Difference between revisions of "Arts Initiative"

From WikiCU
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 33: Line 33:
 
What Columbians have wanted since day 1. Still in the works.
 
What Columbians have wanted since day 1. Still in the works.
  
=External links=
+
==External links==
[http://www.cuarts.com CUArts.com]
+
* [http://www.cuarts.com CUArts.com]
  
 
[[Category:Office of the President]]
 
[[Category:Office of the President]]

Revision as of 12:12, 23 April 2008

AILogo.gif

The Arts Initiative at Columbia University was created in 2004 by President Bollinger to promote "the role of the arts in the university, and the university's role in the arts". It is part of the Office of the President. The initiative's Director is Gregory Mosher. The initiative's website is CUArts.

Current Programs

Arts Train

5 consecutive weeks of free tours of galleries around New York City led by a pair of docents, a grad student in Visual Arts, and a PhD student in Art History. Very popular, held every semester. More Info

Passport to New York

Passport is a program that grants student CUID holders free admission to 28 New York City museums and institutions. Major savings at MoMA, the Guggenheim, and more.

Sainsbury Support Fund

Any student or club that has a non-academic (not for a class) arts-related project in need of financial support can apply. Get more info at the CUArts wesbite, by email cuarts@columbia.edu, or sending a fax to 212-851-1876. More Info

Arts Networking

Held in collaboration with the Columbia Alumni Association, networking sessions bring students and artistic alumni together to effectively schmooze. CCE may not have you back, but the AI does. More Info

Past Programs

Tierno Bokar

Legendary director Peter Brooks staged a production of this French-language play in Barnard's LeFrak Gymnasium. Most students weren't cultured enough to realize that magnitude of Peter Brooks directing a production on campus and complained about the track being closed. Website

New Yorker nights

Series of events at Miller Theater in 2005-2006 featuring speakers like Joan Didion, Oliver Sacks, Malcolm Gladwell, Simon Schama, and others.

Havel at Columbia

Vaclav Havel chilled at Columbia for the Fall of 2006. He delivered the CC Coursewide Lecture, students had to read a play of his in Lit Hum, the first time a Living White Man cracked the curriculum, and he shared the stage with Bill Clinton for a discussion. Website

Upcoming projects

Music Train

Counter part to Arts Train.

Discount tickets

What Columbians have wanted since day 1. Still in the works.

External links