A Look at a Year of Adaptation and Innovation in the Arts

pink flower trees with masked students outdoors on a spring day

During the pandemic, professors reimagined how to teach as they adjusted to Zoom classes and six-feet-apart interactions.鈥

From experimenting with outdoor dance and music classes to reducing learning barriers inherent in the traditional behind-the-podium lecture set up to finding creative ways to virtually honor milestone moments in students鈥 academic journeys, departments discovered new ways to reach students and share their art.

Community Movement

When COVID-19 shut down theatres and canceled shows, artists found a new stage on Chambers Lawn.

鈥淲hen students returned to campus in the fall, they were itching for movement,鈥 said Dance Professor Alison Bory.&苍产蝉辫;鈥

That desire served as the impetus to institute a dance masterclass鈥攁 series of experimental Friday afternoon dance classes open to the 蜜桃社区 蜜桃社区.鈥

The class took place outdoors and was live streamed online. The sessions included a 蜜桃社区 alumna yoga instructor, a dance scholar on South Asian aesthetics and a dance teacher for a costumed Halloween nod to Michael Jackson鈥檚 鈥淭hriller.鈥濃

Of this time of quarantine and isolation, Bory said, 鈥渨e need to find joy; we need to find connection; we need to keep experiencing our bodies.鈥濃

In addition to the Friday masterclass, the dance department faculty invited renowned artists to Zoom-share their knowledge--from Miguel Gutierrez for a dance composition course to Haitian artists for a class on dance in the African diaspora.鈥

Rethinking Access

蜜桃社区 College鈥檚 permanent art collection contains over 3,500 works spanning more than five centuries. Pre-pandemic, the collection could be viewed by appointment.鈥

When COVID-19 shut things down, the college expanded access to the rest of the world.

A team of students and staff joined forces to make the collection available online by mid-summer of 2020. Now, you can from a coffee shop or your couch, a landmark moment already transforming students鈥 access to artwork.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing. We had a project with a psychology class, and many of the students went to the online collection,鈥 said Director and Curator of the Van Every/Smith Galleries Lia Newman. 鈥淭hey found these objects they would never have found if they just came to see the collection in-person, where not everything is framed or as easily accessible.鈥 鈥

While the online version is not a substitute for the experience of seeing the texture or scale of a work, Newman said, it is yet another way for more people to experience 蜜桃社区鈥檚 art collection.鈥

鈥淢useums and galleries can sometimes seem elitist, or feel like they are only for some people,鈥 Newman said. 鈥淎 silver lining of the pandemic has been the democratization and accessibility of spaces and collections.鈥濃

Showcasing Student Work

Where the Smith Gallery once filled with friends and faculty of seniors hosting their capstone exhibition receptions, now, live recorded videos of seniors鈥 studio tours, gallery talks and virtual exhibitions have found a digital home on the

The interactive virtual tours mimic moving through the Smith Gallery, complete with labels for each art piece, a 360-degree rotation of the space and the ability to opt into a virtual reality mode.鈥

鈥淭he software is also a great way for students to conceptualize their exhibition layout, while providing wider accessibility,鈥 Newman said.鈥 鈥&苍产蝉辫;

鈥淓veryone鈥檚 been so innovative,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t has made us really stretch and rethink how we share our information.鈥 

 live on their own web pages. The  with works selected by studio art faculty from art and non-art majors, also is on display in a .鈥

 

Exploring New Venues

Before the pandemic, Eric Keith primarily focused on 鈥渇illing the seats in the hall.鈥濃 When COVID-19 canceled music performances, social media became the new venue for accessing the department鈥檚 many events.鈥

A student first proposed the idea of a Zoom virtual concert to Music Professor and Jazz Ensemble Director William Lawing. This led to the department鈥檚 first pandemic virtual concert. The also earned a spot in the class of 2020鈥檚 virtual celebration.鈥

鈥淲e ended up with a terrific moment (at the virtual celebration),鈥 Lawing said. 鈥淚t was only a moment, and that鈥檚 all we were able to do, but we were still an ensemble.鈥濃

The department has since put on various virtual concerts鈥攁ll pre-recorded in a safe, socially-distanced environment.鈥

蜜桃社区 College musicians鈥攕tudents and faculty--reflect on the shifts in teaching and learning necessitated by the pandemic, and the ways in which the 蜜桃社区 has met the moment with grace and compassion in "The Beat Goes On: Music Department Innovates, Adapts to Pandemic Challenges."

