Mount Holyoke Art Museum hosts Queer & Trans* Art event

Mount Holyoke Art Museum hosts Queer & Trans* Art event

On Tuesday, Nov. 15, the Mount Holyoke College Art Museum and the Lyons Legacy LLC — described by the Mount Holyoke website as “a community designed to support students as they explore and express their whole selves, including their gender identities and sexualities” — hosted a “Queer & Trans* Art” event, highlighting the work of artists Martine Gutierrez and Jes Fan, who use their work to explore questions of gender, race, identity, commodification and the body.

FMT performs ‘Short Eyes,’ invites conversation regarding incarceration system

FMT performs ‘Short Eyes,’ invites conversation regarding incarceration system

During the weekend of Nov. 18, the Department of Film Media Theater acted out selected scenes from the play “Short Eyes.” Performing two shows, they hosted talkbacks after each as well as a symposium on Friday, Nov. 18. 

“Short Eyes” by Miguel Piñero, which premiered in 1974, follows a group of inmates who meet in a house of detention and turn against a prisoner accused of child molestation. Based on Piñero’s own experiences, the play unabashedly depicts the lives of those living in the American incarceration system. It explores themes of morality and justice, as well as what it means to find humanity within a dehumanizing institution.

AMC’s ‘Interview with the Vampire’ updates the story for a modern audience

AMC’s ‘Interview with the Vampire’ updates the story for a modern audience

Louis and Lestat’s relationship is not a healthy one, nor is it a good example to follow. However, it is not meant to be portrayed as such, and the show’s effort to portray the complexity of queer relationships is incredibly compelling.

Students display lakeside installations in ‘Expanded Print Media’ course

Students display lakeside installations in ‘Expanded Print Media’ course

On Nov. 7, 2022, Mount Holyoke studio art students erected a myriad of artworks along the lush perimeter of Upper Lake. The installations were created by students of the Fall 2022 semester “Topics in Studio Art: ‘Expanded Print Media’” course taught by Assistant Professor of Art Studio Amanda Maciuba. During the cultivation process, students worked with the Miller Worley Center for the Environment and the 2022-2023 Common Read “Braiding Sweetgrass” by Robin Wall Kimmerer to create printed installations in response to the Western Massachusetts environment, Maciuba shared.

Mount Holyoke Art Society hosts Fall Arts & Crafts Fair

Mount Holyoke Art Society hosts Fall Arts & Crafts Fair

The Mount Holyoke Art Society hosted its third annual Fall Arts & Crafts Fair on Friday, Nov. 4, 2022, in the Community Center Great Room. That afternoon, the room was filled with tables from many different student artists selling a range of creations, from tote bags to earrings to stickers.

The Backseat Lovers releases new album

The Backseat Lovers releases new album

The Backseat Lovers, an indie-rock band from Utah, has done the seemingly impossible and solidified themselves as a timeless band in an age where much music, specifically indie, can sound like the echoes of its predecessors, lacking the creation of anything groundbreaking. Formed in 2018, the band appeals to a younger generation thrust into the uncertainty of a world turned upside down, experiencing the bittersweet and precarious nature of growing up. The Backseat Lovers — Joshua Harmon, lead singer and guitar; Jonas Swanson, guitar; KJ Ward, bass; and Juice Welch, drummer — embody exactly what it means to be a kid-turned-adult in a world that isn’t quite prepared for them.

Westeros returns to the screen in ‘House of the Dragon’

Westeros returns to the screen in ‘House of the Dragon’

Sky-high dragon fights, familial power struggles and political schemes mark Westeros’ return to the screen. The first episode of “House of the Dragon,” a prequel series to “Game of Thrones” set roughly 200 years before the events of the original series, premiered on Sunday, Aug. 21. The following nine episodes were released every Sunday on HBO Max.

Cate Blanchett delivers her best performance yet in new, biting film ‘Tár’

Cate Blanchett delivers her best performance yet in new, biting film ‘Tár’

Amid the multiple Halloween movies released this month, director Todd Field’s “Tár” was a standout. Starring Cate Blanchett as Lydia Tár — the movie’s protagonist and namesake — the film follows one of the best maestros of her generation as she prepares to perform the only one of composer Gustav Mahler’s symphonies that she has never tackled.

‘The Car’ officially marks the Arctic Monkeys’ shift toward a new sound

‘The Car’ officially marks the Arctic Monkeys’ shift toward a new sound

The Arctic Monkeys, a rock band from Sheffield, England, is perhaps best known for revolutionizing the English music scene, beyond rock, in the late 2000s and early 2010s. Akin to “Beatlemania,” the influence the band had on garage rock permanently shaped the production of rock music. With the release of “AM” (2013), their fifth studio album, fans recognized the band as an instant classic, with the album representing the coolness of revived indie rock that the band became known for.

