Fall 2008 - School of Arts and Humanities
Transcription
Fall 2008 - School of Arts and Humanities
& arts humanities Buffalo State College > The Newsletter of the School of Arts and Humanities > Fall 2008 TFA student Brooke Rewa Photographs by Bruce Fox From left: Amy Berman, ’87, Deborah Oppenheimer, ’75, Tom Fontana, ’73, Rich Wall, ’94, Marcia Mulé, ’81, Ruben Santiago-Hudson, Tom Calderone, ’86 Photograph by Sharon Cantillon/Buffalo News Star Alums Guide Growth of Television and Film Arts Program Seven of Buffalo State’s most successful alumni from the entertainment industry returned to campus in June to take part in a two-day Television and Film Arts Symposium—a series of meetings designed to assist with the long-term strategic direction of the college’s new television and film arts (TFA) major, www.buffalostate.edu/tvfilm. The star-studded lineup featured Amy Berman, ’87 (vice president of casting, HBO Films), Tom Calderone, ’86 (president of VH1), Tom Fontana, ’73 (Emmy Award–winning producer), Marcia Mulé, ’81 (producer of Celebrity Poker Showdown and Kathy Griffin: My Life on the D-List), Deborah Oppenheimer, ’75 (Oscar-winning documentarian and producer of The Drew Carey Show), Ruben Santiago-Hudson (Tony Award–winning actor and author of Lackawanna Blues), and Rich Wall, ’94 (promotions manager for the Buffalo Sabres). The interdisciplinary TFA curriculum incorporates courses from the college’s Theater, Communication, and English departments, along with nine new TFA-specific classes. TFA majors choose one of two concentrations: writing and storytelling, or directing and producing. Graduates of the program will have a portfolio that demonstrates they have written, produced, and directed short films; written short scripts and full-length screenplays; and directed before a live audience. The highly selective program recently named its inaugural class of 15 students. “We aspire to be the public equivalent of a USC, NYU, Syracuse, Northwestern, or Emerson,” said Jeffrey N. Hirschberg, assistant professor of television arts. “We want to be on the short list of every talented potential filmmaker in the country.” Plans are already in the works for the alumni to gather on campus for a second symposium, tentatively scheduled for October 2009. In addition, several members of the group have expressed an interest visiting professorship opportunities. “It is important that we just don’t have a once-a-year relationship with the alumni,” Hirschberg said. “There are a lot of different scenarios to play out, but we are off to a great start.” Contact Hirschberg at hirschjn@buffalostate.edu. Visit the TFA website at www.buffalostate.edu/tvfilm. Leadership in Creative Expression “ From Buffalo to the Slovak Republic Under the leadership of Associate Professor of Design Jozef Bajus, the ongoing relationship between the Buffalo State fiber design program and artists in Slovakia continues to thrive. This past spring, Zuzana Gazikova, PhD, Director of the art gallery in Liptovsky Mikulas, Slovakia, and Associate Professor Julia Sabova from the Department of Textile and the Fashion Studio at the Academy of Fine Arts and Design (AFAD), Bratislava, Slovakia, came to Buffalo for a week-long residency in the Design Department. Sabova discussed her current fashion artworks: “Hats” and student projects from Fashion Studio at AFAD. Gazikova introduced her “Inspiration–Quotation–Interpretation” project and spoke about the permanent collections of the gallery in Liptovsky Mikulas. Student participants designed and constructed their own hats, using felt of their own creation. Subsequent to that event, students and faculty from Buffalo and Slovakia have been making regular exchange visits. Last spring, four fiber students — Amy Anderson, Keyla Kegler, Teagan Ford, and Hillary Fayle — visited historical and cultural sites of the Czech and Slovak Republics (May 15–29, 2008) and attended a workshop on fiber design. Red felt hat designed by Buffalo State student Mariko Masubuchi, on exhibit in the Slovak Republic Faculty Art Chosen by Steuben A drawing by Art Education Professor Joseph Piccillo was chosen by Steuben Glass of New York for a limited edition of 25 in its new Fall 2008 collection. The etched glass piece with Piccillo’s drawing of a horse was on exhibit this summer in New York City. Piccillo earned both his bachelor’s and master’s degrees at Buffalo State. He is especially well known for his work in graphite pencil and his depictions of horses. He has exhibited in numerous galleries, and his work is in the permanent collections of a number of museums, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Steuben Glass was founded in 1903 in Corning, New York. Its glass creations – named by Forbes as one of the 50 Best Products of America – are entirely hand-crafted to this day and are considered the highest quality clear crystal in the world. Steuben Glass has often been the American Gift of State beginning with President and Mrs. Truman’s gift of a Steuben bowl to Princess Elizabeth and Prince Phillip of England on the occasion of their royal wedding in 1947. Moscow Trip Dean Benjamin C. Christy traveled to Moscow this past spring with music