Anne Weber CV Hine

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Anne Weber CV Hine ANNE WEBER Curriculum Vitae EDUCATION 2009 Certificate in Documentary Studies, Center for Documentary Studies, Duke University, Durham, NC 2003 B.A., Studio Art, cum laude, distinction in the major, Yale University, New Haven, CT 2002 Yale-Norfolk Summer School of Art, Norfolk, CT 2001 The International School of Art, Montecastello di Vibio, Italy GRANTS/AWARDS/RESIDENCIES 2009-10 Lewis Hine Fellowship, Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University, Durham, NC. Supports 10- month collaborative documentary project with Inquilinos Boricuas en Acción, a nonprofit in Boston 2008 Vermont Studio Center Residency, Johnson, VT. Month-long residency in the visual arts 2006 Best Spot, March ‘06, Adweek. Co-Director/DP of award-winning Converse commercial, ‘Commute’ 2003 Wooden Fish Fellowship, Motosu Temple, Japan. Sponsored academic study at Fo Guang Shan Buddhist monastery 2002 Ellen Battell Stoeckel Fellowship. Full tuition to Yale-Norfolk Summer School of Art, Norfolk, CT. Morse Traveling Fellowship, Yale University, New Haven, CT. Awarded annually to one Yale junior, funded project to retrace The Grand Tour of Italy taken by painter Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot 2001 Richter Fellowship, Yale University, New Haven, CT. Supported study at the International School of Art 2000-03 Louis Sudler Grant, Yale University, New Haven, CT. Four-time recipient, funded photo documentary of the Three Gorges Dam among other projects EXHIBITIONS 2009 Forever Hold Your Peace, New Orleans Photo Alliance, New Orleans, LA 2007 50,000 Beds, Artspace, New Haven, CT, Real Art Ways, Hartford, CT, and The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, CT 2003 Senior Thesis Exhibition, Holcombe T. Greene Jr. Hall, Yale University, New Haven, CT Sudler Show, Berkeley Gallery, New Haven, CT 2002 Norfolk Summer Show, Holcombe T. Greene Jr. Hall, Yale University, New Haven, CT Still Wet, Maya’s Room, New Haven, CT 2000 Group Show, The International School of Art, Umbria, Italy Sudler Show, Timothy Dwight College, New Haven, CT EMPLOYMENT 2005-08 Assistant to Principal Scientist and Scientific Editor, D. E. Shaw Research, New York, NY 2005 Art and Natural Sciences Instructor, summer term, Princeton Day School, Princeton, NJ Artist Assistant, Studio of Joseph Kosuth, New York, NY Programs Assistant, The American Academy in Rome, New York, NY 2004 Image and Advertising Coordinator, A&E Television Networks, International Division, New York, NY 2003 Photography Intern, Art & Auction magazine, New York, NY EXTRACURRICULAR & COMMUNITY ACTIVITIES 2008-09 Volunteer Mechanic, Durham Bicycle Co-op, Durham, NC 2001-03 Co-Editor-in-Chief, Graphic Designer, Writer, Wake: A Journal of Contemporary Culture 2002-03 Contributing artist, Yale Literary Magazine Contributing artist, The New Journal 2000-02 Photographer, The Rumpus 2000 Photographer, The Yale Herald TRAVEL & HOBBIES International and domestic travel including China, Japan, Taiwan, Portugal, Spain, Italy, France, Germany, Switzerland, England, Scotland, Canada, and 43 US states Avid runner and hiker, completed two half-marathons in 2008.
Recommended publications
  • 2018-2019 Newsletter
    2018-2019 Newsletter The YDA by the Numbers: Another Outstanding Year The Yale Debate Association continued to dominate both at 1 home and abroad this year. The The YDA’s US team snagged its tenth consecutive Ranking Club of the Year Award and broke three teams and five judges at the World Universities Debating Championships among a long list 10 of its other stellar accomplishments Years in a Row from this year. as Top US Team The team excelled once more at APDA Nationals, with one team reaching semifinals, and one team reaching quarterfinals. By stay- ing on top of the ranks throughout the season, Yale also keep its COTY status for the tenth year in a row, leading second place team 8 Harvard by over 40 points. Tournaments Won Yale also performed strongly at WUDC. Three of five teams broke to elimination rounds, with Yale B reaching quarterfinals, and Yale A and Yale C both reaching double-octafinals. All five Yale-affiliat- 5 ed judges also judge broke. Top Speaker Awards The YDA had another oustanding year, and is looking forward to the next! Excellence at APDA Nationals The YDA had another incredible year at APDA Nationals. Eleven 11 team members qualified, and five Debaters teams competed at Nationals, Qualified to including two novices. Yale's Nationals competitors performed very well. Three debaters earned top twenty speaker awards: Will Arnesen ('20), also 10th Speaker of the Year, was 2nd speaker, Ellie Singer ('21) was 6th speaker, and Jack Kelly ('21) was 16th speaker. Two teams also broke to elimination rounds.