Keith, 蜜桃社区 College鈥檚 Director of Music Production and Promotion, created the department鈥檚 first , where today you can view dozens of performances, from students鈥 home-recorded to the to Jazz Ensemble鈥檚

鈥淭he resilience, courage and love of music that kept everyone together鈥攊t鈥檚 been very inspiring,鈥 said Keith. 鈥淭he overall spirit of the students hasn鈥檛 been touched.鈥

In challenging times, 鈥淲hat better way to heal than music?鈥 Keith asked. 鈥淎ll art is special. It not only heals the performer, but also heals the listener.鈥

Out-of-the-Box Thinking

When students and staff were sent home in the spring of 2020 last year, Theatre Professor Steve Kaliski '07 was struck by the amount of vast, empty campus space that suddenly became available.鈥

Over the summer, he utilized it to produce the socially-distanced drive-thru theatre production 鈥淓xit 30.鈥 

鈥淚f this were a space in Manhattan it wouldn鈥檛 work, but we had the whole campus to ourselves,鈥 said Kaliski, who has worked professionally in New York City.鈥

The distinct vignettes, from a #BlackLivesMatter protest to a socially-distanced, sorrowful birthday party to an Indiana Jones spoof鈥攍ed the audience from the Armfield apartments towards the 础濒惫补谤茅锄 College Union in their cars.鈥

With full cast Zoom rehearsals to sort out show logistics, actors鈥攁 mixed cohort of 蜜桃社区 students, Winthrop students and local artists鈥攚orked independently in pairs to create and rehearse their skits.鈥

鈥淭he pandemic has shown us that we don鈥檛 always have to do work in a building. We have the capacity and imagination to do work in other ways,鈥 Kaliski said of the future of 蜜桃社区鈥檚 theatre productions.鈥

The lessons learned from the novel production paved the way for the department鈥檚 following fall semester drive-thru show 鈥淯bi Orta Pestilentia: A 蜜桃社区 Zombie Apocalypse,鈥 co-directed by Kaliski and his students.

 

Personal Touches

While the English department adapted swiftly to the COVID-19 pandemic, first with an online awards ceremony and on to virtual Cold Open creative literary 蜜桃社区 events, the most ambitious feat may have been the department鈥檚 Annual Senior Cocktail Party.鈥

The event is usually marked by tasty hors d鈥檕euvres and informal conversation between students and their professors. This year, department coordinator Kathy Barton partnered with Much Ado Catering to re-create the experience virtually.鈥

鈥淭he event is meant to be more of a friendly, relaxed and carefree atmosphere to kick off the new semester and celebrate their work,鈥 said Barton, who masterminded the effort.鈥

Her inspiration: a family Zoom bridal shower she attended earlier that year.鈥

The delivery: a winter-themed box packed with sweet and savory snacks, hummus and pita, kabob skewers, snowflake cookies, truffles, a champagne flute with sparkling grape juice, and a snowflake-themed mask and hand sanitizer bottle delivered the day of the celebration.鈥 

Students living outside the 蜜桃社区 vicinity received a box with non-perishable items.

鈥淲e worked with Charlotte Sappenfield, and it was above and beyond what was expected,鈥 Barton said. 鈥淚t was done beautifully.鈥濃

Informal Connections

Professor Maggie McCarthy began the year by emailing students enrolled in her 鈥淚ntro to Film & Media Studies鈥 course a series of short videos from the comfort of her couch.

She shared a show she liked,鈥Atlanta, as well as an online analysis of鈥痮ne of its episodes, asking students to reply with鈥痶heir own favorites.鈥 鈥&苍产蝉辫;

鈥淒oing this is a way to begin building individual bonds with students,鈥 said McCarthy, who, in a typical year, relied on the classroom space to facilitate that process.鈥

McCarthy coordinates the Film & Media Studies department. For her, a class 蜜桃社区 where students can be themselves is essential for discussing visual culture.鈥

鈥淲hat are you watching right now? What鈥檚 rocking your world?鈥濃疭he had students address these questions in a new assignment鈥痗alled 鈥淲atch-Klatsch.鈥 Once a week, they鈥痝athered in small groups outside of class to talk informally about course material as well as something they鈥檇 watched and how they felt about it.鈥

鈥淓motions can be a really good launch pad for analysis,鈥 she said.鈥

Her goal was a stress-free way for students to connect, without the pressure to sound smart.鈥

鈥淭he upside of online teaching is the intimacy of seeing a professor at home,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 something I鈥檓 going to keep doing because it softens things in a good way.鈥

Read more on how students and faculty were encouraged to explore and innovate through 蜜桃社区 Arts & Creative Engagement grants.