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Wells
College Announces Group Art Exhibit
Four regional
artists display a variety of media
The
Wells College Art Department is pleased to announce the opening of its
latest exhibition. A selection of work by four regional artists will be
on display in the String Room Gallery from November 12 - December 12, 2003.
The exhibit is free and the public is cordially invited. An opening reception
to be held on Wednesday, November 12 from 7:00-9:00 p.m. offers an opportunity
to meet the artists; refreshments will be served.
A variety
of media will be presented by an eclectic group of artists. Brian Elder
will show his abstract paintings. Brian is a professor of art at Central
Michigan University who received his MFA from the University of Indiana
at Bloomington. Born in Germany, Eileen Pleasure O’Brien paints in the
abstract expressionistic style. She currently teaches and paints in Buffalo,
and received her master’s degree in behavioral psychology from the University
of Buffalo.
Mark
Iwinski is a sculptor who works in both wood block printing and abstract
wood sculptures. He is a visiting professor of art in the sculpture department
at Cornell. Damon McArthur, a recent graduate of Hobart College in Geneva,
NY, teaches painting at Western Illinois University. He will be displaying
his still life paintings.
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 the show and art
classes at Wells, please contact art professor and String Room Gallery
director William Roberts at 315/364-3237.
October, 2003
Wells
College Students Present Fall Drama Production
Anton in Show
Business - Three Independent Women…One Stage
The
Wells College Theatre Department proudly presents Anton in Show Business
as
this fall’s student drama production. The comedy will be featured on Friday,
November 7 and Saturday, November 8 at 7:30 p.m. in Phipps Auditorium,
Macmillan Hall on the Aurora campus. Prices are $3 for students and children,
$5 for senior citizens and the Wells College community, and $7 for the
general public. Tickets are available from the box office the week preceding
the show, and at the door the night of the performance. Please call 315/364-3456
or email boxoffice@wells.edu
to reserve seats.
Anton
in Show Business is based on Anton Chekhov’s famous The Three Sisters
classic, yet reveals writer Jane Martin’s own edgy twists. The play features
an all-female cast, and tells the tale of three unique independent women
who come together to mount a stage production of The Three Sisters
in San Antonio, Texas. They encounter every imaginable obstacle and confront
many controversial issues of modern life, from plastic surgery to racism.
The
hilarious comedy, rated PG-13 for strong language and adult content, presents
three Wells College students: freshwoman Beth Anne Nelson plays Lisabette
Cartwright, a hapless third grade teacher and newcomer to the stage; glamorous
television star Holly Seabe is played by freshwoman Rebecca Cooper; and
junior Lauren Noyes portrays the jaded, off-off Broadway actress Casey
Mulgraw. These women comically contemplate their different relationships
with the stage, and poke tongue-in-cheek fun at the stereotypes and revealing
backstage realities of the world of theatre. At the end of the day, they
realize they have more in common than they ever dreamed.
Anton
in Show Business is directed by visiting assistant theatre professor
Siouxsie Grady of Ithaca. Grady works as audience services manager in Cornell’s
Theatre, Film and Dance Department. She received her Master of Theatre
Education in Drama from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro,
and a B.A. in Speech and Theatre from the University of Montevallo in Alabama.
Siouxsie has taught theatre workshops and classes across the country and
most recently at Ithaca’s Kitchen Theatre Company and the Hangar Theatre.
Scenery and lights are designed and presented by technical director Joe
DeForest.
In
addition to the three lead characters, Wells College students comprise
the rest of the cast and crew: Rachel Crosbie (cast), Dana Finegan (cast
and props), Margaret Irving (props), Zoe Malinchoc (board op), Rebecca
Miles-Stiener (board op), Isabelle Ramos (cast), and Whitney Sampson (cast).
Deborah Dhuy is assistant director, and Angela Azevedo and Cindy Cicarell
serve as stage managers. Cast member Lauren Noyes also doubles as costume
designer.
For
more information about Anton in Show Business and performing arts
classes at Wells, please contact theatre professor and director Siouxsie
Grady at 315/364-3232 or email sgrady@wells.edu.
October, 2003
Friends
& Family Weekend 2003
Each
fall, students invite their families and friends for a festive weekend.
This tradition usually includes a reception with the president, a special
dinner dance, campus activities, and field trips to regional locations
of interest. The Office of Campus Involvement coordinates the weekend.
For more information, please contact Meagan Mulherin, assistant dean for
campus involvement, at 315/364-3428.