    [Show full text]
  • 2002 Phyllis Curtin (Master Class)
    THE PHYLLIS CURTIN SERIES Vocal Master Class with Richard Lalli Thursday, April 4, 2002 Branford College 5:00 Undergraduate musicians from MUSIC 222: The Performance of Vocal Music Richard Lalli, instructor; Sara Kohane, coach Hugo Wolf (1860-1903) Die Spröde (from Goethelieder) Kimberly DeQuattro. soprano Sara Kohane, piano Francis Poulenc (1899-1963) Hôtel (from Banalités) Jonathan Boschetto, tenor Sara Kohane, piano Georg Frederick Handel (1685-1759) Meine Seele hört im Sehen (from Nine German Arias) Jessica Luck, soprano Ryan Rice, flute Perry So, harpsichord Richard Rodgers (1902-1979) Isn’t It Romantic? (from Love Me Tonight) Vira Slywotzky, mezzo-soprano Daniel Wielunski, piano Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750) Schlummer ein (from Cantata #82) Christopher Herbert, baritone Perry So, harpsichord Johann Strauss II (1825-1899) Czardas (from Die Fledermaus) Claire Owen, soprano Sara Kohane, piano Jesús Guridi (1886-1963) ¡Como quieres que adivine! (from Seis Canciones Castellanas) Elliot Lewis, baritone Sara Kohane, piano Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1793) Crudel! perchè finora (from Le Nozze di Figaro) Kimberly DeQuattro, soprano Christopher Herbert, baritone Sara Kohane, piano Sponsored by Branford College and The Department of Music at Yale Jonathan Boschetto is a sophomore in Timothy Dwight College who has performed with the Yale College Opera Company, the Yale Camerata, and The Duke’s Men of Yale. He has spent two summers at the Boston University Tanglewood Institute and currently studies singing with Lili Chookasian. Kimberly DeQuattro studies voice with Lili Chookasian and is a junior in Branford College. She has recently performed leading roles in YCOC productions of Riders to the Sea and Gianni Schicchi.
    [Show full text]
  • The Odd Couple
    OWEN M. FISS The Odd Couple In June 1988, Bo traveled to Santiago, Chile. The trip was sponsored by the Fulbright Commission and its stated purpose was to celebrate the two hundredth anniversary of the United States Constitution. Bo was accompanied by Abner Mikva, then a judge on the D.C. Circuit and by William Van Alstyne, a law professor at Duke. In a series of public lectures, Bo described the marvels of our Constitution, though he did so in a way that boldly and bravely discredited the orthodoxy that had long nurtured the dictatorship of General Augusto Pinochet. Later that year, the Chilean people were asked, as their constitution required, to decide if they wanted the General to continue in office. Miracle of miracles, in spite of the all-encompassing power of the dictatorship, the noes won, and then to compound the miracle, Pinochet actually stepped down. In paying tribute to a dear friend, the temptation is great to attribute the collapse of the Pinochet regime to Bo's eloquent defense of democracy. But that would be too much, even for me. I mention Bo's trip to Santiago because it marked the beginning of a new phase in our relationship -a phase that lasted for more than twenty-five years and ended only this past August on his death. Bo and I had known each other for ages. We met in Washington in the mid-196os. Bo had just finished a clerkship with Chief Judge David Bazelon, famous for his rulings on the insanity defense, and he had just begun to work for Senator Joseph Tydings, a leading sponsor of the measure that would eventually become the Civil Rights Act of 1968.
    [Show full text]
  • Class of 2022 Class of 2022 Welcome to Silliman!
