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Campus Stories

The Golden Gate is returning to Stanford May 30

The homecoming is long overdue: The Golden Gate, Vikram Seth’s 1986 novel-in-verse, was born among Stanford’s sandstone buildings and palm trees. Now the Bay Area will have a chance to hear highlights of composer Conrad Cummings’ opera of the novel. A multimedia presentation at the new Bing Concert Hall Studio at 8 p.m. Thursday, May 30, will include readings of…

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Digital musician Robert Henke, center, in his class 'Music 223M: Sound, Structure, and Machines.' On Thursday and Friday Henke will present Stanford Dust at Bing Concert Hall Studio as the culmination of his time as Stanford's 2013 Mohr Visiting Artist.
Campus Stories

Stanford visiting artist Robert Henke to perform a ‘musical machine’

Digital musician Robert Henke is building a musical performance without performers. Seated in a thick darkness, the audience will be surrounded by morphing and transforming sounds unlike anything typically heard in a concert hall. This Thursday and Friday Henke will present Stanford Dust at Bing Concert Hall Studio as the culmination of his time as Stanford’s 2013 Mohr Visiting Artist. Henke relates the show’s…

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Campus Stories

Wit and Wordplay Take Center Stage in StanShakes’ Love’s Labour’s Lost

Performing the show at an actual fraternity house aligns with StanShakes’ history of presenting high-quality, free Shakespeare shows in uniquely Stanford locations. Past locations have included the old Terman fountain, the Cantor Arts Center, and the oak tree amphitheater outside Huang Engineering. This week only, through the generous support of ASSU Special Fees and a…

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Stephen Sansom (foreground) with Alan Sheppard, Scott Arcenas, Michael Vang and David Driscoll rehearsing the contemporary presentation of Cyclops.
Campus Stories

SCIT presents Euripides’ Cyclops

Otis and Us of Ithaca, New York, are like any old band touring the Williamsburg circuit. They’re tearing up stages, bagging chicks, and rolling their own fair-trade tobacco cigarettes all while keeping to a strict locavore, vegan, paleo-diet. Worn and exhausted from their most recent conquests at Coachella, the merry band of brooding hipsters gets…

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Campus Stories

Remarks by Nancy J. Troy at the McMurtry Building Groundbreaking Ceremony

On behalf of colleagues, students and staff in the Department of Art and Art History and the Art and Architecture Library who have been looking forward to this moment for almost a decade, it is a pleasure to thank all of you who have enabled us to envision, design, and, now, break ground for our…

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Campus Stories

Remarks by Provost John Etchemendy at the McMurtry Building Groundbreaking Ceremony

Welcome Good afternoon. For those of you I haven’t had a chance to meet, I am John Etchemendy, Stanford provost. It is my honor and privilege to welcome you to this groundbreaking ceremony for the McMurtry Building, the new home for the Department of Art and Art History. I would like to first acknowledge members…

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Campus Stories

Remarks by Charles Renfro at the McMurtry Building Groundbreaking

Stanford has always been known for its groundbreaking research and applied science.  I, like many of my peers, thought it was a school wholly populated by nerds. Then about 12 years ago I picked up a book called Object to Be Destroyed, which chronicles the artist Gordon Matta-Clark’s irreverent approach towards art making. Author Pam…

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Campus Stories

Remarks by Burt and Deedee McMurtry at the McMurtry Building Goundbreaking Ceremony

Burt begins: A groundbreaking sounds like a beginning, but this seems to be more like the middle. For years there has been talk of moving Art and Art History to a new building near Cantor. In fact that was one of the recommendations in an external review of the Cantor Center in 2002! The real…

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The cello section, during a chamber orchestra reading session.
Campus Stories

SLSQ Chamber Music Seminar 2013

The St. Lawrence String Quartet is pleased to host the Chamber Music Seminar, 2013, with 67 musicians making up 17 groups, including trios, quartets, a quintet, and a string sextet. The presentation of five concerts at the new Bing Concert Hall this year will be an exciting new development for the seminar series. Students will…

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Set for Dead Man's Cell Phone.
Campus Stories

