Events This Week Focusing on Art and Social Justice

Upcoming Events Focusing on Social Justice and the Humanities
Cornerstone Arts Center, Colorado College, June 15 & 16

As a recipient of the Mellon Foundation’s “Humanities For All Times” Grant, Colorado College is hosting several exciting events that will explore the role of poetry, dance, and visual art for social justice work. These events are free and open to everyone! You can find more information about the artists below and at www.HumanitiesForOurTimesCC.org. 

Thursday, June 15: Artist Talk by Caroline Randall Williams
Cornerstone Arts Center at Colorado College (Screening Room)

3:00-5:00
Film screening of Nashville Ballet’s recent performance of Lucy Negro Redux, based on the 2019 collection of poetry Lucy Negro, Redux: The Bard, a Book, and a Ballet by Caroline Randall Williams.

7:00-8:30
Artist talk by Caroline Randall Williams, an award-winning poet, young adult novelist, and cookbook author as well as an activist, public intellectual, performance artist, and scholar. Book signing will follow.

Friday, June 16: Keynote Conversation with Jordan Casteel
Cornerstone Arts Center at Colorado College (Screening Room)

7:00-8:30
Keynote conversation with Jordan Casteel, painter and MacArthur “Genius” Grant recipient whose painting God Bless the Child was recently featured on the cover of Time magazine. The MacArthur Foundation wrote this about her work: “Jordan Casteel is a painter capturing moments of proximity with people and environments she has encountered on the streets of Harlem, within the New York subway, in her classrooms, and in the spaces occupied by those closest to her. Her paintings depict, in luminous hues and nearly life-size proportions, people of color and landscapes that convey relationships of mutual respect and care that extend beyond the canvas… [Casteel’s works] expand upon [her] commitment to broadening whose likenesses appear in museum and gallery spaces. By honoring the surroundings and people that she sees day-to-day, Casteel prompts viewers to meet the gaze of others and to recognize our shared humanity.”

Jordan Casteel
Jordan Casteel (b. 1989, Denver, CO) received her BA from Agnes Scott College, Decatur, GA for Studio Art (2011) and her MFA in Painting and Printmaking from Yale School of Art, New Haven, CT (2014). In 2020, Casteel presented a solo exhibition titled Within Reach at the New Museum, New York, in conjunction with a fully illustrated catalogue published by the institution. Other recent museum solo exhibitions include Jordan Casteel: Returning the Gaze, presented at both the Denver Art Museum, CO (2019), and the Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University, CA (2019–20). In recent years, Casteel has participated in group and permanent collection exhibitions at institutional venues such as Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY (2021 and 2022); Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY (2022); The Modern, Fort Worth, TX (2022); Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, MA (2022); Pérez Art Museum Miami, FL (2022); Los Angeles County Museum of Art, CA (2021); San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, CA (2021); Art Institute of Chicago, IL (2021); Crystal Bridges, Bentonville, AR (2021); Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, IL (2020); Kunsthal KAdE, Amersfoort, Netherlands (2020); Baltimore Museum of Art, MD (2019); MoCA Los Angeles, CA (2018); Studio Museum in Harlem, NY (2017 and 2016); and MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA (2017). Most recently, Casteel presented a solo exhibition entitled In bloom at Casey Kaplan, New York. Casteel is the recipient of a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship (2021).

Caroline Randall Williams
Born and raised in Nashville Tennessee, Harvard graduate Caroline Randall Williams is an award-winning poet, young adult novelist, and cookbook author as well as an activist, public intellectual, performance artist, and scholar. She joins the faculty of Vanderbilt University in the Fall of 2019 as a Writer-in-Residence in Medicine, Health, and Society while she continues to work and speak to the places where art, business, and scholarship intersect, moving people closer to their best lives and corporations closer to their ideal identities.

