May 11, 2022 By: yunews
By Dr. Rachel Mesch
Professor of French & English
Chair, Yeshiva College English Department
After a two-year pandemic hiatus, the Parisian Views student photo exhibit had its grand re-opening on Wednesday May 11, at 4 p.m. in the Gottesman library.
The class鈥檚 sixteen wonderful students from Yeshiva College and Sy Syms School of Business, across all majors and years, offer a lovely example of what a Humanities course can look like at 每日大瓜. If you want to brighten your day, stop by to congratulate these guys, look at their photos and mini-essays, and find out how a photo of the beis midrash connects to nineteenth-century Paris.
The exhibit will be on display to the right of the circulation desk until the next crop of students comes through Parisian Views. For more information on what this is all about, see my intro below (part of the exhibit).
Special thanks, of course, to Paul Glassman for making it all look so beautiful!
Parisian Views Photo Exhibit by Yeshiva College & Sy Syms students Parisian Views is an interdisciplinary Humanities course offered by the English Department under the 鈥淚nterpreting the Creative鈥 (INTC) rubric. In this class, students learn about new approaches to art and literature from nineteenth-century Paris, when artists began to see the everyday life of their rapidly changing city as fodder for artistic creation. Painters like Manet, Degas, Renoir, Cassatt, and Caillebotte, and writers like Baudelaire, Balzac, Zola, and Colette depicted what they observed around town鈥攐n the bustling boulevard, in newly constructed caf茅s and restaurants, in recently renovated parks, and in the theater. They loved to capture life in motion and were very much influenced by the new technology known as the camera. In Parisian Views, we treat New York City as a similar source of inspiration as we learn how to become artists of everyday life. With our private What鈥檚 App鈥攆ondly known as our What鈥檚-App-O-Rama, an homage to the pre-cinematic experience of the panorama and its encompassing views of the city鈥攕tudents try to see through nineteenth-century eyes to capture the unexpected beauty of Washington Heights and beyond. Some of our classmates discovered New York City鈥檚 marvels for the first time, while others found a new perspective on a city that they have long considered home. From traffic and storefronts to street signs and street 鈥渇urniture鈥 to moments of nature meeting the unforgiving 鈥渃oncrete jungle,鈥 they captured the changing city with a new sense of wonder. On a personal note, the last time that I taught Parisian Views on this campus was in Spring of 2020, when our urban escapades were cut short by the pandemic. It was a special delight to be able to return to the vibrant energy of pulsing crowds this semester, with an even greater appreciation of the poetry that surrounds us, if only we would stop to notice. I hope you鈥檒l take that moment now.
Parisian Views Photo Exhibit by Yeshiva College & Sy Syms students Parisian Views is an interdisciplinary Humanities course offered by the English Department under the 鈥淚nterpreting the Creative鈥 (INTC) rubric. In this class, students learn about new approaches to art and literature from nineteenth-century Paris, when artists began to see the everyday life of their rapidly changing city as fodder for artistic creation. Painters like Manet, Degas, Renoir, Cassatt, and Caillebotte, and writers like Baudelaire, Balzac, Zola, and Colette depicted what they observed around town鈥攐n the bustling boulevard, in newly constructed caf茅s and restaurants, in recently renovated parks, and in the theater. They loved to capture life in motion and were very much influenced by the new technology known as the camera. In Parisian Views, we treat New York City as a similar source of inspiration as we learn how to become artists of everyday life. With our private What鈥檚 App鈥攆ondly known as our What鈥檚-App-O-Rama, an homage to the pre-cinematic experience of the panorama and its encompassing views of the city鈥攕tudents try to see through nineteenth-century eyes to capture the unexpected beauty of Washington Heights and beyond. Some of our classmates discovered New York City鈥檚 marvels for the first time, while others found a new perspective on a city that they have long considered home. From traffic and storefronts to street signs and street 鈥渇urniture鈥 to moments of nature meeting the unforgiving 鈥渃oncrete jungle,鈥 they captured the changing city with a new sense of wonder. On a personal note, the last time that I taught Parisian Views on this campus was in Spring of 2020, when our urban escapades were cut short by the pandemic. It was a special delight to be able to return to the vibrant energy of pulsing crowds this semester, with an even greater appreciation of the poetry that surrounds us, if only we would stop to notice. I hope you鈥檒l take that moment now.