27 Students + 2 Faculty + 9 Alumni = Magic New York Field Trip

Faculty member Drew Buchman ’77 describes a recent field trip to New York City: twenty-seven students on a mission of inquiry to learn how alumni are creating their livings by living their creativity. As so often happens when alumni and students meet, they recognize in each other a shared “Greener” spirit. It makes wonderful magic.

Story and photos: Drew Buchman ’77, Member of the Faculty
Program: The Business of Art: Making a Living as an Artist
Faculty Members: Drew Buchman, Zoë Van Schyndel, Doreen Swetkis

We went to New York City this December to network with alumni making a living in the big city. Faculty member  Zoë Van Schyndel and the students themselves did a lot of the planning. Abby Kelso, ’01, MPA ’11, who works in Evergreen’s College Advancement office, helped identify and set up meetings with a series of amazing young alumni pursuing professional careers in both the “profity” and “nonprofity” worlds, to use fellow faculty member Doreen Swetkis’s useful new adjectives. (Doreen usually teaches in the MPA program, so this year has been a rare opportunity for undergraduates to benefit from her expert knowledge on non-profits, which are the most important organizations in the art world.) Zoë (from near Boston) and I (from  New York) provided insider perspectives: navigating subways and buses, buck-a-slice pizza and general street-wise-ness.

Students consider meetings with alumni to be the highlights of the entire program and we’ve met with quite a few on campus, including independent artist and author Nikki McClure ’91 and Jami Heinricher ’91, owner of the Sherwood Press.  But we did a whirlwind of meetings with alumni in our brief week in the Big Apple, including visits with photographer/camera inventor Liz Sales ’01, performer and publishing executive Erik Fabian ’00 of Moleskine, and theater director Hilary Adams ’95, soon heading out to Omaha, Nebraska to become artistic director of OCP (Omaha Community Playhouse, one of the largest regional theaters in the country, founded in 1924).

We met jewelry designers Erin Considine ’05 and Tarra Rosenbaum ’97, and got behind-the-scenes tours of the jewelry district in Manhattan and artist’s studios in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, one of New York’s hottest neighborhoods. In downtown Brooklyn, we got to visit the brand-new digs of Makerbot, and one of this burgeoning 3-D printer company’s principal creators, the amazing Bre Pettis ”95, also featured on the cover of the new issue of the Evergreen alumni magazine.

A Time Magazine video profile of Bre Pettis and Makerbot. Continue reading

Join the Evergreen Conversation

    Joselynn Engstrom ’99: Life Really is a Circus

    future_list_jocelyn_engstrom_mike_hipple_600

    Joselynn Tokashiki Engstrom ’99

    Note: You can read the full article in  City Arts.

    Six days a week, Joselynn Tokashiki Engstrom can be found training at the School of Acrobatics & New Circus Arts in Georgetown—often hanging from a trapeze.

    “I’ve never done anything that takes so much strength and concentration,” she says.

    About 14 months ago, Engstrom and her artistic partner Terry Crane founded the Acrobatic Conundrum, a circus troupe that creates accessible, narrative shows that mix acrobatics, dance and theatre. From the beginning, she says, “We wanted to tell a story, we didn’t want it to be plug-and-play vaudeville.”

     Read the full article.

    Join the Evergreen Conversation

      Salimatou Pratt ’13: Putting Theory into Practice at the EPA

       

      SalimatouPrattRead with Greener pride this blog post by Salimatou Pratt ’13, now an intern at the Environmental Protection Agency in Washington D.C. The post is published in Greenversations: The EPA’s blog about our world.

      If you’re like me, talking about environmental issues is normal, especially around the dinner table with family and friends. Coming from Conakry, Guinea, and learning about how I may have been exposed to toxicity from local industries while growing up, has intensified my desire to be part of the bigger environmental discussion. Interning in EPA’s Office of Public Engagement has given me a unique perspective on how the agency connects with communities, both nationally and internationally.  Continue reading

      Join the Evergreen Conversation

        Luke Bradford ’02 – Making His Mark on the Washington Wine Scene

        index

        Luke Bradford, ’02, owner of Cor Cellars winery in south-central Washington.

