Arts Events and Programming Grants
Arts Events and Programming Grants provide support or seed money for conferences, lecture series, performance series, exhibits, film festivals and screenings, and even radio programming. Proposals that integrate the arts into curricular or scholarly activities, proposals that combine individual events with long-term sustainable projects, and those that bridge across schools at Stanford were given priority. The thirteen successful 2009 applicants in Arts Events and Programming come from a range of departments, including Art & Art History, Asian-American Studies, Biology, the Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Dance, East Asian Studies, French & Italian Literature, Music, Philosophy, the Product Realization Lab in Mechanical Engineering, the Program in Writing & Rhetoric, and Spanish and Portuguese Literature.
Afro-Latin Music Clinical and Cultural Outreach Program
Murray Low, Music Department
A Podcast Tour of Plants, Animals, and Science Art
Darryl Wheye, Donald Kennedy, Department of Biology; Katherine Preston, Human Biology; Paul Ehrlich, Center for Conservation Biology
The Origin Cycle
R. Lanier Anderson, Department of Philosophy; Carol Boggs, Human Biology; Elizabeth Hadly, Biology
Trans-Poetic Exchange: Around Blanco & Campos de Paz Colloquium
Marilia Librandi Rocha, Joan Ramon Resina, Iberian and Latin American Cultures; Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht, French and Italian Literature
Reuben Margolin Interdisciplinary Workshops Program
Jennifer Rahn, David Beach, Product Realization Lab/Mechanical Engineering; Terry Berlier, Art and Art History
The Cinderella Theory: New Families - Constructed Identities
Robert Moses, Diane Frank, Dance Division
Performing the Troubadours: Visit of the Troubadours Art Ensemble
Marissa Galvez, French & Italian Literature
Stanford Multimedia Showcase
Alyssa O’Brien, Andrea Lunsford, Program in Writing and Rhetoric
Stanford Storytelling Project
Jonah Willihnganz, Creative Writing Program
Tracing the Past, Initiating the Future Symposium
Xiaoneng Yang, East Asian Studies/Cantor Art Center; Jindong Cai, Music; Richard Vinograd, Art and Art History
"Mad" Orlando and His Legacy
Michael Wyatt, CMEMS; Stephen Orgel, Department of English
Frederick Wiseman Visit
Jamie Meltzer, Department of Art & Art History
Imagination on the Pacific Rim: Asian American Writers and Their Craft
Steven Hong Sohn, Asian-American Studies
