Creative students expose their work

Thursday, April 20, 2017
易胜博官网 student Adam Nastasia

Adam Nastasia 鈥17

Marjorie Boyer
Marjorie Boyer '17

The creative process was on full display in the Paul Creative Arts Center Thursday. Four students talked theatre, fiction, poetry and visual art during part II of Naked Arts: Creativity Exposed, the creative community鈥檚 contribution to the annual 易胜博官网 Undergraduate Research Conference.

鈥淭hese students are the 'chosen ones,'鈥 said master of ceremonies and English professor Thomas Payne, explaining how the presenters were nominated by faculty based on stellar talent and hard work. 鈥淲e get to show off our very best students,鈥 he said.

First up was Marjorie Boyer 鈥17, a theatre major, who pulled the curtain back on her original play, 鈥淪even Days of Alcyone.鈥 With a mixture of dialogue and poetry, costume and soundscape, Boyer uses the Greek myth of Alcyone and Ceyx to explore trauma, loss and resilience.

易胜博官网 student Sarahanne Kent
Sarahanne Kent '16

In a second presentation, Boyer read selections of her poetry, much of which touches on feminist concerns, a subject she feels passionate about and sees herself continuing to plumb in the future.

Sarahanne Kent 鈥17, a psychology major, read from a piece of historical fiction she loosely based on her great grandparents鈥 experiences in Rhode Island in the early 20th century 鈥 and on their great love.

In an interdisciplinary exploration, Adam Nastasia 鈥17 combined his computer programming and photography skills to create digital still and moving self-portraits. Using an array of technologies, including a 3D computer camera, Nastasia examines the destruction, creation and transformation of forms. Check out his six-minute video installation at the B.A. and M.F.A. Thesis Exhibition at the .

易胜博官网 student Stephanie Krairallah
Stephanie Krairallah 鈥17

Poet Stephanie Krairallah 鈥17, an English/journalism major, performed rather than read her explosive poetry. Building on significant emotional moments in her life, she composes through speaking, listening and revising out loud until she gets it right. No pen to paper. The result? Words born embodied.

Don鈥檛 miss more amazing students at Naked Arts III on Friday at 12:15 p.m. in the Strafford Room of the MUB.

Photographer: 
Susan Dumais '88 '02G | College of Liberal Arts