        Luke Bradford, ’02, owner of Cor Cellars winery in south-central Washington.

        Nestled in south-central Washington near the Oregon border, Cor Cellars winery, owned by Luke Bradford ’02, has been named Winery of the Year by the seattlepi.com’s  “Blue Collar Wine Guy.”

        The writer traces Luke’s story from his early years growing up on a dairy farm in Pennsylvania, to his high school years in Park City, Utah, then to Evergreen. Mid-way through his college career, Luke traveled to Italy where he fell in love with wine and viticulture. His final years at Evergreen focused on chemistry and business, preparing him for his career as a maker of outstanding wines. Read the full article at seattlepi.com.

        Join the Evergreen Conversation

          Filmmaker Bryan Smith ’97 Kicks Off 2014 “National Geographic Live” Speaker Series

          1117650-BryanSmith_100710

          Filmmaker Bryan Smith ’97 visits Olympia as National Geographic speaker

          Award-winning filmmaker Bryan Smith ’97 is living an Evergreen-powered dream, capturing the world on film for National Geographic. In January, he returns to Olympia as part of the 2014 National Geographic Live speaker series to talk about his globe-trotting career. Guaranteed, there will be lots of Greeners in the audience to welcome Bryan back, celebrate his success and maybe even sing an impromptu chorus of The Geoduck Fight Song.

          When: Jan. 10 from 7:30-9:30 p.m. Where: The Washington Center for Preforming Arts, 512 Washington St. SE, Olympia.

          Read the full story in the Olympian.

          Join the Evergreen Conversation

            Alumna Elise Zelechowski – Deconstructing Chicago for the Greater Good

            Elise_ZelechowskiPhoto

            Chicago’s “Garbage Guru” credits Evergreen with preparing her for social justice work.

            Elise Zelechowski studied French philosophy at Evergreen. Now she’s known as a  “garbage guru.” Qu’est-ce que c’est? No, this is not a galliphobic slur; it’s the career path Elise has followed since leaving Evergreen.

            In a recent interview, Elise describes how she found her calling as Executive Director of ReBuilding Exchange, a Chicago-based organization promoting the reclamation of used building materials that would otherwise wind up in landfills.

            “I went to Evergreen,” she explained. “Going to school there you can’t leave without being pretty well-rounded as an environmentalist, a feminist, a social justice advocate. And then I lived in France and I was really taken by how the city of Paris functions in terms of food infrastructure, transit infrastructure, small business and recycling.”

            Read the full story at occupy.com to learn how Elise has expanded her work in sustainable deconstruction and waste management to address issues of poverty, the criminal justice system, housing, and employment. You can also view Elise’s inspirational TED talk.

            How did The Evergreen Mind hear about Elise? She “facebooked” us! You can share your news too. Check out all Evergreen’s social media connections including our new LinkedIn page.

             

            Join the Evergreen Conversation

              Can Humanity Think Its Way to a Better Future?

              Picture1

              ONE BIG BRAIN: Can humanity think its way to a better future?

              On February 21, 2014, Evergreen will host a film screening and panel discussion to explore the existence of a “noosphere” (pronounced “No-a-sphere”), a planetary field of unified consciousness that forms a layer around planet Earth, just as does our atmosphere. The event will highlight the Noosphere Endowment at Evergreen that supports faculty-student collaborative projects unifying artistic, scientific, and spiritual elements that promote the advent of a worldwide culture of peace. Adam Leveen Sher ’02 and his parents Gerson and Marjorie Sher established this endowed award to assist future generations of Evergreen students.

              Here is a preview of the film that will be shown prior to the panel discussion:

              Following the screening, a panel of faculty members and alumni will consider the concept of a noosphere that can act in specified ways upon our biosphere.

              One of the sources of research on the noosphere is The Global Consciousness Project, an international, multidisciplinary collaboration of scientists and engineers. This organization, operating under the auspices of Princeton University, collects and examines data “to discover subtle correlations that reflect the presence and activity of consciousness in the world . . .When human consciousness becomes coherent and synchronized, the behavior of random systems may change.” 

