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Brandeis University’s Independent Student Newspaper Since 1949 | Waltham, MA

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Chakaia Booker discusses her unique style in Sculpture

(10/25/16 12:09am)

Old tires and broken toys are not the first things that come to mind when presented with the idea of sculpture. We tend to think of lavish sculpture gardens of marble and bronze — the perfectly crafted cherubs and women that the first sculptors wrought. However, with clear beauty and clean lines comes a price — marble and bronze are not the most feasible materials for a young artist in New York, a problem Chakaia Booker was forced to address. She discussed her solution to this dilemma, a much more untraditional medium — a product of economic necessity — in a lecture this past week at the Kniznick Gallery in Brandeis’ Women’s Studies Research Center. As a young woman in New York with plenty of ideas, but a threadbare wallet, she chose to take in the world around her — the trash-strewn New York City of the 1980s — and use it to build her ideas into reality. Booker’s work melds life and art down to its core parts: each piece making up each sculpture is an object previously rejected, left for trash on the street, and Booker reinstates these objects into society by giving them new meaning within her works.



JustArts exhibit shows off Faculty Artwork

(10/18/16 3:00am)

In college, most of us have hopefully grown to appreciate the people who make our education what it is ― those who teach and those who give us the tools to learn and indulge our own interests. These people are more than just mentors and educators. While it is easy to forget this fact in the crazy whirlwind of college, it is important to step back and appreciate the University’s staff and all they add to the University’s creative environment. This is the focus of the JustArts exhibit in Spingold Theater’s Dreitzer Gallery.



Examining Disability

(10/17/16 10:18pm)

When Rosemarie Garland-Thomson ’93 Ph.D. first came to Brandeis, she had a variety of identities. Mother, wife and English teacher were among them. Yet she avoided thinking of herself as disabled, despite being born with a congenital difference. One of Garland-Thomson’s arms is shorter than the other, and she has a total of six fingers.






‘New Work’ offers view into life abroad

(09/27/16 3:12am)

Twisting Italian villages — red rooftops, azure skies and dusty balconies — are the architecture upon which summer fantasies are built. Merely gazing at glossy photographs in books of northern Italy is enough to engender a piercing desire to book a plane ticket, quit your job and fail your classes in favor of the golden hills guaranteed to welcome you as a guest. However, while photos can inspire desire, paintings allow the viewer to participate in a discussion with the scene and the painter’s own reaction to it. Gazing at a painting allows the viewer to see through someone else’s eyes, a more organic way of becoming ensconced in a place the way the painter did — the way the smells of freshly baked bread tickled the artist’s nose or how the golden sunshine shrouded her shoulders and soothed her soul.


'Evidence and Agency'

(09/27/16 12:57am)

 “Human beings have dignity; they don’t have a price. That’s why human beings can’t be bought or sold,” said Prof. Berislav Marušić (PHIL) in an interview with the Justice, paraphrasing a conversation he had once had with his son. “What’s dignity?” his son prompted. Marušić replied, “Dignity is the idea that every person gets to make decisions for themselves” — to which his son artfully responded, “Well then, why can’t I watch TV whenever I decide?” And so his young, amusingly ruminative son rendered the 2016 recipient of the American Philosophical Association Sanders Book Prize speechless.


The chemical makeup of art

(09/21/16 10:45pm)

   Tucked inside the University of Massachusetts Boston’s newly constructed University Hall, Brandeis Prof. Todd Pavlisko (FA) proudly welcomed guests to the opening of his art installation “Now’s the Time.” Pavlisko has worked with UMass for a while now; more specifically he has collaborated with Prof. Robert Carter, the director of the chemistry department. In an email interview with the Justice, Pavlisko explained, “[Carter] and I have been using chemistry and science to make art for about a year and a half. The opportunity for the exhibition came out of this collaboration.”




BLSO showcases iconic artist Frida Kahlo

(09/20/16 3:21am)

Frida Kahlo’s work is not for the light-hearted; after all, bleeding hearts and self-portraits do not make for stately dining rooms and school buildings. Even so, Kahlo drew fame from her willingness to bare her deepest emotions on canvas — everything from the depression stemming from a miscarriage to the fiery passion she felt for various affairs during her marriage — and for her untraditionally liberal aesthetic; a unibrow and suit was not exactly the typical garb of her female contemporaries.


Faculty Forward to enter fourth bargaining session

(09/13/16 5:21am)

As the newly formed adjunct and contract-faculty union prepares for its fourth bargaining round with the University this month, officials on both sides say the negotiations thus far have been a positive experience. But the University has frozen wages and benefits for bargaining unit professors until a contract is reached, and the faculty union is publicizing part of their agenda online.


Shrigley delights in sarcastic art talk

(09/13/16 4:58am)

A crowd of students, faculty and members of the public sat in Pollack pointing at a screen up front and laughing on a Sunday afternoon. This was not a stand-up routine or a movie showing. Rather, the audience was cracking up in the Pollack Fine Arts Teaching Center with David Shrigley. Shrigley’s artist talk was full of sardonic punchlines. Many art talks delve into artistic theory and interpretation. Shrigley mentioned these themes — mostly to make ironic, humorous jabs — but in his own words, “much of this talk is about nothing in particular.”