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Juried
Photography Exhibit Opens at Wells College
The
Wells College Art Department announces the opening of its latest exhibit.
Simply entitled “Photography - A Juried Competition,” the show will be
on display in the String Room Gallery from April 9 through May 8, 2003.
The exhibit is free and the public is cordially invited to view the show.
An opening reception with refreshments provides an opportunity for artists,
photography buffs, and the general public to meet with several of the artists
on Wednesday, April 9 from 7:00-9:00 pm in the Gallery.
This exhibit represents the
14th annual juried photo show, on loan from the State of the Art Gallery
in Ithaca, New York. Each year, more than 50 photographers’ work is chosen
for the show. The subject matter covers a broad spectrum and the level
of work ranges from amateur to professional. The exhibit is judged by Nicolai
Klimaszewksi, chairman of the photography department at Tompkins-Cortland
Community College in Dryden, NY. He was named one of the “Top 100 Photographers”
by the Ernst Haas International Photography Competition in 1997, and has
won other top awards in various exhibitions throughout the Finger Lakes
region.
During
the opening reception, Robert Doherty will speak briefly about photography
and its roots. Doherty is the former director of the Eastman House of Photography
in Rochester, New York, and is presently the printer-in-residence at the
Wells College Book Arts Center.
The String Room Gallery is
located in Main Building on the Aurora campus. Hours are Monday through
Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Wednesday evenings from 7:00 p.m. to
9:00 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. For more
information about the photography show and art at Wells College, please
contact art professor William Roberts at 315/364-3237.
March, 2003
Award
Winning Ensemble Performs Early Music on Electric Instruments at Wells
College
The
Wells College Music Department is pleased to welcome discontinuo to the
Aurora campus. The ensemble will perform at 7:30 pm on Friday night, April
4 in Phipps Auditorium, Macmillan Hall. The concert is free and the public
is cordially invited to this special performance.
discontinuo, an award-winning
electric Baroque ensemble, is the result of collaboration between three
early music performers who began experimenting with the possibilities of
playing 17th and 18th century music on 20th century electric instruments.
The trio discovered an apparently endless range of sonic variation that
seemed to lend itself perfectly to the kaleidoscope of colors the group
uses to bring out the inherent drama and expressiveness of the music.
The group began rehearsing
much like today's traditional rock-n-roll garage-bands, and many of the
trio's impromptu jam sessions led to highly unique interpretations of pieces
that are standard repertoire for many early music groups. However, discontinuo
has taken the term “interpretation” a step further by taking some of the
raw and gritty effects of current popular styles, and fusing them with
music that originally was intended for a more courtly and elegant era two
centuries ago.
The band's demo CD was recently
featured on Angela Mariani's nationally syndicated early music public radio
broadcast Harmonia on a program entitled, "New Music, Early Music" [program
#00-42]. Samples of the recording may be found by clicking the "listen"
link from discontinuo's home page (http://php.indiana.edu/~mpietran/discontinuo).
discontinuo is Martin Davids
on electric violin, G. Victor Penniman on viola da gamba, and keyboardist
David G. Yearsley. Davids received his B.M. from Florida Atlantic University
in Boca Raton and a Masters degree from the University of Michigan in violin
performance. He also earned a Performer Diploma from the Early Music Institute
at Indiana University. Davids has performed, among others, with The Toronto
Consort, the Rochester Early Music Festival, Publick Musick, La Belle Danse,
and Brandywine Baroque, and is a founding member of discontinuo. He currently
resides in Chicago.
Violist
da gamba, guitarist, award-winning music director and co-founder of discontinuo,
G. Victor Penniman holds a Bachelor of Arts in Music degree from Marylhurst
University near Portland, Oregon, and a Masters of Music in historical
musicology from Florida State University. He is currently completing a
Doctor of Musical Arts in Operation of Early Music Programs, with minors
in music history and conducting, at the Indiana University School of Music’s
Early Music Institute. He was music director for the Tygre's Heart Shakespeare
Company in Portland Oregon, and has performed with The Oregon Renaissance
Band, the Oregon Bach Festival Orchestra, the Waverly Baroque Ensemble,
the Tallahassee Bach Parley, and countless other individual projects and
performances. He has also studied Indian classical music in the Hindustani
tradition. Victor is currently a visiting instructor of music at Wells
College.
