Word: artsã
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...where any student’s imagination can materialize.” Now, for the first time ever, the B&A is offering a course formalizing the instruction of this craft. Supported by the Office of the Arts and by Adams House, “Introduction to Printing & Book Arts?? is a 10-week non-credit course that teaches the basics of the craft, including the physics of setting type, the mechanics of hand printers, and the challenge of pulling a pristine print. The class is the brain-child of Jacoby, and it will be taught by Michael...
...students aware of job offerings in areas other than investment banking and consulting. OCS has restructured and expanded its offerings into 16 new industry “clusters,” such as “Architecture, Urban Development, and Green Construction” and “Creative Arts?? in order to make the job market more navigable for students...
While the Dance Department may not be why most students choose Harvard, for Claudia F. Schreier ’08—recipient of the Office for the Arts?? Suzanne Farrell Dance Prize–dancing has been the most significant part of her undergraduate career. Although she began ballet as a toddler and has been choreographing since high school, Schreier believes that she has substantially developed both talents over the past four years. Schreier admits that upon arriving at Harvard she was a “bun-head,” or a very traditional dancer...
...Harvard Office for the Arts?? Dance Program’s annual show, “Dancers’ Viewpointe,” is the first large-scale coordination of music and dance in the program’s history. The show, which opened April 4 and runs through April 12 in the New College Theatre, was the first dance performance in the newly renovated space, which was large enought to accommodate the entire Harvard Wind Ensemble. The scope of this project highlights the dance program’s evolution over the past few years.Elizabeth Bergmann, the Dance Program?...
...Many students and professors appreciate this need for a breadth of knowledge. “I have yet to find a student who has not felt that the liberal arts??provides them with a very unique perspective on the sciences or the social sciences,” says Homi K. Bhabha, a literature professor and director of the Humanities Center. “Though academically they may be experts in particular areas, one of the things the liberal arts does is create an intellectual bridge across disciplines...