Campus Stories - Posts

Photo by Yanessa Lasley
Campus Stories

Stanford Band ‘writerz’ aim for irreverent, wacky and fun shows

There’s nothing easy about entertaining more than 50,000 people all at once, especially if they are in a football stadium surrounded by friends, fans and lots of good food. Just ask senior chemical engineering major Andrew Kleinschmidt and junior product design major Matt Appleby. The two – backed by a cadre of fellow student “writerz”…

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Stanford’s Clark Center celebrates first decade
Campus Stories

Stanford’s Clark Center celebrates first decade

Created as a social experiment in collaboration and described as both a cauldron of creativity and Noah’s ark, the James H. Clark Center, home to Bio-X, turns 10 this month. The three-story, 146,000-square-foot research center brings together under one roof a variety of disciplines, including biology, medicine, chemistry, physics and engineering. That’s why it is…

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Stanford dance scholar examines how ballet challenged the Soviet regime
Campus Stories

Stanford dance scholar examines how ballet challenged the Soviet regime

From the royal courts of the Renaissance to modern-day theatres, classical ballet performances have continually delighted audiences. But in 20th-century Soviet Russia, ballet took on another role, that of a powerful vehicle for political resistance and reform. Through a study of Russian choreographer Leonid Yakobson (1904-1975), Janice Ross, a professor of theater and performance studies…

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Jason Linetzky, Director, Anderson Collection at Stanford University
Campus Stories

Jason Linetzky named first director of the Anderson Collection at Stanford University

Jason Linetzky has spent the better part of his 20-year career working with one of the world’s most coveted private collections of 20th-century American art: the Anderson Collection. The collection was built over the last 50 years by Bay Area residents Harry W. and Mary Margaret Anderson, and by their daughter, Mary Patricia Anderson Pence….

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The Rapture
Campus Stories

The Rapture

The enormously entertaining exhibition of 45 color images is an unexpected surprise and deviation from Leivick’s past work, which has generally been characterized by large format landscape prints in black and white.  While in Italy last autumn as a 2012 Visiting Artist at the American Academy in Rome, Leivick had planned a project involving beachfront…

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What were the aristocracy enjoying at the Paris Opéra while the peasants starved in the days before the French Revolution?
Campus Stories

What were the aristocracy enjoying at the Paris Opéra while the peasants starved in the days before the French Revolution?

Stanford University Libraries is pleased to introduce Opening Night! Opera & Oratorio Premieres, a cross-index of data for over 38,000 opera and oratorio premieres. It allows complex searches across multiple categories or simple browsing within any single category, such as genre, composer, librettist, premiere date, country, oratorio subject or theater. The database is linked to…

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[wpbb-if post:acf type="image" name="image" size="thumbnail" display="alt"]Composer Rob Kapilow, a guest faculty member in the St. Lawrence String Quartet
Campus Stories

Eat, play, learn at Stanford: You can’t live without music

Speeding over the Mojave Desert on his blue BMW motorcycle with a viola strapped to his back, Robert Hauswald isn’t the typical professor of economics. But he is emblematic of the diverse performers who travel across the world each summer to attend the St. Lawrence String Quartet’s annual Chamber Music Seminar at Stanford. Lifelong amateur musicians join…

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Susan Cashion provided rich, rigorous instruction to several generations of Stanford dancers.
Campus Stories

Susan Cashion, Stanford Dance Division faculty member, artist and dance community leader, has died

Susan V. Cashion, a Stanford University specialist in Mexican, Caribbean and Latin America dance, died unexpectedly Aug. 29. The loss of this remarkable scholar, colleague and artist, known to all affectionately as “Susie,” is felt across campus and throughout the dance community. Cashion joined the Stanford Dance Division faculty in 1972 and remained an emeritus…

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Jim Wong, Spaces, No. 2, photographic print. Wong is the spouse of a postdoctoral scholar at the School of Medicine.
Campus Stories

Stanford postdoctoral scholars get into the act of art

Under the watchful gaze of Nathan Oliveira’s Universal Woman in the Lorry I. Lokey Stem Cell Research Building are 12 works of art informally displayed on easels. This pop-up installation is the brainchild of the art committee of the Stanford University Postdoctoral Association, and it won’t be the last. Recognizing that postdoctoral scholars do not have an outlet…

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Can’t resist touching the art? These Stanford students scrub the ‘Gates of Hell’
Campus Stories

Can’t resist touching the art? These Stanford students scrub the ‘Gates of Hell’

Somebody has got to keep the Gates of Hell safe from the elements. Meet the students on Stanford’s outdoor sculpture preservation crew. They conduct preventative maintenance on Rodin’s Gates of Hell and 100 other outdoor sculptures across campus. In other words, they get lots of hands-on-the-art experience because they have permission to touch. Given the nature of their work,…

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The Freedom Fighters.
Art + Justice

Stanford filmmaker aims to reveal injustices of wrongful convictions

When Jamie Meltzer touches down in Dallas to film scenes for his upcoming documentary Freedom Fighters, he never quite knows what to expect. On one visit, he interviewed exoneree Johnnie Lindsey in his backyard at the break of dawn. “The sun was coming up and he just sat there listening to birds and trains and all…

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My Three Weeks with the Workshop (Part 1 of 2)
Campus Stories

My Three Weeks with the Workshop (Part 1 of 2)

I had the privilege of covering the 2013 Summer Jazz Workshop and Festival (SJW/F) for its duration – following the international cast of students, staff and faculty who make up the immersive three-week world of summer jazz camp at Stanford. The first two weeks of the Workshop (part one of my two-part SJW/F coverage) are…

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My Three Weeks with the Workshop (Part 2 of 2)
Campus Stories

My Three Weeks with the Workshop (Part 2 of 2)

I had the privilege of covering all programs that ran the last week of SJW/F’s concurrent weeks, Aug. 3-10. In that time, I attended concerts including Savion Glover and His Trio, Jazz Guitar Night with Julian Lage and Larry Koonse, Taylor Eigsti Quintet Featuring Julian Lage, Chris Potter and Larry Grenadier, the SJW All-Star Jam,…

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Listening in on Tyler Brooks at the 2013 Stanford Jazz Festival
Campus Stories

Listening in on Tyler Brooks at the 2013 Stanford Jazz Festival

Omaha-native and Oakland-based guitarist Calvin Keys is the definition of a serious musician. Quiet, husky-voiced, and concealed behind dark auburn shades, Keys wore a steady, sagacious cool that warranted the opening line of Tuesday night’s program which frankly and endearingly read: “Calvin Keys doesn’t call a lot of attention to himself.” And true enough to…

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Stanford Arts Institute to pilot new interdisciplinary honors program
Campus Stories

Stanford Arts Institute to pilot new interdisciplinary honors program

The Stanford Arts Institute will pilot a new interdisciplinary honors program in the arts during the 2013-14 academic year, an initiative intended to appeal to arts and non-arts majors alike. Students admitted to the program will participate in small workshops throughout their senior year while working towards the completion of a capstone project that reflects…

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Stanford Summer Theater Festival presents works by two great Irish dramatists and funnymen, Wilde and Beckett
Campus Stories

Stanford Summer Theater Festival presents works by two great Irish dramatists and funnymen, Wilde and Beckett

Lynne Soffer knows what she likes when she sees it. Earlier this month, she was tinkering with the blocking of the third act of Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest and her directorial instincts were swiftly shaping the action on stage. The actors’ every step, gesture and inflection were quickly weighed and tweaked to her liking…

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