Department chair Bradley Fuster and Fine Arts Department chair Lin Xia Jiang to facilitate international agreements between Moscow State University (MSU) and Buffalo State College. While in Moscow, Jiang met with the coordinator of the MSU painting program and students, visited studios and attended an exhibition reception. Fuster and Christy performed a clarinet and percussion duet by American composer Sydney Hodkinson, which was featured on the 135th birthday concert of Russian composer Sergei Rachmaninoff. Scholars from MSU will visit Buffalo State this fall. Steuben’s The Steed, created in a limited edition of 25. Inspiration–Quotation–Interpretation ” Arts and Humanities Moscow State University 01 fig. Letter from the Dean Dear Friend of Arts and Humanities: The overarching goal of the School of Arts and Humanities is to gain recognition for leadership in creative expression. Advancing Buffalo State’s regional and national academic leadership, A&H initiated three new degree programs, the arts and letters major (BA), which allows students to craft a customized major in cultural fields; the writing major (BA) with studio-like workshops and an inaugural class of 25 select students who will write in the professional arenas of education, media, technology, and the arts; and the multidisciplinary television and film arts (TFA) major (BA) featuring a class of 15 students who will hone their vision and storytelling skills to pursue screenwriting, producing, editing, and directing. Detail of model for “Spojovet handbag retail store,” designed by Wai Hoe Loh, A&H creative associate in interior design A&H expanded its internationalization initiative at Capital Normal University (CNU, Beijing) and Moscow State University (MSU). Building on well-established visual arts exchanges with CNU, Buffalo State music and dance faculty will perform at CNU in October, followed by presentations at Buffalo State by three CNU musicians. Our spring 2008 visit to MSU yielded four partnership agreements and Buffalo State music and visual arts performance and presentations at MSU, as well as MSU psychology and fine arts faculty visits to Buffalo State in September and November 2008. These international interactions inspire students and faculty intellectually and creatively, and enhance our appreciation and respect for cultural, social, and political diversity. Closer to home, A&H initiated the Innovations in Creative Expression speakers series, adopted three public schools (Campus West, School 30, and the Buffalo Academy for the Visual and Performing Arts), and began a partnership with Music is Art (led by Robby Takac of the Goo Goo Dolls). Students excelled, with 412 achieving the Dean’s List (3.5 GPA) in Fall 2007 and 375 in spring 2008. Students received seven of the 16 Undergraduate Summer Research Fellowships, and 11 visual arts students were honored as creative associates by the display of their work in the new Dean’s Student Art Gallery. We can be proud of the accomplishments and leadership demonstrated throughout the School of Arts and Humanities, as faculty and students establish a vibrant community of scholars, artists, and professionals. We appreciate your encouragement and support for student and faculty success and invite you to join us for the ongoing celebration of creative expression at Buffalo State. Sincerely, Benjamin C. Christy Dean, School of Arts and Humanities The corridor and conference room visual arts program as an arts and one year and then a new roster of of the dean’s office in Rockwell Hall humanities creative associate. creative associates will be selected. The 218 have been designated as a gallery These extraordinarily talented students were selected from among spring. Those interested to see the visual arts. Each exhibitor was chosen the 900 visual arts majors at Buffalo work can call (716) 878-6326 or check by the faculty to represent his or her State. Their work will be displayed for in with the office receptionist. The Dean of Arts and Humanities’ Student Art Gallery Margaret Kamholz, A&H creative associate in ceramics, stoneware vessel Paintings by Nathan Sutton, A&H creative associate in art conservation Corporate identity for “Guys Tuys” by John English, A&H creative associate in communication design exhibition opened with a reception last for work by selected students in the Casting Call! The Theater Department is planning for a Casting Hall reunion this spring, kahnaj@buffalostate.edu, and put “Casting Hall including a welcome event on Friday, March 20, 2009, and a reception and Reunion” in the subject line. Professor Kahn also attendance at the Casting Hall production of The Grapes of Wrath on Saturday, can be reached at (716) 878-6421. March 21, 2009. Reunion fig. The 2008–2009 Casting Hall season began Founded under the leadership of Professor Mina S. Goosen, who served with Dog Sees God: Confessions of a Teenage on the Buffalo State faculty for 36 years, beginning in 1927, Casting Hall has Blockhead in October and continues with long provided the opportunity for students to work on college theatrical Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night (November 6–15), 02 Arts and Humanities Casting