Schedule
Friday,
November 7
1:00-5:00pm
Check-in Main Lobby
(5pm-on,
check-in will be located at the Office of Campus Safety)
5:00pm
Welcome by class officers Chapel
6:00pm
Dinner on own (please see “Dining Options”)
8:00pm
Family Movie “Finding Nemo” Sommer Center
Saturday,
November 8
7:00-9:00am
Continental Breakfast Main Lobby
10:00am-12
noon Class receptions
-
Senior
Class Mother/Daughter Brunch AER
-
Junior
Class Faculty Parlors
-
Sophomore
Class Sommer Ctr.
-
First-year
Class Main Smoker
11:00am
Historical walking tour of Aurora with Ann Mathieson Meet at Main
Lobby
12
noon Lunch on own
1:00pm
Friends and Family Weekend Trips:
(Sign
ups will be located at check-in, and then at Campus Safety after 5:00pm
on Friday. This is first come, first served, however, you may take
your own vehicle to the various locations.)
-
Winery
Tour Front of Main
Visit
King Ferry and Long Point Wineries
-
Historic
Homes Front of Main
Visit
the historical sites of the Harriet Tubman and Seward Homes
-
Women’s
Hall of Fame of Seneca Falls Front of Main
5:00pm
President’s Reception Taylor House (across the street from
the Aurora Inn)
6:30-11:00pm
Dinner Dance Sommer Center
(Open to pre-registered friends and families only)
Sunday,
November 9
7:00-9:00am
Continental Breakfast Lobby of Main
9:30-11:00am
Morning Tea & Tours of the Newly Restored Aurora Inn Meet
at Aurora Inn
12:00
noon Lunch on own
Concert
with Whirligigs, Henry’s VIIIs and Gospel Choir
Dining Hall
Other
events and activities going on during the weekend:
The
Wells College bookshop is open on Friday from 8:30am-5:00pm, and on Saturday
from 10:00am-2:00pm
7:30pm
on both Friday and Saturday: Wells College Theater Dept. presents: Anton
in Show Business Phipps Auditorium
11:00am,
Saturday AWCC Swim meet w/College of Notre Dame
Schwartz
Student Union
2:00pm,
Sunday: The Wells College Concert Choir and Chamber Singers Fall
Concert Barler Recital
Hall
Original
Quilt Show
“Stitch,
Color, & Cloth” will be shown through December 15
The
quilts will be shown in the lobbies of the Long Library from November 1
– December 15, 2003. The exhibit is free and the public is cordially invited
to view the installation. Long Library lobby hours are Monday
through Thursday from 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m., Friday and Saturday 12:00
noon to 6:00 pm, and Sunday from 12:00 noon to 9:00 p.m.
Dining
Options:
In
an effort to leave your dining options open, and keep your registration
costs to a minimum, The Friends and Family Weekend Committee has not included
meals other then the Dinner Dance in the weekend’s programming. There
will however be a continental breakfast served both Saturday and Sunday
morning at no charge. Please see below for dinging hours and prices.
By doing this, there is no obligation to stay on campus and you have the
option to leave Wells freely for your dining pleasure at any of the local
restaurants.
The
$30 registration fee goes toward all of the weekend’s programming that
was designed collaboratively by the Officers of the Classes of 2004, 2005,
2006, and 2007 and the Office of Campus Involvement.
Dining
Hours and Prices
Full
Breakfast/Brunch Saturday & Sunday 8:00am-1:00pm $4.25
Dinner
Friday 5:30-7:00pm $7.00
Saturday 5:00-6:00pm
October, 2003
New
Edition Recounts History of Wells’ Book Arts Center
The
Wells College Press has released a much-needed and finely printed volume
chronicling the history of the Victor Hammer Press at Wells and the revival
of Hammer’s legacy in the 1990s through the founding of the college’s Book
Arts Center.
Written
by current Victor Hammer Fellow Sarah Roberts and designed by the center’s
Director Terry Chouinard, A History of the Book Arts at Wells College
begins by profiling two historic figures responsible for bringing the art
of the book into the college’s liberal arts curriculum and into the heart
of the community.
This
new edition serves as an excellent companion piece to two other books:
Sincerely
Yours, Victor Hammer (a collection of Hammer’s letters written to poet
and novelist Janet Lewis, published by the Wells press) and The Woodcut
Art of J.J. Lankes (a special Wells press edition produced in collaboration
with David R. Godine).
According
to Roberts, nationally recognized artist Julius John (J.J.) Lankes came
to Wells in 1932 at the urging of his friend Robert Frost. He collaborated
with faculty members, illustrated books for R. Tristam Coffin (a well-known
poet of that era who taught at Wells), and produced a stunning series of
woodcuts depicting the Wells campus and surrounding landscape.
