Works in Progress
At the start of Fall term, 51成人猎奇 students celebrated with Student Works, an annual showcase of projects done across disciplines鈥攆rom poetry and play readings, to musical performances, genetics research, oral histories, and more.
Student Works is organized by Bennington鈥檚 (SEPC), which is comprised of elected students who represent the student body on matters of academic policy. SEPC President Eve Mefferd 鈥20 was a driving force behind this year鈥檚 Student Works, recruiting presenters from across all disciplines.
Visual Arts
Before and after the event, a visual arts gallery was held in Newman Court, featuring works by Zen Beattie 鈥21, Emily Hinojosa 鈥20, Musa Ghaznavi 鈥20, Ella Stewart 鈥22, Alex Wall 鈥20, and Charlotte Zinsser 鈥21.
Hinojosa鈥檚 artwork explores themes of home and the self. She screened her short film , which overlays footage from her two homes鈥攊n the bordertown of Brownsville, TX, and at 51成人猎奇鈥攊n a montage that depicts her struggle to define her identity.
She also spoke about her painting Me Raja, Me Raja, which depicts the U.S./Mexican border as a scar running down a woman鈥檚 body. The work, inspired by Gloria Anzald煤a鈥檚 collection Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza, was included in the inaugural , a three-day festival uplifting the Rio Grande Valley through art, education, and activism.
Hinojosa was excited to see her peers鈥 projects on display at Student Works.
鈥淪ocially, we all interact with each other, but usually you don鈥檛 want to talk about your schoolwork when you鈥檙e hanging out on the weekend,鈥 said Hinojosa. 鈥淚t鈥檚 cool to see what people work on most of the time. I learn things about people; I鈥檓 like, 鈥業 didn鈥檛 even know you studied that!鈥欌
Music
Kicking off the night, Vera Yarmo-Gray 鈥22, Celina Einem 鈥22, Luke Taylor 鈥22, Luca Scheid 鈥22, and Tighe Ridley 鈥22 performed as their band, The New Commons. Later, a jazz trio comprised of Ben Watson 鈥21, Dion Nataraja 鈥22, and Phoenix Cantor 鈥22 offered another sound.
The New Commons
Performance by Vera Yarmo-Gray '22, Celina Einem '22, Luke Taylor '22, Luca Scheid '22, and Tighe Ridley '22
鈥淪tudent Works is a great opportunity to see what other people are doing that you might be interested in and to see who you might want to collaborate with,鈥 said Yarmo-Gray. 鈥淚鈥檝e seen stuff that has made me realize that people who I didn鈥檛 know did music, and then a whole world opened up seeing them perform. It鈥檚 a good way to get to know the campus and the community by seeing what people are passionate about performing.鈥
Yarmo-Gray also closed the night with a performance of their solo piece 鈥淔ollow You,鈥 which grew out of a composition they wrote as a dance class accompanist.
鈥淭he first melody, which is most of the piece, came from me improvising while my friend Luke was drumming,鈥 said Yarmo-Gray. 鈥淎s I sat with it, it kept getting stuck in my head. My goal is that by the end of the piece, which repeats the main theme four times, the audience will be able to sing along.鈥



Drama
Evan Caldwell 鈥20 offered a reading of scenes from his play La Princesa Concha, which he has been developing since he first wrote the draft in Sherry Kramer鈥檚 playwriting course.
鈥淚n that class, all of our plays revolved around an object that acted as an organizing metaphor,鈥 said Caldwell.
In La Princesa Concha, that object is a seashell. The play follows two siblings, who first meet after their mother鈥檚 death.
鈥淎fter their mother dies, her daughter and son come together and have to hash out all the years they missed and try to make sense of her legacy and the stuff she left behind,鈥 said Caldwell. 鈥淭heir focus is primarily on the seashell, which was the first thing their mother ever got in America, after she came over from Cuba as a little girl. The seashell is a metaphor for their family鈥檚 history, and now they have to find it and keep the family line going.鈥
Science
In his presentation 鈥淏eauty and the Yeast,鈥 Zac Bull 鈥20 summarized the work done in his Spring 2019 Genetics course. The class allowed various genetically different strains of yeast to grow under multiple concentrations of SDS, a common industrial detergent. Their growth鈥攐r lack of鈥攚as used to understand how SDS affects living cells, both yeast and otherwise.
Louis Celt 鈥21 presented on the plastic pollution crisis. He spoke about testifying at the Vermont House of Representatives in support of S. 113, the nation鈥檚 strongest to date, which addresses single-use plastic bags, drinking straws, and polystyrene. Bennington students will continue working with Senior CAPA Fellow Judith Enck to counteract plastic pollution through Enck鈥檚 project.
