Division of the Arts News by Date
December 2018
12-11-2018
An intimately staged and darkly revisionist revival of Oklahoma! that enjoyed a critically acclaimed and sold-out Off Broadway run will transfer to Broadway this season.
The production, which originated in 2015 at Bard College’s SummerScape festival and then was staged this fall at St. Ann’s Warehouse in Brooklyn, will begin previews on March 19 and open on April 7 at Circle in the Square, which is the only theater-in-the-round on Broadway. Read the full story in the New York Times.
Bard's Oklahoma! has been lauded as one of the top theater productions of 2018. Time magazine calls Oklahoma! the best play of the year—a “provocative” new take on the Rodgers and Hammerstein classic. The production also made best theater lists from the New York Times and Vulture. Time writes, “The painfully relevant production lands at the exact right moment in a country where demonization of immigrants and outsiders is on the rise and mass shootings are an everyday occurrence.”
The production, which originated in 2015 at Bard College’s SummerScape festival and then was staged this fall at St. Ann’s Warehouse in Brooklyn, will begin previews on March 19 and open on April 7 at Circle in the Square, which is the only theater-in-the-round on Broadway. Read the full story in the New York Times.
Bard's Oklahoma! has been lauded as one of the top theater productions of 2018. Time magazine calls Oklahoma! the best play of the year—a “provocative” new take on the Rodgers and Hammerstein classic. The production also made best theater lists from the New York Times and Vulture. Time writes, “The painfully relevant production lands at the exact right moment in a country where demonization of immigrants and outsiders is on the rise and mass shootings are an everyday occurrence.”
Credit: Rebecca Naomi Jones as Laurey and Damon Daunno as Curly in
Oklahoma! at St. Ann’s Warehouse. Photo: Sara Krulwich/New York Times
Meta: Type(s): Event | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Theater and Performance Program | Institutes(s): Fisher Center |
Oklahoma! at St. Ann’s Warehouse. Photo: Sara Krulwich/New York Times
Meta: Type(s): Event | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Theater and Performance Program | Institutes(s): Fisher Center |
12-10-2018
Artforum’s Year in Review highlights The Conditions of Being Art: Pat Hearn Gallery and American Fine Arts, Co. (1983–2004) at the Hessel Museum of Art at Bard College. Art in America publishes a review and an editor’s letter lauding the exhibition. Bookforum lists the exhibition catalogue among the best art books of the season.
Curated by Jeannine Tang, Ann E. Butler, and Lia Gangitano, The Conditions of Being Art is the first exhibition in the United States to examine the shared histories, art, and programming activities of Pat Hearn Gallery and American Fine Arts, Co., Colin de Land Fine Art. The exhibition features works of art shown at or associated with these New York galleries by over 40 artists. The show opened in June and closes this Friday, December 14.
David Rimanelli writes on the Bard exhibition in Artforum’s Year in Review issue, listing it among the Best of 2018. Hearn and de Land were “explorers,” he observes, not professionals, “cosmonauts of the art world and the world of art.” Their influential gallery practices were more focused on bringing important artists to light rather than making a commercial success. Rimanelli concludes, “The two of them were both too much of their time and too singular in themselves for us to ever expect to see their likes again.” View selections from Artforum here (PDF).
In the Artforum Best of 2018 Artists’ Artists section, Alex Carver chooses The Conditions of Being Art for his pick of the year. “In staging this inspiring show,” he observes, “the curators ... have presented a poetic constellation of concept-rich artworks.”
“The shifting sands of the 1980s and ’90s thus make ‘The Conditions of Being Art’ ... an intriguing object of study,” writes Domenick Ammirati in his review for the December issue of Art in America, “with the milieux of the Hearn/de Land scenes unfolding at a peculiar, significant moment of transition in perceptions of the past, present, and future.... The curators, Jeannine Tang, Ann E. Butler, and Lia Gangitano, have let the diversity of works in their subjects’ histories live, even as they tailor the installation to present clear points.”
In the editor’s letter for this month’s Art in America, William S. Smith notes that Hearn’s and de Land’s galleries exhibited work that was “prescient in its critique of American power.”
Bookforum also listed the exhibition catalogue for The Conditions of Being Art among the most outstanding art books of the season in a section called Artful Volumes, in which Bookforum contributors selected their favorite works.
Curated by Jeannine Tang, Ann E. Butler, and Lia Gangitano, The Conditions of Being Art is the first exhibition in the United States to examine the shared histories, art, and programming activities of Pat Hearn Gallery and American Fine Arts, Co., Colin de Land Fine Art. The exhibition features works of art shown at or associated with these New York galleries by over 40 artists. The show opened in June and closes this Friday, December 14.
