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Bard Professor Bryson Rand Receives Ellis-Beauregard Residency

Bard Professor Bryson Rand Receives Ellis-Beauregard Residency

The residency will support Bryson’s development of his ongoing body of work, A Need to Leave the Water Knows.
Read More →
a woman in white with black boots sits in a studio surrounded by colorful paintings

Mira Dancy ’01 Featured in the Financial Times

The article discusses how artists are still navigating the devastation of the Los Angeles fires a year later.
Read More →
Bard Professor Sarah Hennies Receives Civitella Ranieri Music Fellowship

Bard Professor Sarah Hennies Receives Civitella Ranieri Music Fellowship

The fellowship takes place in a 15th century castle in the Umbrian region of Italy and will allow Hennies the free time and space to conduct her music work amidst an international cohort of other creatives.
Read More →

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February 2021

02-01-2021
Fisher Center at Bard’s Spring 2021 Season Presents New Music and Performance Programs Through Its Virtual Stage, UPSTREAMING
Continuing its commitment to bring the world’s boldest artists and most exciting projects to audiences beyond the walls of our building, the Fisher Center at Bard announces its spring 2021 season of music and performance. The Fisher Center’s virtual stage, UPSTREAMING, extends its programming into the new year with As Far As Isolation Goes (Online), an interactive, one-on-one performance from live artist Tania El Khoury, cocurator of last season’s Live Arts Bard Biennial, and the new director of the OSUN Center for Human Rights and the Arts, based at Bard; The Future Is Present, a project intended to model community building with a focus on intimacy and discourse; as well as streamed concerts from The Orchestra Now and the Bard Conservatory College Orchestra; The Sound of Spring, a Chinese New Year celebration, from the US-China Music Institute, and a recital of French music with Piers Lane and Danny Driver, commissioned by the Bard Music Festival.

All events are available on UPSTREAMING, the Fisher Center’s virtual stage, adding to an already robust selection of archival HD opera recordings and contextual materials.

Reserve online or call the box office at 845-758-7900. Box office hours: Monday–Friday, 11 a.m. – 4 p.m. EST.

Program information

THE FUTURE IS PRESENT
Ongoing

In late 2020, artists Charlotte Brathwaite, Justin Hicks, Janani Balasubramanian, Sunder Ganglani, June Cross, and Alyssa Simmons initiated The Future Is Present: A Casting the Vote Project, a high-impact, liberatory media project. Across seven weeks, a small community of Black and Indigenous young artists/activists and a small community of young artists from Bard College (Adrian Costa, Megan Lacy, Cam Orr, Anya Petkovich, Taty Rozetta, Hakima SmithStone, Dani Wilder, and Mengchen Zhang) virtually cultivated intimacy and discourse. Over the course of these weeks, the youth cohort created demands on our collective future; now a process of amplifying those demands is underway. Using the youth cohort’s words to inspire scenes, animations, and other moving-image fragments, the Bard artists created a film for the youth cohort, to be released in February, as part of an ongoing collaborative process.

An introductory video, released on UPSTREAMING following the 2021 presidential inauguration, is an invitation for people to participate on terms that make sense in their communities.


TANIA EL KHOURY AND BASEL ZARAA
AS FAR AS ISOLATION GOES (ONLINE)
February 24 – March 21
Very limited availability
ZOOM
$20 ($5 Bard student tickets available through the Passloff Pass)

An online, interactive, one-on-one performance brings audience members into contact with people experiencing inhumane detention centers and a mental health system that disregards their political and emotional humanity. A collaboration between live artist Tania El Khoury and musician and street artist Basel Zaraa, and reimagined for an online context during the coronavirus lockdown, the piece builds on an earlier collaboration, As Far As My Fingertips Take Me, in which El Khoury commissioned Zaraa to record a rap song inspired by the journey his sisters made from Damascus to Sweden.

In As Far As Isolation Goes, Zaraa and El Khoury worked together to create another iteration of their previous piece focused on the mental and physical health experiences of refugees in the United Kingdom. Zaraa created a song inspired by conversations with friends and colleagues who have recently claimed refuge in the UK.


THE ORCHESTRA NOW (TŌN)
The Orchestra Now’s 2021 Season features livestreamed virtual concerts including a world premiere by Sarah Hennies, visiting assistant professor of music at Bard; Popcorn Superhet Receiver by Jonny Greenwood (Radiohead); Maestro Leon Botstein conducting Schoenberg and Bach; and more. All concerts, which are livestreamed from the Sosnoff Theater at the Fisher Center at Bard, are free, but reservations are required.

SCHOENBERG & BACH
Sunday, February 7 at 2 p.m. EST
Leon Botstein conductor

TŌN Music Director Leon Botstein kicks off the spring season with J.S. Bach’s third Brandenburg Concerto and Arnold Schoenberg’s romantic tone poem Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night). Also on the program are works for string orchestra by Venezuelan composer Teresa Carreño and Polish composer Witold Lutosławski.

