Word: chou
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...event and who is also a Crimson editor. Heilmann said the ability to impart knowledge to young artists invigorates her. “What always went along with the work, all through my whole life, even now, is teaching at the same time,” she said. Sabrina Chou ’09, also at the lecture, shared enthusiasm about Heilmann’s ability to work in many media. “I thought that the fluidity and intensity of her work was really interesting,” Chou commented. Part of Heilmann’s current work...
...altered dimensions. The subjects of each photo do not gaze at each other or show interaction; they function alone. Abandoning the traditional self-portrait and capitalizing on the repetition of keeping ethnicity and glasses as constants, Chen questions identity and sameness in a focused, non-didactic way. Finally, Sabrina Chou ’09 questions conventional ideas about the nature of human interaction in her work “Vend a Friend” (2006). “Vend a Friend” is comprised of a large cardboard box with written directions, explaining that with the insertion...
...narrowly escaped death when a mysterious bicyclist deliberately knocked her down in the path of an oncoming bus. Her health slowly improved, however. She did not have cancer but merely a hormonal disturbance. And she began to benefit from the changes in China's overall political situation. When Chou En-lai died in January 1976 the radicals were still in control, but on the night of April 5, during a festival when the Chinese traditionally visit their ancestors' graves to pay respects, a climactic event occurred. As huge crowds thronged Peking's Tiananmen Square to honor Chou with flowers, wreaths...
...costumes and set work together effectively to underscore the status of the characters. Costume designers Olga I. Zhulina ’09 and Sabrina Chou ’09 put each couple in subtly matching colors while Robert wears neutrals, effectively emphasizing his isolation. The set, designed by Melissa E. Goldman ’06 and Grace C. Laubacher ’09, consists of five large cubicles along the walls on the first floor for the couples and three smaller ones on a second level for the girlfriends. The band is perched in between the two levels, serving...
...that hang all over the set. “We decided that it’s set in the 1920s of your imagination. The costume ideas came from the beachside setting so they’re all very light and in bright colors,” Costume Designer Sabrina Chou ’09 says. Birnbaum decided on Shaw’s play after seeing two different productions of it and realizing that the themes were very applicable to the lives of college students. “At the end, the daughter is forced to make a decision between...