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Beach Blog

Month: April 2016

Global Food Systems Research Science Communication Symposium

GFS

During the 2015-16 academic year, a group of graduate students and postdoctoral scientists from Global Food Systems research teams have participated in an experimental series of workshops. These focused on communication of science questions, methods, and discoveries to non-specialist audiences. The aim of the workshop has been to help these scientists strengthen skills that will help them convey the significance of their work – to legislators and funders, to their future students, and to the general public.

The visual arts, especially research around a technique called Visual Thinking Strategies, provided a starting point by examining the power of images and the importance of selecting them carefully. Later in the workshop, the group considered discoveries in neuroscience and psychology that can help a presenter maximize communication of information and concepts. The presentation events will showcase the work of this group of researchers and allow them to demonstrate their communication skills.

Jim Richardson

In his photographic projects for National Geographic over the last three decades, Jim Richardson has explored natural landscapes, human cultures, and environmental issues around the world. These worldwide photographic essays were rooted in his Kansas upbringing and the subjects he found close to home. Richardson has returned often to the subject of the prairie and the livelihoods of the people who make their homes in that ecosystem, at once rich and austere, beautiful and punishing. The exhibition of Richardson’s photographs, “Beneath the Prairie Sky” at Beach Museum of Art (March 8 – June 26, 2016), will explore life and meaning on the Great Plains. Filled with both exhilarating wonder and gnawing doubt, the artist says these photographs reflect 50 years of soul-searching.

A collaborative program of:

  • Office of the Vice President for Research
  • Beach Museum of Art
  • Prairie Studies Initiative
  • Department of Landscape Architecture and Regional & Community Planning

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Hip Hop Dance Workshop at the Beach Museum of Art

Presented by the Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art and 91.9 KSDB Manhattan

April 21, 2016, 5:30-7 p.m.
Optional Photo Shoot, 7-8 p.m.

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Inspired by the exhibition “Behind the Glass Eye: Photographs by Toyo Miyatake”  and taught by choreographer Katie Oliver, NY.

Workshop fee $5.00. Advance registration required. Please contact 785-532-7718 or beachart@ksu.edu to reserve your spot for the workshop.

Post-workshop, the participants work with student photographers to create their own Toyo Miyatake-inspired photograph using the dance movements they learned in a play with light and shadow. Participants receive a free downloadable digital file of their photograph.

Katie is a choreographer and teacher born & raised in Queens, NY of Puerto Rican & Filipino descent. She has performed nationally and internationally (US, Canada, Europe, South America) and has been featured in several music videos with artists including Farruko, Toby Love, Melo-X, & Justina Valentine. Recently she performed with hip hop dance company “Soulsations” at the famous Apollo Theater stage for Breakin Convention.

The workshop is open to teens and adults.  No previous experience necessary to participate.

91.9 KSDB Manhattan, K-State’s Student Run Radio Station will broadcast LIVE from the Beach Museum of Art!
7:00 – 8:00 p.m.
Open to the Public

The galleries will be open from 10-8 on Thursday, April 21, and the public is welcome to explore the galleries while hip hop is in the air 5-8 p.m.

Katie will teach an additional Hip Hop workshop 7:00 p.m. on Friday, April 22 at the K-State Rec Center, Studio Two.

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Making an evening out of it, April 14, 2016

Saxophone Expressions: An Exploration of Musical Turmoil

Thursday, April 14, 5:30 p.m., Pelton Gallery

This highly eclectic saxophone concert will feature Dr. Anna Marie Wytko, Associate Professor of Saxophone at Kansas State University, as well as KSU graduate and undergraduate saxophone students John Ashburn, Adam Lechner, Michael Meier, and Jacob Wright in performances by Japanese, Polish, American, and French composers from the WWII Era.

Part of the programming for “Behind the Glass Eye: Photographs by Toyo Miyatake” and “Minidoka on My Mind: Paintings and Prints by Roger Shimomura.”

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At the conclusion of Saxophone Expressions: An Exploration of Musical Turmoil head up to the Union Little theater for a lecture by K-State Department of English’s Visiting Writer and Speaker, Julian Hoffman.

K-State Department of English Visiting Writer and Speaker Julian Hoffman

Thursday, April 14, 2016, 7:00 p.m., in the Union, Little Theatre

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Julian Hoffman lives beside the Prespa Lakes in northern Greece. His book, The Small Heart of Things: Being at Home in a Beckoning World, was chosen by Terry Tempest Williams as the winner of the 2012 AWP Award Series for Nonfiction. In 2014, it won a National Outdoor Book Award for Natural History Literature.  This program is co-sponsored by the Prairie Studies Initiative.