Boulder Alumni Turn Out for a Traveling Seminar

Boulder History Museum was the venue for the May 23 Colorado Traveling Seminar

May 23, Twenty alumni and their guests packed the small meeting space at the Boulder History Museum for an Evergreen Traveling Seminar. The title was Curating the Human Story: The Power and Influence of Museums.

 

 

Faculty member Jean Mandeberg

Faculty member Jean Mandeberg and her former student Seth Frankel ’93 facilitated the discussion that swirled around questions such as: Do museums transform living, changing cultural objects into fixed, preserved, stale collections? What stories do museums tell? What stories do objects embody? And what stories do we, visitors, tell ourselves?

Adding to the richness of the conversation was the fact that the Boulder Museum’s current exhibit was one of Seth’s installations, a history of beer.  Needless to say, beer was part of the hospitality provided.

Seth Frankel ’93

Mandeberg had this to say about the event which was her first Traveling Seminar:

I had no idea that the seminar would attract such a diverse group of alumni  … . The comments I heard after the discussion were all extremely positive reports about how much people enjoyed themselves and appreciated the stimulating conversation.  That continued for me (and my husband Joel) when we had breakfast the next morning with Daniel Fonken (’95), one of the seminar participants who happened to be a former student of mine (1993-4, Sculpture in Time & Place).  Daniel told us how the event helped him understand the unique connection Evergreen alums have with each other, and he looks forward to continuing that spirit.

Hope to hear comments from other alumni who have attended Traveling Seminars over the years.  We are planning the line-up for next year right now.

 

Still Rioting, After all These Years

Did you know that New York University has in their library a Riot Grrrl collection? Here’s a blurb from The New York Times Magazine:

Back in the ’90s, when the Riot Grrrl movement started, one of its catalysts was Kathleen Hanna, from the band Bikini Kill. Earlier this spring, Hanna was the subject of a new documentary called “The Punk Singer,” and in June, her writings, lyrics and artwork will be featured in the book “The Riot Grrrl Collection.” Lisa Darms, an archivist at New York University (and a former roommate of Hanna’s), who edited the book, says there is “a hunger out there for access to the movement.” Hanna, meanwhile, speaks of being at a safe remove from her riot grrrl days now that she’s 44. “Guys came to our shows and wanted to beat us up,” she says. “Even women were saying that we were doing it wrong. I didn’t enjoy it much at the time, but I’m really enjoying it now.”

Sherman Alexie – 2013 Graduation Speaker

Literary super star Sherman Alexie will play Red Square on Graduation Day this year. We can’t wait.

A tough guy to categorize, Alexie’s creative genius declines to fall neatly into a single category. Writer, movie-maker, stand-up comedian, equal opportunity iconoclast; where hasn’t this guy ventured in expressing his take on life, the universe and everything?

Here he is, talking to The Daily Beast about his new book Blasphemy.

I called the book Blasphemy primarily because I’ve been so regularly accused of being blasphemous by white folks and Indians. But they only speak of blasphemy in its most basic terms: disrespect toward religion, toward a philosophy. I think blasphemy is actually more directed toward other human beings, and most often expressed toward those who have lesser power in society. I think human beings are sacred and that all the evil shit each of us does is blasphemous…. White folks talk about finding the sacred in the wilderness, and I suppose it’s there, but I hear the sacred in 3 a.m. traffic and 747s descending and loud music from the house down the block and the ship horns in the foggy night and the whirr, whirr, whirr of crowds. If people are sacred then the most sacred places are the ones where the most people have gathered.

As we mentioned above, we can’t wait.

Countdown to Alumni Day – Return to Evergreen 6.1.13

Hope you’ve got Saturday, June 1 blocked out on your calendar. It’s going to be another great Alumni Day on campus. Starting at 9 am, seminars, workshops, student work, tours and a long evening of music on Red Square. Where else can you get 14 hours of cool for only $25?

Can’t get to campus on June 1st?  You can still join in  via live stream on the Evergreen You Tube Channel. Invite your Greener friends over  for your own “Alumni Day” festivities around the TV.  Here’s the line up of evening performers:

Behind the Scenes: You won’t want to miss Return to Evergreen 6-1-13

Thomas Herndon ’07 to speak at Return to Evergreen

Economics grad student Thomas Herndon ’07, the Greener who schooled Harvard economists over their faulty math and shook up the global austerity world, will speak on campus June 1 as part of  Return to Evergreen. In an afternoon session, Thomas will talk about the project he initiated at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst that eventually debunked the influential Harvard study asserting economic growth slows precipitously when a country’s debt rises above 90% of GDP. In case you missed it, see Thomas make us all proud on The Colbert Report.

 

Xbox Creator Dan Black ’91

 

 Dan Black ’91 tells great stories. Well, just imagine: father of Xbox, gamer-extraordinaire, this Greener has spent years working with top game developers, engineers, marketing geniuses and all manner of creative geeks. Of course he’s brimming with tales from the inner sanctum of this amazing and booming industry. Dan has worked on  game franchises such as “Assassin’s Creed,” “Grand Theft Auto,” and Tom Clancy’s “Splinter Cell.” This session will appeal to current students, faculty members and alumni from a broad spectrum of fields and interests: education, gaming, investment, computer science, and show business.

