October 06, 2015

The Great Yellow River: Exhibit in One Week

Since 2010, as part of an annual test of human endurance, students and alumni worked around the clock the first week of classes to put together an art exhibit for Exhibition Workshop, a museum studies course.

In the Neese Gallery of the Wright Museum of Art, Gaizi Jie'15 installs a propaganda poster featu... “The Great Yellow River” opened in August in the Wright Museum of Art’s Neese Gallery and ran until mid-October. It featured pieces from the Wright’s collection covering the extensive history of one of China’s most important rivers. These ranged from a 180 C.E. rubbing of the first Chinese emperor, who is believed to have “tamed” the river, to a room-length reproduction of a 16th century scroll depicting the topographical features of the waterway. The exhibit also included photos taken by Beloit faculty members traveling on a grant funded by the Henry Luce Foundation initiative on Asian studies and the environment.

Joy Beckman, who holds the George S. Parker II Endowed Chair in Art History, co-teaches the course. She says the Workshop is different in that it has a “concrete public outcome” unlike a traditional classroom, which is typically a closed dialogue between students and faculty through research and papers.


Also In This Issue

  • Station manager Nora Kane’16 holds up one of WBCR’s many classic albums in the radio station’s graffiti-covered storage room in Pearsons Hall.

    Record Reorganization

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  • Challenging Puzzles for the Curious-Minded

    Brittanica Brainbusters: Challenging Puzzles for the Curious-Minded

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  • “U.S. Marine Cpl. Philip Pepper, age 22, Garmsir District, Helmand Province, Afghanistan,” photographed by Louie Palu, one of 14 photographers featured in “Conflict and Consequence: Photographing War and its Aftermath.” After being embedded with U.S. Marines in Afghanistan, Palu turned his camera on the soldiers. “These are the men and women that governments rely upon to implement their complex policies, especially when it comes to killing people,” Palu wrote.

    The Photography of War

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  • Jessica Peck’14 took this photo, titled “Lost,” while in Western Morocco. It took first place in Beloit’s fall 2013 study abroad photography contest.

    How to Study Abroad Meaningfully

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