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Lucas Blalock ’02 Interviewed in <em>To Be Magazine</em>

Lucas Blalock ’02 Interviewed in To Be Magazine

"As the technology changed, the potentials of my practice changed along with it, all the way up to the present."
A man considers a selection of photographs laid out on a wall.

Photography by Tim Davis Featured in the New York Times

Davis’s photos of shelves and shoppers show the abundance of the supermarket chain through the thousands of colors and forms that stretch throughout its spaces.
Susan Fox Rogers Wins the 2025 Harvard Review Chapbook Prize

Susan Fox Rogers Wins the 2025 Harvard Review Chapbook Prize

Judge Jerald Walker said, “I savored every page, and yet somehow I was still unprepared for their cumulative power."

Division of the Arts News by Date

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November 2020

11-17-2020
Actor Patrick Vaill ’07 Writes About His New Netflix Series <em>Dash & Lily</em> and Filming in His Hometown of NYC during the Pandemic
“As a proud native New Yorker, to see my hometown in full flower, flexing and showing off as only New York can feels exultant. New York City is not, has never been, and never will be a ghost town,” writes Vaill, who plays an employee of the Strand bookstore in the series. “New York has a starring role, and in the show’s deft, kind hands, what could feel like loss feels like a promise of what can return.”
Read more in Town & Country
Photo: Patrick Vaill '07 as Mark in the Netflix series “Dash & Lily.” Alison Cohen Rosen/Netflix
Meta: Type(s): Alumni,Article | Subject(s): Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts,Theater and Performance Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
11-12-2020
<em>New York Times </em>Review: Bard Professor Sky Hopinka: Songs of the Earth and the Road

Sky Hopinka, Assistant Professor of Film and Electronic Arts, was featured in the New York Times. His work “rivals in visual and linguistic beauty any new art I’ve seen in some time,” their critic writes.

By Holland Cotter for the New York Times

Between a spiking pandemic and a slugfest election, November has brought storm clouds to the nation. But to the art world it introduces two warm points of light in concurrent shows by the Indigenous American artist and filmmaker Sky Hopinka. One, in a new Manhattan gallery, is his New York City solo debut; the other, at Bard College in upstate New York, his first museum survey anywhere.

Mr. Hopinka is a member of the Ho-Chunk Nation and descended from the Pechanga Band of Luiseño Indians. His work, which he aptly calls “ethnopoetic,” is built on that biographical data, but expands outward from it. It’s steeped in Native American history but rejects the idea that history is confined to the past. Present tense and personal, it rivals in visual and linguistic beauty any new art I’ve seen in some time.
Read the Review in the New York Times
Photo: Still from Sky Hopinka’s video “Jáaji Approx” (2015).
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
11-10-2020
The <em>Guardian</em> Spotlights Work by Recent Grad Jasmine Clarke ’18 in Photo Vogue Festival 2020
The fifth edition of the Photo Vogue Festival, entitled All In This Together, includes works by an international group of 30 photographers. Of her own work in the exhibition—the portrait Marissa—New York–based artist and Bard alumna Jasmine Clarke ’18 says, “When I look in the mirror, I want to believe that what I am seeing is an extension of myself even though I know that it isn’t. I’m seeing a reflection (an illusion) of me and my world. I can never quite trust a mirror; a picture creates a similar false sense of reality.” The exhibition will be available for viewing online beginning November 12.
Read more in the Guardian
View the exhibition
Photo: “Marissa,” from the series Shadow of the Palm, by photographer Jasmine Clarke ’18.
Meta: Type(s): Alumni,Article | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Photography Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
11-05-2020
Renowned Interdisciplinary Artist Nayland Blake Named Chair of Bard Studio Arts Program
Bard College announces the appointment of internationally acclaimed interdisciplinary artist and educator Nayland Blake ’82 as the incoming chair of the Bard Studio Arts Program, beginning with the academic year 2021–2022. Blake is the chair of the ICP-Bard Program in Advanced Photographic Studies, a joint masters program run by Bard College and the International Center of Photography in New York City. They succeed Ellen Driscoll, who returns to the studio arts faculty. For more information about Bard’s Studio Arts Program, please visit studioarts.bard.edu.