J.S. Bach Brandenburg Concerto No. 3
Witold Lutosławski Funeral Music
Teresa Carreño Serenade for Strings
Arnold Schoenberg Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night)


NEW & CLASSIC WORKS FOR STRINGS
Sunday, February 21 at 2 p.m. EST
James Bagwell conductor

This concert features the world premiere of a new work by composer Sarah Hennies, visiting assistant professor of music at Bard; and the 2005 piece Popcorn Superhet Receiver by Radiohead guitarist Jonny Greenwood, which was used in the film There Will Be Blood. The program also includes Edvard Grieg’s classic Holberg Suite and a popular work by Vaughan Williams.

Sarah Hennies New Work TBA
Jonny Greenwood Popcorn Superhet Receiver
Ralph Vaughan Williams Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis
Edvard Grieg Holberg Suite


ANDRÉS RIVAS CONDUCTS THE ORCHESTRA NOW
Sunday, March 7 at 2 p.m. EST

TŌN Assistant Conductor Andrés Rivas leads this March concert by The Orchestra Now, livestreamed online for free from the Sosnoff Theater at the Fisher Center at Bard. Music on the program will be announced in the weeks preceding the concert.


ZACHARY SCHWARTZMAN CONDUCTS THE ORCHESTRA NOW
Saturday, March 20 at 8 p.m. EST

TŌN Resident Conductor Zachary Schwartzman leads this March concert by The Orchestra Now, livestreamed online for free from the Sosnoff Theater at the Fisher Center at Bard. Music on the program will be announced in the weeks preceding the concert.


AN APRIL CONCERT WITH LEON BOTSTEIN
Saturday, April 10 at 8 p.m. EST

TŌN Music Director Leon Botstein leads this April concert by The Orchestra Now, livestreamed online for free from the Sosnoff Theater at the Fisher Center at Bard. Music on the program will be announced in the weeks preceding the concert.


A MAY CONCERT WITH LEON BOTSTEIN
Saturday, May 1 at 8 p.m. EST

TŌN Music Director Leon Botstein leads this May concert by The Orchestra Now, livestreamed online for free from the Sosnoff Theater at the Fisher Center at Bard. Music on the program will be announced in the weeks preceding the concert.


THE US-CHINA MUSIC INSTITUTE
THE SOUND OF SPRING
Saturday, February 13 at 8 p.m. EST
Prerecorded concert streamed online
Free; reservations required

A concert of symphonic music to celebrate the Lunar New Year, featuring a new performance by The Orchestra Now conducted by Jindong Cai, along with performances from orchestras in Asia including the China NCPA Orchestra and the Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra.

This year’s concert will carry a message of hope, renewal, and new beginnings, in the spirit of the Chinese New Year tradition of the spring festival.


BARD MUSIC FESTIVAL
FRENCH MUSIC RECITAL
Pre-recorded recital streamed on demand February 19–25
$15, $25, $35 ($5 Bard student tickets available through the Passloff Pass)

A recital of French music with Danny Driver and Piers Lane commissioned by the Bard Music Festival, featuring works by César Franck, Lili Boulanger, Gabriel Fauré, and Camille Saint-Saëns.


BARD COLLEGE CONSERVATORY ORCHESTRA
Saturday, March 13 at 8 p.m. EST
Livestreamed from the Sosnoff Theater
Free; reservations required

Leon Botstein and Andrés Rivas lead the Bard College Conservatory of Music in a program with works by Richard Strauss, William Grant Still, Ellen Taaffe Zwilich, and Peter Illych Tchaikovsky.


About UPSTREAMING, the Fisher Center’s virtual stage, Archival Discoveries, and New Commissions for the Digital Sphere
UPSTREAMING broadens the Fisher Center’s commitment to reaching audiences far beyond the physical walls of our building, and offers new ways for us to engage with artists. Launched in April 2020, UPSTREAMING has released new content, including digital commissions, virtual events, and beloved performances and rich contextual materials from the archives of the SummerScape Opera, as well as Bard Music Festival’s 30-year history. UPSTREAMING highlights different aspects of the breadth of programming the Fisher Center offers. New releases are announced via the Fisher Center’s weekly newsletter. To receive those updates and stay connected to UPSTREAMING, join the mailing list here.
#UPSTREAMINGFC

