Columbia University in the City of New York Art

Here's What to Encounter, Do, and Listen to This Fall in New York City, According to Columbia Arts Faculty and Students

September 29, 2021

The starting time Tony Awards in more than two years but took identify, right on the heels of the 2021 Emmy Awards. Broadway and Off Broadway are back, the lights are on at Lincoln Center, and museums and galleries are chock with new exhibitions.

To assist you lot decide where to go and what to see amid New York City's abundant cultural offerings this autumn, Columbia News turned to the School of the Arts to ask Dean Carol Becker, along with professors and students, what they recommend.


Columbia University School of the Arts Dean Carol Becker

Ballad Becker, Dean

Q. What new theater, film, dance, music, and fine art exhibitions are y'all virtually excited well-nigh? Volition you attend alive events?

A. I will attend live events. I'll for sure be at the Park Avenue Armory to see Bill T. Jones'Deep Blue Bounding main. I was just at the Brooklyn Academy of Music to see the opera-theatrical installation,Sun & Body of water, which won the meridian prize at the Venice Biennale in 2019. I'm looking forward to School of the Arts Theatre Professor Lynn Nottage's much-awaited new comedy,Clyde's, which is opening on Broadway in November.

I will also go to museums and galleries, and not miss such exhibitions as Dawoud Bey: An American Project at the Whitney Museum, Greater New York 2021 at MoMA PS1, and Alice Neel: The Early Years at the David Zwirner Gallery.

Q. How practice y'all think Zoom programming has affected creative practices and productions?

A. Zoom programming gave all fine art forms a new style to pivot when needed. Some things worked wonderfully, others non then much. We moved our School of the Arts International Play Reading Festival—which starts on October 6—to podcasts using professional actors and musicians, and found that it worked brilliantly. The playwrights, who were at start disappointed not to have live productions in New York City, realized that instead of a evidence with a small audience, they actually got a well-produced podcast of their play, which could be distributed worldwide.

That's just one instance of what we did and what we learned. There is then much good to be taken from these by months. Merely at that place is no doubt that the art world, in all forms, is fix to exist back in person. Nil is equally exhilarating equally a collective art experience.

Q. What films/programs are yous streaming? What music are you listening to, and what songs are on your playlist? Any podcasts you would recommend?

A. Of course, as a dean, I simply watched The Chair. Who would not watch a show with the amazing Sandra Oh and such a familiar setting.

I love the Ezra Klein Testify and listen to those podcasts. While traveling recently from Michigan to New York, my husband and I listened to the unabridged nine-office Dolly Parton'southward America. I cannot recommend that highly enough. On our adjacent epic trip, we will be listening to the 1619 Project podcast.

I don't really take a playlist. I have always been a big jazz fan, only when I accept a moment to myself, I love silence.


Columbia University School of the Arts student Hallel Mujingila Diakalenga

Hallel Mujingila Diakalenga, MFA Film Student

Q. What new theater, flick, trip the light fantastic, music, and art exhibitions are you nearly excited near? Will y'all attend live events?

A. I am excited to get to the movies once more! Flick has e'er been an escape for me, particularly when I just demand to plow my brain off for a bit. I may as well finally go watch a Broadway bear witness. I have lived in New York for six years now, and accept yet to run across a testify on Broadway.

Q. How do you think Zoom programming has affected creative practices and productions?

A. I believe information technology has expanded the ways that we think virtually how we make art.

Q. What films/programs are you lot streaming? What music are you listening to, and what songs are on your playlist? Any podcasts you would recommend?

A. TV shows: Only Murders in the Building; Roswell, New Mexico; Girlfriends; and Bones.

Podcasts: Answer All, How Did This Get Made?, Pop Civilization Happy Hr, Scriptnotes, Yous're Incorrect Virtually, Welcome to Dark Vale, and Armchair Proficient with Dax Shepard.

Music: annihilation by Jon Bellion, Hayley Williams (she dropped two albums during the pandemic), Aly & AJ (also dropped a new album), and a lot of oldies (Abba, Queen, etc.).

Q. What courses are you taking this semester?

A. Script Revision, Thesis Advisement, and Editing for Inquiry Arts.


Columbia University School of the Arts student Emily Eng

Emily Eng, MFA Film Student

Q. What new theater, film, dance, music, and fine art exhibitions are you about excited about? Volition y'all nourish alive events?

A. Every bit things are opening upward in the amusement field, I'm looking forward to seeing a diverseness of new films in theaters and attention more music events virtually me. I plan on going to a film screening of Celine Sciamma'southward recent motion-picture show, Petite Maman, at the New York Flick Festival. Information technology would be neat to attend a Broadway prove soon!

Q. How do yous recall Zoom programming has affected artistic practices and productions?

A. The aligning in working through Zoom was a difficult i, just it did strength film productions and rehearsals to become more artistic with Zoom backgrounds and other effects. You definitely don't achieve the same in-person connection using Zoom, just information technology brings in a lot more omnipresence now that people are able to attend production meetings in the comfort of their own homes.

Q. What films/programs are you streaming? What music are y'all listening to, and what songs are on your playlist? Any podcasts you would recommend?

A. I'1000 currently watching an affluence of Netflix documentaries, such as Winter on Fire: Ukraine's Fight for Liberty, Wild Wild Country, and The Devil Side by side Door. I'm listening to a lot of acoustic folk music and, occasionally, the Acquit Brook crime podcast.

Q. What courses are y'all taking this semester?

A. I'one thousand taking my required producing courses, Feature Movie Development, Pre-production for the Motility Picture, Business of Movie, Brazilian Movie theatre, and Cinema History: 1960-1990.