Hall Reunion 2009 productions of the highest quality. The experience has been a formative life Frank Galati’s stage adaptation of John Steinbeck’s experience for countless Buffalo State students. novel The Grapes of Wrath (March 12–21), and a Maybe you worked with Mina Goosen, or Warren Enters, Don Savage, dance program, The World Within (April 29–May 2), or Dennis and Donna McCarthy. If you value your Casting Hall memories and a collaboration between the college’s dance and would like to be informed of reunion plans, we want to hear from you. Please Fiber Design programs. contact Theater Department chair, Professor Drew Kahn, at The Casting Hall production of Artizone, 2007–2008 Acclaim for Art Ed Grant from the Seneca Nation The Department of Modern and Classical Languages has received a grant from the Seneca Nation to fund the curriculum development for the first two semesters of Seneca language instruction at Buffalo State, as well as a Seneca elder in residence and a number of extracurricular activities for our Seneca language students. With this development, Buffalo State becomes the only university-level institution anywhere in the world to offer courses in Seneca language. The art education program at Buffalo State, established in 1930, is one of the oldest and largest state-sponsored preparatory programs for art teachers in the United States. In 2007–2008, our art education faculty continue to be highly engaged in the field, as evidenced this year by eight publications in national refereed journals and texts by professors Shirley Hayes, Alice Pennisi, Phyllis Thompson, John Siskar, and Mary Wyrick; five nationally prominent exhibitions by Professor Joseph Piccillo; 32 state, national, and regional juried or invited presentations by professors Lucy Andrus, Carol Hammond, Shirley Hayes, Michael Parks, Pennisi, Siskar, and Wyrick; three significant grants for Siskar; a grant in progress for Professor Kate Hartman; a statewide New York State Art Teachers Association Members’ Special Citation Award for Parks; the national National Art Education Association Women’s Caucus Connors Award for Wyrick; and five assignments as judges for scholarship evaluation and art shows for Siskar and Wyrick. The excellence of our faculty translates into enriching experiences for our students and continues to keep Buffalo State at the forefront of the field. Art Conservation Interns Span the Globe Art Conservation Open House The Art Conservation Department will host an open house from 2 to 4 p.m. Friday, November 7, in Rockwell Hall. Meet department students, view works of art undergoing conservation treatment, and learn more about the art conservation graduate program. This event provides a rare opportunity to observe the materials, techniques, and equipment used to examine, restore, and preserve works of art and artifacts of various cultures. Objects in different stages of conservation treatment will be on display. Faculty and students will explain and demonstrate aspects of conservation principles and practices, and will answer questions about the department’s graduate program and the work of conservator, www.buffalostate.edu/depts/artconservation. Buffalo State’s art conservation students travel far and wide through internships to expand their knowledge and hone their skills. For their summer internships, students traveled to Chicago, Washington D.C., Houston, and Atlanta. One student interned at the National Palace Museum in Taiwan, while others ventured to Greece, Iceland, and Italy on archeological digs. This fall, the art conservation class of 2009 scattered across the country for a remarkably diverse array of enriching experiences. Two students went to Washington, DC, for painting internships at the Hirschhorn Museum and the National Gallery of Art. One student was a paper intern at the Philadelphia Museum of Art while another went to Kansas City, Missouri, to the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. Four students were in New York City for internships as the Museum of Modern Art, the American Museum of Natural History, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. One student headed to the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation for an objects internship, and another was at the Weissman Preservation Center at Harvard University Library. The art conservation program at Buffalo State is one of only three such programs in the United States and one of the most prestigious in the world, with a 100 percent placement rate for its graduates. Music Mural Unveiled A 55-foot mural, donated by artist Jeff Laibson, was unveiled on the first floor of Rockwell Hall on August 25. Laibson is an accomplished jazz pianist, and his work gives an appropriate aesthetic boost to the halls of the Music Department. Arts and Humanities Sixth Annual Empty Bowls Event Communication Accreditation Celebrating Pharmaceutical History Through Design Hundreds of handcrafted bowls by Western New York students, teachers, and artists were displayed and sold at the Empty Bowls fundraising luncheon this past spring at Buffalo State’s Rockwell Hall. Visitors at the May event selected a handmade bowl, and enjoyed a simple meal