James Meyer, associate professor of art history and Winship Distinguished Research Professor at Emory University, will present the fall 2006 Robert Sterling Clark Visiting Professor lecture, "The Minimal Unconscious," on Tuesday, October 24 at 5:30 pm. This talk is free and held at the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute.
Meyer's talk is an examination of the collecting practice of Giuseppe di Panza, a leading patron of Minimal art, and the conflicts that arose in his fabrication of works by Dan Flavin and Donald Judd. By making "Judds" and "Flavins" without the artists' consent, Panza exposed the conceptual and allusive nature of their work, which the artists suppressed. In so doing, the collector unwittingly revealed the repressive character of the Minimalist tendency.
Meyer has been named as the Robert Sterling Clark Visiting Professor for fall 2006. He is a contributing editor of Artforum. A specialist on the art of the 1960s and contemporary art, he is the author of Minimalism: Art and Polemics in the Sixties and editor of Minimalism, Gregg Bordowitz's The AIDS Crisis is Ridiculous and Carl Andre's Cuts: Texts 1959-2004. His other writings include studies of Mel Bochner (Yale Art Gallery), Eva Hesse (San Francisco Museum of Modern Art), Andrea Fraser (Belkin Art Gallery), and Californian Minimalism (Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art), as well as the catalogue of Howard Hodgkin's 2006 retrospective at Tate Britain, which he co-authored with Nicholas Serota. Meyer has also been selected as a Clark Fellow for the spring of 2007, during which time he will develop a book of essays on the "sixties return" in contemporary art and art history.
The Clark is one of the country's foremost art museums, as well as a dynamic center for research and higher education in art history and criticism. The institute is one of only a few art museums in the U.S. that is also a major research and academic center, with an international fellowship program and regular conferences, symposia, and colloquia, and an important art research library. The Clark, together with Williams College, jointly sponsors one of the nation's leading M.A. programs in art history, which has been part of the professional development of a significant number of directors of art museums, curators, and scholars.
The Clark is located at 225 South Street in Williamstown, Massachusetts. The galleries are open Tuesday through Sunday from 10 am to 5 pm (daily in July and August). Admission June 1 through October 31 is $10 for adults, free for children 18 and younger, members, and students with valid ID. Admission is free November through May. For more information, call 413-458-2303 or visit www.clarkart.edu .
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Capeless Students Raise $5,619 for Charity
By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Students at Capeless Elementary School celebrated the season of giving by giving back to organizations that they feel inspired them.
On Monday night, 28 fourth-grade students showed off the projects they did to raise funds for an organization of their choice. They had been given $5 each to start a small business by teachers Jeanna Newton and Lidia White.
Newton created the initiative a dozen years ago after her son did one while in fifth grade at Craneville Elementary School, with teacher Teresa Bills.
"And since it was so powerful to me, I asked her if I could steal the idea, and she said yes. And so the following year, I began, and I've been able to do it every year, except for those two years (during the pandemic)," she said. "And it started off as just sort of a feel-good project, but it has quickly tied into so many of the morals and values that we teach at school anyhow, especially our Portrait of a Graduate program."
Students used the venture capital to sell cookies, run raffles, make jewelry, and more. They chose to donate to charities and organizations like St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Berkshire Humane Society and Toys for Tots.
"Teaching them that because they have so much and they're so blessed, recognizing that not everybody in the community has as much, maybe not even in the world," said Newton. "Some of our organizations were close to home. Others were bigger hospitals, and most of our organizations had to do with helping the sick or the elderly, soldiers, people in need."
Once they have finished and presented their projects, the students write an essay on what they did and how it makes them feel.
"So the essay was about the project, what they decided to do, how they raised more money," Newton said. "And now that the project is over, this week, we're writing about how they feel about themselves and we've heard everything from I feel good about myself to this has changed me."
Sandra Kisselbrock raised $470 for St. Jude's by selling homemade cookies.
"It made me feel amazing and happy to help children during the holiday season," she said.
Gavin Burke chose to donate to the Soldier On Food Pantry. He shoveled snow to earn money to buy the food.
"Because they helped. They used to fight for our country and used to help protect us from other countries invading our land and stuff," he said.
Desiree Brignoni-Lay chose to donate to Toys for Tots and bought toys with the $123 she raised.
Luke Tekin raised $225 for the Berkshire Humane Society by selling raffle tickets for a basket of instant hot chocolate and homemade ricotta cookies because he wanted to help the animals.
"Because animals over, like I'm pretty sure, over 1,000 animals are abandoned each year, he said. "So I really want that to go down and people to adopt them."
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