ABOUT THE FISHER CENTER AT BARD
The Fisher Center at Bard develops, produces, and presents performing arts across disciplines through new productions and context-rich programs that challenge and inspire. As a premier professional performing arts center and a hub for research and education, the Fisher Center supports artists, students, and audiences in the development and examination of artistic ideas, offering perspectives from the past and present, as well as visions of the future. The Fisher Center demonstrates Bard’s commitment to the performing arts as a cultural and educational necessity. Home is the Fisher Center for the Performing Arts, designed by Frank Gehry and located on the campus of Bard College in New York’s Hudson Valley. The Fisher Center offers outstanding programs to many communities, including the students and faculty of Bard College, and audiences in the Hudson Valley, New York City, across the country, and around the world. Building on a 160-year history as a competitive and innovative undergraduate institution, Bard is committed to enriching culture, public life, and democratic discourse by training tomorrow’s thought leaders.
# # #
(2.1.21)
fishercenter.bard.edu
Photo: Leon Botstein Conducts the Bard College Conservatory Orchestra. Photo c/o Bard Conservatory
Meta: Type(s): Event | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Leon Botstein,Music,Music Festival,The Orchestra Now,Theater and Performance Program,UPSTREAMING Archive,US-China Music Institute | Institutes(s): Bard Conservatory of Music,Bard Music Festival,Bard Undergraduate Programs,Fisher Center,The Orchestra Now,U.S.-China Music Institute |
02-01-2021
Bard Professor Susan Aberth and Curator Tere Arcq Publish First Book Dedicated to Newly Discovered Tarot Set Created by Surrealist Artist Leonora Carrington
The British-born artist Leonora Carrington (1917–2011) is one of the more fascinating figures to emerge from the Surrealist movement. The magical themes of Carrington’s otherworldly paintings are well-known, but the recent discovery of a suite of tarot designs she created for the Major Arcana was a revelation for scholars and fans of Carrington alike. Susan Aberth, Edith C. Blum Professor of Art History and Visual Culture at Bard College, and curator Tere Arcq examine their new discovery in The Tarot of Leonora Carrington (Fulgur Press, 2020). 

“Once we saw the tarot, we immediately knew that this was very important to the iconography,” says Professor Aberth. “For many years, people thought her work was playful, a bit like fairy tales. But it’s a very serious study of esoteric principles—primary among them the tarot.”
Full Story in Artnet
More about the Book
Photo: The Tarot of Leonora Carrington (Fulgur Press, 2020). Cover detail.
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Art History and Visual Culture,Division of Social Studies,Division of the Arts,Gender and Sexuality Studies,Theology Concentration | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |

January 2021

01-28-2021
Yebel Gallegos Joins Bard College Dance Faculty, Cameron McKinney and Alanna Morris-Van Tassel Named Gibney/Bard Teaching Artists for Spring 2021
The Bard College Dance Program is pleased to announce that Yebel Gallegos, a dance artist from El Paso, Texas, will be joining the Bard Dance Program faculty in fall 2021.

“I am looking forward to Yebel joining the dance faculty at Bard,” said Maria Simpson, director of the Dance Program at Bard. “His accomplishments as an artist in the U.S. and Mexico and his research into the history of dance in Mexico through the lens of border politics, are a robust combination that I am certain will draw students to his courses and colleagues to collaborative projects.”
Cameron McKinney. Photo by Rachel Neville Photography
Cameron McKinney. Photo by Rachel Neville Photography

Cameron McKinney and Alanna Morris-Van Tassel will be the spring 2021 Bard Dance Program/Gibney Partnership Teaching Fellows. McKinney and Morris-Van Tassel will be teaching the Intermediate/Advanced Modern and Dance Repertory courses. The Bard/Gibney Partnership was launched in fall 2020 by the Bard Dance Program and GIBNEY, a New York City–based dance and social justice organization led by Founder, Artistic Director, and CEO Gina Gibney. The Partnership provides unique opportunities for Bard students to work closely with Gibney’s resident dance troupe, Gibney Company, a commission-based, repertory company that works with renowned and rising international choreographers representing a broad range of aesthetics and techniques. For more information, visit dance.bard.edu/gibney.

“We are very excited to have Cameron and Alanna on board for the spring semester,” said Simpson. “Each represents a unique and dynamic boundary-pushing point of view in their work in Dance and I am thrilled that the students will have the opportunity to work with them this spring.”
Alanna Morris-Van Tassel
Alanna Morris-Van Tassel. Photo by Kari Mosel

Yebel Gallegos, a dance artist from El Paso, Texas, played an important role in the founding of Cressida Danza Contemporánea in Yucatán, Mexico. During his time in Cressida Danza he served as dancer, company teacher, rehearsal director, and academic coordinator for the Conservatorio de Danza de Yucatán. While in Mexico, he also helped in the creation and implementation of the Festival Yucatán Escénica, an international contemporary dance festival hosted by Cressida Danza. Yebel recently concluded a six-year tenure working full time with the Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company, based in Salt Lake City, Utah. While in Utah, he also involved himself in projects with local artists, as well as teaching various population groups in Utah and across the United States. He has performed work from artists such as; Twyla Tharp, Doug Varone, Ann Carlson, Daniel Charon, Stephen Koester, Netta Yerushalmy, Claudia LaVista, Joanna Kotze, Jonah Bokaer, among others. Yebel has had the fortune to travel internationally as a performer and educator to countries such as; South Korea, Mongolia, France, Austria, and Chile. He earned his BFA in dance, both from the University of Texas at Austin and from the Escuela Profesional de Danza de Mazatlán, directed by Delfos Dance Company. He currently resides in Seattle, WA, where he is expected to receive his Master in Fine Arts degree from the University of Washington in the Spring of 2021.

