Thursday, April 28, 2011
Fuente — photo preview
Saturday, April 16, 2011
Tulloch Ard
By Collegian freelancer Samantha Gilman and Arts Editor Marieke van der Vaart
Strength, dignity, grace, poise: these are the words that best describe the performances of tonight and last night’s Tulloch Ard concert. From the moment the curtains opened to the sharp rat-a-tat of the snare drums accompanied by the piercing notes of the bagpipes, the Hillsdale College Scottish Highland Pipes and the Hilltop Highland Dancers brought a taste of Scotland to Markel Auditorium.
The night’s performances included orchestral works from ensembles which included the fiddle, flute, cello, guitar and accordion. The dancing numbers featured incredibly precise footwork and gracefully strong lines, and the clear, strong voices of the guest artists, the Buehrer Sisters, dripped with the beautiful Scottish lilt.
The siblings performed a set of “Walking Songs,” songs that women traditionally sang as they walked on wool to help it dry, junior and concert attendee Kirsten Block said.
Block said the enthusiasm of performers was particularly evident.
“You could tell they really loved what they did,” Block said.
She said the bantering of the master of ceremonies and performers displayed an endearing sense of camaraderie.
“It just seemed like a whole bunch of people who just enjoyed dancing and playing music got together.”
Friday, April 15, 2011
Beach styles — 1 wedge, 3 ways.
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Quick Looks For Spring
Friday, April 1, 2011
Sartorialist, Director's Cut
Megan covers the world she lives in with her personal style, which she describes as, “Ugly pretty." This means crazy contrasting outfits from leather to floral prints, peacock feathers, and most importantly, zebra!
An interview with this unique fashionista revealed just how much this girl loves style.
“You can see the beauty in it but you have to look for it.”
Thursday, March 31, 2011
Tower Dancers Concert, extended cut
One of the concert's group was a mathematically-inspired number by Lecturer in Theatre Holly Hobbs. Hobbs said the concept of "strange loops" inspired the choreography. Hobbs said a strange loop describes the phenomenon of seemingly contradicting things are resolved, or you end up where you started. Her piece explored lots of shapes and group patterns, and ended in a figure eight loop, representing the idea of infinity.
Another number choreographed by Visiting Assistant Professor of Dance Corinne Imberski featured a trio of dancers. Here sophomore Marianna Ernst and senior Carly Gilmore perform in "Emergence."
Imberski's "Pier: What is Left Behind" feature liquid movements and a set of ropes hanging from the ceiling and a pier downstage. Sophomore Emma Curtis, second from right, said the troupe was pleased to discover the theme before Imberski told them.
The last piece of the night was a six-movement dance set to J.S. Bach's cello concerto. The numbers featured the troupe in solos (like Gilmore above), trio, quartet, and ensemble.
Lecturer in Music David Peshlakai played the piece at the foot of the stage. Sometimes the coordination between the dancer's movements and the cello's music seemed to imply a conversation between the two.
Bright colors and angular shapes dominated the stage, with the angular, modern movements contrasting with the baroque music. Imberski wrote in the program notes that the piece helped show the connection of the old and the new: "Choreographers of today should represent our current place in history, but are always following in the footsteps of what came before—we are yet another step in the necessary evolution of dance."
The Tower Dancers will perform Friday and Saturday night at 8 p.m., and Sunday at 2 p.m. in Markel Auditorium.
To read the review go here.
Friday, March 18, 2011
Sartorialist director's cut
Junior Seth Strickland and his sister, freshman Hannah, from Brunswick Maine, said it wasn't until recently that they discovered their style. Freelancers Rachel Hofer and Robert Ramsey found out greatest fashion faux pas and tips for style. Here's what they said.
Hannah said her style past, termed "homeschool chic," included horrors like flowered leggings. Now, she said her fashion icon is singer-actress Zooey Deschanel.
Both siblings said living in Maine affects their style. Boots become more important. Also layers.
Hannah: "You have to get used to the fact that you can't always dress well."
Seth: "You have to learn to flirt with Mother Nature."
Seth said his style icon is Audrey Hepburn. Style essentials?
"A good pair of jeans and a good sweater and a really solid pair of shoes."
Thursday, March 17, 2011
Spring Break Fashion
Junior Maxine D'Amico gives readers a sneak peek into this season of resort and spring wear.
With only one day left until spring break, palm trees, sunshine and surf may all be captivating your thoughts away from the much less alluring pages of textbooks. Rest assured, because you are not alone as an exploration of nature’s vibrant beauty is exactly what designers across the globe continue to unveil in their Resort Collections and Spring looks.
Even flipping through the pages of W, Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar, reveals colors found only under the Caribbean Sea. The Spring 2011 looks of Alberta Ferreti’s line Philosophy, has looked to the splendor and silks of the orient with the rich and detailed designs. As the Michigan college student anticipates taking off their Uggs for summer, simply trade in your boots for some of their sandals, reminiscent of the Tuscan sun and Mediterranean.