She has spoken in twenty states: Alabama, Arkansas, California, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nevada, New Hampshire, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Washington and West Virginia, in venues that range from as small as a classroom in a neighborhood school to as large as the Superdome mainstage during Essence Fest. To every speaking engagement Caroline brings a fierce intelligence, disarming charm, a touch of glamour, and a depth of lived experience that belies her thirty-one years. She has taught in two of the poorest states in the union — Mississippi and West Virginia — and she has been educated at two of the richest universities on the globe — Harvard and Oxford. She is an accomplished artist on the page and on the stage, and she is a successful entrepreneur with an exceptionally diverse investment portfolio that includes ownership stake in a nationally acclaimed restaurant and Facebook stock purchased so early it is still profitable.
You may have seen her on Morning Joe, or Dr. Oz, or The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell. More likely you’ve read her. Caroline’s first book, The Diary of B.B. Bright, Possible Princess (co-authored with Alice Randall) won the Harlem Book Fair’s Phillis Wheatley Prize and was a finalist for the NAACP Image Award. Her second co-authored volume, Soul Food Love won the NAACP Image Award and got her invited to speak at The Smithsonian. In 2017 the New York Times published an op-ed she wrote and it went viral. Her book of poetry, Lucy Negro Redux, earned rave reviews and got optioned to become a ballet. In 2019 the ballet debuted to more rave reviews with the New York Times review concluding that Lucy Negro Redux was “something wildly original, something so unlike anything else that all description falls short of its otherworldly reality. A place where, when the curtain drops, the very city cries out: “Brava! Brava! Oh, brava!” Another reviewer wrote, “All this is to say that Attitude: Lucy Negro Redux is not just original, but revolutionary — marking a seismic shift in the art form not just in Nashville, but in dance the world-over.” No wonder she was chosen in 2015 by Southern Living as one of “50 People Changing the South” for her work around food justice, and in 2016 as a national Neiman Marcus “Face of Beauty” because she personifies “beauty, brains, and passion.”
After graduating from Harvard University, where her undergraduate thesis received Magna Cum Laude honors, Caroline moved to Mississippi where she taught public school on a dirt road in Sunflower County for two years. In Mississippi, Caroline lived in an America many Americans are hardly aware of any longer, an America as rich in culture as it is wretched in poverty, towns still split into white and black by train tracks and bridges. During her second year, she taught 9th grade English to 86 kids who didn’t have a book to take home. She got that job by tutoring eight kids who the state of Mississippi said couldn’t pass the English exit exam—eight for eight, her kids passed.
Caroline is a catalyst. She makes change possible by bringing art and joy into the room in such a way that the grit of real challenge and limits may become eclipsed by analysis, innovation, and skill.

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CC Celebrates Pride

Love is Love is Love!

Pikes Peak Pride Festival and Parade | June 10 and 11

Where: Alamo Square Park, 215 S Tejon Street (Pioneer Museum)

Cost: Free admission to the festival

Parade: Sunday, June 11, 11 a.m. Acacia Park to Pioneer Museum via Tejon Street

Live Event!


LGBTQ+ Basics Workshop:
This course introduces participants to foundational terminology and key LGBTQ+ concepts. We will review the differences between sexual orientation and gender identity, and explain what it means to identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer. We will also explore best practices for engaging with the LGBTQ+ community, the importance of pronouns, tips for supporting LGBTQ+ colleagues, and allyship strategies.

Time: 9:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.
Where: JLK Mchugh Commons

All Colorado College community members are invited to participate. Registration is limited to 50 participants (first come, first serve) and breakfast will be provided. Join us for this event.

About the presenter:

Johnny Humphrey, MBA, is the director of inclusivity services at The Center on Colfax and leads the agency’s RANGE Consulting program. Humphrey has over a decade of IDEA (inclusion, diversity, equity and accessibility) experience and was a recipient of the 2020 Inclusion@Work Award by the Center for Legal Inclusion. He currently serves on the Executive Committee for the Aurora Chamber of Commerce’s Diversity and Inclusion Council and is a member of Colorado’s LGBTQ+ Chamber of Commerce.

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Around the Block – Summer Session is Underway

Summer Session is Off and Running!

ID: A young woman in white shorts and gray CC Tigers thsirt and four casually dress young men sit on the stairs outside of a classroom chatting and enjoying the summer air.

Photo submitted by Jennifer Coombes
Summer Session 2023 is off to an exhilarating start, delivering a vibrant and impactful learning experience to students. With 146 students enrolled in eight off-campus courses and 265 students enrolled in 23 on-campus courses, this summer term is set to leave a lasting impression. 

