1780 – The Official Blog of Transylvania University

1780 | The Official Blog of Transylvania University

Transy junior opens solo exhibition; runs through November 6

Lexington, Ky.— Transient Narratives, a solo exhibition featuring the artwork of Transylvania University junior Kathleen Burke, is on exhibit in the StudentGallery of the Shearer Art Building on Transylvania’s campus. The exhibition will run through Thursday, Nov. 6; gallery hours are 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday-Friday and during a reception for the artist on Saturday, Nov.1 from 4-6 p.m. The pieces on display include two-dimensional mixed media, video, prints, and handmade books. The art was created during winter term 2008, when Burke studied at Firenze Arti Visive in Florence, Italy, and during the current term at Transylvania. “The show is titled Transient Narratives because, for me, art is about telling a story,” said Burke. “In Italy, I kept having memories come back to me, and I wrote them down and turned them into a “trip tik” of illustrated childhood memories and associated text that will be part of the exhibition.” A “dream catcher” series abstractly represents the state of being when a dream catches hold, according to Burke. These images were made from ink, thread and paper. Videos include a self portrait and “Boxed In,” which features two of Burke’s classmates in Italy. Burke said that her study in Italy gave her confidence and made her think of herself as a true artist, instead of someone who does art just for fun. A studio art major and art history minor, Burke is a William T. Young Scholar, a student orientation leader,

Grammy Award-winning group Chanticleer to perform at Transylvania on Friday, Nov. 14; limited tickets available to the public.

LEXINGTON, Ky.—The Grammy Award-winning male chorus Chanticleer will perform a concert in Transylvania’s Haggin Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 14, as part of the Dorothy J. and Fred K. Smith Endowed Concert series.  Chanticleer has developed a remarkable reputation over its 30-year history for its vivid interpretations of vocal literature, including Renaissance, classical, jazz, gospel, sacred chant, Christmas and venturesome new music. With its seamless blend of 12 male voices, ranging from countertenor to bass, Chanticleer has earned international renown as “an orchestra of voices” and New Yorker magazine called the group “the world’s reigning male chorus.” The performance at Transylvania, Wondrous Free, is an appreciation of the 250th anniversary of the earliest surviving American secular composition, “My Days Have Been So Wondrous Free,” by Francis Hopkinson, a friend of George Washington and a signer of the Declaration of Independence. The program demonstrates the diversity of song in America. Based in San Francisco, Chanticleer was name 2008 Ensemble of the Year by Musical America and was recently inducted into the American Classical Music Hall of Fame. The ensemble has 22 recordings to its credit, including Colors of Love, which won the Grammy Award for Best Small Ensemble Performance and the Contemporary A Capella Recording Award for Best Classical Album.  The most recent release, Magnificat, a disc of early music devoted to the Virgin Mary, climbed to the top four on Billboard’s Classical Chart.  In 2008-09, the ensemble will

Transylvania University Theater opens season Oct. 30 with Miller’s masterpiece “The Crucible”

LEXINGTON, Ky.—Arthur Miller’s “The Crucible,” a gripping drama widely recognized as one of the most important dramatic works of the 20th century, opens Thursday, Oct. 30 at 7:30 p.m. in Transylvania University’s Lucille C. Little Theater. “‘The Crucible’ serves to remind us not only of the ever-present danger of Constitutional compromises, of political power used to abuse another and of the all-too-easy threat of ambiguously-based charges, but also of the value and place of art in our lives,” said director and drama professor Tim Soulis. Miller wrote “The Crucible” in 1952, as a metaphoric response to the hysteria surrounding the fear of Soviet-style Communism in America and the resulting investigation and persecution of anyone in government organizations thought to be affiliated with the Communist Party. He saw the situation as one parallel to the Salem Witch Trials two and a half centuries earlier. In the 1692 Puritan world of Salem, Massachusetts, accusations of witchcraft flew among the disgruntled, fearful members of the community. A trial was convened to uncover and destroy the perceived power of Satan in Salem, and several Salem citizens were hanged for witchcraft. But in truth, economic expediency and personal vengeance motivated many of the accusations and the undesirables in the society—the homeless, the rebellious, the mentally challenged—could easily be eradicated with a charge of witchcraft. The mad dash to find demonic dangers in Salem and the accusatory climate of the trial led to the assessment in

Kentucky author and activist Wendell Berry to give poetry reading at Transylvania on Thursday, Oct. 30 at 8 p.m.

LEXINGTON, Ky.—Wendell Berry, Kentucky native, environmental activist and author of more than 40 books, will read from his recent poetry at Transylvania Thursday, Oct. 30, at 8 p.m. in the William T. Young Campus Center. The event is free and open to the public. A reception will follow the poetry reading. Berry has received numerous awards and honors, including a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, the Vachel Lindsay Prize from “Poetry” and a Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship. Berry’s essays have covered everything from agriculture to global economics, and his poetic subjects include everything from the Kentucky countryside to the Vietnam War. He lives and works with his wife, Tanya, on their farm in Port Royal. Berry was born in Henry County, Kentucky, in 1934. He earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the University of Kentucky, and received a Wallace Stegner Fellowship from Stanford University. Berry taught at the University of Kentucky from 1964-77 and from 1987-93. He has also taught at Stanford University, New York University and Georgetown College. The lecture is sponsored by the Delcamp Visiting Writer series. For more information, contact the public relations office at (859) 233-8120.

“Death’s Showcase” runs through Nov. 21 at Transylvania’s Morlan Gallery; coffins featured

LEXINGTON, Ky.—Ten artists have created fantastic coffins that reside between the enigma of life and the mystery of death for “Death’s Showcase,” which opens Wednesday, Oct 22, in Transylvania’s Morlan Gallery. The exhibit, which is free and open to the public, runs through November 21. The ten artists featured in this exhibition—Steve  Armstrong, Roy “Bud” Davis, Marvin Francis, Jimmy Gordon, John Ishmael, Diane Kahlo, Sherry McGee, Bob Morgan, Fabio Rodriguez and Lynn Sweet—come from diverse backgrounds. Last spring, Lexington artists Morgan and Armstrong approached Morlan Gallery Director Andrea Fisher with the idea of exhibiting artist-made coffins and caskets. “Artists have been fabricating and decorating burial coffins for thousands of years,” says Fisher. “I thought it would be interesting to see how contemporary artists translate our modern day sensibilities into this ancient practice.” The gallery’s regular hours are Monday-Friday, noon-5 p.m. and by special appointment. The gallery will also be open for the Lexington Gallery Hop on Friday, Nov. 21, from 5-8 p.m. For more information, contact gallery director Andrea Fisher at (859) 233-8142. Roy “Bud” Davis, Rolla Davis Killed. In 1908, Davis’s grandfather, Rolla Davis, was murdered at a baseball game in Perryville, Ky., by Thomas and Samuel Wheat. The coffin contains a portrait of Rolla with a baseball bat hovering above it. The coffin lid is lined with newspaper articles about the murder and the court trials of the Wheat brothers.