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Laura Battle
Bob Bielecki
Ken Buhler
Jean Churchill
Barbara Ess
Jacqueline Susan Goss
Ann Lauterbach
Nancy S. Leonard
Richard Teitelbaum
Hap Tivey
Shelley Wyant
Laura Battle
Professor of Studio Arts
B.F.A., Rhode Island School of Design; M.F.A., Yale School of Art. Awards: MTA Arts-for-Transit commission, National Endowment for the Arts grant, MacDowell Colony residency in painting, Fulbright Scholarship (Cairo), Massachusetts Council on the Arts Fellowship. Selected exhibitions: Lohin Geduld Gallery, Arsenal 16, Pace University Gallery, Gilhorn Art End, Albany Center Gallery (New York), Bienale (Ecuador), Van Buren, Brazilton, Cutting Gallery, Atelier du Caire (Cairo), Yale, Northeastern University, American Academy of Arts and Letters, Franklin Furnace, Vassar College. Lectured at Kanazawa College of Art (Japan), Yale School of Art, University of Massachusetts, Brown University, Boston Women’s Art Caucus. Visiting artist, Hampshire College. (1986– ) Professor of Studio Arts.
Phone: 845-758-7329
E-mail: battle@bard.edu
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Bob Bielecki
Visiting Assistant Professor of Music
Sound designer, specializing in the creative use of technology in the electronic arts; additional expertise as audio engineer, exhibition designer, electrical engineer, software developer, and artist/collaborator. Collaborated since the mid-1970s with Laurie Anderson and La Monte Young on work including creation of unique instruments and interfaces used in performance installations. Current work in sound localization and imaging. Grants from Andy Warhol Foundation and New York State Council on the Arts. Faculty, Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts. (1997– ) Visiting Assistant Professor of Music.
Phone: 845-758-7003
E-mail: bielecki@bard.edu
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Ken Buhler
Artist in Residence
B.F.A., University of Iowa; M.F.A., Indiana University, Bloomington. Painter. Solo exhibitions: Axel Raben Gallery, O�Hara Gallery, Michael Walls Gallery, New York; Hudson Walker Memorial Gallery, Provincetown; Beach Museum of Art, Manhattan, Kansas. Numerous group exhibitions, including Frederick Spratt Gallery, San Francisco; McKee Gallery; Max Protetch Gallery, Pamela Auchincloss Gallery, Exit Art, P.S. 122, and The Workspace. Grants and awards: MacDowell Colony (1983, 2003); Pollock-Krasner Foundation grant; National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship (painting) (1987); New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship (printmaking) (1994). Instructor and assistant professor, Pratt Institute (1995–2000). (2000– ) Artist in Residence.
Phone: 845-758-7679
E-mail: buhler@bard.edu
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Jean Churchill
Professor of Dance
Studied modern dance at Connecticut College Dance Festival. Member, Boston Ballet Company (1966–72); artistic director, New England Dinosaur (1976). Performed works by James Waring, Trisha Brown, Carolyn Brown, George Balanchine, Norman Walker, and in classical and modern ballets. Choreography in Choreographer’s Showcase, Split Stream, Fresh Tracks, Men Dancing, Performance Mix, and To the Pointe festivals; venues in Scotland; and many venues in the United States. Choreography and direction for Cinderella’s Bad Magic, opera composed by Kyle Gann, premiered in Moscow (2002). (1980– ) Professor of Dance.
Phone: 845-758-7933
E-mail: churchil@bard.edu
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Barbara Ess
Associate Professor of Photography
B.A., University of Michigan. Visual artist. Attended London School of Film Technique. Performed and recorded music with bands since 1978 and edited journal of artists’ work in a variety of formats. Work, primarily large-scale photographs, shown internationally in solo and group exhibitions and reviewed extensively. Grants from LINE, Creative Artists Public Service Program, and Kitchen Media, and fellowships from Mid-Atlantic Arts Foundation and National Endowment for the Arts (photography). Publication, I Am Not This Body (Aperture). Faculty, Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts. (1997– ) Associate Professor of Photography.
Phone: 845-758-7814
E-mail: ess@bard.edu
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Jacqueline Susan Goss
Assistant Professor of Film and Electronic Arts
B.A., Brown University; M.F.A., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Recipient, DAAD Fellowship (2005), Creative Capital Award (2005), Jerome Foundation Award (2003), New York State Council on the Arts Award (2002), New York Foundation for the Arts Award (1998). Recent video and web-based works include How to Fix the World (2004), There, There, Square (2002), The 100th Undone (2001). Recent exhibitions and screenings at American Museum of Natural History, Eyebeam Atelier, Rotterdam Film Festival, New York Video Festival at Lincoln Center, Pacific Film Archives. Contributor to gurl, alt-x, and beehive websites. (2001– ) Associate Professor of Film and Electronic Arts.