David Yearsley was educated
at Harvard and Stanford, where he received his Ph.D. in music history.
Since winning first prize at the 1994 Bruges Early Music Festival, Yearsley
has enjoyed an active recital career throughout the United States and Europe
as an organist, harpsichordist, and clavichordist. His scholarly
work has appeared in the Journal of the American Musicological Society,
Music
& Letters, Early Music, and the Journal of 17th Century
Music. His book, Bach and the Meanings of Counterpoint,
is forthcoming from Cambridge University Press. His latest recording,
The Great Contest: Bach, Scarlatti, Handel, is available on the
Loft label. A member of discontinuo and the synthesizer trio, Mother Mallard’s
Portable Masterpiece Company, Yearsley teaches at Cornell University.
For more information about
discontinuo and the concert, please contact Victor Penniman at 315/364-3346.
March, 2003
Lettering
Artist Presents Slide Lecture at Wells College
The
Wells College Book Arts Center is pleased to announce that Suzanne Moore
will present this spring's Susan Garretson Swartzburg '60 Memorial Book
Arts Lecture at Wells College. The lecture, entitled "Everything Begins
with A: Alphabets, Architecture, and the Art of the Book," will be given
at 8:00 pm on Monday, March 31 in the Art Exhibit Room of Macmillan Hall
on the Aurora campus. The event is free and open to the public.
Ms. Moore’s slide lecture
will focus on selections from her 20-year career as a designer, painter,
lettering artist and collaborative bookmaker. The Book Arts Center will
host a reception in Morgan Hall immediately after the lecture so that guests
may see a display of Ms. Moore’s work and speak with her informally.
Suzanne Moore is a lettering
artist and designer who combines contemporary vision with traditional scribal
techniques, painting and drawing in manuscript books, limited edition books,
and
broadsides. Subjects of Suzanne’s painting and drawings include Sequoyah
and the Cherokee writing system, the history and spirituality of gardening,
and non-Latin alphabets. Ms. Moore has taught lettering and arts-related
subjects throughout the United States and in Europe, Hong Kong and Japan.
Her work is exhibited widely, and her manuscript books have been acquired
for major private and public collections in the United States and Europe,
including the Pierpont Morgan Library, New York; The Library of Congress;
the James S. Copley Library, La Jolla, California; and the special collections
of Harvard University, Wellesley and Smith Colleges.
Suzanne currently art directs
the lettering design and font design group at American Greetings in Cleveland,
Ohio, and she is one of seven artists (and one of only two Americans) illuminating
with gold leaf the St. John’s Bible, a manuscript Bible commissioned by
the Benedictine St. John’s Abbey, in Collegeville, Minnesota. This monumental
work is overseen by Donald Jackson at his scriptorium in Wales, UK.
The lecture series is made
possible through the Heiland-Garretson Book Arts Lecture Fund, established
by Susan Garretson Swartzburg '60 and sustained through the generosity
of her family.
For more information about
this event, please contact the Wells Book Arts Center by phone at 315/364-3420
or by email at bookartscenter@wells.edu,
or visit us on the Internet at
http://aurora.wells.edu/~wbac/bookarts/index.html.
March, 2003
Wells
College Hosts Lesléa Newman, Writer
Author focuses on
the transgender experience and butch/femme relationships
Wells
College welcomes author Lesléa Newman to campus on Tuesday, April
1. Newman’s appearance is sponsored by the Wells College English, Psychology,
and Women’s Studies departments, as well as by the Visiting Writers Series
and LBQTA, among others. Her lecture, entitled “Girls Will Be Boys!” is
scheduled for 12:00 noon in the Art Exhibit Room in Macmillan Hall. The
event is free and the public is invited to attend.
