and downs before becoming the first Indigenous artist to represent the US at the Venice Biennale in 2024. Gibson shares that he nearly abandoned art in his 40s before moving to the Hudson Valley, finding his current studio, and beginning to experiment with his current “psycho-prismatic” art.
Gibson’s art includes sensory objects like flashes, jingle dress dance, and op-art patterns to produce a feeling of “luminous, multisensory release.” His upcoming show This Is Dedicated To The One I Love is focused on bright paintings inspired by prisms and nebulas. These pieces reflect his childhood, which he spent surrounded by many different cultures, and impart the sense that humanity is “encased by this planet… on the same, massive, phenomenal organism.”
Gibson’s art includes sensory objects like flashes, jingle dress dance, and op-art patterns to produce a feeling of “luminous, multisensory release.” His upcoming show This Is Dedicated To The One I Love is focused on bright paintings inspired by prisms and nebulas. These pieces reflect his childhood, which he spent surrounded by many different cultures, and impart the sense that humanity is “encased by this planet… on the same, massive, phenomenal organism.”
Photo: Artist in Residence Jeffrey Gibson. Photo by Brian Barlow
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs,Division of the Arts,Studio Arts Program |
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs,Division of the Arts,Studio Arts Program |
Results 1-4 of 4