    silliman college class of 2022 class of 2022 welcome to silliman! ndergraduate life at Yale College is organized around fourteen residential colleges where students live, eat, Uattend seminars and workshops, and participate in intellectual, artistic, and social activities. Each college is a cohesive community with its own character and traditions. A Head and Dean live in each college with their families, and there are apartments where faculty members live as Resident Fellows. Silliman is the largest college at Yale, occupying most of a city block. Whereas other colleges house their first-year students on Old Campus, first-year students in Silliman College, Benjamin Franklin College, Pauli Murray College, and Timothy Dwight College enjoy the privilege of living in their own colleges. Silliman’s courtyard alternates as an informal Entryways: J, K, & L athletic field, a site for college festivities, and a place for quiet repose. Over one hundred members of the faculty, staff, and What to look forward to... administration are Fellows of Silliman, and they are invited to eat in the college dining hall and participate in college activities. This booklet contains information about the The aim is to promote interchange between faculty and accommodations, facilities, and activities in Silliman College. students. It also contains important practical information to keep in mind. You will find it a useful guide during the first days of Silliman offers a wide range of activities and is known for college. the enthusiasm of its students. It is a truth, universally acknowledged, that Silliman is the most awesome college at Silliman is a vibrant place, alive with diverse activities, Yale.
    [Show full text]
  • Yale Debate Association
    THE YALE DEBATE ASSOCIATION 2015-2016 Newsletter The YDA by the Yale Continues Reign as Top School on APDA Numbers: After a season that saw a hard fought race for APDA’s Club of the Year title, Yale runs to finals at the 1 United States Universities YDA’s US Rank- Debating Championships, ing begets a fantastic perfor- mance at the World Champi- onships, and finishes another successful year at the top of the list of the best debate teams in the country. In addition to its in- 7 Individual members of the YDA Years in a Row ternationally recognized success, the YDA were also greatly successful throughout continued its run of unprecedented do- as top US Team the year. Yale LZ, consisting of Diana Li mestic dominance. Breaking its own rec- and Henry Zhang, were APDA’s Team of ord for total points, Yale won APDA’s the Year (“TOTY”), winning back the coveted COTY award of the 2014-2015 award with 88 points. Additionally, most season, for the seventh year running, ac- of the best speakers at the 2015 National cumulating 66 more points than the sec- championships were from Yale. The 2016 ond ranked school, Brandeis. North American Championships also saw 11 As part of a record breaking year, Edwin Zhang and Tony Nguyen become Tournaments not only did Yale win its seventh consecu- finalists. Won tive COTY award from the American Par- Unsurprisingly, the YDA contin- liamentary Debate Association (“APDA”), ues to prove itself as the best team in the it is continuing the 2016 season as first United States this year, and the ranking place with 433 points, more than 160 also reflects an excellent class of new nov- points higher than the current second ices and the dedication and involvement place, with Brown University holding 286 of the YDA's members to every aspect of points.
    [Show full text]
  • Campus Shuttles Shawn Luciani, JE ‘20 Ryley Constable, MY ‘21
    Yale College Council Campus Shuttles Shawn Luciani, JE ‘20 Ryley Constable, MY ‘21 January 2018 Report on Shuttles 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction…………………………………………………………….…………….….…………………………………………….3 Background………………………………………………….……….....……………………………………………………………3 Peer Institutions……...…………………………………………………………………………………………………………….4 Data Analysis……..……………...……………………………….………………………….............................................5 Recommendations…………………….…………………………………………….……………………………………………8 Report on Shuttles 3 INTRODUCTION Yale’s two new residential colleges and the expected 800-student increase in the undergraduate population served as the impetus for YCC’s review of the Yale Shuttle System. We have determined areas for shuttle improvement related to both these new factors and persistent prior problems. Specifically, students in the new colleges have expressed dissatisfaction with overcrowding on the Red Line. There is overwhelming interest among these students in adding a line specifically to replace the half-mile walk between Old Campus and the new colleges. To combat overcrowding, the Red Line shuttles should increase in size. In order to accommodate larger buses, the Red Line could shift its route to wider, more compatible streets throughout New Haven. Additionally, STEM students have consistently voiced frustration in finding reliable nighttime transportation back to the central undergraduate campus. They cite issues with nighttime shuttles, including reliability and timeliness. A proper solution to this would include identifying peak times of need for STEM students and supplying more shuttles at these times. On the whole, this report aims to examine the most pressing needs for the student body in regards to the shuttle system. The Fall 2017 Survey and YCC Focus Groups have indicated that students, on the whole, could benefit from adjustments to the shuttle routes that give more options to accommodate both students in STEM and students who live in the new residential colleges, Benjamin Franklin and Pauli Murray.
