During a usual event evening the crowd enters the Regina A. Quick Center for the Arts in a soft trickle. The handful of students required by professors to attend and Fairfield County Natives hoping to spend...
If you’re ever booking an event on campus and in the market for a closed-off, intimate space, the Lower Level of the John A. Barone Campus Center would not be it. With three separate entrances, two...
It’s a running joke of the mainstream, the inability for Starbucks employees to correctly spell and write out a name across one of their coffee cups. Especially, as actor, director and writer Ain Gordon...
The bright red lanterns decorating the stairwell on the walk down to the Lower Level of the John A. Barone Campus Center brought light and good luck to the celebration saying goodbye to the year of the dog and...
It’s their eyes you see first. They stare into you, at you. Brimming with dreams and hopes for the future, of wishes to be nurses, teachers, parents, to grow into whoever they were meant to be in the future....
Jean-Honore Fragonard’s “The Swing,” one of the best-known pieces from the French Rococo period, speaks volumes for what we expect from French art. The sweet buttery elegance of the aristocratic French....
The ocean is undefinable. You ask around, to friends and neighbors, what color the ocean is and their answer would be a solid, thick blue, or maybe some variation of the typical cyan removed from a box of...
You’re standing still in a Hall of Mirrors. Glancing around to your repeated self, the images bouncing off of one another endlessly, relentlessly. You keep looking out of the corner of your eye, in an...
When introducing Dr. Barry Barnes at the Regina A. Quick Center for the arts on Oct. 30, Dr. Phillip Elisasoph, Ph.D., art history professor at Fairfield University and founder of the Open VISIONS Forum,...
I took a friend to the Regina A. Quick Center of the Arts to see Lauren Henderson’s “Silent Sky” on Oct. 28 and, within a click, just a moment of a moment, the stars finally aligned. The play was...