The Intersection of Art and Academia
“My internship with the Media Institute for Social Change was one of my most life-changing experiences.”
- Featuring
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Adrienne Picciotto ’16
Keep up with all the ways in which the Mount Holyoke community is pushing the limits of human knowledge, building lasting bonds and leading the way forward — on campus and around the world.
Narrow down the list by selecting multiple topics.
“My internship with the Media Institute for Social Change was one of my most life-changing experiences.”
Learning about many facets of dance opened my eyes to a range of possibilities and prepared me to take on each opportunity I encountered.
While in graduate school, I began to combine my love of dance and medicine through an internship with Boston Ballet.
On Friday, October 26th, Mount Holyoke’s Rooke Theatre hosted a performance of Chinese Yue Opera scenes, featuring award-winning actors Jun’an Wang and Qi Tao. Wang and Tao, both of whom flew in from China specially for this event, performed three scenes from the classic operas Liu Yi Delivers a Letter for the Dragon King’s Daughter and Searching for and Probing the Wife, featuring full costume, makeup, and choreography.
The Mount Holyoke flutist — one of 11 women musicians chosen from around the country — performed in “Soul Songs: Women of Klezmer.”
Mount Holyoke's African-music expert spoke in Nigeria and Ghana.
Terre Vandale ’02 uses Mount Holyoke’s Campus Living Lab as her classroom to teach her dance students about place, movement and the environment.
This is the perfect time for “American Moor,” a play running Nov. 8–10 about one actor’s Othello audition, says Mount Holyoke professor Amy Rodgers.
An art installation by Mount Holyoke’s Naomi Darling that closes Nov. 7 challenges the public to engage with the sun in a meaningful way.
View the new paintings of Barack and Michelle Obama through the eyes of Mount Holyoke’s Paul Staiti, an expert on presidential portraits.