David Rimanelli writes on the Bard exhibition in Artforum’s Year in Review issue, listing it among the Best of 2018. Hearn and de Land were “explorers,” he observes, not professionals, “cosmonauts of the art world and the world of art.” Their influential gallery practices were more focused on bringing important artists to light rather than making a commercial success. Rimanelli concludes, “The two of them were both too much of their time and too singular in themselves for us to ever expect to see their likes again.” View selections from Artforum here (PDF).
In the Artforum Best of 2018 Artists’ Artists section, Alex Carver chooses The Conditions of Being Art for his pick of the year. “In staging this inspiring show,” he observes, “the curators ... have presented a poetic constellation of concept-rich artworks.”
“The shifting sands of the 1980s and ’90s thus make ‘The Conditions of Being Art’ ... an intriguing object of study,” writes Domenick Ammirati in his review for the December issue of Art in America, “with the milieux of the Hearn/de Land scenes unfolding at a peculiar, significant moment of transition in perceptions of the past, present, and future.... The curators, Jeannine Tang, Ann E. Butler, and Lia Gangitano, have let the diversity of works in their subjects’ histories live, even as they tailor the installation to present clear points.”
In the editor’s letter for this month’s Art in America, William S. Smith notes that Hearn’s and de Land’s galleries exhibited work that was “prescient in its critique of American power.”
Bookforum also listed the exhibition catalogue for The Conditions of Being Art among the most outstanding art books of the season in a section called Artful Volumes, in which Bookforum contributors selected their favorite works.
Photo: Pat Hearn and Julia Scher at Art Frankfurt, 1992. In Artforum
Meta: Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Center for Curatorial Studies |
Meta: Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Center for Curatorial Studies |
12-04-2018
These days—despite longstanding clichés about art and excess—the creative impulse can actually be more closely tied to asceticism, Mason writes.
Photo: Pat Hearn and Julia Scher at Art Frankfurt, 1992. In Artforum
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
12-04-2018
Gaines was awarded the grant for his book Future Ruins: The Art of Abstractive Democracy, which examines the unmooring of representation in early 21st-century America.
Photo: Pat Hearn and Julia Scher at Art Frankfurt, 1992. In Artforum
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Bard Graduate Programs,Division of the Arts |
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Bard Graduate Programs,Division of the Arts |
12-04-2018
Inspired by bodybuilders posing, the video features “a set of four dancers flexing and strutting together” along the garden’s colonnade.
Photo: Pat Hearn and Julia Scher at Art Frankfurt, 1992. In Artforum
Meta: Subject(s): Division of the Arts |
Meta: Subject(s): Division of the Arts |
12-02-2018
New Annandale House, the two-story multipurpose media studio that houses the Center for Experimental Humanities at Bard College, has won a 2018 New York Design Gold Award from DRIVENxDESIGN, which represents 75,000 members, 5,000 brands, and 1,500 studios, and celebrates the role of design in enriching the human experience.
Located at the intersection of Woods Avenue and Annandale Road near the center of Bard’s main campus, New Annandale House is a 945-square-foot building made of four 40-by-8-foot Corten steel shipping containers, originally manufactured in Hong Kong in 2003. The building, installed in 2017, was designed by Maziar Behrooz of MB Architecture in Manhattan and fabricated by SnapSpace Solutions in Brewer, Maine. The ends of the containers were transformed into 8-by-8-foot glass walls. The main floor is a double-height space with an adjoining 20-by-8-foot space. Designed with versatility and flow in mind, the main classroom becomes an indoor/outdoor space with a 16-foot garage door opening onto an adjacent outdoor gathering space on the south side.
“This beautiful building has been an inspirational home for the work we do at the Center for Experimental Humanities,” says Maria Sachiko Cecire, assistant professor of literature and coordinator of experimental humanities at Bard. “It echoes our own values in its flexibility, foundations in social consciousness, and balance of the classic and cutting-edge. We have loved experimenting with its many possibilities as we’ve used it for digital workshops, interdisciplinary student presentations, VR demos, musical performances, art installations, miniconferences, a space for public-facing local history research, and more.”
An advisory panel praised New Annandale House as an exemplary project in DRIVENxDESIGN’s Public and Institutional category, which celebrates the process of planning, designing, and constructing form and space that reflect functional, technical, social, and aesthetic considerations.