Cameron McKinney, the artistic director of Kizuna Dance, is a New York City-based choreographer and educator. With over 15 years of Japanese language study, he created Kizuna Dance with the mission of using contemporary floorwork to create works that celebrate the Japanese culture. He was recently selected as a 2019-20 U.S.-Japan Friendship Commission Creative Artist Fellow to collaborate with renowned Japanese choreographer Toru Shimazaki and present work in showcases in Japan alongside the 2020/2021 Tokyo Olympic Games’ events. He is a 2020 Ann & Weston Hicks Choreography Fellow at The School at Jacob’s Pillow (under the direction of Dianne McIntyre and Risa Steinbeirg), a 2017-18 Alvin Ailey Foundation New Directions Choreography Lab Fellow, and a 2018 Asian Cultural Council Individual Grantee. Through Kizuna Dance, Cameron has presented work and taught in fifteen states and in Japan, Mexico, France, and the UK. His commissions include Princeton University, twice from the Joffrey Ballet School, twice from the Let’s Dance International Frontiers Festival, The Dance Gallery Festival, LIU Brooklyn, CREATE:ART, The Thacher School, and SUNY Brockport, among numerous others. His teaching credits include Adjunct Lecturer positions at Princeton University and Queensborough Community College, and he has taught on faculty at Gibney Dance since 2016. He has also taught on faculty at the Joffrey Dance School, the Charlotte Dance Festival, the Tennessee Dance Festival, the Southern Vermont Dance Festival, and Williamsburg Movement and Arts Center. He is currently building Nagare Technique, a training module that blends street dance styles and contemporary floorwork. Through Kizuna Dance’s new Culture Commissions program, he also directly supports emerging artists through commissions for new works created through research-oriented explorations into the Japanese culture.

Brooklyn native and Saint Paul-based artist Alanna Morris-Van Tassel, is a dancer, choreographer, educator, and artist organizer whose work excavates cultural retention and fragmentation within Caribbean diasporic identity. Morris Van Tassel was named one of Dance Magazine's “25 to Watch!” for 2018 and City Pages’ Artist of the Year for 2018. She was a featured dancer with Minnesota-based dance company TU Dance (2007-2017), a TU Dance Artistic Associate (2020), and is a current advisor to Springboard Danse Montreal. Her self-produced solo project,“Yam, Potatoe an Fish!” was named Star Tribune’s Best of Dance (2018) and earned her City Pages’ Best Choreographer (2019).

Morris-Van Tassel is artistic director of Alanna Morris-Van Tassel Productions (AMVTP), founded in 2017 to produce dance, education, and community-building initiatives. She was a 2015 McKnight Dance Fellow. Morris-Van Tassel is a graduate of Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts in New York City and holds a BFA in Dance from The Juilliard School. She is currently building a performance art project, Black Light, which explores the nobility of black-ness, divine feminine expression, and primordial creativity. alannamvt.com.

For more information about the Bard Dance Program, please visit dance.bard.edu.

About Bard College
Founded in 1860, Bard College is a four-year residential college of the liberal arts and sciences located 90 miles north of New York City. With the addition of the Montgomery Place estate, Bard’s campus consists of nearly 1,000 parklike acres in the Hudson River Valley. It offers bachelor of arts, bachelor of science, and bachelor of music degrees, with majors in nearly 40 academic programs; graduate degrees in 11 programs; eight early colleges; and numerous dual-degree programs nationally and internationally. Building on its 160-year history as a competitive and innovative undergraduate institution, Bard College has expanded its mission as a private institution acting in the public interest across the country and around the world to meet broader student needs and increase access to liberal arts education. The undergraduate program at our main campus in upstate New York has a reputation for scholarly excellence, a focus on the arts, and civic engagement. Bard is committed to enriching culture, public life, and democratic discourse by training tomorrow’s thought leaders. For more information about Bard College, visit bard.edu.
Read More
Photo: Yebel Gallegos. Photo by Steve Korn
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Dance Program,Division of the Arts,Inclusive Excellence | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
01-27-2021
Marvel Honors the Legendary Chris Claremont ’72 with Anniversary Special
For the past 50 years, Bard alumnus Chris Claremont ’72 has graced the Marvel Universe with his brilliant storytelling—creating and defining some of its most iconic heroes and building the framework for one of its most treasured franchises. In the Chris Claremont Anniversary Special, the acclaimed writer returns to the world of the X-Men with a brand-new story.

