Arts and Culture (page 3)
Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery’s 79th Ceramic Annual
The 79th 91¶¶Òõ Ceramic Annual, the longest continuous exhibition of contemporary ceramics in the nation, is ongoing and will continue until April 7.
Read MoreA New Era for the Williamson Gallery
Erin M. Curtis, the Gabrielle Jungels-Winkler Director of the Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery, has spent her career working toward change in the world of arts institutions.
Read MoreCore III Class Unveils Rock ‘N’ Roll Exhibition at Clark Humanities Museum
Through the curation of merchandise, records, and other artifacts, Huang’s class highlighted the ways in which young people in LA used and continue to use music to support both themselves and each other as artists.
Read MoreRuth Chandler Williamson Gallery Announces New Exhibition, Queer-ish
Queer-ish highlights Ken Gonzales-Day’s personal collection of 19th- and 20th-century vernacular photographs—snapshots of everyday life and subjects—depicting people who may have identified as LGBTQ+.
Read MoreASIANetwork Grant Funds Student and Faculty Research Trip to Malaysia
The research trip was fully funded by a Freeman Student-Faculty Fellows Program grant of more than $24,000 from ASIANetwork, a professional organization of more than 140 member colleges that strives to promote the development of Asian studies within the liberal arts.
Read MoreClaremont Lewis Museum of Art to Host Exhibition of Ken Gonzalez-Day’s Work
The exhibition, Face to Face, will feature two of Gonzalez-Day’s overlapping series, Pandemic Portraits and Profiled, and will run through January 21, 2024.
Read MoreLibrary of Congress Highlights Martha Gonzalez in Labor Day Songwriting Tribute
Gonzalez is the lead singer, songwriter, and percussionist for the Grammy Award–winning band Quetzal.
Read MoreGettin’ It Done Features Visionary Works by Black Artists at Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery
Gettin’ It Done will highlight pieces from the Samella Lewis Contemporary Art Collection at Scripps, which focuses on works by women and artists of color.
Read MoreMena Bova ’24 Revives Ellen Browning Scripps’ Passion for Literature through Summer Research Internship
What surprised Bova the most during her research was that, in addition to her love of collecting books, Ellen Browning Scripps was also a literary benefactor.
Read MoreTaylor Nelson ’25’s Short Story “Cold Summer” Published in Saturday Evening Post
The story focuses on the absence of the narrator’s friend, Gabriela, from summer camp, and the emotional consequences the absence has on the campers.
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