SATELLITE OF ART: Rosebud is a satellite gallery of the Rose Art Museum. It hopes to build a greater connection to Waltham residents.
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RAINBOW CONNECTION: Rachel Berkovitz ’15 (left) and Jess Podhorcer ’15 installed their “Color Theories” yesterday morning. The piece stretches 37 feet long.
EXTENDING IDEAS: Hall and Cohen noted that the process of improvisation is uniquely adaptable; it can be used to describe social justice dialogue, happiness, how people deal with the unknown and how people make use of their surroundings.
BRINGING IN THE TALENT: Prof. Judith Eisenberg (MUS) chooses and coordinates the MusicUnitedUs artists-in-residence every semester.
OFF TO WAR: The exhibit features propaganda with a variety of different messages to multiple demographics of the American population.
FOR LIBERTY: Some of the propaganda posters were used to evoke a hostile emotional response from American citizens toward the German enemy.
WE WANT YOU: Propaganda strove to make the point that a person could do just as much for the war effort back at home as they could oversees.
ARTISTS IN DIALOGUE: Four artists gathered at the Boston Athenaeum on Thursday evening for a panel talk as part of the symposium “Abstract and Otherwise.”
IN THE HEAVENS: “Fishing in the Sky” on the Lawn on D can be viewed by looking through a cell phone’s camera at the sky, using a mobile application.
ADULT PLAYGROUND: The Lawn on D features complementary installed games, such as Ping-Pong and Corn-Hole, that are open to the public to rent.
LIGHT UP THE NIGHT: The Lawn on D, where the temporary installation is located, was converted from an empty parking lot into a social space in August, to be open to the public for the next 18 months.
ALL SPRAWLED OUT: “Chameleon,” painted with oil on linen, is characteristic of McNeely’s work, which often portray woman in strained and awkward positions.