Word: stopforth
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...Beckham is uncanny. Surely Bateman needs only to turn up at the audition to be cast as Beckham when David Beckham: The Movie is eventually made. Assuming, of course, that Beckham doesn't audition for the part, considering that he might very well end up living in Hollywood. William Stopforth George, South Africa...
Walking through the hushed corridor of the gallery space in the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African-American Research, Lecturer on Visual and Environmental Studies and Director of Undergraduate Studies Paul Stopforth stops before a piece of his, which is entitled ‘Monument.’ “This is in reference to one of the prisoners, who found a piece of high-tensile wire and, with no tools, created a beautiful blanket pin.” Stopforth pauses, and traces the unbroken line of the object with his hand. “It?...
...Seed”: finding that Stopforth encouraged her exploration with the bags, Bloomfield kept playing with them. “I spent most of the time sitting in the corner, just working on these bags,” she says. “The texture’s just my finger, poking through them...
...blurb, “Students interested in focusing on Environmental Studies should consult with the Director of Undergraduate Studies to construct a Plan of Study reflecting these interests.” Students who follow the handbook’s advice will likely be redirected once more. Paul Stopforth, the VES Director of Undergraduate Studies, recommends that prospective Environmental Studies applicants seek out Professor Stilgoe’s services as an adviser: “Professor Stilgoe, for all intents and purposes, is the only VES faculty member who teaches courses that are defined as Environmental Studies. Students interested in that...
...students return each week with photos, drawings, and, in one student’s case, videos they have made on-site. Stopforth calls digital cameras “pretty miraculous,” since they allow images to be easily reproduced and shared in class. However, he warns that mere representations of the artworks are limiting. Instead, he teaches an “art of engagement”—a return to “that childlike awareness that eventually gets covered up by our analytical relationship to the world...