Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Rikki Reich
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
John Gregory Brown's visit
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
Claire Hoch's Visit
Claire Hoch visited Sweet Briar on Wednesday, February 24, 2010 and introduced herself as a new and inventive artist who tends to work on many small projects at a time. She is currently spending her freshly graduated phase just across the way at the VCCA to figure out exactly where she wants to go next with her work. Claire introduced many art projects that I had not heard of before and therefore I was a little hesitant about them at first. However, there were a few that were somewhat ground-breaking and successful. I particularly enjoyed the dining services that she and some friends prepared out of a trailer. I definitely think that something like this should be repeated again. A lot of her other ideas just seem to randomly come about, and I know that not all things have to string together, but it was a little tricky to understand where all of her ideas sparked from.
I certainly think that her artistic senses must be going all day long. I believe that she can take the smallest things and turn them into much larger developments, which is pretty significant. For example, her most recent “project” is about rocks and pebbles. This process insists that she be aware of the rocks that her shoes collect throughout the day and where they come from. I definitely do not take the time to notice what soil and stones I step on.. maybe others do.. this I am not sure..
Claire, in my opinion, seems to be going in multiple directions at once. This is probably the most beneficial way because an artist should do everything to get out there in as many different ways as possible.
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Love
five hundred twenty five thousand six hundred minutes
five hundred twenty five thousand moments so dear
five hundred twenty five thousand six hundred minutes
how do you measure? measure a year
in daylights,
in sunsets,
in midnights,in cups of coffee,
in inches, in miles, in laughter, in strife
in five hundred twenty five thousand six hundred minutes
how do you measure a year in a life?
how about, love?
x2 more
measure in love...
x2 more
(Stevie)
five hundred twenty five thousand six hundred minutes,
five hundred twenty five thousand journeys to plan,
five hundred twenty five thousand six hundred minutes,
how do you measure a life of a woman or a man?
in truths that she learned,
or in times that he cried,
in bridges he burned,
or the way that she died,
its time now, to sing out though,
the story never ends,
let's, celebrate remember a year in a life, of friends,
remember the love...
(oh you gotta remember the love)
)remember the love...
(oh yeah,yeah,yeah,yeah,yeah,yeah,yeah,yeah,yeah)
remember the love...
('member, sing out, give out, measure your life!
measure in love, measure in love, measure in love, measure in love, measure in love, Ohhhhhhhh)
seasons of love...
x3 more
In Diapers - Report Cards
In Spoke Wheels - In Speeding Tickets
In Contracts - Dollars
In Funerals - In Births
Five Hundred Twenty-Five Thousand
Six Hundred Minutes
How Do You Figure
A Last Year On Earth?
How Do You Figure
A Last Year On Earth?
(Seasons Of Love...)
How Do You Figure
A Last Year On Earth?
Five Hundred Twenty-Five Thousand
Six Hundred Minutes
How Do You Figure
A Last Year On Earth?
Seasons of....LOVE....
Thursday, February 18, 2010

Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Joelle Wallach's Visit
Joelle Wallach visited Sweet Briar College on Wednesday, January 27th and spoke with us about Women Composers dating back from the 800’s to the 20th Century. She was surely a feisty woman with a deep passion for music and for the women she was talking about. She did not have any problems answering the few questions that we could come up with. I was very amazed at how quickly Joelle could identify and separate all of the music within a matter of seconds. Clearly, she studies what she loves and I am sure that she makes this impression on all of her audiences.
There weren’t too many of us who were familiar with the powerful list of composers she introduced to us, so it was definitely a lot to absorb. In fact, I believe that there are only a few people in the classroom who are accustomed to the knowledge of writing music in general. For the most part I think we can identify different genres of music, especially in today’s music, but Joelle helped us recognize subtle differences in each of the different composers. Her helpful hints let us identify the era that the music was created or written in and allowed us to group some of the women together. A great deal of information was presented to us in one short hour, and I could feel Joelle wanting to tell us more and was dying for us to dig deeper and to be curious about these infamous women.