Ms. Newman is the author
of over 40 volumes, including Heather Has Two Mommies and Out
of the Closet and Nothing to Wear. The themes for several of her books
are based on lesbian identity, Jewish identity, and the intersection and
conflicts between these two identities. Ms. Newman also explores issues
surrounding AIDS, eating disorders, sexual abuse, and butch/femme relationships.
Ms. Newman is a popular guest lecturer, and has spoken at numerous colleges
and universities including Harvard University, Smith College, and the University
of Judaism. She also attended in 1984 a series of Women's Writing Workshops
taught by Kathryn Machan Aal in Aurora.
For more information about
Lesléa Newman’s lecture on the Wells College campus, please contact
Professor Victoria Muñoz at 315-364-3248. There is also information
at Ms. Newman’s website at www.lesleanewman.com.
To arrange an interview or photo session with Ms. Newman, please contact
Gwen Webber-McLeod, director of communications, at 315-364-3260.
March, 2003
President
Ryerson Honored with National Award
Girls Incorporated of Central
New York has named President Lisa Marsh Ryerson as the recipient of their
national Expanding Your Horizons award. The award will be presented on
March 26 at the annual Spirit of American Women dinner. This event builds
on the strength, wisdom, and resources of the honorees and supporters,
ensuring that girls are not alone in their quest to become strong, smart,
and bold.
President Ryerson was selected
for her national leadership of the Women’s College Coalition Board of Directors
as well as her commitment to gender equity in education and society, teachings
about women in leadership, and commitment to carving out a new and exciting
future for the students at Wells.
President Ryerson will appear
as a guest on the Syracuse-based television show "Women's Voices" on March
11 to discuss her selection as the national Girls Inc. honoree and the
Spirit of American Women dinner. She will focus on the importance
of positive female role models for girls.
An outstanding list of nationally
recognized women have also received the national Girls Inc. award: former
First Lady Barbara Bush; former Secretary of Health and Human Services,
Donna Shalala; and former White House Bureau Chief for UPI Helen Thomas.
March, 2003
Digital
Image Art Exhibit Opens at Wells College
The Wells College Art Department
is pleased to welcome Rochester artist Ronald Broida to the Aurora campus.
Broida’s large digital images will be on display in the String Room Gallery
from March 5 - April 4, 2003. The exhibit is free and the public is cordially
invited to view the show. An opening reception with refreshments provides
an opportunity to meet the artist on Wednesday, March 5 from 7:00-9:00
pm in the Gallery.
A 1973 graduate of RIT’s
School of Art and Design, Ron Broida worked in traditional media until
his transition to the digital medium 18 years ago. Photography, both digital
and film, continues to be an important component as well. Broida’s work
is represented in several private collections and in the permanent collection
of the Rochester Institute of Technology. His most recent exhibition was
in March 2002 at the Center at High Falls Fine Art Gallery in Rochester.
String Room Gallery hours
are Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Wednesday evenings
from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday from 1:00 p.m. to
5:00 p.m. For more information about Broida and the show, please contact
art professor William Roberts at 315/364-3237.
March, 2003
Earlier Articles
in Wells College News:
| April, 2003 |
Sept.,2000.-May.,2001 |
May,1998 |
May - June,1997 |
| March, 2003 |
Sept. 1999-Aug.,2000 |
April,1998 |
March - April,1997 |
| Jan.-Feb.,
2003 |
August,1999 |
March,1998 |
February,1997 |
| December, 2002 |
May,1999 |
February,1998 |
Nov. - Dec.,1996 |
| November, 2002 |
April,1999 |
January,1998 |
October,1996 |
| October, 2002 |
Feb. - March,
1999 |
December,1997 |
September,1996 |
| September,
2002 |
January,1999 |
November,1997 |
June - Aug.,1996 |
| August, 2002 |
Fall,1998 |
October,1997 |
May,1996 |
| Sept.,2001.-May.,2002 |
August,1998 |
September,1997 |
April,1996 |
|
June -July,
1998 |
July - August,
1997 |
Feb - March, 1996 |
Last updated 05/15/2003 |