Center for Experimental Humanities at Bard College
How does technology mediate what it means to be human? The Experimental Humanities (EH) concentration is Bard’s liberal arts–driven answer to the digital humanities. Digital humanities is an evolving field that typically employs digital tools and research methods to investigate humanities subjects. In addition, EH engages with media and technology forms from across historical periods, combining experimental research methods with critical thinking about how such forms function as a part of cultural, social, and political inquiry. We encourage the reconsideration of older media in light of today’s technologies and look ahead to the developments on the horizon. The Center for Experimental Humanities at New Annandale House hosts regular EH events, workshops, and meetings for EH projects and courses. Members of the Bard community can also apply to reserve the downstairs space for other activities, especially those that share EH’s interests in how technology and media intersect with the arts, humanities, and culture. eh.bard.edu
For more information: drivenxdesign.com/NYC18/project.asp?ID=17813
Located at the intersection of Woods Avenue and Annandale Road near the center of Bard’s main campus, New Annandale House is a 945-square-foot building made of four 40-by-8-foot Corten steel shipping containers, originally manufactured in Hong Kong in 2003. The building, installed in 2017, was designed by Maziar Behrooz of MB Architecture in Manhattan and fabricated by SnapSpace Solutions in Brewer, Maine. The ends of the containers were transformed into 8-by-8-foot glass walls. The main floor is a double-height space with an adjoining 20-by-8-foot space. Designed with versatility and flow in mind, the main classroom becomes an indoor/outdoor space with a 16-foot garage door opening onto an adjacent outdoor gathering space on the south side.

New Annandale House, with garage door open to the outside. Photo: (c) MB Architecture.
“This beautiful building has been an inspirational home for the work we do at the Center for Experimental Humanities,” says Maria Sachiko Cecire, assistant professor of literature and coordinator of experimental humanities at Bard. “It echoes our own values in its flexibility, foundations in social consciousness, and balance of the classic and cutting-edge. We have loved experimenting with its many possibilities as we’ve used it for digital workshops, interdisciplinary student presentations, VR demos, musical performances, art installations, miniconferences, a space for public-facing local history research, and more.”
An advisory panel praised New Annandale House as an exemplary project in DRIVENxDESIGN’s Public and Institutional category, which celebrates the process of planning, designing, and constructing form and space that reflect functional, technical, social, and aesthetic considerations.

Interior of New Annandale House. Photo: (c) MB Architecture.
Center for Experimental Humanities at Bard College
How does technology mediate what it means to be human? The Experimental Humanities (EH) concentration is Bard’s liberal arts–driven answer to the digital humanities. Digital humanities is an evolving field that typically employs digital tools and research methods to investigate humanities subjects. In addition, EH engages with media and technology forms from across historical periods, combining experimental research methods with critical thinking about how such forms function as a part of cultural, social, and political inquiry. We encourage the reconsideration of older media in light of today’s technologies and look ahead to the developments on the horizon. The Center for Experimental Humanities at New Annandale House hosts regular EH events, workshops, and meetings for EH projects and courses. Members of the Bard community can also apply to reserve the downstairs space for other activities, especially those that share EH’s interests in how technology and media intersect with the arts, humanities, and culture. eh.bard.edu
For more information: drivenxdesign.com/NYC18/project.asp?ID=17813
Photo: New Annandale House, home of Bard's Center for Experimental Humanities.
Meta: Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Center for Experimental Humanities |
Meta: Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Center for Experimental Humanities |
November 2018
11-30-2018
New Annandale House, the two-story multipurpose media studio that houses the Bard College Center for Experimental Humanities, has won a New York Design Gold Award from DRIVENxDESIGN.
Photo: New Annandale House Credit: Matthew Carbone | MB Architects
Meta: Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Center for Experimental Humanities |
Meta: Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Center for Experimental Humanities |
11-22-2018
One of New York City’s most exciting young theater companies, New Saloon, founded by three Bard alumni, returns to Bard with their kaleidoscopic adaptation of Uncle Vanya.
Credit: Photo by Maria Baranova
Meta: Type(s): Alumni,Event | Subject(s): Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts,Theater and Performance Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs,Fisher Center |
Meta: Type(s): Alumni,Event | Subject(s): Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts,Theater and Performance Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs,Fisher Center |
11-21-2018
The Bard College Conservatory Orchestra performs at the Fisher Center on Saturday, December 1, at 8:00 p.m. with guest conductor Xian Zhang.
Credit: Photo by B. Ealovega
Meta: Type(s): Event | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Music | Institutes(s): Fisher Center |
Meta: Type(s): Event | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Music | Institutes(s): Fisher Center |
11-18-2018
Interdisciplinary artist Alisha Wormsley MFA ‘19, whose work is inspired by the collective memory of African American culture, will receive a $15,000 prize with the award.
