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National Endowment for the Arts Annual Report 1990
National Endowment For The Arts Annual Report National Endowment For The Arts 1990 Annual Report National Endowment for the Arts Washington, D.C. Dear Mr. President: I have the honor to submit to you the Annual Report of the National Endowment for the Arts for the Fiscal Year ended September 30, 1990. Respectfully, Jc Frohnmayer Chairman The President The White House Washington, D.C. April 1991 CONTENTS Chairman’s Statement ............................................................5 The Agency and its Functions .............................................29 . The National Council on the Arts ........................................30 Programs Dance ........................................................................................ 32 Design Arts .............................................................................. 53 Expansion Arts .....................................................................66 ... Folk Arts .................................................................................. 92 Inter-Arts ..................................................................................103. Literature ..............................................................................121 .... Media Arts: Film/Radio/Television ..................................137 .. Museum ................................................................................155 .... Music ....................................................................................186 .... 236 ~O~eera-Musicalater ................................................................................ -
May 2020 Personnel Actions
SUMMARY OF PERSONNEL ACTIONS REGENTS AGENDA May 2020 ANN ARBOR, DEARBORN, AND FLINT CAMPUSES – Recommendations for approval 1. Promotions to the ranks of professor and associate professor, 2020 - 2021. ANN ARBOR CAMPUS – Recommendations for approval 2. New appointments and promotions for regular associate and full professor ranks, with tenure. *(1) Chen, Jiande, Ph.D., professor of internal medicine, with tenure, effective April 1, 2020. (2) Foster, Margaret, associate professor of classical studies, with tenure, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, effective August 31, 2020. (3) Fresco, David M., Ph.D., professor of psychiatry, with tenure, Medical School, effective June 1, 2020. (4) Karnovsky, Alla, Ph.D., associate professor of computational medicine and bioinformatics, with tenure, Medical School, effective June 1, 2020. *(5) Kleindorfer, Dawn O., M.D., chair, Department of Neurology, professor of neurology, with tenure, effective May 1, 2020, and Robert W. Brear Professor of Neurology, Medical School, effective May 1, 2020 through August 31, 2025. (6) Matthews, Jamaal Sharif, associate professor of education, with tenure, School of Education, effective August 31, 2020. (7) Ready, Jonathan L., professor of classical studies, with tenure, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, effective August 31, 2020. (8) Zerkel, David, professor of music, with tenure, School of Music, Theatre & Dance, effective August 31, 2020. 3. New appointments and promotions for regular associate and full professor ranks, without tenure. (1) Perkins, Douglas F., associate professor of music, without tenure, School of Music, Theatre & Dance, effective August 31, 2020. * Interim Approval Granted 1 SUMMARY OF PERSONNEL ACTIONS REGENTS AGENDA May 2020 ANN ARBOR CAMPUS – Recommendations for approval 4. -
Israël Veut Un « Changement Complet » De La Politique Menée Par L'olp
LeMonde Job: WMQ0208--0001-0 WAS LMQ0208-1 Op.: XX Rev.: 01-08-97 T.: 11:23 S.: 111,06-Cmp.:01,11, Base : LMQPAG 27Fap:99 No:0328 Lcp: 196 CMYK CINQUANTE-TROISIÈME ANNÉE – No 16333 – 7,50 F SAMEDI 2 AOÛT 1997 FONDATEUR : HUBERT BEUVE-MÉRY – DIRECTEUR : JEAN-MARIE COLOMBANI Les athlètes Israël veut un « changement complet » à Athènes de la politique menée par l’OLP Rigor Mortis a Brigitte Aubert Participation record Benyamin Nétanyahou exige de Yasser Arafat qu’il éradique le terrorisme a aux championnats ISRAÉLIENS et responsables de Jérusalem. Les premiers accusent Le premier ministre a mis Yasser maine. « On ne peut faire avancer du monde l’Autorité palestinienne se sont l’OLP de ne pas