While
at Wells, his book A Woodcut Manual was published by Henry Holt.
Lankes brought to the campus community an appreciation of woodcut art.
He also heightened appreciation of the interplay between illustration and
text, a focus that has endured in art classes and literary studies for
decades.
Victor
Hammer arrived at Wells in 1939, having fled the Holocaust. He was a highly
accomplished painter, calligrapher, type designer, and printer whose sensibilities
were firmly rooted in the Old World. Existence in America, which he found
laden with nearly intolerable contradictions, perplexed, amused, and annoyed
him; however, it sparked his creativity.
He
established the Wells College Press in 1941, giving students the opportunity
to participate in book production. During his years in Aurora he printed
editions by William Carlos Williams, Stéphane Mallarmé, and
Rainer Maria Rilke. He also produced several historically significant type
faces. “Victor Hammer was a dedicated and accomplished teacher. The books
produced by Wells students under his guidance demonstrate sensitive design
and beautiful printing,” writes Roberts.
Following
Hammer’s retirement, the Wells College Press was idle for 45 years. A former
associate of Hammer’s, Robert Doherty, convinced members of the campus
community they had an unrealized treasure in Hammer’s connection to the
college and the materials he left behind. Doherty’s plan for a revival
was enthusiastically supported by alumnae Jane Webster Pearce ’32 and Susan
Garretson Swartzburg ’60, among many others. When the Book Arts Center
opened in 1993, it was obvious their efforts had exceeded all expectations.
Today,
the Book Arts Center links the liberal arts tradition with hands on learning
for Wells students. Their studies range from age-old book crafts to digital
design; they produce books and broadsides for well-known literary figures
as well as their own creative projects. The center includes the Class of
1932 Bindery and the Wells College Press and has gained recognition as
a premier location in the United States for the study of the book, literary
production, and conservation.
Roberts
writes, “With abundant resources, dedicated faculty, friends, alumnae and
students, the Book Arts Center has grown. New courses are being developed,
more students are becoming Book Arts minors, and a new understanding of
the importance of this broad and dynamic discipline has spread throughout
academe.”
To
learn more about Sarah Roberts’ A History of the Book Arts at Wells College,
visit the book arts website (www.wells.edu/bkarts/info.htm)
and the college bookshop website (athena.wells.edu:6080/bookshop/info.htm).
October, 2003
Original
Quilt Show on Display at Wells College
“Stitch, Color,
& Cloth” will be shown through December 15
Thirty
original quilts will be exhibited at Wells College this fall. Created by
Wells’ technical director Joe DeForest and his wife Kathy, the quilts will
be shown in the lobbies of the Long Library from November 1 – December
15, 2003. The exhibit is free and the public is cordially invited to view
the installation. A reception with the quilters will be held on Sunday,
November 9 from 4:00-6:00 pm in the library lobby; refreshments will be
served.
The
quilt show, titled “Stitch, Color, & Cloth,” is presented by Joe and
Kathy DeForest of Genoa. Kathy, an operating room nurse and a life-long
seamstress, began quilting in 1989 when she enrolled in a class. Her Mariner’s
Compass quilt “Sun Burn” was published in the Fall 1996 edition of American
Quilters Society magazine. She has taught classes in machine quilting in
Skaneateles, and was the guest curator for the antique quilting show held
in 1998 at the Cayuga Museum of History and Art in Auburn.
Kathy’s
husband Joe was bitten by the quilting bug in 1992 when the two of them
worked together on a piece dedicated to Kathy’s mother called “Tucson Ruth.”
Joe is a three-time judge at the annual Schweinfurth Memorial Art Center’s
"Quilts = Art = Quilts" show in Auburn, and serves as technical director
and facilities manager for Wells College’s theatre department.
Now
nationally recognized for their textile art, Joe and Kathy’s quilts have
received ribbons at many shows, and have been featured in several magazines,
calendars, and industry newsletters. The couple works independently and
collaboratively to create original quilts in their studio, located in the
loft of their restored Greek Revival farmhouse. Flamboyant color is their
trademark, used with abandon as they explore various designs and themes
in their work. Together, they are also owners and operators of Shakelton
Hardware in Aurora.
The
dates for “Stitch, Color, & Cloth” have been intentionally chosen to
coincide with the Quilts=Art=Quilts show which runs November 1 – January
4 at the Schweinfurth Memorial Art Center, and with the Amish quilt exhibit
to be displayed at the Cayuga Museum of Art from November 2 – January 11.
October, 2003
Stephen
L. Zabriskie Named Wells Board Chair
Continuing
a family tradition of service to the college going back nearly 150 years,
Aurora resident Stephen L. Zabriskie has been elected chair of the Wells
College Board of Trustees. His responsibilities in this new position began
this summer.