Credit: Photo by B. Ealovega
Meta: Type(s): Student | Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): MFA |
Meta: Type(s): Student | Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): MFA |
11-17-2018
Eva LeWitt ‘07 talks about studying sculpture with Judy Pfaff at Bard, founding an artists’ residency in Italy, and how art is in her DNA.
Credit: Photo by B. Ealovega
Meta: Type(s): Alumni | Subject(s): Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
Meta: Type(s): Alumni | Subject(s): Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
11-17-2018
CCS Bard’s Tom Eccles and Luma Foundation’s Maja Hoffmann pen the introduction for the book accompanying the exhibition presented at the Parc des Ateliers, Luma Arles and at CCS Bard.
Credit: Photo by B. Ealovega
Meta: Type(s): Event | Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Center for Curatorial Studies |
Meta: Type(s): Event | Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Center for Curatorial Studies |
11-15-2018
Josephine Sacabo’s solo exhibit in New Orleans, Tagged, responds to the everyday misogyny of graffiti in the streets.
Credit: Photo by B. Ealovega
Meta: Type(s): Alumni | Subject(s): Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
Meta: Type(s): Alumni | Subject(s): Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
11-12-2018
Award-winning actress and filmmaker Isabella Rossellini talks about her new theatrical lecture on the science of animal minds. She will perform "Link Link Circus" on November 17 at 7:30 p.m.
Credit: Photo by B. Ealovega
Meta: Type(s): Event | Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Fisher Center |
Meta: Type(s): Event | Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Fisher Center |
11-10-2018
TŌN's free concert series will offer two performances led by associate conductor James Bagwell and one led by resident conductor Zachary Schwartzman during the holiday season.
Credit: Photo by B. Ealovega
Meta: Type(s): Event | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Music | Institutes(s): The Orchestra Now |
Meta: Type(s): Event | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Music | Institutes(s): The Orchestra Now |
11-09-2018
Joan Tower, Asher B. Edelman Professor in the Arts, talks with the New York Times about her more than 50-year career as a composer and educator, and the milestone of turning 80 this fall.
Credit: Photo by B. Ealovega
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Conservatory of Music,Bard Undergraduate Programs |
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Conservatory of Music,Bard Undergraduate Programs |
11-09-2018
Matalon's hire fulfills the museum’s commitment to furthering community outreach through exhibitions and maintaining a feminist perspective in its curatorial practice.
Credit: Photo by B. Ealovega
Meta: Type(s): Alumni | Subject(s): Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
Meta: Type(s): Alumni | Subject(s): Bardians at Work,Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
11-09-2018
When the composer Joan Tower went to Bennington College to study music, her teachers told her she needed to compose something.
“So I wrote a piece,” she recalled recently, laughing, “and it was a disaster from beginning to end. I said, ‘I know I can do better than that.’ So I did that for the next 40 years, trying to create a piece that wasn’t a disaster.”
Read the full article from the New York Times
“So I wrote a piece,” she recalled recently, laughing, “and it was a disaster from beginning to end. I said, ‘I know I can do better than that.’ So I did that for the next 40 years, trying to create a piece that wasn’t a disaster.”
Read the full article from the New York Times
Credit: Photo: Lauren Lancaster for the New York Times
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Music | Institutes(s): Bard Conservatory of Music,Bard Undergraduate Programs |
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Division of the Arts,Music | Institutes(s): Bard Conservatory of Music,Bard Undergraduate Programs |
11-09-2018
As part of BGC's Agents of Faith exhibition, Adrián Viajero Román built an altar for those who have died crossing the Mexican border or were victims of Hurricane Maria.
Credit: Photo: Lauren Lancaster for the New York Times
Meta: Type(s): Event | Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Graduate Center |
Meta: Type(s): Event | Subject(s): Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Graduate Center |
October 2018
10-31-2018
“Creative Process in Dialogue: Art and the Public Today” will be held at BHSEC Manhattan on October 31, followed by a lunch hour talk at Bard at Brooklyn Public Library on November 1.
Meta: Type(s): Event | Subject(s): Division of Languages and Literature,Division of Social Studies,Division of the Arts,Early Colleges | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs,BHSECs,Center for Civic Engagement,Center for Curatorial Studies |
Meta: Type(s): Event | Subject(s): Division of Languages and Literature,Division of Social Studies,Division of the Arts,Early Colleges | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs,BHSECs,Center for Civic Engagement,Center for Curatorial Studies |