As part of his position with Friends of Acadia at , Ben Watson 鈥21 educated visitors on the Park鈥檚 unique ecosystem and the impacts it sustains from visitation.
鈥淲ithin the National Parks system, there鈥檚 a growing call for stewardship,鈥 said Watson. 鈥淭he position was similar to an interpretation ranger; I was out in the field, talking to visitors and answering questions. I educated people on leaving no trace and helped with trail work, too.鈥



Cultural Studies and Languages
Schyler Norton 鈥20 presented about her semester abroad in Paris, where she studied at the Institut Catholique de Paris.
During Spring 2019, Steven Hendricks 鈥20 taught Japanese language and culture to third-grade students at Bennington Elementary School. At Student Works, he explained his tutorial using volunteers from the audience, whom he guided through a game that taught directions in Japanese鈥攆orward, backward, right, and left鈥攂y moving in patterns.
Society, Culture, and Thought
During her sophomore year, Deja鈥 Haley 鈥20 participated in a research survey project that tested the measures between students鈥 Black identity and their willingness to give back to their communities at a liberal arts school versus a public school. The group later expanded their analysis to study students at predominantly white institutions (PWIs) and historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs).
鈥淲e found that Black students at HBCUs are more open and willing to give back to their communities than those at PWIs, which is interesting,鈥 said Haley. 鈥淭his basic project is what started to shape my thesis, which will be a survey project testing to see if one鈥檚 commitment to their racial identity affects the way they see mental illness, the way they seek help for it, and if it affects them giving back to their community.鈥
Just as Haley has noticed how meaningful senior work has stemmed from her Plan, she enjoys the opportunity Student Works provides to see the progression of her peers鈥 work.
鈥淎 lot of times, you don鈥檛 know exactly what people are working on, but you know they鈥檙e working on something,鈥 said Haley. 鈥淓ven when I talk to my friends, I鈥檓 surprised to hear what they鈥檙e doing, and the meaning is really starting to hit. It鈥檚 exciting to see presentations or readings and see how their work has evolved over one or two or three years.鈥
Literature
Several poets read during Student Works, including Luci Arbus-Scandiffio 鈥20, who shared selected poems from her literature thesis, and Frances Erlandson 鈥20, who read poems from her senior thesis.
Erlandson studies both Architecture and Poetry, the latter of which is a recently discovered passion. However, she notes, the two fields overlap.
鈥淚 really like to read about Architecture,鈥 said Erlandson. 鈥淚鈥檓 interested in how people talk about buildings and how buildings can influence an experience or create a space. Poetry is also focused on creating a space for an experience to happen.鈥
In her Poetry work, Erlandson is interested in themes of construction.
鈥淚 have an idea for a project where I鈥檓 going to write poems about specific buildings,鈥 said Erlandson. 鈥淚 want to add a research element, so I鈥檒l be reading a lot about a building and then writing a poem that may not talk directly about the building but is influenced by it. I want to use poetry as a translation of architecture.鈥
Public Action
Gabriela Yadegari 鈥21 has integrated her interest in studying radio and oral histories with her interest in studio and visual arts. After finding inspiration from her work with local students, who found the power of their own stories and voices through radio, Yadegari began experimenting with the physical power of recorded narratives.
She recorded her parents鈥 immigration stories in their native languages. Under a constructed platform, she mounted a stereo system that played these stories, allowing the sound to radiated throughout the listeners鈥 bodies. Yadegari鈥檚 Student Works presentation played visualizing these narratives, as well as abstracting oral histories.
Dance
Karlyn Ellis 鈥21 and Lou Brownlee 鈥21 were roommates in Fels over the summer. Both passionate Dance students, the two decided to compose a piece for Student Works. The result was 鈥,鈥 a movement study/love letter about our insides, making feelings work, and Janis Joplin.
鈥淚 like choreographing duets because I've been able to best explore care between people through duets. I think people are most transparent when interacting with one other person,鈥 said Ellis. 鈥淟ou and I started making this duet this summer. We are inspired by each other and the swing and sway of Janis Joplin. We have been thinking about the interplay between leading and following and loving our insides.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 been fun working with Karlyn because she calls me out, and it鈥檚 fun to have someone push back against you when you're creating,鈥 said Brownlee. 鈥淲e're both interested in contact and partnering work, so we started by going to the studio and improvising with partnering and contact work, feeding back and forth. We鈥檙e both tall, strong dancers, so we got to experiment with lifting each other and sharing weight in an interesting way.鈥
By Natalie Redmond, Associate Writer