              Event information:

              One Big Brain: Can Humanity Think Its Way to a Better Future?
              Date:        Friday, February 21, 2014
              Time:       1:00 to 3:00 pm
              Location: On campus in the Longhouse Education and Culture Center

              There is no charge for this event and it is open to the public.Contributions to the Noosphere Endowment are gratefully received.

              Seating is limited. Faculty members who wish to bring their students should reserve seats by contacting R.J. Burt in the Office of Alumni Programs by February 15.

              Join the Evergreen Conversation

                Paul Stamets ’80 on How Mushrooms Can Save the World

                stamets

                Paul Stamets, ’79, scientist, author, world-renown mycology expert.

                In an article in Discover Magazine (May 31, 2013), writer Kenneth Miller follows mycologist Paul Stamets ‘79 into the woods to learn more about how fungi can clean up everything from oil spills to nuclear meltdowns, read: How Mushrooms Can Save the World.

                Also Check out Paul’s website Fungi Perfecti and Facebook Page as well as his highly reviewed TED talk and TEDMED talks: Paul Stamets: 6 ways mushrooms can save the world and TEDMED 2011.

                 

                Join the Evergreen Conversation

                  Delbert Miller ’96 Awarded Artist Trust Fellowship

                  6145240437_22b50504fd_b

                  Skokomish Tribal elder Delbert Sm3tcoom Miller ’96, winner of a 2013 Artist Trust Fellowship

                  Congratulations to Delbert Sm3tcoom Miller ’96, one of three Native American artists in Washington State to receive a 2013 Fellowship from Artist Trust.  Delbert will present his work, “stuxWa?scH3la, Keep the Knowledge and Memories of Our Ancestors Alive,” on January 31st in the Longhouse. The award was in the category of emerging fields & cross-disciplinary arts.

                  Cross-disciplinary is an excellent description of Delbert Miller. As an Evergreen student, his academic work focused on Sociology and Native American Studies. His resume lists expertise as a chemical dependency professional, a cultural resource specialist, and a Skokomish Tribal Historic Preservation Officer.  Tina Kuckkahn-Miller, Director of Evergreen’s Longhouse Cultural and Educational Center and Delbert’s wife, describes her husband’s many contributions and gifts:

                  Delbert and his family have been involved with the concept of the Longhouse from the beginning. Delbert was at the Longhouse’s ground breaking, opening, naming, 10-year anniversary and 2009 expansion. He is a frequent lecturer in Evergreen programs, although to date he has not lectured on his art, which is  why this fellowship is special – It allows him to talk about himself as an “artist”: a carver, jewelry-maker, composer, drummer, singer.

                  It is Delbert’s artistry that this award celebrates – his work as a carver, a maker of traditional objects that sing their own songs within a rich cultural context. Delbert writes:

                  I carve to maintain the usage and understanding of what our old cultural, traditional and spiritual items are. I carve paddles, canoes, root and clam digging sticks, cedar bark pounding tools, combs, house posts and many other items that are used in traditional Native societies in the Northwest. To have a house post is actually saying “I’m obeying the ancient law, remembering all that I can about the ancient history, songs, village sites, etc. It announces to the world who I am and that I have earned the right to have a shoylus, or house post.

                  Around campus, we know Delbert as a soft-spoken man with a big smile and a warm, enveloping presence, a singer of prayers and blessings at Evergreen’s most important occasions, a sharer of wisdom, and acreator of sacred space in the midst of a busy world. We look forward to learning more from Delbert, starting with a public presentation in January 2014. Watch this blog for updates.

                  Join the Evergreen Conversation

                    Wayne Au, ’96 MiT to Chair UW Bothell Diversity Council

                    wanyne-au

                    Wayne Au, ’96 MiT, Ph.D

                    The University of Washington Bothell announced that MiT alumnus Wayne Au has been appointed to chair the University of Washington Bothell Diversity Council.

                    This is just the latest recognition of Wayne’s outstanding work in education. Read the full news release.

                    Congratulations Wayne!

                    Join the Evergreen Conversation