Columbia University School of the Arts Professor Adama Delphine Fawundu

Adama Delphine Fawundu, Professor, Visual Arts Plan

Q. What new theater, film, dance, music, and art exhibitions are you most excited about? Volition you attend live events?

A. Every autumn, I attend Photoville in Dumbo. Since the pandemic, it has expanded to long-term public exhibitions. I am looking forrard to seeing Deana Lawson'south Centropy at the Guggenheim Museum, and Dawoud Bey: An American Project and Dave McKenzie: The Story I Tell Myself, both at the Whitney Museum. Also, Ei Arawaka: Social Muscle Rehab at Artist Infinite.

Q. How do you think Zoom programming has affected artistic practices and productions?

A. Even though I've dealt with Zoom fatigue, I am grateful that I've been able to achieve international audiences through this platform.

Q. What songs are on your playlists?

A. My playlists include Common cold Little Heart by Michael Kiwanuka, Nobody by Nas and Lauryn Hill, many Nina Simone tracks, Black Wall Street, and Alicia Hall Moran.


Columbia University School of the Arts Professor David Henry Hwang

David Henry Hwang, Head, Playwriting Concentration, Theatre Program

Q. What new theater, moving picture, trip the light fantastic, music, and art exhibitions are you most excited nearly? Will you attend alive events?

A. Alive theater and Broadway in particular (whose economical model makes social distancing unfeasible) may open unsteadily. So actually, I'm just excited about any show that succeeds in enjoying a condom and successful run! That said, I am particularly excited about an increase in shows written by BIPOC artists (Clyde'due south, Skeleton Coiffure, Problem in Heed), besides as experimental forms (Dana H., Is This a Room). The absence of tourists compels Broadway to focus on audiences from the tri-state area, which will hopefully lead to more challenging, diverse work and away from the pre-pandemic Vegas aesthetic.

Because I am a Tony Awards voter, I volition attend all new Broadway shows. I too but appeared at the 50th Ceremony Reopening Concert at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.

Q. How do you call back Zoom programming has affected artistic practices and productions?

A. Zoom may continue to be used for play developmental readings, and innovative theater artists take already begun to incorporate virtual techniques into their live functioning concepts.

Q. What films/programs are you streaming?

A. Nosotros've all watched then many TV shows over the pandemic! Fortunately, the quality of writing in the course nowadays is very good. One might even fence that Television has surpassed theater in terms of embracing diversity. A few of my many favorite shows include Succession, I May Destroy Yous, Ted Lasso, Principal of None, Watchmen, Lupin, Call My Agent, Borgen, and P-Valley.


Columbia University School of the Arts Professor Jack Lechner

Jack Lechner, Chair, Film Program

Q. What new theater, film, dance, music, and art exhibitions are you most excited about? Will y'all nourish alive events?

A. I'g looking frontwards to long-awaited new films by Jane Campion (The Power of the Canis familiaris) and Wes Anderson (The French Dispatch). And, of course, I desire to see the new James Bond movie,No Time to Dice, largely considering it's directed by Cary Joji Fukunaga, who made the extraordinaryBeasts of No Nation.

I take tickets forHadestown, which I didn't get to see the first time around. I'm as well excited to seeClyde's.

Q. Any podcasts yous would recommend?

A. I mind to far too many podcasts! Some recent favorites areCocaine and Rhinestones, about the history of country music;Gene and Roger, a mini-series on The Big Picture nigh movie critics Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert; andThe Marx Brothers Quango Podcast, a witty and exhaustive examination of the work and lives of the Marx Brothers—who are the reason I became interested in moving picture, and will always exist my emotional home base.

Q. What are you educational activity this semester?

A. At present that I'm film chair, I'm educational activity only one course, Writing and Script Analysis for Producers, in which producers learn how to work with writers. Every calendar week, we analyze the narrative construction of a different film, ranging fromCasablanca toKajillionaire toEmmet-Man and the Wasp.


Columbia University School of the Arts Professor Naeem Mohaiemen

Naeem Mohaiemen, Head, Photography Concentration, Visual Arts Program

Q. What are you almost excited virtually culturally right now?

A. I am participating in the virtual speaker serial, "The Normalizing Gaze: Surveillance from Drones to Phones," in conjunction with Sam Durant'southward Loftier Line Plinth commission, Untitled (drone).Given the contempo catastrophic denouement of the ii-decade-long American military presence in Afghanistan, it is very timely to discuss the twinned histories of surveillance and drone warfare in, and emanating from, the United States.

Of the many meme riffs in Kehinde Wiley's official portrait of Barack Obama, my favorite is the ane where the sheet is covered with minor painted drones. Although Durant's sculpture is physically on view on the High Line, he made the crucial decision to accept the speaker series exist online, then as to open up to an international audience, outside American borders.

Q. How do y'all think Zoom programming has affected artistic practices and productions?

A. Everyone speaks of Zoom fatigue and the longing for the real, only I think ane positive thing that is not spoken of plenty is the leveling of the terrain in terms of sharing creative practices betwixt eye and periphery. A lot of my enquiry-based practice is in Bangladesh, and the capital city, Dhaka, dominates (but as New York does in this country).

In the terminal 18 months, I take been able to participate in artist sharing sessions with fine art schools and self-organized communities in Chittagong, Khulna, and Sylhet—cities all over Bangladesh—at no boosted toll to those spaces. This I come across every bit an unexpected positive, the normalization and habituation of Zoom programming as a way to share that opens up to a much more than democratic, specially Global South, audience.


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Source: https://news.columbia.edu/news/school-of-the-arts-faculty-and-students-recommend-new-york-cultural-offerings

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