 
Read More at Marvel
See the Issue
Photo: 'Chris Claremont Anniversary Special' 1 (2021) #1. Marvel Comics. Cover detail; art by Salvador Larroca.
Meta: Type(s): Alumni | Subject(s): Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
01-27-2021
Visiting Assistant Professor of Writing and Photography Luc Sante and Photography Professor Tim Davis Explore New York City’s Reservoirs in Upstate New York in Four-Part Photo Essay Series in <em>Places Journal </em>
“The trauma imposed by these land seizures is still felt, even as nearly nine million people depend daily on the water system,” the series introduction states. “New York’s reservoirs exemplify the social compact that undergirds ambitious public infrastructures, while the stories of their making emphasize divisions between city and country, wealth and poverty, the potentials and risks inherent in large-scale environmental intervention.”
See the Series in Places Journal
Photo: Downsville Covered Bridge. Photo by Tim Davis (2020)
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Art History and Visual Culture,Division of Languages and Literature,Division of the Arts,Photography Program,Written Arts Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
01-26-2021
Review: <em>Palberta5000</em>, the Latest Album from Bard Alums Ani Ivry-Block ’15, Lily Konigsberg ’16, and Nina Ryser ’15 Wins Praise from <em>New York Times</em>
“Since meeting at Bard College nearly a decade ago, Ivry-Block, Konigsberg and Ryser have gradually built a reputation as one of the most dynamic live acts in New York’s D.I.Y. scene (and one of the most woefully missed during the pandemic),” writes Lindsay Zoladz, reviewing Palberta5000. “Palberta uses the tricks of pop structure here to a destabilizing effect: These are the kinds of hooks that implore you to sing along before you quite realize what you’re singing about.”
Read more in the New York Times
Photo: Nina Ryser '15, Ani Ivry-Block '15, Lily Konigsberg '16 of Palberta. Photo by Chloe Carrasco
Meta: Type(s): Alumni,Article | Subject(s): Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts,Music Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
01-25-2021
Speak, Reenactment: Poet Hai-Dang Phan on Professor An-My Lê’s Photography
“As equipment for life and art, An-My Lê’s exemplary work suggested to me that one way forward might be back—into the tangles of memory and history, onto the contested terrain of the past,” writes Hai-Dang Phan for the Baffler. An-My Lê is the Charles Franklin Kellogg and Grace E. Ramsey Kellogg Professor in the Arts at Bard College.
Read the Essay in the Baffler
Photo: Caption: An-My Lê: Fragment I: Film Set (“Free State of Jones”), Battle of Corinth, Bush, Louisiana, 2015, pigment print, 40 by 56 1/2 inches; from the series “Silent General.”
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Photography Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
01-24-2021
Bard Students in Human Rights Course Produce Videos for People in Prison Seeking Clemency
Buzzfeed features the work of students in HR 321, Advocacy Video, in which Bard undergraduates worked together with students in the clemency clinic at CUNY Law School and the human rights organization WITNESS to create short video self-presentations by applicants for clemency. Buzzfeed reporter Melissa Segura highlights the video narrative of Rodney Chandler, incarcerated at Cayuga Correctional Facility, and also interviews David Sell, with whom the class worked last year on two videos from Wende Correctional Facility. Advocacy Video is an Engaged Liberal Arts and Sciences class cotaught by Thomas Keenan, professor of comparative literature and director of the Human Rights Program, and Brent Green, visiting artist in residence. This is a Human Rights course crosslisted with Film and Electronic Arts. The four videos produced by students in fall 2020 are available on the Human Rights Program website.
Full Story from Buzzfeed
Watch the Videos on the HRP Website
Photo: Still from Matthew Lemon's clemency video, produced by students in Bard's Advocacy Video course.
Meta: Type(s): Student | Subject(s): Community Engagement,Division of Social Studies,Division of the Arts,Film and Electronic Arts Program,Human Rights | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs,Center for Civic Engagement |
01-21-2021
Night Sky Time-Lapse Photographs by Pete Mauney ’93 MFA ’00 Exhibited at Quad City Airport
Time-lapse photographs of airplane arrivals and departures by Bard alumnus Pete Mauney ’93 MFA ‘00 are on view through March 1 as part of A Trip Back in Time at the Quad City International Airport in Moline, Illinois. The exhibit comprises Mauney’s photographs, Drew Morton’s digital drawings of airport runways around the world, and a selection of mid-century modern artifacts. For this series, Mauney camped out in select locations for hours at a time with his camera aperture open to capture the light emitted from airplanes and stars as they moved through the night sky. Pete Mauney lives and works in Tivoli, New York. He received his BA and MFA in photography from Bard College. 
Full Story from WVIK
Photo: Pete Mauney ’93 MFA ‘00, Quad City Arts
Meta: Subject(s): Bard Graduate Programs,Division of the Arts,Photography Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs,MFA |
01-17-2021
Dancer and Choreographer Arthur Avilés ’87 Honored with Bessie Lifetime Achievement Award in Dance
Bard College alum, dancer, and choreographer Arthur Avilés ’87 and Charles Rice-González— cofounders of the Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance—were honored with 2020 Bessie Awards for Lifetime Achievement in Dance: “For being masterful artists. For transforming the South Bronx and New York City dance and performance by creating the Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance. For providing an artistic home for women, Latinx, People of Color, Indigenous folx, and the LGBTQ community and for placing these artists, their communities and their arts-making front and center.”
Read More about the 2020 Bessies
Photo: Arthur Aviles ’87 performing at the Fisher Center at Bard, 2016. Photo by China Jorrin ’86
Meta: Type(s): Alumni | Subject(s): Bardians at Work,Dance Program,Division of the Arts,Inclusive Excellence | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
01-11-2021
The Orchestra Now Starts Its 2021 Season with Two Livestreamed Concerts on February 7 and 21