Maia Bellon ’91, newly appointed Ecology Director

Maia Bellon ’91 came to Evergreen as a starry-eyed 17 year old straight out of high school.  She loved to dance. At Evergreen, she fell under the spell of neurobiologist Linda Kahan – (in)famous for teaching the the toughest classes at Evergreen. Emerging from that crucible, Maia graduated, went to law school, and, as an Assistant Attorney General, became a tenacious, environmentally focused litigator. Today, Maia is settling into her new Olympia office as Director of Washington State’s Department of Ecology, the first Greener to hold such a position. Talk about Evergreen changing lives!  Talk about serendipity in action!   Well, actually, that is exactly what we’ll be talking about when Maia teams up with faculty members Linda Kahan and Bill Ransom to reflect on life, serendipity and Evergreen.

Paddling History’s Waterways with Harvey Golden ’95

 

Harvey Golden ’95 had no experience with paddling or woodworking when he built his first kayak in his father’s garage.

“The first kayak I built was the first one I’d  ever been in,” he says in a video interview.

In his handmade craft, Harvey explored the Columbia and Willamette Rivers of the Northwest and soon, as he says, “I was hooked.” Passion unleashed, Harvey has gone on to be not only a builder of historically impeccable kayaks, but an historian and a published author.  His first book, “Kayaks of Greenland” will be followed by similar works on the kayaks of Alaska and Canada, focusing on the seagoing vessels used by the Inuit and Aleut peoples of that region.

Currently, 50 of his magnificent boats are on display at The Lincoln Street Kayak and Canoe Museum, 5340 S.E. Lincoln St., Portland, Oregon. For information, call 503-234-0264.

Read the full story, enjoy a slide show and video at The Oregonian.

Longhouse Carving Studio “Pay3q’ali” hosts its first workshop

MARK HARRISON / THE SEATTLE TIMES. More Seattle Times photos here.

The Seattle Times visited the newly built Evergreen Longhouse Carving Studio “Pay3q’ali” to cover the first workshop in the space. Master Carver David Boxley led the workshop, teaching folks how to make box drums by bending cedar. You can visit the Evergreen Longhouse Facebook page to find photos of the workshop.

How Capitalism Is Turning the Internet Against Democracy

Robert McChesney ’77

Last week Robert McChesney ’77 was invited on Democracy Now to explore the shifting landscape of the internet. Currently, he is a professor at the University of Illinois focusing on the history and political economy of communication, specifically the role media play in democratic and capitalist societies. Additionally, he is the co-founder of Free Press, a national media reform organization, that just hosted the National Conference on Media Reform. You can learn more about McChesney here.

 

 

Lyda Kuth ’78 presents documentary about love, marriage and taking creative risks

Filmmaker Lyda Kuth ’78 will present LOVE AND OTHER ANXIETIES on February 26 in Lecture Hall Three, at 6:30. The event is free.

From right to left: Kent ’74, Lily, Lyda ’80

(OLYMPIA, WA) Lyda Kuth and her husband Kent Christman were both born in Ohio and enrolled at The Evergreen State College in the first few years after opening in 1971. Nearly a decade later, they crossed paths in Boston and later married.  Their relationship, and the universal uncertainties of finding and staying in love, is the subject of Kuth’s first feature film, a personal documentary, “Love and Other Anxieties.” Kuth, a 1978 Evergreen graduate, will be on the campus on February 26, 2013 to meet students and faculty, present a public screening of her film and answer questions.  The screening is at 6:30 pm in Lecture Hall Three.  The event is free and open to the public.  Parking is $2. 

After two decades of giving grants to New England artists and filmmakers as the executive director of the LEF Foundation in Cambridge, MA, Kuth secretly contemplated making a film. She finally admitted this desire in her mid 50s, around the time her only daughter was preparing to go to college.

Love and Other Anxieties, movie poster

Kuth decided she wanted to talk with young people in her daughter’s generation about their expectations for marriage and long-term commitment. In one scene she travels to Evergreen and interviews professor Stephanie Coontz—an internationally recognized author and expert on the history and culture of marriage—and her students. These interviews helped launch and are part of “Love and Other Anxieties,” in which Kuth also turns the camera on her own “average” love story.

The Boston Globe’s film critic Ty Burr called “Love and Other Anxieties” “extraordinarily touching in its very ordinariness” and that it bears witness to “the ache we all have to keep love fresh.”

Kuth has appeared with the film at film festivals throughout the country and the film had its theatrical premiere in Brookline, MA in November. This event is the Pacific Northwest premiere.

The Olympian takes on 6 new Board of Contributors

As the new year begins, The Olympian has appointed six new Board of Contributor members to write weekly columns for the paper’s editorial page, bringing community voices to the paper. Evergreen Alumna, Kathleen Rogers ’09, is one of the six new Board members. Rogers received a degree from Evergreen for creative writing and has been a registered nurse for the last 35 years. The Olympian has more on the story.