Mar Simon '23 opens 'Martian Gallery' exhibition in Blanch

Mar Simon '23 opens 'Martian Gallery' exhibition in Blanch

Art studio major Mar Simon ’23 showcased their exhibition “Martian Gallery” in Blanchard Gallery from Oct. 18-31. The exhibition offers students a chance to take a break from their busy lives and step into a lounge inspired by imagery of outer space.

Skinner Museum 75 presents ‘vanessa german — THE RAREST BLACK WOMAN ON THE PLANET EARTH’

Skinner Museum 75 presents ‘vanessa german — THE RAREST BLACK WOMAN ON THE PLANET EARTH’

In cultivating “THE RAREST BLACK WOMAN ON THE PLANET EARTH,” artist and activist vanessa german set out to make something living. A branch of Skinner Museum 75 — Mount Holyoke College Art Museum’s commemoration of the Joseph Allen Skinner Museum’s 1946 bequest to the College — german’s exhibition explores decolonization by means of intellectual and spiritual emancipation.

Ten horror movies to watch this spooky season: An October guide

Ten horror movies to watch this spooky season: An October guide

Fall is upon us, and at Mount Holyoke it’s easy to tell due to the beautiful foliage, an increase in Doc Martens worn around campus and whispers of spooky season in the air. Halloween isn’t that far off, and if you’re looking for a way to get into the spirit of the season, here are some horror movie recommendations to guide you.

Velma comes out as a lesbian in ‘Trick or Treat Scooby-Doo!’

 Velma comes out as a lesbian in ‘Trick or Treat Scooby-Doo!’

The Scooby-Doo franchise’s bright colors, wacky catchphrases, easily recognizable characters and supernatural hi jinks have wormed their way into millions of fans’ hearts. But as the franchise reimagined itself for a new generation of viewers in the 2000s, one question kept coming up: Would Warner Bros. allow gay characters into its beloved, nostalgic cartoon universe?

“Don’t Worry Darling” makes theater debut

“Don’t Worry Darling” makes theater debut

“Don’t Worry Darling,” starring Florence Pugh and Harry Styles was released in U.S. theaters on Sept. 23, 2022. According to Forbes, the film “won the weekend domestic box office with a $19.2 million opening and the approval of fans.” The film, directed by Olivia Wilde, follows a 1950s housewife, Alice (Pugh), who discovers the truth about her husband Jack’s (Styles) job at an organization known as the Victory Project. The cast also features actors Chris Pine and Gemma Chan.

‘Monster:’ Netflix releases yet another Jeffrey Dahmer story

‘Monster:’ Netflix releases yet another Jeffrey Dahmer story

According to IMDB, there are numerous films based on American serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer’s life and several shows featuring him or a character inspired by his crimes on television. But why is the convicted killer and rapist of numerous Black and Brown gay men so popularized?

‘Angela Davis, A History of the United States’ staged at Rooke Theater

‘Angela Davis, A History of the United States’ staged at Rooke Theater

One might not expect a “History of the United States” from a French theater company, but Compagnie L’Héliotrope’s production of “Angela Davis, A History of the United States” did just that this past weekend at Rooke Theater. The one-woman play features a combination of monologues, music and media that provide an insightful look into the life and work of African-American scholar and activist Angela Davis from an international perspective.

‘Pearl’: A love letter to classic slasher films fosters nostalgia and originality

‘Pearl’: A love letter to classic slasher films fosters nostalgia and originality

Despite being a prequel, “Pearl” is able to stand on its own within the slasher genre while paying a beautiful homage to the classics. Symbolism is at the heart of all great slasher films, and A24 is no stranger to engaging it. A24 films often use color to show a transformation and to establish a character’s identity. Older horror films often use color as well, especially red to symbolize that the worst is near and to show the manifestation of repressed rage. West doesn’t try to give movie-goers something too different but plays on nostalgia and maintains what makes a slasher film good while still orienting it for modern audiences through costuming, re-imagined cliches and allusions. 

New Art Studio professors promote interdisciplinary dialogue

New Art Studio professors promote interdisciplinary dialogue

This semester, the Mount Holyoke Department of Art Studio onboarded Visiting Lecturers in Art Studio Vick Quezada and Xuân Pham and Assistant Professor of Art Studio Marianna Dixon Williams. Bolstered by the soft opening of Media Lab, each of the new faculty members offers a distinctive perspective to the College’s rapidly-evolving interdisciplinary dialogue. 

Mount Holyoke College Art Museum exhibition highlights the diversity of Indigenous experiences

Mount Holyoke College Art Museum exhibition highlights the diversity of Indigenous experiences

Last Thursday, Sept. 22, the kickoff event for the annual Native American Indigenous Studies Association Northeast Gathering and Five College Native American Indigenous Studies Symposium was held at the Mount Holyoke College Art Museum. Attendees made up of Five College NAIS faculty, students and local NAIS academics ate Wampanoag cuisine from Sly Fox Den Restaurant & Bar and concentrated in the front gallery, where they examined one of the newest MHCAM exhibits, “Considering Indigeneity.”