Programs Feature a World Premiere by Sarah Hennies and Popcorn Superhet Receiver by Radiohead Band Member Jonny Greenwood

The Orchestra Now (TŌN) will begin its 2021 season with two concerts to be livestreamed from the Fisher Center at Bard on February 7 and 21, led by Leon Botstein and James Bagwell respectively. Both programs for string orchestra will offer pieces by underrepresented composers, including a new work by composer/percussionist Sarah Hennies written for the Orchestra and the Bard Music Program, where she is on faculty. Her work is concerned with a variety of musical, sociopolitical, and psychological issues including queer and trans identity, love, intimacy, and psychoacoustics. She was recently profiled in The New York Times about her eclectic musical style, “rife with psychological effects and emotional undercurrents.” Additional rarely-heard music will showcase Popcorn Superhet Receiver, a work by English composer Jonny Greenwood, the lead guitarist and keyboard player of the alternative rock band Radiohead; and Serenade for Strings by the Venezuelan composer, pianist, and singer Teresa Carreño, who played for Abraham Lincoln at the White House in 1863.

Upcoming highlights in the 2021 season are a concert led by assistant conductor Andrés Rivas (March 7), a performance with resident conductor Zachary Schwartzman (March 20), and two concerts led by music director Leon Botstein (April 10 and May 1).

Schoenberg & Bach
Sunday February 7 at 2 pm
Leon Botstein, conductor
Bach: Brandenburg Concerto No. 3
Lutosławski: Funeral Music
Teresa Carreño: Serenade for Strings 
Schoenberg: Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night)

Access: RSVP at theorchestranow.org starting on January 27 to receive a direct link to the livestream on the day of the concert. This concert will be available for delayed streaming on TŌN’s digital portal STAY TŌNED, starting on February 11.

New & Classic Works for Strings
Sunday February 21 at 2 pm
James Bagwell, conductor
Sarah Hennies: New Work (World Premiere)
Jonny Greenwood: Popcorn Superhet Receiver
Vaughan Williams: Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis
Grieg: Holberg Suite

Access: RSVP at theorchestranow.org starting on January 27 to receive a direct link to the livestream on the day of the concert. This concert will be available for delayed streaming on STAY TŌNED starting on February 25.

STAY TŌNED
Since March 2020, TŌN has presented more than 100 audio and video streams on STAY TŌNED, its new portal regrouping of all digital initiatives. Audio content is offered every Tuesday and videos every Thursday. The events feature weekly new and archived audio and video recordings that comprise recitals, chamber music, and symphonic programs, including collaborations with the Bard Music Festival that are also available on the Fisher Center at Bard’s virtual stage, UPSTREAMING. Much of the content is also available on YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Bard College Covid-19 Measures and Safety
To adapt to current circumstances, Bard College created detailed protocols for testing and screening, daily monitoring of symptoms, contact tracing, quarantine practices, and physical distancing in the classroom and across the Bard campus. This includes specific protocols for musicians campus-wide in both its undergraduate and graduate programs.

The Orchestra Now
The Orchestra Now (TŌN) is a group of 72 vibrant young musicians from 14 different countries across the globe: Bulgaria, China, Costa Rica, Hungary, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Mongolia, Peru, Spain, Taiwan, Thailand, the U.K., and the U.S. All share a mission to make orchestral music relevant to 21st-century audiences by sharing their unique personal insights in a welcoming environment. Hand-picked from the world’s leading conservatories—including The Juilliard School, Shanghai Conservatory of Music, Royal Conservatory of Brussels, and the Curtis Institute of Music—the members of TŌN are enlightening curious minds by giving on-stage introductions and demonstrations, writing concert notes from the musicians’ perspective, and having one-on-one discussions with patrons during intermissions.

Conductor, educator, and music historian Leon Botstein, whom The New York Times said “draws rich, expressive playing from the orchestra,” founded TŌN in 2015 as a graduate program at Bard College, where he is also president. TŌN offers both a three-year master’s degree in Curatorial, Critical, and Performance Studies and a two-year advanced certificate in Orchestra Studies. The Orchestra’s home base is the Frank Gehry-designed Fisher Center at Bard, where it performs multiple concerts each season and takes part in the annual Bard Music Festival. It also performs regularly at the finest venues in New York, including Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and others across NYC and beyond. HuffPost, who has called TŌN’s performances “dramatic and intense,” praises these concerts as “an opportunity to see talented musicians early in their careers.” 

