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YOUNG TALENT: The actors were successful in bringing the 400-year-old play to life at the Laurie Theater.
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YOUNG TALENT: The actors were successful in bringing the 400-year-old play to life at the Laurie Theater.
ROCKING OUT: The audience enjoyed indie punk from Boston Cream and rock and metal from Horse Jumper of Love.
LOCAL TALENT: Horse Jumper of Love and Boston Cream are both up-and-coming Boston-based bands.
CREATIVE LIBERTY: This production changed the genders and pronouns of some of the characters to fit the needs of the cast.
VERY FLEXIBLE: Horse Jumper of Love showed off some rather dramatic poses to their doting audience.
A Theater Arts Production of “The Tempest” by William Shakespeare will be presented on March 6 -8 and March 13-15 in Laurie Theatre. This week, JustArts&Culture spoke to Mr. Barricklo, the director of the production at the Brandeis Department of Theater Arts, about the coming events.
“A lynching is a murder, a group murder,” reads the quote from artist Melvin Edwards accompanying his piece, “Nigerian Diamond,” on the ground floor of the Rose Art Museum. This piece, affixed to the wall and made of welded steel, was created in 1978 as part of a series begun over a decade earlier. Edwards’ Lynch Fragments series consists of sculptures made from recovered steel objects and recalls the “metaphorical significance of these items as instruments of oppression,” per the piece’s explanation on the wall at the Rose.
On Feb. 13, the Rose Art Museum hosted its opening ceremony for the Rose’s Spring Exhibition. In the Gerald S. and Sandra Fineberg Gallery and Lower Rose, “Yesterday’s Tomorrow” presents a selection from the Rose Museum from 1933 to 2018. The chosen pieces focus on historical incidents that had long-lasting impacts on our present understanding of society and that continues to shape our future. In the Lois Foster Gallery, “Dora García: Love with Obstacles” includes a variety of art forms, from film and drawings to documents and performances created by Dora García. The exhibition aims to tackle the relationship between idealism, reality and the difficulties of bringing the former to the latter.
Last Saturday, the Taiwanese Student Association held its annual cultural show, “My Home, Formosa,” in the Levin Ballroom. In 1542, Portuguese sailors came across a forest-cloaked land and shouted: “Ilha Formosa,’’ meaning “Beautiful Island.” Taiwan was then named “Formosa” in 1542. This year, TSA picked Formosa as the namesake and topic of the show to conjure up a feeling of home and belonging for Taiwanese-American students, and to present the beauty and essence of Taiwanese culture in the Brandeis community.
HOME-GROWN MUSICIANS: Sproutfit, the final act, is an indie pop band created by Brandeis students.
DANCING FUN: Some of the performers shared a variety of dances to showcase traditional and modern Taiwanese culture.
SHARING A LAUGH: The second act was OLGA, a comedic duo from Brooklyn, New York.
GRAND GALLERY: People observed the exhibition on the opening night.
1978 Welded steel Melvin Edwards “Nigerian Diamond” 17 x 13 x 10 in. (43.18 x 33.02 x 25.4 cm)
MUSICAL TALENT: Various artists, both from Brandeis and the local area, performed at “My Home, Formosa.”
WIDE VARIETY: “Yesterday’s Tomorrow” presents artworks from the museum collection spanning from 1938 to 2018.
LOCAL ARTIST: The first act was oomph!, a Boston-based singer and songwriter.
APPRECIATING ART: The Rose Art Museum opened this gallery for the spring semester.
Theater Arts Production “The Tempest” by William Shakespeare will be presented on March 6 -8 and March 13-15 in Laurie Theatre. This week, JustArts&Culture spoke to Mr. Barricklo, the Director of Production at the Brandeis Department of Theater Arts, about the coming events.
On Sunday night, the Undergraduate Theater Collective (UTC) presented “Quickies,” the annual festival of student-written short plays. The nine plays were all about 10 minutes long, and were written, produced, directed, designed and acted by students. The format of these performances allow students to get involved in theater, no previous experience or extensive time commitment required. Auditions for “Quickies” were about two or three weeks prior to the showcase followed by a mere two or three rehearsals for students to perfect their short plays.