en faire assez dans Arafat en demeure d’éradiquer le le processus diplomatique alors que renvoyés, jeudi 31 juillet, la res- la lutte contre le terrorisme ; les terrorisme et a juré qu’il n’y aurait l’Autorité palestinienne ne prend une nouvelle inédite ponsabilité de l’attentat qui, la seconds affirment que la politique pas de reprise des conversations pas les mesures minimales qu’elle qui s’ouvrent samedi veille, a fait quinze morts et plus du gouvernement de Benyamin israélo-palestiniennes tant qu’Is- s’est engagée à prendre contre les de cent cinquante blessés sur un Nétanyahou favorise la montée raël ne jugerait pas l’action de foyers du terrorisme », a dit M. Né- dames a des marchés les plus populaires de des extrémistes palestiniens. l’OLP satisfaisante dans ce do- tanyahou. « Il faut un changement du noir La pollution peut complet de politique de la part des Palestiniens, une campagne vigou- perturber les épreuves reuse, systématique et immédiate pour éliminer le terrorisme », a-t-il Les Dames a lancé, jeudi soir, à la télévision. -
Art Works Grants
National Endowment for the Arts — December 2014 Grant Announcement Art Works grants Discipline/Field Listings Project details are as of November 24, 2014. For the most up to date project information, please use the NEA's online grant search system. Art Works grants supports the creation of art that meets the highest standards of excellence, public engagement with diverse and excellent art, lifelong learning in the arts, and the strengthening of communities through the arts. Click the discipline/field below to jump to that area of the document. Artist Communities Arts Education Dance Folk & Traditional Arts Literature Local Arts Agencies Media Arts Museums Music Opera Presenting & Multidisciplinary Works Theater & Musical Theater Visual Arts Some details of the projects listed are subject to change, contingent upon prior Arts Endowment approval. Page 1 of 168 Artist Communities Number of Grants: 35 Total Dollar Amount: $645,000 18th Street Arts Complex (aka 18th Street Arts Center) $10,000 Santa Monica, CA To support artist residencies and related activities. Artists residing at the main gallery will be given 24-hour access to the space and a stipend. Structured as both a residency and an exhibition, the works created will be on view to the public alongside narratives about the artists' creative process. Alliance of Artists Communities $40,000 Providence, RI To support research, convenings, and trainings about the field of artist communities. Priority research areas will include social change residencies, international exchanges, and the intersections of art and science. Cohort groups (teams addressing similar concerns co-chaired by at least two residency directors) will focus on best practices and develop content for trainings and workshops. -
Opera & Ballet 2017
12mm spine THE MUSIC SALES GROUP A CATALOGUE OF WORKS FOR THE STAGE ALPHONSE LEDUC ASSOCIATED MUSIC PUBLISHERS BOSWORTH CHESTER MUSIC OPERA / MUSICSALES BALLET OPERA/BALLET EDITION WILHELM HANSEN NOVELLO & COMPANY G.SCHIRMER UNIÓN MUSICAL EDICIONES NEW CAT08195 PUBLISHED BY THE MUSIC SALES GROUP EDITION CAT08195 Opera/Ballet Cover.indd All Pages 13/04/2017 11:01 MUSICSALES CAT08195 Chester Opera-Ballet Brochure 2017.indd 1 1 12/04/2017 13:09 Hans Abrahamsen Mark Adamo John Adams John Luther Adams Louise Alenius Boserup George Antheil Craig Armstrong Malcolm Arnold Matthew Aucoin Samuel Barber Jeff Beal Iain Bell Richard Rodney Bennett Lennox Berkeley Arthur Bliss Ernest Bloch Anders Brødsgaard Peter Bruun Geoffrey Burgon Britta Byström Benet Casablancas Elliott Carter Daniel Catán Carlos Chávez Stewart Copeland John Corigliano Henry Cowell MUSICSALES Richard Danielpour Donnacha Dennehy Bryce Dessner Avner Dorman Søren Nils Eichberg Ludovico Einaudi Brian Elias Duke Ellington Manuel de Falla Gabriela Lena Frank Philip Glass Michael Gordon Henryk Mikolaj Górecki Morton Gould José Luis Greco Jorge Grundman Pelle Gudmundsen-Holmgreen Albert Guinovart Haflidi Hallgrímsson John Harbison Henrik Hellstenius Hans Werner Henze Juliana Hodkinson Bo Holten Arthur Honegger Karel Husa Jacques Ibert Angel Illarramendi Aaron Jay Kernis CAT08195 Chester Opera-Ballet Brochure 2017.indd 2 12/04/2017 13:09 2 Leon Kirchner Anders Koppel Ezra Laderman David Lang Rued Langgaard Peter Lieberson Bent Lorentzen Witold Lutosławski Missy Mazzoli Niels Marthinsen Peter Maxwell Davies John McCabe Gian Carlo Menotti Olivier Messiaen Darius Milhaud Nico Muhly Thea Musgrave Carl Nielsen Arne Nordheim Per Nørgård Michael Nyman Tarik O’Regan Andy Pape Ramon Paus Anthony Payne Jocelyn Pook Francis Poulenc OPERA/BALLET André Previn Karl Aage Rasmussen Sunleif Rasmussen Robin Rimbaud (Scanner) Robert X. -