“Nayland Blake has a long history with Bard and a significant appreciation for what makes the institution unique. At the same time, they bring an important new perspective to imagining the future of Bard's Studio Arts program,” said Bard’s Dean of the College, Deirdre D’Albertis. “What all members of the program have commented on and appreciate already about Nayland is their commitment to students, faculty, and staff in the program all being heard and considered in building toward that future.”

Nayland Blake is an internationally acclaimed interdisciplinary artist and educator whose work is included in the collections of the Brooklyn Museum of Art, the Des Moines Art Center, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the University Art Museum, Berkeley. Their writing has been published in Artforum, Shift, Interview, Out, Outlook, and numerous exhibition catalogues. Blake has been on the faculty of the Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts (Bard MFA) and has taught at the San Francisco Art Institute, the California Institute of the Arts, the University of California, Berkeley, Parsons School for Design, New York University, the School of Visual Arts, and Harvard University Department of Visual and Environmental Studies. They are represented by Matthew Marks Gallery in New York. Blake has a BA in sculpture from Bard and an MFA from California Institute of the Arts.

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.
 
Photo: Nayland Blake ’82
Meta: Type(s): Alumni,Faculty | Subject(s): Bard Graduate Programs,Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts,Studio Arts Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs,ICP |
11-03-2020
Tschabalala Self ’12 Explores Black American Identity in First Major Gallery Exhibition in New York City
New York Times critic Robin Pogrebin interviews Self ahead of her solo exhibition at Galerie Eva Presenhuber in Lower Manhattan, opening November 6. “The colorful works display Ms. Self’s signature combination of painting and collage,” writes Pogrebin. “She does not use glue or adhesive; in homage to her mother’s facility as a seamstress as well as the quilting tradition, Ms. Self integrates swatches of fabric into her paintings by deploying the sewing machine as well as the paintbrush: She draws with stitches. … These paintings speak to what Ms. Self said is the show’s main theme: ‘understanding and naming the institution of American slavery as the origin of Black American identity.’ ‘For me, it’s clarifying what I mean when I refer to Blackness,’ she added. ‘Without the institution of slavery, this country could never have been built to be what it is today. The Black American is almost a mascot for modernism. The Black American represents the modern world, the new world.’” Cotton Mouth is on view through December 19.
Read more in the New York Times
Photo: Bard alumna Tschabalala Self ’12 in her New Haven studio with “Sill,” left.  Photo by Josefina Santos for The New York Times
Meta: Type(s): Alumni,Article | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Inclusive Excellence,Studio Arts Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
11-03-2020
Bard Alumni Filmmakers Adam Khalil ’11 and Zack Khalil ’14 Named 2020–22 Firelight Documentary Lab Fellows
Firelight Media has named Bard alumni Adam Khalil ’11 and Zack Khalil ’14 among the 14 Fellows selected for the 2020–22 Firelight Documentary Lab. The 18-month program supporting Black, indigenous, and other filmmakers of color is now in its 11th year. The two brothers will receive support for their film Aanikoobijigan (ancestor/great-grandparent/great-grandchild), of which they write, “Locked away in the sterile storage of museums and archives, our ancestor’s remains struggle to find their way home. This film follows eleven Indigenous repatriation specialists that make up MACPRA (Michigan Anishinaabek Cultural Preservation & Repatriation Alliance), fighting to rebury and return ancestors from settler-colonial libraries, archives, and museums.”
Full story in Deadline
Photo: Adam and Zack Khalil (L–R)
Meta: Type(s): Alumni,Article | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Theater and Performance Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |

October 2020

10-27-2020
Martine Syms MFA ’17 is Shortlisted by Rolls-Royce Art Programme for Its Inaugural Flagship Initiative, the Dream Commission
“Martine Syms has earned wide recognition for a practice that combines conceptual grit, humour and social commentary. For her short-form moving image artwork, Kita’s World, Martine introduces viewers into her personal mythology; equal parts biological, psychological and sociological,” writes FAD Magazine. “My world is a strange combination of core material, broken samples, seductive loops, and heavy theory. Kita’s World considers the problem of the psychosomatic slip in the digital era,” says Syms.
Full Story in FAD Magazine
Photo: Ugly Plymouths, © Martine Syms, courtesy Sadie Coles HQ
Meta: Type(s): Alumni,Article | Subject(s): Bard Graduate Programs,Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): MFA |
10-23-2020
Professor An-My Lê’s Four-Year Photographic Road Trip of the United States
“Many of my photographs are made out of a profound sense of powerlessness but also out of a desire to locate power and authority in unexpected places: in the natural world, in a solitary border patrol officer or in the intimacy and strength of a family under a bridge that connects the United States to Mexico,” writes Lê in the New York Times. “These images are reminders to me that our American landscape and the communities within it transcend this cultural and political moment.”
See the Series in the New York Times
Photo: “Family Under the Presidio-Ojinaga International Bridge, Texas-Mexico Border, 2019.”
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Photography Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
10-23-2020
Interview: Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance (BAAD!) Cofounder Arthur Aviles ’87 Talks to PBS <em>NewsHour</em> about Finding New Ways to Continue Showcasing and Supporting Local Artists During the Pandemic
“What's important to us is to make sure that we keep in touch with who it is that we are in these unfortunate times,” Aviles, tells PBS NewsHour’s Jeffrey Brown. “We want to create a platform for the community to be a star on. That's really what we say. This is about boxes, and where we are confined to that. And art is all about pushing against the boundaries of those boxes, and helping all of us see the world.”
Full Story on PBS Newshour
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 | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
10-23-2020
Filmmaker Hazel Gurland-Pooler ’99 Awarded $25,000 Grant as One of Six Finalists for Library of Congress Lavine / Ken Burns Prize for Film
Hazel Gurland-Pooler ’99 has won a $25,000 grant for her film Storming Caesar's Palace, one of six finalists for the second annual Library of Congress Lavine / Ken Burns Prize for Film. The awards—overseen by the Library of Congress, acclaimed documentarian Ken Burns, the Crimson Lion/Lavine Family Foundation, and nonprofit The Better Angels Society—were presented at a virtual ceremony on October 20.

About Storming Caesar's Palace
Primarily led by low-income African American women, The National Welfare Rights Organization (NWRO) challenged sitting presidents, corporations, and everyday Americans to rethink their notions of the “welfare queen” by protesting benefit cuts, boycotting companies, suing the government—and winning—all before national news cameras.

For Ruby Duncan, Mary Wesley, and Alversa Beals—who lived in the shadow of the Las Vegas Strip—welfare reform was taking too long. With the NWRO, they sought to abolish welfare altogether, instead proposing a guaranteed annual minimum income for all Americans.

Storming Caesar's Palace explores how a group of ordinary mothers launched an extraordinary grassroots movement that fought for economic justice, women’s rights, and Black women’s empowerment.
Read More in RealScreen
More about Hazel Gurland-Pooler
Photo: Still from Storming Caesar's Palace, directed by Hazel Gurland-Pooler ’99.
Meta: Type(s): Alumni | Subject(s): Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts,Film and Electronic Arts Program,Inclusive Excellence |
10-23-2020
The Orchestra Now Announces Two Additional Symphonic Concerts to Be Livestreamed as Part of Its Fall Season on November 1 and 14, 2020
The Orchestra Now (TŌN) has announced the addition of two more symphonic concerts to be livestreamed for free as part of its fall season. On November 1, Music Director and Founder Leon Botstein will conduct a program pairing 20th century works by Schoenberg, Mexican composer Silvestre Revueltas, and R. Strauss with Handel’s Water Music; and on November 14, he will lead the Orchestra in the rarely heard Scherzi musicali by Black American composer Ulysses Kay. The concert will also feature Haydn’s Symphony No. 48 and works by Varèse and Hindemith. The livestreamed concerts are free and will be available for streaming after the performances.

