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College of Arts and Humanities

1102J Francis Scott Key Hall
Thursday, September 17, 2015 - 3:00 PM to 4:30 PM

An ARHU-specific information session for anyone new to RASA/CAPAA or who would like to understand better the review process and criteria.

1102J Francis Scott Key
Tuesday, September 08, 2015 - 11:30 AM to 12:30 PM

Information Session for NEH Summer Stipend Applicants

Friday, September 04, 2015 - 5:00 PM

The Office of the Dean invites ARHU faculty to complete an "Intent to submit" notice for NEH Summer Stipends.

5/12/15

BY LAUREN BROWN
PHOTO BY JOHN T. CONSOLI

This week only, the landscape of downtown College Park is a little more whimsical. And thoughtful. And connected.

Students in a new public art and design course have installed five temporary artworks on streets, in open spaces and in other nooks of the city for view May 11–16, in hopes of sparking conversations about the relationship between the university and College Park.

On Monday, passersby paused and drivers turned their heads to stare at the works, such as reflector-covered poles lining a sidewalk, a blown-up globe between a pair of park benches, and three platforms bearing chairs and tables and festooned with a canopy of colored ribbons, on a grassy area just outside City Hall.

Architecture Associate Professor Ronit Eisenbach, with sculptor and art Professor John Ruppert and urban planning Professor Gerrit Knapp, director of the National Center for Smart Growth, taught the “Making Place Work” class to a mix of art, architecture and landscape architecture students.

“We wanted them to think about spicing up College Park a bit, and raise possibilities about what could happen here,” she says.

The course is supported by UMD’s Academy for Innovation and Entrepreneurship andPartnership for Action Learning in Sustainability (PALS) program, in which students and faculty work with local governments in Maryland to solve real community problems.

The students first explored the challenges the city and university are now confronting to make College Park’s downtown more vibrant, diverse and attractive. Then, split into teams, they explored different concepts in the city-campus relationship, such as blurring the boundaries between them or emphasizing the quiet areas or creating a place to mingle. They worked with the property owners—the university, its foundation and the city—to secure short-term use of the spaces, and raced to design and build their visions.

Architecture graduate student Prakruti Hoskere was glad to get experience in collaborating and constructing a design on a budget, and has enjoyed watching people interact with her team’s piece, “Room Garden.”

“I really feel that these projects can help make College Park a better place,” she says.

For more information, visit makingplaceumd.wordpress.com. Passersby can connect via Twitter #CPMakePlace.

 

Friday, May 29, 2015 - 11:45 PM

Deadline to submit course proposal is Friday, May 29, 2015.

Francis Scott Key Hall, Dean’s Conference Room
Monday, May 04, 2015 - 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM

Interested ARHU faculty will have the opportunity to learn more about submitting a proposal for a Spring 2016 Foxworth Creative Enterprise Initiative course.

Dean's Office Conference Room, Francis Scott Key Hall
Tuesday, May 05, 2015 - 1:00 PM to 2:15 PM

Interested ARHU faculty will have the opportunity to learn more about submitting a proposal for a Spring 2016 Foxworth Creative Enterprise Initiative course.

Dean's Office Conference Room, Francis Scott Key Hall
Wednesday, April 29, 2015 - 11:30 AM to 12:30 PM

Interested ARHU faculty will have the opportunity to learn more about submitting a proposal for a Spring 2016 Foxworth Creative Enterprise Initiative course.

4/17/15

By Sissi Cao/The Diamondback

Environmentalism might sound like science to some, but Terry Tempest Williams said it takes a humanitarian perspective to fully understand it.
Williams, an award-winning nature writer, came to speak at the arts and humanities college’s Dean’s Lecture Series at the Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center on Thursday night to talk about the humanities, her writing and the environment.
About 50 people attended the event featuring the environmental humanitarian, who is known for her books Finding Beauty In A Broken World and Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place. She currently teaches at Dartmouth College.
“I grew up with the value that community comes before individuals. I believe community is the vehicle for social change and the vehicle for empathy,” Williams said.
The writer was born in 1955 and grew up in a Mormon family in Salt Lake City, Utah. She called herself “a free spirit in a conservative religion,” recounting events in her early life that led her to the path of writing and supporting environmental activism.

 

To read more, click here.

2120 Francis Scott Key Hall, Merrill Room
Tuesday, April 28, 2015 - 3:00 PM to 4:30 PM

ARHU Graduate Student Grant Workshop

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