4 research outputs found
Celebrating The Values of Time: Bellarmine Forum Opening Lecture and Reception - VIDEO
This LMU wide event celebrated the launch of the Bellarmine Forum, a semester-long interdisciplinary exploration of The Values of Time.”
The event included a keynote lecture by philosopher-poet Frederick Turner, followed by a reception and first look at So Short A Lease: Early Reflections on the Human Timeline,” an archival exhibition curated by William H. Hannon Library\u27s Department of Archives and Special Collections in collaboration with the Bellarmine Forum
Collaboration as Creative Synthesis: Constructing the \u27Being and Slow Time\u27 Exhibition - VIDEO
Bellarmine Forum Artist-in-Residence Richard Turner and Paul Harris discussed the collaborative creative process in relation to the Being and Slow Time installation and poet Alyson Hallett will present her Migrating Stones project. A reception followed
The End of Time - VIDEO
As the 2016 Bellarmine Forum closes, attendees were able to peek inside the Bellarmine Forum time capsule, which will be buried on the Bluff until 2112. The group walked to the site of the new Cretan Labryinth on the Bluff for a consecration.
Remarks made by Paul Harris and Brad Stone, Co-directors, Bellarmine Forum and Robbin D. Crabtree, Dean, LMU\u27s Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts
Jazz Invocation by Dwight Tribl
Slow Time Arts Festival - VIDEO
Art, music, dance and food at a slower pace. The Displacement GardenBellarmine Forum Artist-in-Residence Richard Turner and Paul Harris present the Displacement Garden, a Slow Time Zone installation. Woody Woodpecker and the Avant-GardeLMU animation professor Tom Klein presents Woody Woodpecker and the Avant Garde, the Laband Art Gallery\u27s fall exhibition. Slow Dance PerformanceDamon Rago, dance professor at LMU, choreographs and dances a work in the Displacement Garden, with text by Paul Harris and music by LMU President, Timothy Law Snyder, Ph.D. Jazz with Dwight TribleBeloved L.A. jazz musician Dwight Trible performs in Murphy Hall. Trible uses his music to bring people together, to bridge the gap between the races, and to heal the human heart. He has received numerous awards for his humanitarian efforts.
Slow Food reception followed in Burns Courtyard