The Dramaturgy of Marivaux: Three Elements of Technique
72-4653 SPINELLI, Donald Carmen, 1942- THE DRAMATURGY OF MARIVAUX: THREE ELEMENTS OF TECHNIQUE. The Ohio State University, Ph.D., 1971 Language and Literature, modern University Microfilms,A XE R O X Company, Ann Arbor, Michigan © 1 9 7 1 Donald Carmen Spinelli ALL RIGHTS RESERVED THE DRAMATURGY OF MARIVAUX* THREE ELEMENTS OF TECHNIQUE DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Donald C. Spinelli, B.A., M.A. ****** The Ohio State University 1971 Approved by Adviser nt of Romance Languages PLEASE NOTE: Some Pages have Indistinct print. Filmed as received. UNIVERSITY MICROFILMS TO MY MOTHER AND FATHER ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to take this opportunity to express my gratitude to some of the people who have made this work possible. Professors Pierre Aubery and V. Frederick Koenig took a personal interest in my academic progress while I was at the University of Buffalo and both en couraged me to continue my studies in French, At Ohio State University I am grateful to my ad visor* Professor Hugh M. Davidson* whose seminar first interested me in Marivaux. Professor Davidson*s sound advice* helpful comments* clarifying suggestions and tactful criticism while discussing the manuscript gave direction to this study and were invaluable in bringing it to its fruition. 1 must thank Emily Cronau who often gave of her own time to type and to help edit this dissertation! but most of all I am grateful for her just being there when she was needed during the past few years. -
Report of Evaluation
D-RE: REPORT OF EVALUATION Circle appropriate action: Reappointment Merit Increase Promotion Tenure Section I: Background Information A. Name Max B. Kazemzadeh Department Art, Communication & Theater School Gallaudet University B. Date of this evaluation: C. Rank: 12/01/12 Assistant Professor D. SCPI Rating: Date of SCPI: ASLPI Rating: 2.8 Date of ASLPI: 10/05/11 *For Tenure, targeted ASLPI rating of 2.5 or SCPI rating of Advanced is required. For promotion, targeted ASLP rating of 3.0 or SCPI rating of Intermediate Plus is required. If the rating is below the required score, please provide additional documentation. E. Period of time covered by the evaluation: from _08/01/09_ to __12/01/12__ (time since last MI or promotion) F. Does faculty member being evaluated hold a joint appointment with a separate administrative unit at Gallaudet or have administrative responsibilities external to the department (e.g., GRI, a second academic department, etc.?) YES NO (Circle one) If yes, write an explanation and attach it to this form. Section II: Teaching From UF Guidelines, Section 2.1.2.1: Teaching competence includes both expertise in the faculty member's field and the ability to impart knowledge deriving from that field to Gallaudet students. A competent teacher must possess the ability to communicate course content clearly and effectively; he/she must also be available to the students individually, responsive to their academic needs, and flexible enough to adapt curriculum and methodology to those needs. [Effective communication as intended by this heading is separate from and in addition to proficiency in Sign Communication as outlined in Section 2.1.2.4.] A. -
Boston Symphony Orchestra Concert Programs, Season 25,1905-1906, Trip