The off-campus courses have captured the imagination of students, with topics ranging from the complex relationship between Indigenous communities and the State under colonial and postcolonial conditions in Professor Hernandez-Lemus’s course in Kenya, to the origins and impact of Montessori and other educational pedagogies in Professor Nicki Coomer’s course in Italy. These thought-provoking courses offer profound insights and the chance for students to expand their horizons.

On-campus, students are immersing themselves in hands-on learning experiences. Field-based courses, such as BE202 Field Botany and GY135 Geology of the Pikes Peak Region, provide invaluable opportunities for students to apply their classroom knowledge in real-world settings, bridging the gap between theory and practice. Additionally, the remote course offerings in Block C are enabling students to explore sought-after subjects that are typically not available during the academic year.

Hey Class of 2023! You just graduated, but don’t move too far!

ID: Some snow remains atop Pikes Peak in the distance while lush trees in the foreground and traditional lighposts adorn the path to Colorado College.
By Megan Clancy ’07

As graduation season draws to a close, Zillow, the leading real estate and rental marketplace, created a list of the best metropolitan areas for recent graduates in the country. Number one on the list: Colorado Springs! The rankings are based on rent-to-income ratio, average salary for recent college grads, job openings, and the share of the population in their 20s.

The Zillow report states that Colorado Springs is “the top market for college grads in 2023, exemplifying how markets with a smaller population, relatively affordable rents and lots of career prospects contribute to a high quality of life for individuals beginning a new phase in their lives.” In its story on the report, MSNBC specifically noted that Colorado College is one of the assets, offering “employment opportunities to their own recent grads and graduates of nearby colleges.”

The Zillow index calculates that, in the Springs, the typical recent graduate can expect to make around $63,000 annually. While the typical graduate will spend about 35% of their income on rent without roommates.

Most CC graduates will agree, Colorado Springs is a great place to go to college. The experts now agree that it’s a great place to stay after you’re done.

Men’s Ultimate Frisbee Team Wins D-III Nationals

Player number 7 stands victorious on a platform above the crowd holding the winners plaque above his head shouting with glee. ID: Seven members of the Men's Ultimate Frisbee Team, wearing their team uniforms of black athletic black tank tops and matching shorts, pose together after winning the D-III Nationals Competition

Photos submitted by Wasabi Ultimate
By Julia Fennell ’21

Wasabi, Colorado College’s Men’s Ultimate Frisbee Team, won D-III Nationals for the first time in CC history. 

Wasabi was undefeated all weekend and ultimately beat Middlebury College 15-11 to take home the national title.

“Wasabi played like the best team at this tournament because, frankly, they were,” a writer for Ulti World wrote. “Their perfect blend of star power, depth, adaptability, and athleticism was a recipe for national success.”

“The win means so much to me and I’m so proud of my teammates for all they accomplished during this season,” says Grench. “But what means more to me are the relationships I was able to build with my teammates and coaches throughout this season and the three prior seasons.”

The D-III National College Championships took place May 20-22 in Obetz, Ohio.

Celebrate Juneteenth with a Virtual Event 

ID: Bald black man wearing a navy suit jacket, light blue shirt, blue floral tie, and glasses, looking into the camera with a small smile, he is outside and the background is blurred
Next Wed., June 14, 2-3:30 p.m., learn about the history of Juneteenth from author, national public speaker, and education juggernaut, Adam Smith. Celebrate the talent of the local community and find out how you can get involved in Juneteenth activities near you! All members of the Colorado College community, including students, faculty and staff, alumni, and families, are invited to attend.

The American Numismatic Association Offers a Summer Seminar

Summer Seminar is a once-a-year opportunity for numismatic learning and camaraderie that offers students a varied selection of weeklong courses designed for discovery or continued study. 

For many students, Summer Seminar is a life-changing event; it has catapulted the careers of several of the nation’s most respected collectors, authors, and dealers.

Classes are designed to suit every collector’s interests and include courses such as: Grading U.S. Coins, Detecting Counterfeit and Altered Coins, ancient Greek and Roman coinage, Early American Copper Coinage, Colonial Americana, Morgan Dollars, World Numismatics, and much more.

