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Hatke show extended to May 1

Posted on Feb 18, 2005

“Open” by Walter Hatke


An exhibition of paintings, drawings, and prints by Walter Hatke, May I. Baker Professor of Fine Arts, in the Nott Memorial's Mandeville Gallery has been extended through May 1.


“Walter Hatke: Recent Work” features works completed by the artist between 2000 and 2005.


Hatke, who has taught at Union since 1986, earned his bachelor's degree from DePauw University, and his master's and MFA degrees from the University of Iowa. His works have appeared recently in the John Pence Gallery, San Francisco; Gerald Peters Gallery in Santa Fe; and at MB Modern Gallery in New York.


The following poem by Jordan Smith, professor of English, was inspired by Hatke's “Open.” It appears in “A Sketchbook for Walter Hatke” that accompanies the show.


The door to the pew is open, as if a congregant had just
Left a moment ago, slipping quietly outside, as if the sermon
Came a little too close to home, or prayer seemed simpler somewhere
Else, a cigarette sheltered in one hand, out there among the trees,
Where smoke might rise in praise of breath's dispersal into
A fine sky, where someone unexpected might be listening. Still,
The door is open, the emptiness welcoming, and the wood's
Grain is another kind of meaning that has lasted a long time
Despite the rectitude of the white paint, this record of what living
Leaves behind: the fine whorls of the world always, almost
Just gone, and so without end, amen.

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Photos by Iraqis on exhibit in atrium

Posted on Feb 18, 2005

The Department of Visual Arts is hosting
the photography exhibit, “Photographs by Iraqi Civilians, 2004,” from Feb. 18
 through March 7 in the
Burns Arts Atrium Gallery.

Ten Iraqi civilians were given disposable
cameras in April and May of 2004 by the Daylight Community Arts Foundation and
asked to reveal Iraq
as they knew it.

The exhibit consists of 30 exhibition
quality ink-jet color prints ranging in size from 16 x 20 inches to 20 x 24
inches. The exhibition was curated by PixelPress, funded in part by the Open
Society Institute, the Department of Photography & Imaging and New York University's
Tisch School of the Arts.

This exhibition was recently displayed at
New York University's
Tisch School of the Arts. The New Yorker magazine describes the exhibition as “sublime.” The Los Angeles Times describes the
exhibit as “striking” and reports, “Some pictures expose scenes of devastation,
such as a family that, along with 500 others, lives in a garbage dump. But the
children still play, and life goes on.”

For more information, please call ext. 6714.

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Black Tulip by Kit Goldstein ’05 to go up in Yulman

Posted on Feb 18, 2005

The Black Tulip, an
original musical written and directed by Kit Goldstein '05, will be presented
Thursday through Saturday, Feb. 24 through 26, at 8 p.m. at Yulman Theater.

Performances are free and open to
the public.

Performed by Mountebanks, the
student theater group, the musical is based on the romantic novel of the same
name by Alexandre Dumas, the classic French novelist.

Set in 17th-century Holland
at the height of tulip-mania – the craze that swept Europe
in which fortunes were made and lost – The Black Tulip is the
story of a dedicated tulip-grower whose life is nearly destroyed by a jealous
rival and his political schemes. With memorable melodies and a romantic plot, The Black Tulip is appropriate for all ages.

Goldstein, a Niskayuna native, is the author of several musicals and
plays that have been produced locally, including The Wrong Box (2002, Union College),
and It Spoiled His Constitution (2001, Schuyler Mansion State Historic
Site).  She is majoring in cultural
musical theater at Union.

The musical features Joe Nimon as Cornelius Van Baerle, the guileless
botanist; Laura Mercado as the cynical daughter of a prison guard; and Justin
Silvestri as Cornelius's bitter rival. 
The cast also includes Victor Cardinali, Will Deegan, Meaghan Heisinger,
Joey Hunziker, Sarah Jensen, Ben Jones, Pam Koncius, Reyna Machado, Bre
Mackenzie, Mary Olushoga, and Danny Shain, all Union College
students.

For more information, contact 783-8434.

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Gretchel Tyson selected for Social Work Congress

Posted on Feb 18, 2005

Gretchel 
H
. Tyson, director
of community outreach and affirmative action, was nominated and selected to
attend the 2005 Social Work Congress: A Coming Together of the Profession on
March 17 and 18 in Washington,
D.C. The meeting brings together
500 leaders in the social work profession with the goal of producing an agenda
to improve the quality of care provided by social workers. The Congress is
being convened by the National Association of Social Workers in partnership
with the National Association of Deans and Directors of Schools of Social Work.
It is co sponsored by the Institute for the Advancement of Social Work Research
and the N.Y. Academy of Medicine. The National Association of Social Workers
web site is http://www.socialworkers.org.

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Prof. Hamm-Ehsani authors conference paper

Posted on Feb 18, 2005

Karin Hamm-Ehsani, assistant
professor of German, presented a paper titled “Cross-Se(x)ions:
Issues of National, Cultural and Sexual Identities in Kutlug
Ataman's Berlin-Film Lola and Bilidikid” at the
Hawaii International Conference on Arts and Humanities in January. The paper investigates
the representational strategies used by Ataman to highlight the queer
characters' identity negotiations vis à vis their double
marginalization caused by xenophobia and racism as well as homophobia, not only
in the wider German society, but also within the German Turkish community.
Ataman's film is read as an essential cultural production of the so-called Wende (political change after the German reunification), as
a narrative in which Turkish and German histories and memories cross and
converge, and where history is confronted with its present.

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