The lines of this season are clean and strong yet at the same time create the allusion that with just the softest of sea breezes they would gently flow in the wind. The variety in each designer's look book is seen in the spreads in Vogue described as “The Must-Have Looks, from Punk to Polish, Romantic to Rebel.” Beginning with the September Issue of Vogue, Fashion Designers continue to return to classic styles such as menswear for women that began with the House of Chanel for their inspirations. They are, however, translating these styles into creations that are bold and modern
So as you pack your bag for Paradise, here are a few tips to build your resort wardrobe. Glamour magazine is calling “coral” the color of the season. Even Calvin Klein, known for neutrals, is accenting his collection with coral. It is a great representation of the bright colors to select from. Add a splash of any of these colors and it is sure to be a success.
Just in case it may get chilly at 65 degrees, look for 60’s influence in A-line coats as designers pull form the classics of the past. Accessories are a must this season, from playful tights, to dangerously high heels. An exotic tote and a daring hat, are the perfect final touch to your beach look as your bury your toes in the warm sand.
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Bird's Eye View of the Orchestra Concert
Q&A with Mary Foster Conklin
Arts editor Marieke van der Vaart sat down with jazz and cabaret singer Mary Foster Conklin last week to discuss her singing, musical journey, and experience living in New York City. Here's what she had to say.
Marieke van der Vaart: What was your singing background?
Mary Foster Conklin: I came from a rock and folk background and loved singing Gregorian chants and early music and stuff like that. When I got to college I was a theater major and sang with a punk band – I had purple hair back when it meant something.
MV: What do you love about the Great American Songbook?
MC: With musicians, standards are a common language — a reference point where we can make music. “You know ‘All of Me’? What key dyou do it in?" And boom ... They really encapsulate everything that’s good in the American voice. It almost sounds old-fashioned: our pep, our optimism, our arrogance, but that is what we are.
MV: What’s the shelf life for these standards?
MC: I would think of those standards like Shakespearean sonnets — perfectly constructed, timeless, universal. Those songs sit well with everyone. Every period has their own music, their own time, but to dismiss the standards as old-fashioned or hokey and out of step, I just don’t agree. They are a fabulous reference point.
And as you get older these songs resonate deeper with every year of experience.
MV: New York seems to have influenced your music a lot — how has the city changed since you first moved there?
MC: I lived in the East Village when it was really crappy. We call it the “Bad Old Days.” It was when there was still cheap housing in Manhattan and artists could really live cheaply and make art. It was a really wonderful time to live in New York and create.
[Now] it’s not the only place to create but it’s such a dramatic town. Also, it’s such an uncomfortable place to survive. You have to really want to live there. There are too few venues and too many musicians. I’m just a little scrappy girl from New Jersey — I seem to thrive with all of that discomfort. It’s nuts, I don’t know if it’s normal.
MV: How did 9/11 affect the jazz and musical world of New York?
MC: We may hate each other heartily, but we have to take the subway together every morning. It’s a forced tolerance and we protect our own. We don’t like outsiders coming in, hurting anybody in our neighborhood because that’s all New York really is, a collection of little towns and neighborhoods.
You get this feeling in the last couple of years that people really need to be sung to and they didn’t really care doesn’t really matter if it was standards, rock and roll, folk, German, as long as it was good.
MV: Is it true that you perform with a group on fire-escapes in New York?
MC: [Laughing] It was one of the trippier performance opportunities. [The apartment owner] was served by a cease and desist by her landlord. Another theatre contacted us last summer and said, ‘We have a fire escape.’
It has it’s own life. It’s not really legal because you’re not allowed to have things out on the fire escape — we have to come and go like Batman but that’s part of the fun. It’s tremendously hip. We did a Bastille Day production and Elizabeth said “O my God, we’ve got to get a French singer.” And I’m like, “No we don’t. We’ll all wear berets and smoke and we’ll bring in my friend who plays the accordion and that’ll be our French and it was a real hit.”
MV: That’s crazy!
MC: Well, it’s New York. To be part of something that spontaneous and creative: every singer that we invited up to perform with us came off the fire escape looking like they’d done crack [more laughter].
[Bonus: On her bright red Doc Martin shoes — "You can take the girl out of punk, but you can't take the punk out of the girl!"] To read more about Mary Foster Conklin, visit her website here.
Stay tuned for profiles of the student concerto competition winners!
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Family Duo — the Brothers Flint
(photos by Chuck Grimmett/Collegian)
Although the brothers from Omaha, Neb. are both sophomores, Woodruff said that Toby is more than a year younger than Cory. One year Toby decided to do eighth grade in the summer, he said.
Both play cello in the Hillsdale College orchestra and compose music together, including a score for an iPhone application they created last year.
To read more about the brothers and their work on "King Stag" go here for Woodruff's article. To hear more original music, visit their Myspace here.
Monday, March 7, 2011
DIY Puppets
1. Sadler sewed a small cucumber-shaped pillow and painted it red.
2. She laid out the feathers — which had been individually trimmed for balance and symmetry — in the wing pattern.
3. She sewed the feathers into small white wings made from cloth and pillow stuffing.
She attached the wings to the cucumber body.
5. Sadler attached a feather tail and connected the finished bird to a fishing pole with fishing wire. The bird can be manipulated to flap its wings.
Sadler's birds soared from fishing lines above audience members as well as through the set and one heron even jaunted across the stage on its spindly legs. To read Timmis' article about the puppets go here. To read a review of the play itself, go here.