Phone: 845-758-7366
E-mail: goss@bard.edu
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Ann Lauterbach
Ruth and David E. Schwab Professor of Languages and Literature
B.A., University of Wisconsin, Madison. Woodrow Wilson Fellow, Columbia University. Teacher and director of the literature program at the Institute of Contemporary Arts. Books include If in Time (2001); On a Stair (1997); And For Example (1994); Clamor (1991); Before Recollection (1987); Many Times, But Then (1979). Contributing editor, Conjunctions (1981– ). Wrote column "The Night Sky" in American Poetry Review. Grants: New York State Foundation for the Arts, Ingram Merrill Foundation, Guggenheim Foundation, MacArthur Fellowship (1993). Faculty, Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts and Center for Curatorial Studies. (1997– ) David and Ruth Schwab Professor of Languages and Literature.
Phone: 845-758-7241
E-mail: lauterba@bard.edu
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Nancy S. Leonard
Professor of English; Faculty, Workshop in Writing and Thinking; Associate, Institute for Writing and Thinking; Faculty, Master of Arts in Teaching
A.B., Smith College; Ph.D., Indiana University. Assistant professor of English, University of Pennsylvania (1972–77). Member, Modern Language Association. Numerous articles and reviews on Shakespeare, poetry, and aesthetics in edited books and journals including Renaissance Drama, English Literary Renaissance, Huntington Library Quarterly. Program member, Literature, Film and Electronic Arts, Integrated Arts, and Theology Programs. Associate, Institute of Writing and Thinking (1982– ). (1977– ) Professor of English.
Phone: 845-758-7211
E-mail: leonard@bard.edu
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Richard Teitelbaum
Faculty, Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts
Co-Chair, Music/Sound. B.A., Haverford College; M.M., School of Music, Yale University. Known principally for live electronic and interactive computer music composition. Has performed his compositions at numerous venues, including Philharmonic Hall, Berlin; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Concertgebouw, Amsterdam; Kennedy Center, Washington, D.C.; Merkin Hall, New York; Palace of Fine Arts, San Francisco. Recipient of numerous awards, including Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship (2002 03); Prix Ars Electronica from Austrian Radio and Television (1987); commissions from Venice Biennale, German Radio, New York State Council on the Arts, Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust, Meet the Composer/NEA Commissioning Program, and Rockefeller Foundation; Fulbright grants to Italy and Japan. Professor of Music, Bard College.
Phone: 845-758-7358
E-mail: teitelba@bard.edu
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Hap Tivey
Artist-in-Residence; Director of Integrated Arts Program
B.A., Pomona College; M.A., M.F.A., Claremont Graduate School. Monastic practice: Hofuku-ji and Tofuku-ji, Japan. Solo exhibitions include Blum Helman, Diane Brown, New York; Elizabeth Leach, Portland, Oregon; Landau-Alexander, Margo Leavin, Los Angeles; Picasso Studio, Paris. Collections include Dia Center for the Arts; Guggenheim Museum, New York and Bilbao; Museum of Modern Art and P.S. 1, New York; Albright-Knox Gallery, Buffalo; AT&T, Prudential, Federal Reserve, and Bank of America collections. Awards include National Endowment for the Arts, National Science Foundation, Lockheed, and Katherine Roen fellowships. Publications include The Art of Light and Space, Shift L.A./N.Y., Rooms P.S. 1, Artforum, Art in America, Art News. (1995– ) Artist in Residence.
Phone: 845-758-7113
E-mail: tivey@bard.edu
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Shelley Wyant
Visiting Assistant Professor of Theater
B.A., Brandeis University; M.F.A., Brooklyn College. Taught at Central Connecticut State University, Smith College. Founding artistic director of Maskwork Unlimited, now Joy Presenters. Producer/director,Romeo/Juliet,presented to high-school students and at Bard College and Rondout and Red Hook High Schools (2002, 2003, 2004), published by Broadway Play Publishing (2004). Article, ìMask and Ritual,î in Movement for Actors (Allworth Press, 2002).
On the faculty of New School University Drama program M.F.A. program Numerous workshops and master classes using masks at Brown University, New York University,Stella Adler Conservatory, Actors Movement Studio. Teaching artist, Lincoln Center Institute. Placed on the Fulbright Senior Specialist Roster May 2007(1999– ) Visiting Assistant Professor of Theater.
Phone: 845-758-7961
E-mail: wyant@bard.edu
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Bard College, PO Box 5000, Annandale-on-Hudson, NY 12504 integratedarts@bard.edu

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