Steve
joined the Wells board in 1996. Previous to being named chair, he served
as the board’s secretary and then vice chair. He was chair of the Critical
Issues Action Committee that first convened in 1997 and is now a member
of the college’s Sustainable Wells Action Team.
“I
enjoy working with faculty, staff, and administration on many different
projects. Most of the professors are personal friends, and it’s been good
to make common cause with them in trying to mold the future of the college,”
he says.
Since
graduating from Ithaca College with a degree in English, Steve has distinguished
himself through extensive public leadership and service. He was supervisor
for the Town of Ledyard, a past president of both the Cornell Cooperative
Extension in Cayuga County and the Auburn Memorial Hospital, and has been
a board member of the Cayuga Lake National Bank for 28 years.
Currently,
he is president of the Auburn Hospital System Foundation. He chairs the
Cayuga County Planning Board, the Central New York Regional Planning and
Development Board, and was also recently appointed a trustee of the Masonic
Medical Research Laboratory in Utica, New York.
The
Morgan/Zabriskie tradition of service to the college began in the 19th
century when entrepreneur Edwin B. Morgan helped Henry Wells establish
Wells. Zabriskie Hall is named in honor of Steve’s grandfather, Nicholas
Lansing Zabriskie, who was a Wells trustee for 50 years. Wells’ elegant
guest house (formerly known as French House) was a gift given to the college
by Steve’s parents, John L. and Lesley Wead Zabriskie.
Steve
says, “My first recollection of Wells is coming to the campus in the fall
with my mother, trampling through the amphitheatre and woods, gathering
leaves. The college seems like a home to me, and I think of it now as I’ve
known it for 30 or more years – a fine institution for women..”
Steve
and his wife, alumna Randi Shaw Zabriskie ’74, have a daughter, Haley,
who recently graduated from Colby College in Maine; their son Charlie attends
Middlebury College in Vermont.
October, 2003
Renaissance
Scholar And Poet Gives Reading at Wells College
Linda Gregerson
will read from her work, give poetry writing workshop
The
Wells College Visiting Writer Series is pleased to announce that well-known
poet and scholar Linda Gregerson will give a public reading of her poetry
at 8:00 pm on Thursday, October 16 in the Art Exhibit Room, Macmillan Hall.
The free reading will be followed by a reception with an opportunity to
meet the speaker; refreshments will be served.
In
addition to being a celebrated poet, Linda Gregerson teaches Renaissance
literature and creative writing at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
Her poems have appeared in the Atlantic Monthly, Poetry,
Ploughshares,
the Yale Review, and many anthologies, including
The Best American
Poetry 2001. Her most recent book of poetry, Waterborne, was
published in 2002. She is the author of two previous volumes, Fire in
the Conservatory (1982), and The Woman Who Died in Her Sleep
(1996). Gregerson is a recent Guggenheim fellow.
Poet
Edward Hirsch has called Waterborne Ms. Gregerson’s best book yet,
and says that in it "…we are borne along by a language that is at once
rich and luminous, lyrical and discursive, reckless and well crafted, ancient
and new." Another critic, Grace Schulman, has written: "In Waterborne,
Linda Gregerson portrays nothing less than the soul of America, from the
Massachusetts colonists to residents of a contemporary town. She writes
of people whose dreams and sorrows become our own, capturing their idiom
in lines enlightened by biblical and historical truths. The grit of daily
life enters her vision, but so does its beauty…."
Ms.
Gregerson comes to Wells as part of the college’s Visiting Writers Series,
which brings several distinguished writers of poetry, fiction, and non-fiction
to campus each year. The Visiting Writer Series is supported by the New
York State Council on the Arts, the Virginia Kent Cummins Writers-in-Residence
Fund, and the Mildred Walker Fiction-Writer-in-Residence Fund.
During
her two-day visit, Ms. Gregerson will participate in classes and conduct
a poetry-writing workshop in addition to her reading.
For
more information about Linda Gregerson and the Visiting Writers Series
at Wells College, please contact English professor Bruce Bennett at 315/364-3228.
October, 2003
Wells
Professors: Students Say “Caring, Dedicated, and Phenomenally Knowledgeable”
Susan
Talbot, elementary and secondary education director and education instructor,
received the college’s 2002-03 Award for Excellence in Teaching. Eleven
professors were nominated for the honor by Wells students.