INFANTRY HALL, PROVIDENCE. BostonSympIiQnu Dictiestra WILHELM GERICKE, Conductor. Twenty-fifth Season, 1905-1906. PROGRAMME OF THE FIRST CONCERT THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 2, AT 8.15. Hale. With Historical and Descriptive Notes by Philip Published by C. A. ELLIS, Manager, l A PIANO FOR THE MUSICALLY INTELLIGENT artists' pianos f| Pianos divide into two classes, and popular pianos. The proportion of the first class to the second class is precisely the proportion of cultivated music lovers to the rest of society. A piano, as much as a music library, is the index of the musical taste of its owner. are among the musically intelligent, the ^f If you PIANO is worth your study. You will appreciate the " theory and practice of its makers : Let us have an artist's piano ; therefore let us employ the sci- ence, secure the skill, use the materials, and de- vote the time necessary to this end. Then let us count the cost and regulate the -price" \ In this case hearing, not seeing, is believing. Let us send you a list of our branch houses and sales agents (located in all important cities), at whose warerooms our pianos may be heard. fllnsmt&ijermlh Boston, Mass., 492 Boylston Street New York, 139 Fifth Avenue Chicago, Wabash Avenue and Jackson Boulevard . Boston Symphony Orchestra. PERSONNEL. Twenty=fifth Season, 1905-1906. WILHELM GERICKE, Conductor First Violins. Hess, Willy, Concertmeister. Adamowski, T. Ondricek, K. Mahn, F Back, A. Roth, O. Krafft, W. Eichheim, H. Sokoloff, N. Kuntz, D. Hoffmann, J. Fiedler, E. Mullaly, J. Moldauer, A. Strube, G. Rissland, K. -
Wwciguide November 2019.Pdf
From the President & CEO The Guide The Member Magazine for WTTW and WFMT Dear Member, Renée Crown Public Media Center This month, WTTW will bring you a film about the transformative power of 5400 North Saint Louis Avenue Chicago, Illinois 60625 education. College Behind Bars follows twelve incarcerated men and women who hope to turn their lives around by earning a college degree, as we follow their Main Switchboard four-year journey through the famously rigorous Bard Prison Initiative. Join us (773) 583-5000 on two consecutive nights for a compelling documentary on America’s criminal Member and Viewer Services (773) 509-1111 x 6 justice system. Also on WTTW, The Chaperone reunites three talents from Downton Abbey – Websites actor Elizabeth McGovern, series creator Julian Fellowes, and director Michael wttw.com wfmt.com Engler – for this 1920s era story of a Kansas woman who accompanies an aspiring teen dancer on a tumultuous trip to New York City. A new series on WTTW Kids, Publisher Xavier Riddle and the Secret Museum, introduces children aged 4-7 to historical Anne Gleason figures. On wttw.com, learn more about the small-town fraud that went on in Art Director Tom Peth Dixon, Illinois in our interview with the filmmaker of the documentary,All the WTTW Contributors Queen’s Horses. Julia Maish Lisa Tipton WFMT will present a live performance from New York’s Carnegie Hall by WFMT Contributors Riccardo Muti and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. And in observance of Andrea Lamoreaux Veterans Day, Chicago Tribune film critic Michael Phillips will present his sampling of music from war-themed movies old and new. -
Stanley Hasty: His Life and Teaching Elizabeth Marie Gunlogson
Florida State University Libraries Electronic Theses, Treatises and Dissertations The Graduate School 2006 Stanley Hasty: His Life and Teaching Elizabeth Marie Gunlogson Follow this and additional works at the FSU Digital Library. For more information, please contact [email protected] THE FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF MUSIC STANLEY HASTY: HIS LIFE AND TEACHING By ELIZABETH MARIE GUNLOGSON A treatise submitted to the College of Music in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Music Degree Awarded: Fall Semester, 2006 Copyright @ 2006 Elizabeth M. Gunlogson All Rights Reserved The members of the Committee approve the Treatise of Elizabeth M. Gunlogson defended on November 10, 2006. ______________________ Frank Kowalsky Professor Directing Treatise ______________________ Seth Beckman Outside Committee Member ______________________ Patrick Meighan Committee Member The Office of Graduate Studies has verified and approved the above named committee members. ii To Stanley and June Hasty iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS First and foremost I would like to thank Stanley and June Hasty for sharing their life story with me. Your laughter, hospitality and patience throughout this whole process was invaluable. To former Hasty students David Bellman, Larry Combs, Frank Kowalsky, Elsa Ludewig- Verdehr, Tom Martin and Maurita Murphy Mead, thank you for your support of this project and your willingness to graciously share your experiences with me. Through you, the Hasty legacy lives on. A special thanks to the following people who provided me with valuable information and technical support: David Coppen, Special Collections Librarian and Archivist, Sibley Music Library (Eastman School of Music); Elizabeth Schaff, Archivist, Peabody Institute/Baltimore Symphony Orchestra; Nicole Cerrillos, Public Relations Manager, Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra; Tom Akins, Archivist, Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra; James Gholson, Professor of Clarinet, University of Memphis; Carl Fischer Music Publishing; and Annie Veblen-McCarty. -