Both sessions are offered on the CC campus. Session 1 runs June 17-22, and Session 2 runs June 24-29. Review the catalog of offerings, and register for Summer Seminar now.

Tom Byron ’23 Wins Coro Fellowship in Public Affairs

ID: A young caucasian man with brown beard and short hair crosses his leg over his knee and rests his chin on his hand while sitting cross-legged in a hammock amongst the trees behind a building with large glass windows.
By Julia Fennell ’21

Tom Byron ’23 has won a Coro Fellowship in Public Affairs, which will allow him to work at several different organizations over nine months, gaining invaluable experience and professional development skills. The Coro Fellows Program aims to equip upcoming leaders with knowledge, skills, and networks to create positive change. Fellows gain a wide range of experiences in different types of work as a result of rotating through organizations.

“Tom might be one of the most motivated students I’ve worked with,” says Gretchen Wardell, student success specialist who worked with Byron throughout his time at CC. “Tom’s passion for politics is unmatched, and Coro will provide him with practical experience and knowledge about communities, politics, and organizing. While the mission of the Coro Fellowship is to train the new generation of leaders, Tom is already a leader, and Coro will be a great jumpstart to a promising future!”

“I think CC was some of the best preparation I could have for Coro,” says Byron, a political science major. “The program works by cycling us through different organizations every six weeks for nine months, so it’s kind of like the Block Plan for jobs. We might work for a government agency, then a nonprofit, then a corporation, then a political campaign, then a labor union, all to teach us about how power works in American cities.”

June is Pride Month! 

ID: The Colorado State Flag, with Red
If you’re looking to celebrate and support the LGBTQ+ community, you can participate in your local pride fest! Pikes Peak Pride 2023, happening June 10-11, is a community event expected to gather thousands of visitors together from across the Pikes Peak Region into downtown Colorado Springs. There will be two full days of vendor booths, food trucks, a beer garden, and entertainment to include a fabulous parade on Sunday starting at 11 a.m.

Free for everyone and beginning at Alamo Square Park, this year’s theme is “The Power of Pride” and will feature a commemoration and tribute ceremony on June 10 at 11 a.m., to honor the Club Q victims. Both days will run from 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Come celebrate and support our local LGTBQ+ community!

What’s Happening On Campus

June 11-17:
  • USA Hockey will have approximately 275 people on campus for their camps.
June 14-16:
  • CC Conference in Geometric Topology will be happening.
  • Association of Intermountain Housing Officers will be having summer workshops on campus.
June 16-30:
  • Vocal Arts Festival begins their three week summer seminars and performances.

Concrete Couch Founder Steve Wood ’84 Given the Livesay Award for Social Change

ID: Steve Wood, a caucasian man with brown longish hair and mustach with gray short beard stands next to a 7 foot mosaic artwork with his fist up in the air and a smile on his face. ID: Steve Wood, a middle aged caucasian man, holds a plaque recognizing his contributions for social change.
Executive Director and Founder of Concrete Couch, Steve Wood ’84, has been given the Livesay Award for Social Change at the Community Engagement Recognition Night.

Wood, who studied geology and studio art at CC, is an artist first and foremost. After graduation, he worked with Colorado Springs master muralist Eric Bransby. His public art career started as a freelance independent contractor which eventually led to the creation of Concrete Couch, the 501(c)(3) we know today. He has been teaching children, teens, and adults in Colorado Springs for over 30 years.

Wood’s lifework exemplifies the mission and vision of the Public Interest Fellowship Program. Concrete Couch is not just a non-profit that exists to build community through creative projects. Under Wood’s leadership, it has provided a vibrant network of community partners and learners across the state of Colorado to experience the impact of a non-profit. These opportunities not only provide beautiful civic artifacts for current and future generations but experiences for people to learn how to be in community with each other.

Photo of the Week

ID: 3 graduates in their caps and gowns jumping for joy on the grass, one is holding a balloon and flowers

New graduates celebrate following Commencement for the Class of 2023 Sunday, May 28.
Photo by Mark Reis
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