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(05/28/15 11:39pm)
A few weeks ago, in one of my few forays into the wilderness since my Hiking 1 trip freshman year, I spent the night with a group of friends at the Class of 1966 Lodge, also known as Harris Cabin. As we laughed through rounds of Taboo and “yum-yummed” the remainder of what must have been an industrial-sized block of Cabot cheese, the daylight receded, bringing with it the serene darkness and the distant, unknown living sounds characteristic of a forest at night. We staked out our sleeping locations, a few others and I opting for the cool air of the balcony overlooking the clearing.
(09/09/14 10:13pm)
Arts and entertainment editor Caela Murphy talked to three Dartmouth students about finding and developing their artistic passions and how Dartmouth has shaped their interests — from digital arts to jazz.
(04/13/14 8:39pm)
Last night, Friday Night Rock’s blue neon sign illuminated the path into Sarner Underground, where five bands and one solo performer competed in a Battle of the Bands contest.
(03/03/14 12:34am)
This summer, Tricia Paik ’91 will take over as Indianapolis Museum of Art’s contemporary art curator . Paik, who is currently the associate curator of modern and contemporary art at the St. Louis Art Museum, has worked at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Morgan Library and Museum and the Museum of Modern Art.
(02/24/14 10:46pm)
As Hannah Williams ’14 sees it, computer programs open up endless creative possibilities for digital artists. What else can make you feel like a god, capable of creating anything from nothing?
(02/18/14 10:43pm)
Moises Silva ’16, a drummer in the World Music Percussion Ensemble, is used to seeing empty seats at the group’s termly performances. They seldom stay filled because audience members can’t help but stand and move to the energetic rhythms from across the globe. Silva hopes for a similar reaction at Friday’s Cuban-inspired concert, “Ritmos Suaves: Smooth Rhythm.”
(01/29/14 8:40pm)
Can the precise, unwavering stroke of a note on a harpsichord awaken a musical past? Can it convert a modern auditorium into a royal court or the ornate halls of a cathedral? Tomorrow night, conductor Harry Bicket and the members of the English Concert chamber orchestra will take on this task.
(01/21/14 9:32pm)
Broken relics, pieces of scrap and discarded parts from previous rings, earrings and necklaces will be reassembled and sorted to make new jewelry, part of the first of the Hopkins Center’s Community Venture Initiatives, the Radical Jewelry Makeover.
(01/14/14 9:54pm)
At the height of World War II, Countess Freya von Moltke’s husband came to her with a request: could she turn against friends and colleagues to form a resistance group of upper-class German citizens like themselves?
(01/06/14 12:09am)
Preston Copley ’07 assumed the role of director of creative development for theater at Jean Doumanian Productions in December. In his role, Copley will scout in London and other international theaters for new projects that Doumanian will produce on and off-Broadway. An athlete and involved in theater at the College, he will build on established relationships between Doumanian and artists and coordinate with the company’s vice president, Patrick Daly.
(08/16/13 2:00am)
Families streamed into the tent and seated themselves on bright yellow bleachers. As circus employees distributed popcorn and cotton candy, young children were invited to sit on the floor around the center ring, where they could participate in the performance.
(08/13/13 2:00am)
The College's student workshops, tucked away in covert locations on and off campus, provide a gateway to the arts for students with little artistic experience. Jewelry-making, ceramics and woodshop studios offer students a chance to learn new skills and partake in the creative process.
(08/09/13 2:00am)
The studio hosts a termly intensive letterpress program, and in this summer's, "Form and Letterform," participants can learn letterform design to compose a page for an abecedary, or alphabet book. Students design and draw a letterform and corresponding animal, then synthesize them into a unified composition.
(07/26/13 2:00am)
In the back of the theater, Olivia Scott '13 listened as actors read her play, "Little Lights," which will be performed as part of the Eleanor Frost and Ruth Loring Dodd play festival this weekend. Staged readings of "Thaw" by Aaluk Edwardson '12 and "Our Fathers" by Michael McDavid '15, the Frost contest winners, will precede the full production of "Little Lights," which won the Dodd contest.
(07/05/13 2:00am)
Each performance will be accompanied by a workshop, where members of Vox Theater, students and faculty collaborators will contribute to the editing process.
(05/14/13 2:00am)
Caela Murphy: This is a historic moment for the museum. How do you feel about being the first person to hold this new position?
(05/09/13 2:00am)
The evening's first installment will take place in the Black Family Visual Arts Center and includes a digital music exhibition, a camera with background subtraction and video game and cell phone application demos. Hannah Williams '14, one of the event's student coordinators, said she was excited to take full advantage of the VAC.
(04/24/13 2:00am)
Last week, the Year of the Arts steering committee, in collaboration with the Dartmouth Centers Forum, announced the nine students who will receive funding for art proposals this term.
(04/11/13 2:00am)
The exhibit contains 22 ethnographic and archaeological objects from cultures dating up to 3,000 years old and examines how inequality has been historically manifested.
(04/01/13 2:00am)
Artists of various genres recently experimented with diverse ways of telling (and retelling) a story through their work.