The Orchestra has performed with many distinguished guest conductors and soloists, including Hans Graf, Neeme Järvi, Vadim Repin, Fabio Luisi, Peter Serkin, Gerard Schwarz, Tan Dun, Zuill Bailey, and JoAnn Falletta. Recordings featuring The Orchestra Now include two albums of piano concertos with Piers Lane on Hyperion Records, and a Sorel Classics concert recording of pianist Anna Shelest performing works by Anton Rubinstein with TŌN and conductor Neeme Järvi. Buried Alive with baritone Michael Nagy, released on Bridge Records in August 2020, includes the first recording in almost 60 years—and only the second recording ever—of Othmar Schoeck’s song-cycle Lebendig begraben. Upcoming releases include an album of piano concertos with Orion Weiss on Bridge Records. Recordings of TŌN’s live concerts from the Fisher Center can be heard on Classical WMHT-FM and WWFM The Classical Network, and are featured regularly on Performance Today, broadcast nationwide.

For upcoming activities and more detailed information about the musicians, visit theorchestranow.org.

Leon Botstein
Leon Botstein brings a renowned career as both a conductor and educator to his role as music director of The Orchestra Now. He has been music director of the American Symphony Orchestra since 1992, artistic co-director of Bard SummerScape and the Bard Music Festival since their creation, and president of Bard College since 1975. He was the music director of the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra from 2003–11 and is now conductor laureate. In 2018, he assumed artistic directorship of Campus Grafenegg and Grafenegg Academy in Austria. Mr. Botstein is also a frequent guest conductor with orchestras around the globe, has made numerous recordings, and is a prolific author and music historian. He is editor of the prestigious The Musical Quarterly and has received many honors for his contributions to music. More info online at LeonBotstein.com.
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Photo: Leon Botstein conducts The Orchestra Now. Photo by David DeNee
Meta: Type(s): Event,Student | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Leon Botstein,Music,Music Program,The Orchestra Now | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs,Fisher Center,The Orchestra Now |
01-04-2021
Point of No Return: Bard Art Historian Alex Kitnick on the Discontent with Museums
“If the postmodernism of the 1980s considered the museum to be in crisis and contemplated its ‘ruins,’ today many see these same institutions as frustratingly intact, as bulwarks against change, citadels to be stormed,” writes Professor Alex Kitnick in Artforum. “Where an earlier generation of artists associated with institutional critique pointed to the museum’s genetic incoherence, as well as to the incursion of corporate interests, today the museum itself stands as a purveyor of systemic and symbolic violence.” Alex Kitnick is assistant professor of art history and visual culture and Brant Foundation Fellow in Contemporary Arts at Bard College.
Full Story in Artforum
Photo: Caravaggio, “The Inspiration of Saint Matthew,” 1602, oil on canvas, 9’ 8 1/2” x 6’ 2 1/2” (detail)
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Art History and Visual Culture,Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs,Center for Curatorial Studies |

December 2020

12-31-2020
Beastie Boys Debut LP, Featuring Cofounder Adam Yauch ’86, Added to Grammy Hall of Fame
The Beastie Boys’ 1986 debut LP Licensed to Ill—the first rap disc to top the Billboard 200 album chart—is among the 2021 inductees into the Grammy Hall of Fame. “We are proud to announce this year’s diverse roster of Grammy Hall of Fame inductees and to recognize recordings that have shaped our industry and inspired music makers of tomorrow,” Harvey Mason Jr., chair and interim president/CEO of the Recording Academy, said in a statement.
 