    [Show full text]
  • Yale.Edu/Visitor Yale Guided Campus Tours Are Conducted Mon–Fri at 10:30 Am and Campus Map 2 Pm, and Sat–Sun at 1:30 Pm
    sites of interest Mead Visitor Center 149 Elm St 203.432.2300 www.yale.edu/visitor Yale Guided campus tours are conducted Mon–Fri at 10:30 am and 2 pm, and Sat–Sun at 1:30 pm. No reservations are necessary, campus map and tours are open to the public free of charge. Please call for holiday schedule. Large groups may arrange tours suited to their interests and schedules; call for information and fees. selected athletic facilities Directions: From I-95 North or South, connect to I-91 North in New Haven. Take Exit 3 (Trumbull Street) and continue to third traªc light. Turn left onto Temple Street. At first traªc light, turn Yale Bowl right onto Grove Street. At first traªc light, turn left onto Col- 81 Central Ave lege Street. Continue two blocks on College Street to traªc light From downtown New Haven, go west on Chapel Street. Turn at Elm Street and turn left. The Visitor Center is on the left in the left on Derby Avenue (Rte. 34) and follow signs to Yale Bowl. middle of the first block, across from the New Haven Green. Completed in 1914 and regarded by many as the finest stadium in America for viewing football, the Bowl has 64,269 seats, each Yale University Art Gallery with an unobstructed view of the field. 1111 Chapel St 203.432.0600 Payne Whitney Gymnasium www.yale.edu/artgallery 70 Tower Pkwy The Art Gallery holds more than 185,000 works from ancient 203.432.1444 Egypt to the present day. Completed in 1932, Payne Whitney is one of the most elaborate Open Tue–Sat 10 am–5 pm; Thurs until 8 pm (Sept–June); indoor athletic facilities in the world.
    [Show full text]
  • Faqs About Move-In
    Frequently Asked Questions on Move-In Day What events are planned for orientation? A list of all events is available in the Yale Connect calendar of events. A list of events for families is available here. Arts related events are available at artscalendar.yale.edu. I’ve just arrived on campus. What do I do first? • Pick up your key and identification card • Move into your room • Meet and greet your roommates • Pick up prepaid linens from the trucks parked on High Street if you ordered them. • If you want to order a refrigerator go to https://asa.yale.edu/agencies. If you ordered a refrigerator, it will be delivered to your room. • Meet the computing techs and go to a computing session in Linsly-Chittenden Hall on the Old Campus • Pick up a bagged lunch ($10) on Cross Campus. • Go to your residential college open house at 4 p.m. • Dinner is on your own with your families or roommates. For other meals, you can find a list of dining specials for students at http://www.infonewhaven.com/dining/. • Meet with your dean at 8 pm and your counselor at 9 pm at your residential college. Where do I get my key and identification card? For students living on the Old Campus, go to the table set up outside of Dwight Hall which is opposite Phelps Gate on the Old Campus. If it’s raining, go inside Dwight Hall Chapel. Keys and IDs are distributed from 9 am to 5 pm. If you arrive after 5 pm, go to the Law School security desk, located at 127 Wall Street.
    [Show full text]
  • Freshman-Guide-2018 Website 08112014.Pdf
    Silliman College Class of 2018 1 C LASS OF 2 0 1 8 , WELCOME TO SILLIMAN! ndergraduate life at Yale College is organized around twelve residential colleges where Ustudents live, eat, attend seminars and workshops, and participate in intellectual, artistic, and social activities. Each college is a cohesive community with its own character and traditions. A Master and Dean live in each college with their families, and there are apartments where faculty members live as Resident Fellows. Silliman is the largest college at Yale, occupying most of a city block. Whereas other colleges house their freshmen on Old Campus, freshmen in Silliman Upperclassmen entryways: J, K, & L College and Timothy Dwight College enjoy the privilege of living in their own colleges. Silliman’s courtyard alternates as an informal athletic field, a site What to look forward to... for college festivities, and a place for quiet repose. This newsletter contains information about Over one hundred members of the faculty, staff, and the accommodations, facilities, and activities in administration are Fellows of Silliman, and they are Silliman College. It also contains important practical invited to eat in the college dining hall and participate information and regulations to keep in mind. You will in college activities. The aim is to promote interchange find it a useful guide during the first days of college. between faculty and students. Silliman is a vibrant place, alive with diverse Silliman offers a wide range of activities and is activities, facilities, traditions, and people. Master known for the enthusiasm of its students. Through Krauss, Dean Hill, the staff and the students of participation in college activities, conversations in the Silliman are eager to get to know you.