The November concerts follow the Orchestra’s earlier fall livestreamed series Out of the Silence: A Celebration of Music, a four-concert virtual celebration of music showcasing Black composers presented with the Bard Music Festival in September; and the October 17 performance of string concertos by Polish, Czech, and Brazilian composers conducted by Zachary Schwartzman. All concerts will be made available on TŌN’s website. The additional November performances will be the final concerts livestreamed from the Fisher Center at Bard in TŌN’s fall season. The graduate students will finish with their academic courses for the remainder of the semester and then return in February 2021 to continue their academic and musical activities.

STAY TŌNED
TŌN has presented more than 60 audio and video streams since April 2020. They are offered on STAY TŌNED, its new portal regrouping all digital initiatives. The events feature weekly new and archived audio and video recordings showcasing 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. Some of the performances, such as the Sunset Serenade series, were performed outdoors for physically distanced audiences. Much of the content is also available on YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Handel & Strauss
Sunday, November 1, 2020 at 2 PM
This concert pairs three works from the early 20th century—including R. Strauss’ elegiac Metamorphosen, written in the final months of WWII, and one of Mexican composer Silvestre Revueltas’ earliest orchestral compositions, Cuauhnáhuac—with Handel’s Baroque Water Music Suite, composed for one of King George I’s royal water parties on the River Thames in 1717.
Leon Botstein, conductor
Handel: Water Music Suite No. 1
Schoenberg: Chamber Symphony No. 1
Silvestre Revueltas: Cuauhnáhuac
R. Strauss: Metamorphosen

ACCESS: RSVP here 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 November 5.

Haydn’s Maria Theresa
Saturday, November 14, 2020 at 5:30 PM
Leon Botstein conducts three 20th-century works that all premiered in the U.S.—including the rarely heard Scherzi musicali by Black American composer Ulysses Kay, who taught at Lehman College in the Bronx for twenty years—along with Haydn‘s regal Maria Theresa Symphony, performed for the Holy Roman Empress in 1773.
Leon Botstein, conductor
Blair McMillen, piano
Varèse: Hyperprism
Hindemith: Concert Music for Piano, Brass, and Harps
Ulysses Kay: Scherzi musicali
Haydn: Symphony No. 48, Maria Theresa

ACCESS: RSVP here 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 November 19.

Bard College Academic Year 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.  TŌN has successfully pivoted its activities to comply and in addition to physically distanced rehearsals, the musicians have resumed their academic coursework. Since August, procedures required a separation of brass and wind instruments from the larger ensemble. Currently, restrictions on winds and brass have been eased, and limited numbers may be added to the Orchestra. This can be credited to Bard’s diligent testing and protocols.

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 they perform multiple concerts each season and take part in the annual Bard Music Festival. They also perform 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. In 2019, the orchestra’s performance with Vadim Repin was live-streamed on The Violin Channel.

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.


Press Contacts
Pascal Nadon
Pascal Nadon Communications
Phone: 646.234.7088
Email: [email protected]

Mark Primoff
Associate Vice President of Communications
Bard College
Phone: 845.758.7412
Email: [email protected]



