The Phoenix on Art
Amory Art Fair Fails to Meet Student’s Expectations
by Michael Telis
Wednesday April 4, 2007
Michael Telis gives his opinion of the 2007 Amory Art Show.
Chelsea Gives Grand Welcome to David LaChapelle
by Rachel Egan
Wednesday April 4, 2007
Rachel Egan reviews David LaChappelle’s Chelsea exhibit.
Molting Goats and Bed Quilts
by Evelyn Atkinson
Tuesday March 7, 2006
When Robert Rauschenberg’s works first premiered at New York City’s Betty Parson Gallery in 1951, those in attendance were so shocked that uproar ensued, demonstrators blocked the entrance to the exhibit, and police were called to keep order.
Wanted dead or alive: poets prepare for performance
by Michelle Yu
Monday November 28, 2005
With each passing year, the Dead Poets Slam increases in notoriety on campus.
Projekt Rhythm heats up
by Aja Monet
Monday November 28, 2005
A culture was born in 1979, Bronx, N.Y. Initially, an urban form of expression through music, hip-hop became its own genre and eventually inspired a whole new lifestyle. This lifestyle was expressed through a variety of creative arts such as dance, beat, rhythm and spoken word. The combination of hip-hop with urban experience and creativity created terms like beatboxing, B-Boy-ing and emceeing.
Student art auction supports Bates remodeling
by Lee Webster
Tuesday November 15, 2005
At a school where the student body is often perceived as apathetic and uninvolved, there is a movement to get students to stop complaining and start taking action to make improvements. Junior Katy Dull and Sophomore Drew Snyder, the organizers of the first annual Student Art Auction, see the student body as untapped potential in the fundraising efforts of the school.
SLC hosts Kulok’s illuminated photos
by Bethany Altschwager
Monday November 14, 2005
Introduced by Professor Joel Sternfeld as a "young Mozart," Barney Kulok spoke to an intimate group of Sarah Lawrence students and faculty on his photographic and video work.
Nields sisters bring ‘dynamic trademark sound’ to NYC
by Beth Sharkey
Monday November 14, 2005
Nerissa Nields told her fans that, according to the Buddhist tradition, she is a "greedy" type of person.
Literary magazine makes campus debut
by Caroline Sterne
Sunday November 13, 2005
A new student literary publication has burst onto the Sarah Lawrence College scene. The Little Jackie Paper (or The LJP) was thought up by a group of juniors while they were studying abroad, and they have followed through with it. The aim of the LJP is to “focus on and promote unrestricted dialogue and free public art.”
‘Words are inadequate’: disaster relief through poetry
by Natalie Park
Sunday November 13, 2005
It had really come to us in scraps of fact. There had been a hurricane. Having ripened in the Gulf coast and let loose its heavy fruits in New Orleans, La., it had been devastating, surely. Her name was Katrina. That was just about all most Sarah Lawrence students would know about the disaster, if at all, amidst the leftover chaos of orientation and move-in week.

