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Interview with Gregory Foster-Rice
Gregory Foster-Rice (he/him) is a historian and educator. He was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois and moved around the country in his formative years, including Houston, Texas where he earned his MA in Art History at Rice University. He returned home to Chicago to earn his PhD in Art History at Northwestern University. He became an assistant professor in photography at Columbia College Chicago, and currently is an associate professor and Associate Provost for Student Retention Initiatives at Columbia. He has curated several exhibits, such as The City Lost and Found: Capturing New York, Chicago and Los Angeles, 1960-1980 at the Art Institute of Chicago and Princeton University Art Museum, an exhibition which received the Philip Johnson Award from the Society of Architectural Historians, and the exhibit The Many Hats of Ralph Arnold: Art, Identity & Politics, which first opened at the Museum of Contemporary Photography in 2018 and was moved to DePauw University in 2022. Length: 87:23. Transcript: 29 pages.https://digitalcommons.colum.edu/photo_oh/1005/thumbnail.jp
Authoring Culture Audio, Chapter 05: Craft
A podcast to accompany chapter five of Authoring Culture: Foundations of Twenty-First Century Writing. Columbia College Chicago faculty members Brendan Riley and Karl El Sokhn explore a key concept in writing, and Karl chats with students Meghan Patnode and Sprig Velic about their take on the idea. Length: 14:11.https://digitalcommons.colum.edu/authoring_culture/1004/thumbnail.jp
Authoring Culture Audio, Chapter 14: Additional Key Concepts
A podcast to accompany chapter fourteen of Authoring Culture: Foundations of Twenty-First Century Writing. Columbia College Chicago faculty members Brendan Riley and Karl El Sokhn explore a key concept in writing. Length: 10:06.https://digitalcommons.colum.edu/authoring_culture/1013/thumbnail.jp
Guide to the William C. Banfield Collection, 1979-2010
William “Bill” Cedric Banfield is professor emeritus of the Africana Studies Division at the Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts. The collection contains his compositions, including songs and jazz works, and is strong in concert music. It also holds, correspondence, writings, and flyers and programs documenting his career.https://digitalcommons.colum.edu/cmbr_guides/1001/thumbnail.jp
Guide to the Jean Stor Collection
Jean Stor was the pseudonym of William Astor Morgan, a composer, choral conductor, and playwright, who worked mainly in New York City. The collection contains manuscripts and scores for a number of symphonies, tone poems, concertos and other classical works, along with choral works, spiritual arrangements, art songs, popular songs, and theatrical numbers as well as several play scripts, short stories, and photographs.https://digitalcommons.colum.edu/cmbr_guides/1038/thumbnail.jp
The Motions by Liptoss
Recording & Performance Ensemble – Liptoss
The Motions
Director: Typhanie Coller and Nick Tremulis
Students: Ashlyn Sisco - Vocals
Anna Henson - Vocals
Jeremy Donofrio - Guitar
Jake Denny - Guitar
Tim Wenzl - Bass
Matthew Swetnam - Piano
Mark Berg - Keyboard
Elliot Colegrove - Drums
Composer: Liptoss
Statement: The Motions is a piece that Liptoss collaborated on to make a statement on mental health in our society and amongst our peers. Because of the current state of our world and our desire to keep up, we find ourselves constantly falling behind; going through the motions. We hope this song provides its listeners with a sense of togetherness and unity within the chaos of society.https://digitalcommons.colum.edu/blackalbummixtape/1011/thumbnail.jp
Authoring Culture Audio, Chapter 08: Genre
A podcast to accompany chapter eight of Authoring Culture: Foundations of Twenty-First Century Writing. Columbia College Chicago faculty members Brendan Riley and Karl El Sokhn explore a key concept in writing, and Karl chats with students Petey Holman-Herbert and Charles Metcalf about their take on the idea. Length: 10:32.https://digitalcommons.colum.edu/authoring_culture/1007/thumbnail.jp
Guide to the Chicago Press Veterans Association Records
The Chicago Press Veterans Association (CPVA) was founded in 1939 as an organization dedicated to uniting journalists with a shared history of covering news in Chicago and beyond. It provided a space for both men and women in the newspaper industry to foster camaraderie through their collective professional experiences. The collection is rich in documentation of the association’s history, including materials related to its annual dinners, correspondence between members, membership lists, event programs, newspaper clippings, photographs, and business and financial records. The collection also includes artifacts like artwork, printing plates, and other memorabilia, which speak to the organization’s efforts to preserve the history of journalism in Chicago
Interview with Peter Le Grand
Peter Le Grand (he/him) is a photographer and professor emeritus at Columbia College Chicago. He was born in Bussum, The Netherlands, and was raised in Naarden, The Netherlands. He received an Associates of Arts from Grand Rapids Community College, a Bachelor of Business Administration from the University of Michigan in Dearborn in Marketing, and a Master of Fine Arts in photography from Governors State University. At Columbia College Chicago, he began as a part-time faculty member and taught photography in 1980, initially teaching Darkroom 101. He then became a full-time faculty member in 1987 and taught Product Photography. In 2011, he became a professor emeritus and has since left the college. He resides in Chicago, still creating photographs, with a focus on nude photography. Length: 84:54. Transcript: 15 pages.https://digitalcommons.colum.edu/photo_oh/1004/thumbnail.jp