Category Archives: Williston Northampton News

Eudora Welty: Photographs of the 1930s and 40s

eudora welty photoEudora Welty: Photographs of the 1930s and 40s will be exhibited in the Grubbs Gallery of the Reed Campus Center at The Williston Northampton School from February 27 – April 9, 2011. A reception will be held on February 27 from 2:00 to 5:00 p.m.

During her spare time as a junior publicist for the WPA in the 1930s, Eudora Welty captured people and places in Mississippi with her camera. The Pulitzer Prize-winning author would later write in her memoir One Writer’s Beginning, “Photography taught me that to be able to capture transience, by being ready to click the shutter at the crucial moment, was the greatest need I had. Making pictures of people in all sorts of situations, I learned that every feeling waits upon its gesture; and I had to be prepared to recognize this moment when I saw it.” Eudora Welty was known for her writing, yet her photographic documentation of the Depression-era created a compelling record of the time and place that would greatly influence all of her creative works. Her photographs have been shown in the Smithsonian, the National Museum of Women in the Arts, and the Museum of the City of New York.

This exhibit, curated by Burns Maxey, will focus on the story of the photographer and how Welty’s influence has permeated other lives. Alongside the 20-plus silver gelatin prints there will be supplemental multimedia materials exhibited. Ephemera and audio narratives of people who met Eudora Welty will be part of the exhibition and will include a story by renowned illustrator Barry Moser who is a former Williston teacher and currently a professor in residence at Smith College.

The Eudora Welty: Photographs of the 1930s and 40s exhibit is also free and open to the public and takes place in the Grubbs Gallery of the Reed Campus Center at The Williston Northampton School.

Photographer Michael Itkoff Begins Lecture Series

michael itkoffPhotographer Michael Itkoff will give a lecture at The Williston Northampton School’s Photographers’ Lecture Series in the Dodge Room in the Reed Campus Center on January 25, 2011, at 6:30 p.m.

Michael Itkoff is a photographer and a founding editor of Daylight Magazine, a photography publication dedicated to publishing in-depth photographic essays on important issues of the day. In his photography, Itkoff captures his subjects in a documentary style by investigating topics ranging from demolition derbies to portrait studies. In 2009, Charta Books published Street Portraits, Itkoff’s exploration of the artifice of portraiture. Itkoff’s photographs are in public and private collections in the United States, and he has been a recipient of the Howard Chapnick Grant for the Advancement of Photojournalism, a Creative Artists Fellowship from the Pennsylvania Arts Council, and a Puffin Foundation Grant. In 2010, Itkoff received an MFA from the ICP-Bard program in 2010.

Upcoming Lecturers in this year’s series are scheduled as follows:
Vince Cianni, February 17
Ken Sklute, March 1
Michael Lesy, April 1
Thatcher Cook, April 18

All presentations, which are free and open to the public, take place in the Dodge Room of the Reed Campus Center at The Williston Northampton School. Complete information about the lecture series and program can be found at http://www.williston.com/photographers.

For more information, please call 413-529-3237. Dates are subject to change.

Ninth Annual Diversity Conference Emphasizes Change

The Williston Northampton School will hold its ninth annual Diversity Conference on Thursday, January 27, 2011. The theme of this year’s event is “Be the Change You Wish to See in the World.” All students will participate in their choice of over 90 workshops led by fellow students, staff, faculty, parents, alumni, and community members on many aspects of diversity including age, ability, race, gender, political affiliation, language, religion, socio-economic status, family composition, ethnicity, sexual orientation, adoption, and more.

john kawieWorkshop presenters include former Smith College professor Sheri Lyn Schmidt of The Ethel Walker School; Bessie Jones, founder of Mothers of Color Awareness Initiative; Mark C Franczyk ’00, a financial analyst at J.P. Morgan; Lissa Pierce Bonifaz of the Massachusetts Latino political organization ¿Oíste?; Veterans Education Project; and Easthampton Police Department.

The opening keynote speaker for the event is comedian and stroke survivor John Kawie ’68. Kawie’s solo show, “Brain Freeze,” about his journey through the aftermath of a stroke, has been performed off Broadway and at theaters and hospitals throughout the country, and won Best Solo Show in the 2003 InternationalFringe Festival in New York City. Kawie writes a column called “Life At The Curb” for the American Heart Association’s magazine Stroke Connection and has numerous credits as a writer and comedian.

The conference will culminate with an afternoon performance by Jeremy Cohen of Nani Kwashi AgbeliThisWorldMusic and Nani Kwashi Agbeli of Woezo, who will offer what is sure to be a high-energy performance of west African drumming and dance that will also feature students who have spent the day in drumming and dance workshops.

 

U.S. Government Showcase Presented Williston and Easthampton High

we the peopleU.S. History students from The Williston Northampton School who are preparing for this year’s We the People academic competition will collaborate with students from Easthampton High School. The two schools will present a showcase of their research on the Williston campus on Wednesday, January 19. The showcase will begin at 6:30 p.m. in the Dodge Room of the Reed Campus Center, and individual hearings will occur in Reed 202 and 204 from 7–9 p.m.

On Saturday, January 29, students from both schools will travel to Boston and participate in the state-wide We the People competition involving 12 different public and private schools, sponsored by the Center for Civic Education.

To prepare for the competition, students investigate the history, philosophy, and contemporary development of US Government. Working in small groups, they prepare presentations on three different questions. During the event, the groups give one presentation each. Following their prepared remarks, students respond to a series of questions from judges and defend their ideas without benefit of notes.

Williston students have participated in this event since 1998 and finished in the top three places four times, including winning the honor of representing Massachusetts in the national finals in 2000. This year will mark the first time that Easthampton High School has participated.

New Dean of Faculty and Director of the Middle School

fulcher and valineAt a faculty meeting on December 9, 2010, The Williston Northampton School’s Head of School Robert W. Hill announced that Peter Valine will be Williston’s dean of faculty and Jen Fulcher will be director of the Middle School, positions which they currently hold as interims.

Peter Valine majored in history at the University of Vermont and earned a master’s in liberal studies at Dartmouth College. He taught previously at Tilton School, Mercersburg Academy, and Wyoming Seminary College Preparatory School. A history teacher at Williston since 1998, he has taught in both the Middle School and the Upper School. He has also been a dorm head, has coached lacrosse, field hockey, and ice hockey, and has led student trips to Ireland and Central Europe. Peter was head of the History Department from 1999 to 2004, and coordinated the school’s NEASC self-study for re-accreditation in 2005-06. He is also an adjunct professor at the College of Saint Joseph, where he has taught interdisciplinary courses for undergraduate and graduate students since 2002.

Jen Fulcher studied psychology at Connecticut College, where she captained the varsity soccer and lacrosse teams, and earned a master’s in education from Springfield College. She came to Williston in 1989 as a physical education teacher, dorm parent, and coach. She has taught psychology in the Upper School and history in the Middle School, as well as working as director of summer programs and director of facility marketing. The girls’ varsity lacrosse program has enjoyed tremendous success under her guidance, achieving a record of 41-3-1 over the last four seasons. Jen was the Middle School’s coordinator of student affairs from 2007 to 2010.  

About these appointments, Bob Hill said, “With both Peter and Jen, we not only have veteran members of the school community occupying essential leadership positions, but, most importantly, we have tremendously hard working, thoughtful, and creative thinkers ready to help the school move forward.”