Full Story in Deadline
Photo: Beastie Boys. Courtesy Deadline/Everett
Meta: Type(s): Alumni | Subject(s): Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
12-30-2020
Work by Professor Sky Hopinka among the <em>New Yorker</em>’s Best Art of 2020
“[New York City gallery] Broadway inaugurated its storefront space with a hypnotic show by the restlessly intelligent indigenous filmmaker Sky Hopinka, a member of the Ho-Chunk Nation and a descendant of the Pechanga Band of Luiseño Indians,” writes Andrea K. Scott. “The show’s centerpiece, Lore, was a short film with the fragmentary internal logic of dreams and the intimate mood of late-night conversations, circling a band of friends in a practice-room reverie, with Hopinka on bass. Lore itself is a rehearsal of sorts: its audio consists of early drafts and excerpts of Hopinka’s searing prose poem ‘Perfidia,’ published as an elegant book by Wendy’s Subway.” Sky Hopinka is assistant professor of film and electronic arts at Bard.
Full Story in the New Yorker
Photo: Courtesy the artist and Broadway
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Film and Electronic Arts Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
12-20-2020
Accolades Continue for Bard Artist in Residence Kelly Reichardt’s <em>First Cow</em> with New York Film Critics Circle and Associated Press Naming the Film Best Picture of 2020
“The film critics, assembling virtually, gave its top award to First Cow, a delicate tale of friendship and capitalism in mid-1800s Oregon Territory,” writes AP of the new film by Kelly Reichardt, S. William Senfeld Artist in Residence at Bard. “Reichardt’s film, released in theaters in March just days before the onset of COVID-19 forced cinemas to close nationwide, hasn’t been widely seen but remains one of the year’s most critically acclaimed films.”
Full story at AP News
Read more at Sight & Sound
Photo: “First Cow.” Kelly Reichardt, dir. 2019. Image courtesy Allyson Riggs/A24
Meta: Type(s): Article,Faculty | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Faculty,Film and Electronic Arts Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
12-19-2020
<em>The Inheritance</em>, Debut Film by Professor Ephraim Asili MFA ’11, Acquired by Grasshopper Film and Will Open March 12 in New York at Film at Lincoln Center and in Other Cities
“New York–based outfit Grasshopper Film has acquired North American rights to Ephraim Asili’s debut feature, The Inheritance, following its premiere at Toronto and screening at the New York Film Festival,” writes Variety. “A Pennsylvania-born filmmaker, Asili has been exploring different facets of the African diaspora for nearly a decade, and The Inheritance is based on his own experiences in a Black liberationist group.” Ephraim Asili is assistant professor of film and electronic arts at Bard and a graduate of the Bard MFA Program.
Full story in Variety
Read more in Sight & Sound
Photo: Production still from “The Inheritance,” directed by Ephraim Asili, 2020. Photo by Mick Bello
Meta: Type(s): Alumni,Article,Faculty | Subject(s): Bard Graduate Programs,Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts,Film and Electronic Arts Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs,MFA |
12-15-2020
<em>Cultured</em> Magazine Profiles LA-based Artist Eddie Rodolfo Aparicio ’12
“Aparicio’s work points to the profound oneness of all things” writes Wallace Ludel in Cultured. For a recent series, the artist painted trees in the outer neighborhoods of his native Los Angeles with layers of rubber until the material was thick enough to peel off, at which point it functions almost like a tapestry, having absorbed both the natural and manmade textures of the tree. “A good place to start thinking about the work is the interaction between human mark making and the textures that nature makes,” says Aparicio, “and the ways in which these are connected.”
Read more in Cultured Magazine
Photo: Eddie Rodolfo Aparicio ’12. Photo by Evan Davis, courtesy Cultured Magazine
Meta: Type(s): Alumni,Article | Subject(s): Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts,Studio Arts Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
12-15-2020
Adam Khalil ’11 and Fellow Filmmaker Bayley Sweitzer Receive 2021 Creative Capital Award for “Boundary-pushing” Work
Khalil and Sweitzer will receive up to $50,000 in funding for their joint film project Nosferasta, one of 35 proposals chosen from more than 4,000 entries. The winning artists range in age from 20 to 80, with 76 percent identifying as BIPOC, 55 percent as female, and 10 percent as having a disability. In addition to project funding, winners are given access to career development services across fields, with the goal of fostering sustainable practices on which the artists may build.
Full story in Artforum
Learn more about the project
Photo: Still from Adam Khalil ’11 and Bayley Sweitzer’s film “Nosferasta.” Image courtesy the artists
Meta: Type(s): Alumni,Article | Subject(s): Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts,Film and Electronic Arts Program,Inclusive Excellence,Theater and Performance Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
12-15-2020
Arthur Aviles ’87 Remembers His Teacher Aileen Passloff
“Aileen exhibited tenderness toward this queer Puerto Rican boy/man from the mean streets of Jamaica, Queens, and the Bronx. Once, after I performed a dance I’d choreographed, she gently said, ‘Come here, Beauty.’ (She called all her students Beauty.),” writes Aviles. “Aileen possessed a beautiful mix of tenderness and wackiness that reminded me of dance pieces she created which evolved into series of movements that depicted the fantastical worlds that she loved to conjure, worlds of powerful beauty and strong grace.”
Read more in Artforum
Photo: Aileen Passloff and dancers at the 92nd Street Y, New York City, 2019. Photo by Arthur Avilés
Meta: Type(s): Alumni,Faculty | Subject(s): Dance Program,Division of the Arts,Inclusive Excellence | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
12-07-2020
Brooklyn Museum Exhibition Curated by Bard Faculty Jeffrey Gibson and Christian Ayne Crouch Listed in <em>Artforum</em>’s Best of 2020
The Brooklyn Museum commissioned Bard College artist in residence Jeffrey Gibson to revive a neglected collection. Collaborating with associate professor of history Christian Ayne Crouch, the curators “took aim at the museum’s archive, cracking open the ideological biases—the ignorant and often racist beliefs and values—on which its collecting was premised,” writes Lynne Cooke of Artforum. Jeffrey Gibson: When Fire Is Applied to a Stone It Cracks at the Brooklyn Museum is curated by Jeffrey Gibson and Christian Ayne Crouch with Eugenie Tsai and Erika Umali, and is on view through January 10, 2021.
Exhibition Details
Photo: Sioux, Hidatsa, or Arikara artist. Man's Moccasins, circa 1882. Brooklyn Museum; anonymous gift in memory of Dr. Harlow Brooks.
Meta: Subject(s): American and Indigenous Studies Program,Division of Social Studies,Division of the Arts,Historical Studies Program,Inclusive Excellence,Studio Arts Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
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