live entertainment — most for under $10. These artists’ bowls serve as a reminder of all the empty bowls around the world and the need to fill them. The Buffalo Niagara Buffalo State’s Communication Department has become the only program in the State University of New York system to receive national accreditation for teaching communication. The decision came at the May meeting of the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications (ACEJMC), the national body that accredits professional programs in journalism, broadcasting, public relations, advertising and related fields. Buffalo State is the only Over a period of 125 years a pharmaceutical company had a distinguished history on The West Side of Buffalo. It had been known as Westwood, then Bristol, Myers and Squibb, and now is home to CPL (Contract Pharmaceuticals, Limited) a Toronto-based company. CPL approached Buffalo State with an idea. It wanted to transform an older entrance lobby of the facility into a legacy wall that would track the history of the company and the transformation of its facilities and highlight celebrated products from the company’s history: Keri lotions, Doan’s backache pills, Lowila soap, and Sebulex anti-dandruff shampoos among them. The project became an internship-style class taught by Professor Stanley Friesen of the Design Department. Five upper-level communication design students worked on proposals, presented them, and developed scale models in LightWave, a 3D modeling program, a physical scale model, and a website that will be a virtual wall. The group took trips to Association of Realtors was the title sponsor for the event. All public institution among six schools in New York State that various printing and exhibit-construction facilities, and museums in the process of researching the possibilities. Chuck Regier, a museum curator proceeds, more than $4,800, benefited the Food Bank of are accredited. The other schools are Syracuse, Hofstra, New York and Smithsonian Fellow, came to speak on exhibit design and gave a presentation open to the college community. He also met with the Western New York and Friends of Night People. Preservice art University, Iona, and the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism. students and a group from CPL. Currently in the final stages and being prepared for external bids, teachers in the art education student chapter played a significant role in coordinating the event. Buffalo State is among 112 colleges and universities nationwide holding ACEJMC accreditation, representing only 15 percent of all institutions offering instruction in this professional field. the project continues to be an enriching real-world assignment for the students involved. 03 fig. Leadership in Creative Expression Bradley Fuster, professor and chair of the Music The Measure of Intellectual Development based on Elizabeth Peña, director of art conservation, is off Aaron Shugar, assistant professor in conservation Department, has been busy performing as the William Perry’s (1970) Model of Intellectual to Rome in November to be a visiting scholar at science, attended the International Symposium on timpanist with the Rochester Philharmonic and Ethical Development will be administered to the American Academy. She will participate in an Archaeometry in Siena, Italy, in May 2008, taking Orchestra and as a percussionist with the Buffalo a control and comparison group. The study also international course organized by ICCROM, the with him the poster presentations of three art Philharmonic Orchestra. He has performed on five will investigate differences in the intellectual international conservation organization on conservation students. different recordings with the Buffalo Philharmonic, development of students involved in intradiscipli- “sharing conservation decisions.” which are scheduled for International release nary and interdisciplinary learning communities. Deborah Silverman, assistant professor of Allen Podet, professor of philosophy and communication, has been named “Practitioner Fuster collaborated with Music Department Carlos Jones, assistant professor of dance, has Humanities at Buffalo State College, has been of the Year” by the Buffalo-Niagara chapter of pianists Bryan Boyce and Ivan Docenko, and been recognized by the SUNY Faculty Diversity invited by the US Department of Education to the Public Relations Society of America. This is Buffalo Philharmonic timpanist Dinesh Joseph, Program for his teaching, scholarship and service, join the selection board for Fulbright awards. the local chapter’s highest award. The ceremony performing Bela Bartok’s Sonata for Two Pianos and his ability to respond to the learning needs of The board, which meets in Washington, DC, will take place June 19 as part of the annual and Percussion. Bartok performances were students from diverse backgrounds. Jones evaluates and selects individuals and institutions Excalibur Awards. presented at Buffalo State College, University was nominated by the faculty of the Buffalo State to receive funding, including the prestigious at Buffalo, and Syracuse University throughout College Theater Department where he is an Fulbright Scholarship. Podet