 
Read More
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 | Institutes(s): The Orchestra Now |
10-21-2020
Distinguished Writer in Residence Masha Gessen Interviews Russian Opposition Leader Alexey Navalny on His Poisoning, Recovery, and Plans to Return to Russia
“In the last two years, the pressure has really ramped up. Our offices have been raided by law enforcement repeatedly. There have been a number of criminal prosecutions. They tried to crush our nationwide structure, which they perceive as the biggest threat to their power. We are the victims of our own success. They saw that the organization can’t be beaten down, so they decided to seek a final solution. They imagined that if they removed me from the organization, the organization would break. They were wrong,” Navalny tells Gessen in the New Yorker. “Of course I’m going back. If I don’t, that will be the ideal outcome for them. They’d love to have me as just another political émigré.”
Full story in the New Yorker
Photo: Masha Gessen. Photo by Lena Di
Meta: Type(s): Article,Faculty | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Written Arts Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
10-21-2020
<em>New York Times</em> Architecture Critic Michael Kimmelman Takes a Virtual Walking Tour of the East Village and Chats about Its History with Luc Sante
“For me, puberty was rock ’n’ roll and Ginsberg’s ‘Howl,’ and the Lower East Side was the logical place to find that culture,” says Sante whose new collection, Maybe the People Would Be the Times, explores his experiences living and working in the Lower East Side. “When I arrived in the neighborhood, the contrast was palpable between newfangled hippie businesses, which had only been going on for five years at the most, and the older, working class businesses. You had hippie boutiques side by side with Ukrainian social clubs and Polish pork stores. . . . I lived in an apartment between First Avenue and Avenue A, across the street from a Polish bar with a jukebox heavily laden with Bobby Vinton.”
Read More in the New York Times
Photo: The scene outside Gem Spa, a newsstand known for its egg creams, in 1969. Meyer Liebowitz/The New York Times
Meta: Type(s): Article,Faculty | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Written Arts Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
10-21-2020
Francine Prose: Trump's macho bravado is an embarrassment. Yet it puts us all in danger.
Trump is determined to be a manly man at all costs—even if it means encouraging the American people to not wear masks, writes Prose in the Guardian. “Like so many of our problems, poisonous masculinity didn’t start with Trump, nor will it vanish when he leaves office. Let’s say, it’s been around. There’s no doubt that things are better for (some) women than they were in the 1950s, when doors were slammed in women’s faces, when there was pressure to stay home, raise the kids, bake the best apple pie. But Trump reminds us daily that misogyny remains.”
Read more in the Guardian
Photo: “The speed with which Trump checked out of the hospital and tore off his mask was an attempt to impersonate an invincible, heroic force.” Photo by Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
Meta: Type(s): Article,Faculty | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Written Arts Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
10-21-2020
Artist in Residence Jeffery Gibson Participates in Massive, Nonpartisan Billboard Campaign to Raise Voter Awareness
“As part of ‘Art for Action,’ works by artists including Jeffrey Gibson, Jenny Holzer, Tomashi Jackson, and Carrie Mae Weems are on display on 350 digital screens in 16 cities across the US through Election Day, with seven additional artists showing on screens in Columbus and Cleveland, Ohio,” writes Hyperallegenic. “Approximately 3.34 million people will see them every day, totaling more than 106.7 million people throughout its monthlong run, making it the largest, nonpartisan voter awareness public art campaign. It’s a massive effort to counter voter suppression in the lead-up to one of the most anticipated and decisive elections in the country’s modern history.”
Read more in Hyperallergic
Photo: In Washington, D.C., digital screens project artworks by Carrie Mae Weems and Jeffrey Gibson as part of the “Art for Action” campaign. Photo courtesy Orange Barrel Media
Meta: Type(s): Article,Faculty | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Studio Arts Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
10-21-2020
“What Ms. Hennies’s disparate works have in common is their forthright yet subtle, moving evocation of queerness,” writes Steve Smith. “The idea of subverting identity is queer,” Hennies said. “There’s a spectrum of sexuality. There’s a spectrum of identity. And the representation of that is taking something that seems simple, and showing that it is a spectrum.”
