
Student-curated exhibition brings Native American art to forefront
Many scholars believe that Native American culture currently finds itself in a troubling situation: too many people think of it only in the past tense...
Many scholars believe that Native American culture currently finds itself in a troubling situation: too many people think of it only in the past tense...
On Monday, Dec. 2, faculty and administrators unveiled the Privilege Campaign, a show of portrait photographs of faculty and administrators detailing the privilege that each of these individuals...
When she was around six years old, Alisa Prince ’14 made a life-size mural of her family on a wall inside her house out of crayons. She was never reprimanded…
Step into the Palmer Gallery and you will find bright landscapes built through bold shapes and colors. On Wednesday, Nov. 20, the Palmer Gallery held an opening for the exhibition,…
Artwork lives an infinity of lives. And each life is determined by the limits or limitlessness of the viewer, the seer with ubiquitous eyes. On November 5, artist Arlene Shechet…
Medicine and art may seem entirely unrelated, but photographer Andrea Baldeck ’72 manages to combine both. Her exhibit “Bones, Books and Bell Jars” will be in the Palmer Gallery October…
Professor of Art Eve D’Ambra is busy this semester, immersed in cultures of the past— ancient Greece and Rome. She teaches seven lectures in the Art History 105-106 course, Greek…
Emma Goodwin ’14, an anthropology major and art correlate, ponders the questions: What is art? What does art mean? These are two big questions that many artists face as they…
I’m interested in creating a record of the feeling of being somewhere or with someone. Photography, though relied on as an accurate depiction of time and events, has the ability…
There’s no way to get around it—move-in is a mess. Overflowing trash bins, just like getting used to new bathrooms and finding out which of your hall mates are the…