Dead Man’s Cell Phone at Pigott Theater

Leanna Keyes: Dead Man’s Cell Phone (DMCP) ponders issues of technology and connectivity. At this particular historical juncture, it seems people are never more than a text message away, and the idea of not having a cell phone at all is inconceivable. How does Stanford’s position within Silicon Valley and start-up culture affect your approach to the play? Isaiah…

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Pages from the Reichenau Gospels from the Middle of the 11th century CE. This Gospel Book is believed to come from the Abbey of Reichenau, on Lake Constance, on the basis of its script and illumination. As a whole, it is an excellent example of Ottonian book illumination. For full description, see http://www.thedigitalwalters.org/Data/WaltersManuscripts/html/W7/description.html.
Campus Stories

Walters Art Museum manuscript collection makes a virtual move to Stanford

More than 100,000 high-resolution images of unique medieval manuscripts will have a second home, thanks to a new agreement between the Walters Art Museum and Stanford University Libraries. The Walters’ holdings of 850 medieval illuminated manuscripts and 150 single leaves, ranging in date from the ninth to the 19th century, are one of the most…

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Campus Stories

2013 Stanford MFA Thesis Exhibition opens at the Art Gallery

The Department of Art & Art History is pleased to present the 2013 Stanford MFA Thesis Exhibition on view May 14 to June 16, 2013, with an opening reception on May 15, 5:30-7:30 p.m. at the Thomas Welton Stanford Art Gallery. This exhibition features the MFA Thesis artwork of five graduating artists: Ben Bigelow, Chris…

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Visiting Artist Ann Carlson views a rehearsal of The Symphonic Body: Stanford.
Campus Stories

Stanford visiting artist Ann Carlson creates a performance piece made entirely of gestures

Ann Carlson has been animating the Stanford campus, sometimes with silence, sometimes with stillness, for over a year as a visiting artist in dance and performance with the Department of Theater and Performance Studies. Carlson’s work mines the ephemeral and the commonplace toward extraordinary results. Her upcoming project, commissioned by the Stanford Arts Institute, is…

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Nico Phoenix was a competitor in the Teen Boy's Traditional Dance competition. The 38th Annual Stanford Powwow, Eucalyptus Grove, Stanford University.
Campus Stories

42nd Annual Stanford Powwow & Indian art market is this weekend, May 10-12

The Powwow is a celebration of Native cultures through traditional songs, dances and events.  An attendance of over 25,000 is expected, making it the largest student-run powwow in the United States and one of the largest events of its kind on the West Coast. Open throughout the three-day event are more than 100 arts and…

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Norco Cumulus Cloud, Shell Oil Refinery, Norco, Louisiana, negative 1998, print 2012. Inkjet print. High Museum of Art, Atlanta. © 2012 Richard Misrach
Campus Stories

Richard Misrach lecture on 
Monday, May 13 at 6 pm at Annenberg Auditorium, Cummings Art Building


Artist Richard Misrach will be at Annenberg Auditorium on Monday to talk about his photography and the Cantor exhibition Revisiting the South: Richard Misrach’s Cancer Alley. Misrach, one of the most influential photographers of his generation, helped pioneer the renaissance of color photography and large-scale presentation. For 40 years he has documented modern industry’s impact…

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Painting; December 1918; Ivan Alekseevich Vladimirov papers, Hoover Institution Archives. In this painting, one of the rooms in the Winter Palace in Petrograd is vandalized by revolutionaries. Vladimirov, commissioned by Hoover curator Frank Golder to create paintings depicting scenes of daily life in Russia, illustrates a grim world wherein the realities of everyday life are in stark contrast to Bolshevik propaganda.
Campus Stories

Art And History: Treasures From The Hoover Library And Archives

The Hoover Institution’s new exhibition, Art and History: Treasures from the Hoover Library and Archives, runs from April 23 to December 20, 2013, in the Herbert Hoover Memorial Exhibit Pavilion (next to Hoover Tower) on the Stanford University campus. Drawing on the extensive holdings of the Hoover Institution Library and Archives, this exhibition showcases the…

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