    [Show full text]
  • ST JOHN's COLLEGE COUNCIL Agenda for the Meeting Of
    ST JOHN’S COLLEGE COUNCIL Agenda For the Meeting of Wednesday, December 3, 2014 Meal at 5:30, Meeting from 6:00 in the Cross Common Room (#108) 1. Opening Prayer 2. Approval of the Agenda 3. Approval of the September 24, 2014 Minutes 4. Business arising from the Minutes 5. New Business a) Update on the work of the Commission on Theological Education b) University of Manitoba Budget situation c) Draft Report from the Theological Education Commission d) Report from Warden on the Collegiate way Conference e) Budget Summary f) Summary of Awards 6. Reports from Committees, College Officers and Student Council a) Reports from Committees – Council Executive, Development, Finance & Admin. b) Report from Assembly c) Report from College Officers and Student Council i) Warden ii) Dean of Studies iii) Development Office iv) Dean of Residence v) Chaplain vi) Bursar vii) Registrar viii) Senior Stick 7. Other Business 8. Adjournment Council Members: Art Braid; Bernie Beare; Bill Pope; Brenda Cantelo; Christopher Trott; David Ashdown; Don Phillips; Heather Richardson; Ivan Froese; Jackie Markstrom; James Ripley; Joan McConnell; June James; Justin Bouchard; Peter Brass; Sherry Peters; Simon Blaikie; Susan Close; William Regehr, Susie Fisher Stoesz, Martina Sawatzky; Diana Brydon; Esyllt Jones; James Dean; Herb Enns ST JOHN’S COLLEGE COUNCIL Minutes For the Meeting of Wednesday, September 24, 2014 Present: B. Beare (Chair), A. Braid, J. Bouchard, B. Cantelo, D Brydon, J. Ripley, P. Brass, M. Sawatzky, B. Regehr, C. Trott, S. Peters (Secretary), J. Markstrom, H. Richardson, I. Froese, J. McConnell, B. Pope. Regrets: J. James, D. Phillips, H. Enns, S.
    [Show full text]
  • Yale College Programs of Study 2015–2016
    Yale College Programs of Study Fall and Spring Terms 2015–2016 BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY Series 111 Number 9 August 1, 2015 BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY Series 111 Number 9 August 1, 2015 (USPS 078-500) is published seventeen times a year (one time in May and October; three times in June and September; four times in July; five times in August) by Yale University, 2 Whitney Avenue, New Haven CT 0651o. Periodicals postage paid at New Haven, Connecticut. Postmaster: Send address changes to Bulletin of Yale University, PO Box 208227, New Haven CT 06520-8227 Managing Editor: Kimberly M. Go≠-Crews Editor: Lesley K. Baier PO Box 208230, New Haven CT 06520-8230 The closing date for material in this bulletin was May 1, 2015. The University reserves the right to withdraw or modify the courses of instruction or to change the instructors at any time. ©2015 by Yale University. All rights reserved. The material in this bulletin may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, in any form, whether in print or electronic media, without written permission from Yale University. Printed on recycled paper. Text printed in Canada. Mission Statement of Yale College The mission of Yale College is to seek exceptionally promising students of all backgrounds from across the nation and around the world and to educate them, through mental discipline and social experi- ence, to develop their intellectual, moral, civic, and creative capacities to the fullest. The aim of this education is the cultivation of citizens with a rich awareness of our heritage to lead and serve in every sphere of human activity.
    [Show full text]
  • Yale College Programs of Study 2Oo6–2Oo7
    ale university 2oo7 – all and Spring Terms 2oo6 bulletin of y Series 102 Number 7 August 1, 2oo6 F Programs of Study Yale College Yale bulletin of yale university August 1, 2oo6 Yale College Programs of Study bulletin of yale university Periodicals postage paid New Haven, Connecticut o652o-8227 New Haven, Connecticut Bulletin of Yale University The University is committed to basing judgments concerning the admission, education, and employment of individuals upon their qualifications and abili- Postmaster: Send address changes to Bulletin of Yale University, ties and affirmatively seeks to attract to its faculty, staff, and student body PO Box 208227, New Haven ct 06520-8227 qualified persons of diverse backgrounds. In accordance with this policy and as delineated by federal and Connecticut law, Yale does not discriminate in PO Box 208230, New Haven ct 06520-8230 admissions, educational programs, or employment against any individual on Periodicals postage paid at New Haven, Connecticut account of that individual’s sex, race, color, religion, age, disability, status as a special disabled veteran, veteran of the Vietnam era, or other covered veteran, Issued seventeen times a year: one time a year in May, November, and or national or ethnic origin; nor does Yale discriminate on the basis of sexual December; two times a year in June; three times a year in July and orientation. September; six times a year in August University policy is committed to affirmative action under law in employ- ment of women, minority group members, individuals with disabilities, special Managing Editor: Linda Koch Lorimer disabled veterans, veterans of the Vietnam era, and other covered veterans.
    [Show full text]