Full story in the New York Times
Photo: In Washington, D.C., digital screens project artworks by Carrie Mae Weems and Jeffrey Gibson as part of the “Art for Action” campaign. Photo courtesy Orange Barrel Media
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Music Program |
10-21-2020
Preview: Artist and Filmmaker Sky Hopinka’s New Book<em> Perfidia</em> Is a Companion to His Exhibition, <em>Sky Hopinka: Centers of Somewhere</em>, at CCS Bard Galleries
“With Perfidia, a new book of the artist-filmmaker’s writings, edited by Julie Niemi and stunningly designed by Chris Lee, Hopinka delves further into the effects of the violent foundations of the US, and their impact on the everyday lives of Indigenous peoples,” writes Dessane Lopez Cassell in Hyperallergic. “The text takes the form of a lengthy poem, and unfolds via a series of lucid cantos. These poetic compositions are punctuated by the artist’s own photographs, which alternate between the serene and more foreboding visions.”
Full story in Hyperallergic
Photo: An excerpt from “Perfidia,” by Sky Hopinka (Wendy’s Subway and CCS Bard, 2020). Image courtesy Wendy’s Subway
Meta: Type(s): Event | Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Center for Curatorial Studies |
10-21-2020
<em>New York Times </em>Video Producer and Director Alexandra Easton ’07 Talks about “Stressed Election,” a Four-Part Times Video Series that Examines the Complexities of America’s Decentralized Election System
“We were attracted to the people whose job it is to actually manage this process, kind of the unseen figures of democracy,” says Easton, part of the team that produced the series, which, according to the Times, “zeros in on battleground states, reflecting larger issues with voting laws, voters’ rights and disenfranchisement” and illustrates “how starkly different the voting process is for Americans depending on where they live.”
Full story in the New York Times
Photo: New York Times journalists Yousur Al-Hlou (L.) and Alexandra Eaton '07 (2nd from R.) set up an interview shot at the Henry Ford, a museum outside Detroit, in August. Photo by Kassie Bracken/New York Times
Meta: Type(s): Alumni | Subject(s): Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts |
10-21-2020
Interview: Theo Wenner ’09 Discusses His First Book, <em>Jane</em>, Featuring Photographs of His Mother over the Course of One Year
“I think it’s really important to photograph what you know, otherwise the work will feel insincere. That philosophy can be applied to anything you’re photographing. Somehow what you’re shooting has to relate back to you for it to work, in my opinion,” Wenner tells W. “The more time I’ve spent with my mother over the years, the more complex of a character she’s become for me. She really is one of the most mysterious, surprising people I know. Over time, it just became obvious to me that this was what the book should be about.”
Read more in W Magazine
Photo: “My Mom and I before we leave to a wedding.” Photograph by Theo Wenner, and part of his latest book, “Jane” (Rizzoli 2020)
Meta: Type(s): Alumni,Article | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Photography Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
10-21-2020
Carolyn Lazard ’10 among Winners of First Disability Futures Initiative, a New Fellowship Established by the Ford and Mellon Foundations to Support Disabled Artists
Developed by the Ford Foundation in partnership with the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Disability Futures Initiative spotlights the work of disabled creatives across disciplines and geography. Multimedia artist and Bard alum Carolyn Lazard ’10 is among the 20 filmmakers, artists, and journalists who make up the first cohort of winners. Each will receive a fellowship award of $50,000. Lazard, who works from the material conditions of chronic illness, uses video, sculpture, text, and performance to engage the aesthetic and political dimensions of consent, care, and dependency. Lazard has shown work at The Walker Art Center, The New Museum, Museum für Moderne Kunst Frankfurt, The Institute of Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania, and the Whitney Museum of American Art, among other institutions.
Full story at fordfoundation.org
See their latest work in Frieze
Photo: Carolyn Lazard, “Sync,” 2020. Unstallation view, Essex Street Gallery, New York. Photo courtesy the artist, Essex Street, New York, and Maxwell Graham, New York
Meta: Type(s): Alumni,Article | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Film and Electronic Arts Program,Studio Arts Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
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