Campus Stories - Posts

Creative Commons / Naoya Fujii
Campus Stories

Groundbreakers in fashion industry share insights at Stanford

Fall fashion at Stanford is not just cardinal-red hoodies and bike-friendly skinny jeans. On Dec. 2, “fall fashion” at Stanford may very well refer to the first of four conversations surrounding the fashion industry with New York Times fashion critic Cathy Horyn and a collection of forward thinking-insiders: Ron Johnson, Annie Leibovitz, Pascal Dangin, Antoine…

Read more
Fruit bats on the clothesline
Campus Stories

Fruit bats on the clothesline

From across the room it catches my eye immediately, hundreds of 16-inch fiberglass figures dangling from a spidery, umbrella-shaped clothesline. As I approach, I realize that they’re flying foxes—big-eyed, pointy-eared fruit bats of the type I’ve seen fluttering overhead in the evening. I happen to love bats, and these particular sculptures are stunning in their…

Read more
Webcam lets you follow the action at McMurtry construction site
Campus Stories

Webcam lets you follow the action at McMurtry construction site

Whether you’re curious to see how construction in the Arts District is coming along, excited about working in the McMurtry Building when it opens in 2015 or just nostalgic for your childhood Erector set, LBRE has a website for you. The website of the Department of Land, Buildings & Real Estate includes views from two…

Read more
Studying Carrie Mae Weems’ work at Stanford’s Cantor Arts Center from different angles
Campus Stories

Studying Carrie Mae Weems’ work at Stanford’s Cantor Arts Center from different angles

Of course art history and photography students are heading to the Cantor Arts Center to see Carrie Mae Weems’ remarkable three-decade retrospective. Weems is, after all, a MacArthur genius and one of today’s most important contemporary artists. But she is also an eloquent interpreter of the African American experience and through her work explores the…

Read more
Photo by Harrison Truong
Campus Stories

Introducing the Interdisciplinary Honors in the Arts Program

The Stanford Arts Institute is bringing to Stanford’s campus a program unlike any other. Meet the Interdisciplinary Honors Program, Honors in the Arts, which provides an opportunity for students of any major to complete a capstone project that brings a student’s experience in another discipline together with artistic endeavor. Conceived by Executive Director of Arts…

Read more
STANFORD TAPS PRESENTS MARTIN CRIMP’S ATTEMPTS ON HER LIFE
Campus Stories

STANFORD TAPS PRESENTS MARTIN CRIMP’S ATTEMPTS ON HER LIFE

Stanford Department of Theater & Performance Studies (TAPS) open its 2013-14 performance season with British playwright Martin Crimp’s Attempts on Her Life, a production featuring dance, song and projection. TAPS performance-making professors Leslie Hill and Helen Paris direct. Attempts presents 17 scenarios for the theater, shocking and hilarious by turn, on a roller coaster of…

Read more
Stephen Hinton wins Kurt Weill Book Prize
Campus Stories

Stephen Hinton wins Kurt Weill Book Prize

Hinton won the award for his book Weill’s Musical Theater: Stages of Reform. Published in 2012 by the University of California Press, Hinton’s musicological study offers the most comprehensive overview yet of Weill’s output for the stage, according to a press release by the Kurt Weill Foundation. “In tracing Weill’s extraordinary journey as a theatrical…

Read more
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”…

Read more
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…

Read more
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…

Read more
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….

Read more
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…

Read more
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…

Read more
[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…

Read more
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…

Read more
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…

Read more