She
is described as energetic, innovative, willing to help, caring, and phenomenally
knowledgeable. To quote one student, “Professor Talbot comes into class
excited because she can teach what she loves. She uses her enthusiasm to
get us motivated and on our feet to solve problems. She is always eager
to hear what we have to say.” Another wrote, “I want to be this professor
when I grow up.”
Susan
earned her B.A. from S.U.N.Y. Oswego and her M.S. from Syracuse University.
She teaches Introduction to Teaching, The Inclusive Classroom, and Elementary
Methods: Teaching Math and Science, among other courses.
Associate
Professor of Anthropology and Religion Ernie Olson was chosen from among
eight nominees to receive Wells’ 2002-03 Excellence in Advising Award.
In
her nomination a student wrote, “This year I became aware of the time and
effort Professor Olson devotes to advising. I cannot even count the hours
he spent providing feedback on my thesis and coaching me through graduate
school applications.” Another student commented, “Good students don’t just
appear; they are coached by attentive faculty. My academic accomplishments
at Wells are a direct reflection of this professor’s wonderful mentoring
skills.”
Ernie
received his B.A. from the University of Montana and his M.A. and Ph.D.
from the University of Arizona. The classes he teaches include Indigenous
Peoples of North America, Cultures and Religions of the Pacific, and Ritual
Studies and Anthropology.
October, 2003
Papermaker
Gives Book Arts Lecture at Wells College
Peter Thomas presents
slide lecture on the books as aesthetic art
The
Wells College Book Arts Center is pleased to welcome California papermaker
Peter Thomas to campus. Thomas will give a slide lecture at 7:00 pm on
Monday, October 6 in the Art Exhibit Room, Macmillan Hall. All are invited
to hear this book artist’s presentation. The free lecture will be followed
by a reception with an opportunity to meet the speaker; refreshments will
be served.
Papermaker
Peter Thomas will present a slide lecture entitled “The Literary Book as
a Work of Art: Books as Four-Dimensional Art.” The talk will focus on his
understandings of the book as art, using selections from his 25-year career
as a designer, painter, lettering artist, and collaborative bookmaker.
As
a student in the mid-1970s, Thomas’ heartfelt longing was to be a book
artist, yet he was perplexed by the then-accepted dogma of book as container
and art as something else. He sees the advent of computerized text as liberating
the book from its time-honored function as information storage and allowing
it to be enjoyed solely as an aesthetic object. Thomas graduated in 1978
from the University of California – Santa Cruz with a degree in Aesthetic
Studies. He and his wife Donna have worked collaboratively and individually
since 1976, making paper, letterpress printing, and book binding to create
books.
Inspired
by Victor Hammer, founder of the Wells College Press and an internationally
renowned calligrapher, painter, printer and type designer, the Wells Book
Arts Center was established in 1993 to instruct in all areas of book arts
and technologies. Students in Wells book arts classes learn the history
and philosophy of their craft as they develop hand skills in the fabrication
of books.
They
gain international perspective on book arts with visits from accomplished
lecturers, writers, and artists, and with field trips to the area's remarkable
collection of libraries, presses, paper mills and binderies. Current classes
teach design, typography, the evolution of letterforms, letterpress printing,
bookbinding, and the history of the book. Though it embraces historical
arts and technologies, the Center is not an atavistic curiosity; it actively
investigates and incorporates innovations of our digital age. The Wells
Book Arts Center supports the mission of the College by revealing the essential
role of the book in Western culture and the liberal arts.
For
more information about Peter Thomas and the Wells College Book Arts Center,
please contact director Terry Chouinard at 315/364-3420 or visit the college’s
website at www.wells.edu/bkarts/info.htm.
October, 2003
Earlier Articles
in Wells College News:
| September,
2003 |
|
|
|
| Summer, 2003 |
|
|
|
| May, 2003 |
Sept.,2000.-May.,2001 |
May,1998 |
May - June,1997 |
| April, 2003 |
Sept. 1999-Aug.,2000 |
April,1998 |
March - April,1997 |
| March, 2003 |
August,1999 |
March,1998 |
February,1997 |
| Jan.-Feb.,
2003 |
May,1999 |
February,1998 |
Nov. - Dec.,1996 |
| December, 2002 |
April,1999 |
January,1998 |
October,1996 |
| November, 2002 |
Feb. - March,
1999 |
December,1997 |
September,1996 |
| October, 2002 |
January,1999 |
November,1997 |
June - Aug.,1996 |
| September,
2002 |
Fall,1998 |
October,1997 |
May,1996 |
| August, 2002 |
August,1998 |
September,1997 |
April,1996 |
| Sept.,2001.-May.,2002 |
June -July,
1998 |
July - August,
1997 |
Feb - March, 1996 |
Last updated 11/06/2003 |