Cornell soprano presents ‘All-American’ recital March 2

February 23rd, 2004

MOUNT VERNON — Cornell College soprano Lisa Hearne will present a faculty recital Tuesday, March 2, featuring pieces solely by American composers, including text and poetry by writers as diverse as Mark Twain and Bob Dylan.

The recital is at 7:30 p.m. in Cornell’s King Chapel. Admission is free.

The “All-American” performance includes the compositions of Gordon Myers, a 1941 Cornell graduate who went on to study at Julliard and Columbia. He became a noted singer, composer and educator known for his collections of humorous songs, including “They Said,” a two-volume set of comical, pithy sayings by such quotables as W.C. Fields and Yogi Berra, which Hearne will perform.

Other sets include Samuel Barber’s “Mélodies Passagères,” set to poetry from Rainer Maria Rilke’s “Poèmes français,” and “Canti della Lontananza” with music and poetry by Gian Carlo Menotti.

Hearne will perform “Forever Young,” an excerpt from John Corigliano’s “Mr. Tambourine Man,” a cycle of seven songs set to the poetry of Bob Dylan. Corigliano, who was unfamiliar with Dylan’s original song settings, composed the set in 2000 for a commission. Reading Dylan’s texts as poetry rather than lyrics, the Oscar-winning composer fit them to his own music.

Other featured composers include Ned Rorem, Richard Hundley, Lee Hoiby and Thomas Pasatieri, living composers whose careers span the last half of the 20th century and continue to influence American art music.

Hearne is the choral director and voice area head at Cornell, where she has taught since 1992. She will be accompanied by Chiayi Lee, a doctoral candidate in piano at the University of Iowa.




Cornell wins 10 CASE awards

February 23rd, 2004

MOUNT VERNON — Cornell College won 10 awards and was a runner-up for the sweepstakes award in the CASE District VI competition. The awards were announced at the recent CASE (Council for the Advancement and Support of Education) conference in Denver. Awards were received in these categories:

Sesquicentennial video script - gold award
Sesquicentennial video - silver award
Student recruitment viewbook - silver award
Cornell Report magazine - silver award
Cornell Report sesquicentennial timeline - silver award
Student recruitment pre-senior piece - silver award
Student recruitment series - bronze award
Sesquicentennial alumni publication series - bronze award
Sesquicentennial billboard - bronze award
Fine Arts Capital Campaign - bronze award

All publications were produced in-house except the video, produced by Matt Miller ’94; Cornell Report design by Benson & Hepker design; pre-senior piece design by Benson & Hepker; and billboard design by Lamar Advertising.

The sweepstakes award is given to institutions with awards in at least five of the 13 major categories, with additional points awarded for entries produced in-house. Cornell, Nebraska Wesleyan University and the University of Sioux Falls were runners-up to winner Avila University in the division for institutions with enrollments between 1,000 and 3,000.




Paintings, drawings, monotypes in Cornell gallery exhibitions

February 16th, 2004

MOUNT VERNON — Paintings, drawings and monotypes by Vicky Grube and Lisa Schoenfielder will be exhibited at Cornell College’s Peter Paul Luce Gallery Feb. 22 through March 21.

An opening reception for the artists is 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 22.

The two exhibitions — Grube’s “Passengers” and Schoenfielder’s “Everything I Want” — are unpretentious examinations of the artists’ personal experiences. Grube holds a master of fine arts in theater arts from the University of Iowa; Schoenfielder has a master of fine arts in printmaking and a doctorate in art education from the university.

Grube’s work in the visual arts has been honored by the Vermont Arts Council, the Iowa Arts Council, the National Endowment for the Arts and the Nelson-Atkins Museum in Kansas City, Mo. She is pursuing a doctorate in art education and is a teacher at the Preucil School preschool in Iowa City.

Schoenfielder’s awards and honors include purchase awards from many national drawing and print competitions including the Philadelphia Print Club, the Knoxville Museum of Art and the University of Hawaii. She received a Vermont Studio Fellowship for fall 2004. She is an associate professor of art at Viterbo University in LaCrosse, Wis.

The Peter Paul Luce Gallery is located in McWethy Hall on the Cornell campus. Gallery hours are 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday and 2-4 p.m. Sunday. Admission is free.