The Pivotal Role of Messiaen's Quartet for the End of Time in The
KEEN HOCK, RENA CATHERINE, D.M.A. The Pivotal Role of Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time in the Establishment of the Clarinet-Piano Quartet Genre. (2012) Directed by Dr. Kelly J. Burke. 109 pp. Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time played a pivotal role in the development of the clarinet-piano quartet genre. Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time and the subsequent rise of the clarinet-piano quartet genre exemplify a modernist shift in genre identity in twentieth century chamber music. Contributing factors to this identity include the success of professional quartets in performing, promoting, and expanding the repertoire, the quality of work within the genre, and the ability of ensembles who promote this genre to sustain themselves in a changing socioeconomic environment. In this study I examine the different factors of genre identity that relate to the clarinet-piano quartet. These factors include: the problem of genre identity in the twentieth century; a historical account of the development of the clarinet-piano quartet genre from the first performance of Quartet for the End of Time through the work of current professional ensembles; the quality of literature for this genre, represented by the analysis of Toru Takemitsu’s Quatrain (1978) and Paul Moravec’s Tempest Fantasy (2002); and how this new genre meets the social and economic demands of the current information age. The appendices provided with this study are reference tools designed to help musicians discover works within this genre, and to collect the available literature in one location. They include an annotated list of influential or most recently published quartets, a complete list of all clarinet-piano quartets arranged by composition date, and a list of commissioned quartets organized by their commissioning ensemble. -
National Endowment for the Arts Annual Report 1987
NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE ARTS ~~>~=~~ -. " " i . " I~~ JJ~ , .. ..... MUSIC ON COVER AND TI~E PAGE TA~N ~OM SgMPH~ NO. 1 BY ELLEN TAA~ ZWIL ICH, WHICH SHE COM~SED WHILE ~CEIV~G A COM~SERS’ ~LLOWSHIP IN 1981 ~OM THE MUSIC PR~RAM. IN 1983, ~IS COM~S[~ON WAS AW~~D ~E PUL~ER PR~E FOR MUSIC. COPYRIGHT 1983 M~G~ MUSIC, INC. ~P~~ED BY PE~ISSION OF THE PUBLISHER. 1987 ANNUAL REPORT National Endowment for the Arts Washington, D.C. Dear Mr. President: I have the honor to submit to you the Annual Repon of the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Council on the Arts for the Fiscal Year ended September 30, 1987. Respectfully, Frank Hodsoll Chairman The President The White House Washington, D.C. March 1988 CONTENTS CHAIRMAN’S STATEMENT v THE AGENCY AND ITS FUNCTIONS vii THE NATIONAL COUNCIL ON THE ARTS ix PROGRAMS 1 Dance 3 Design Arts 17 Expansion Arts 29 Folk Arts 51 Inter-Arts 59 Literature 71 Media Arts: Film/Radio/Television 83 Museum 95 Music 117 Opera-Musical Theater 151 Theater 161 Visual Arts 173 OFFICE FOR PUBLIC PARTNERSHIP 187 Artists in Education 189 Locals Test Program 195 State Programs 199 OFFICE FOR PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP 203 Challenge 205 Advancement 209 OFFICE OF POLICY, PLANNING, AND RESEARCH 211 Fellowship Program for Arts Managers 213 Intemational 215 Research 217 Special Constituencies 219 APPENDIX 221 Statement of Mission 222 Overview and Challenge Advisory Panels 223 Financial Summary 228 History of Authoñzations and Appropriations 229 iii CHAIRMAN’S STATEMENT The tremendous diversity of the arts of the basics of education from federal support for the arts over the in America is clearly shown by the kindergarten through twelfth grade, long term.