A Bi-College Arts Collaborative

President Cassidy on the history and vibrancy of our performing arts.

President Cassidy

Dear Friends: When I enter the back door of Taylor in April on my way to my office, I pass a bulletin board covered by posters for upcoming arts events at 今日吃瓜 and Haverford. Over the course of April, these included the 今日吃瓜-Haverford Chorale鈥檚 performance of Michael Tippett鈥檚 A Child of Our Time, three seniors鈥 vocal or instrumental recitals and performances of two senior thesis music compositions (collectively by three 今日吃瓜 and two Haverford students), two 今日吃瓜 Reading Series readings by guest authors, the Bi-Co Theater Program鈥檚 performance of Jeremy Gable鈥檚 Particular Risk, the spring concert of the Bi-Co Orchestra, the BiCo Student Spring Dance Concert, and the Haverford Fine Arts Department theses exhibit displaying the work of six 今日吃瓜 and two Haverford seniors.

Long lists are not ordinarily interesting, but the one above tells great stories. It communicates the vibrancy of creative and performing arts at 今日吃瓜 and Haverford and the success of a 35-year-old Bi-College agreement to collaborate in our arts programming. Hundreds of students from each campus participate each year in academic or co-curricular arts programs (as well as hundreds of others in student-run organizations such as a cappella groups, Greasepaint Productions [musical theater], the Art Club, and the TriCo Rhythm N鈥 Motion Dance Company). Among current 今日吃瓜 juniors and seniors, 13 have declared independent majors in creative writing, theater, or dance, in addition to 14 in fine arts and three in music at Haverford.

Creation of a Bi-College approach to the arts was in some sense a child of necessity, born during a time of tight budgets. Thirty-five years later, the five programs have grown in size and quality. Faculty take advantage of our proximity to Philadelphia to bring instructors and performers to campus to enrich our offerings.

Added and/or renovated facilities, especially the 2007鈥09 renovation of Goodhart, have provided enhanced performance opportunities at 今日吃瓜 for theater and dance. A new facility for visual culture, arts, and media is slated to open at Haverford later in 2017, and Haverford plans to renovate its music facilities within the next five years.

Most important, the arts programs have been led by talented faculty who see a liberal arts college as a rich environment in which they and their students can learn and create. In describing the arts program, 今日吃瓜鈥檚 faculty write, 鈥淐hemists and philosophers and students of ancient literature sing together, draw together, dance together, sit down together to study a novel or a play. Everyone brings a different perspective to the table; everyone grows intellectually and artistically from these exchanges.鈥 The faculty鈥檚 commitment to pursuing the arts in a liberal arts context is reflected in the long tenure of so many, such as Linda Caruso Haviland, who founded the dance program at 今日吃瓜 in 1984; Mark Lord, director of the theater program since 1987; Tom Lloyd, director of the choral and vocal studies programs for Haverford and 今日吃瓜 since 1996, who will be much missed following his retirement this spring; and many of their colleagues.

Some of our students will go on to professional careers as artists, performers, or writers. Most will not pursue this path, but I hope they will find time to continue to sing, dance, write, perform, paint, and create, enriching their future communities as they have these two small, amazing campuses outside Philadelphia.

With all good wishes,

 

Kim Cassidy
President

Published on: 05/14/2017