Student Spotlight: Sabrina Yegela '13
Yegela's exhibit, "How to Not Hate White People," is currently displayed in the Barrows rotunda, where it will stay for four weeks.
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Yegela's exhibit, "How to Not Hate White People," is currently displayed in the Barrows rotunda, where it will stay for four weeks.
As orientation drew to a close, the sound of various a cappella groups greeted students on the Green and in the Hopkins Center. At the showcase Saturday night, singers returned to the stage to give members of the Class of 2017 the opportunity to experience one of the most prominent parts of Dartmouth's music scene.
The studio art major culminates with senior seminars offered during winter and spring terms. Because they are enrolled in classes that are less structured, seniors are given the freedom to follow their own artistic trajectory, with feedback from professors. For many, it is the first time they are treated as artists, rather than art students.
Whether we attend a Dartmouth Symphony Orchestra concert, listen to an a cappella group in a fraternity or watch a stage production in Moore Theater, Dartmouth's arts scene is alive and thriving, enabling students to express and hone their musical talents. For Gospel Choir and Glee Club singer Nate Graves '13, Dance Ensemble modern dancer Annie Munger '13 and Barbary Coast tenor saxophonist Alan Gottesman '13, their time at Dartmouth has been marked by these performance groups.
"Inspector Hound" is a window into the theatrical world under the guise of an exaggerated murder mystery. The play presents the comical perspective of two theater critics responding to an Agatha Christie murder mystery set in 1940s England.
The critically acclaimed Hirsch-Pinkas piano duo has performed for audiences around the globe, and will return tonight to the auditorium where the classical pair was born. Music professor Sally Pinkas, along with her husband Evan Hirsch, will grace the Spaulding Auditorium stage playing her first performance of the year as the Hopkins Center's pianist-in-residence.
Winter Carnival is an opportunity for the College community to get involved in various winter activities both out in the snow and inside. Once the skis were put away and the last snowball was thrown, student performers moved indoors, broke out their dance moves and exercised their vocal cords at student shows that made this snowy weekend unforgettable to arts audiences.
From the Dartmouth classroom to "The Sing-Off" stage and now to a Hollywood set, Moore makes his debut on the popular show as a new recurring character who is a member of the Adam's Apples, a competing glee club at the New York Academy of Dramatic Arts, where Hummel and Berry attend.
Topel also reached out to a diverse group of students for selecting the music, including digital arts graduate student Ryan Maguire, Sang Lee '13, Alec Carvlin '15 and Lulu Chang '15. Topel works to showcase high quality music irrespective of genre, just as one would expect to see at Le Poisson Rouge.
The DSO usually performs one concert each term, but an extra concert will be held this term in honor of the Hopkins Center's 50th Anniversary, according to Fu. In addition, as a thank you to the Hopkins Center's patrons, admission will be free.