is himself a Fulbright Gregory Dale Smith, Andrew W. Mellon assistant spring 2008. assistant professor. Scholar who was awarded a year in Jerusalem to professor in conservation science, recently research philosophical manuscripts. presented a lecture, “What's Wrong with This under the NAXOS label. As a chamber musician, Lisa Hunter, assistant professor of music Karen Sands-O’Connor, associate professor of education, has been awarded the 2008 Active and English, delivered a keynote address at the Peter Ramos, assistant professor of English, has a the Rochester Section of the American Chemical Picture: The Analysis of a Known Forgery for Collaborative Learning Faculty Fellowship by the fourth Iberian Congress on Literature for Children new collection of poems, Please Do Not Feed the Society.” The professional organization of some Carnegie Academy for the Scholarship of Teaching in San Sebastian, Spain, organized by OEPLI Ghost, published by BlazeVox Books. 1,000 chemists in the six-county Rochester area presents a series of lectures highlighting the role of and Learning (CASTL) Program at Buffalo State (Spanish Board on Books for Children) in July, College. Her study will assess the intellectual and then traveled to the United Kingdom where Stephen Saracino and Jozef Bajus received a grant development of first-year learning community she and assistant professor of English Jennifer from the Research Foundation titled “Building an this fall at a conference on diversity in heritage students and traditional first-year students. Ryan led the college’s first-ever graduate student International Educational Link between the conservation in New Delhi, India. abroad program for seven Buffalo State English Academy of Fine Arts and Design in Bratislava, graduate students. Slovakia, and Buffalo State College.” chemistry in the arts. Smith also made a presentation & arts humanities Buffalo State College > Rockwell Hall 222 > 1300 Elmwood Avenue > Buffalo, NY 14222 > (716) 878-6326 > Fax: (716) 878-6914 www.buffalostate.edu/artsandhumanities Benjamin C. Christy, Dean, School of Arts and Humanities Nonprofit Org. U.S. Postage PAID Permit No. 277 Buffalo, NY Carolyn Fusco, Executive Assistant to the Dean > Susan Kendt, Secretary to the Dean > Kerran L. Sanger, Associate Dean > Denise M. Zenicki, Secretary to the Dean Dean’s Office School of Arts and Humanities Rockwell Hall 222 Buffalo State College 1300 Elmwood Avenue Buffalo, NY 14222-1095 EDITOR > Anthony Chase, Assistant to the Dean ART DIRECTOR > Lynda H. Donati DESIGNER > Chantel D. Kutzbach WRITERS > Tony Astran, Phyllis A. Camesano, Jerod Dahlgren PHOTOGRAPHER > Bruce A. Fox This publication is available in large print or other accessible formats upon request. Buffalo State College is an affirmative action/equal opportunity institution that subscribes to all federal, state, and SUNY legal requirements and does not discriminate against applicants, students, or employees on the basis of race, sex, ethnicity, national origin, sexual orientation, religion, age, disability, or marital or veteran status. Any violation of this policy should be reported to the Equity and Campus Diversity Office, Cleveland Hall 415, (716) 878-6210. It is the policy of Buffalo State College that no otherwise qualified person with a disability shall, solely by reason of the disability, be excluded from participation in employment or access to programs of the college. 0809-53 WNY’s First High School Honor Band Sixty Western New York high school students, representing thirteen different high schools and selected by their band directors for their talent and skill, participated in the first Buffalo State College High School Honor Band concert on a glorious weekend in May. Organized by Buffalo State music professors Ricky Flemming and Lisa Hunter with the assistance of the Music Department’s Collegiate Music Educators National Conference (CMENC) chapter, student musicians rehearsed with department faculty and special guest Rodney Dorsey, associate director of bands at the University of Michigan. This preparation culminated in a Sunday concert in Rockwell Hall Auditorium attended by nearly 600 audience members, with selections by acclaimed composers Frank Ticheli and Malcolm Arnold. The program was sponsored by CMENC for the Buffalo State College Arts and Humanities Innovations in Creative Expression speaker series. WNY High School Honor Band * BONJOUR French Language Suite Buffalo State enriches the experience of French majors with the opportunity to live in the French Language Suite. This on-campus residential experience provides students with the opportunity to expand their French language skills by living in a French-speaking environment. Additional perks include a DVD library of French/Francophone films; a comprehensive French/English language library of history, culture, literature, and reference materials specific to France and the Francophone world; and the availability of French lessons in French cooking and other activities — available only to residents of the French Language Suite. The suite has undergone major upgrades, receiving new furniture, paint, and carpet. www.buffalostate.edu/artsandhumanities