College of Fine Arts & Communication – Bear Blog /bearblog University of Central Arkansas Wed, 20 Jun 2018 20:23:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.1 BTĚěĚĂPublic Relations Students Present To Conway High Students /bearblog/2017/07/06/public-relations-students-from-the-university-of-central-arkansas-school-of-communication-presented-to-conway-high-school-students-on-march-31/ /bearblog/2017/07/06/public-relations-students-from-the-university-of-central-arkansas-school-of-communication-presented-to-conway-high-school-students-on-march-31/#respond Thu, 06 Jul 2017 18:58:30 +0000 /bearblog/?p=2332 Public relations students from the University of Central Arkansas School of Communication presented to Conway High School students on March 31, 2017.

Treslyn Fletcher, Jordan Reynolds, Shelby Sites, Leia Smith and Julia Woods presented to five different classes. Jordan Reynolds and Shelby Sites are members of UCA’s chapter of the Public Relations Student Society of America.

“I was very excited to get to speak to high school students about public relations,” said Woods. “I didn’t even know what it was before college, so I’m glad they’re hearing about it now.” The presenters informed the students about PR, what PR practitioners do and skills they know, how to use social media effectively, and what PRSSA is and how it is beneficial to students. High school students are heavily involved with social media, so the presenters tried to work that into a large portion of their presentations. Students were asked to list reasons why they use social media, as well as start thinking about ways that their social media usage could help or harm their chances of getting a summer job or even a future career.

The Conway High students came from classes such as entrepreneurship, accounting, imaging and design, debate and oral communications. There was a mix of sophomores, juniors, and seniors in the classes.

To get the students more involved, they were shown an example of a LinkedIn page and then asked to fill out their own information on a handout. They wrote about past job and volunteer experience as well as skills and languages that they know. This activity was included to give them an idea of LinkedIn, because it is so important in the public relations industry.

Public Relations Student Society of America, or PRSSA, is a student organization for public relations and communication students. There are over 300 chapters with more than 10,000 students. PRSSA provides students with opportunities to broaden their knowledge and expertise, to get internships and to make connections for their future profession. For details about the national organization, visit their website or for details about the BTĚěĚĂChapter, visit their website .

For more information, contact PR Specialist Jordan Reynolds, at jordan.reynolds.994@gmail.com or 870-917-7040.

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Artist In Residence Dr. David Cutler Proves To Be Truly ‘Savvy Musician’ At UCA /bearblog/2017/02/24/artist-in-residence-dr-david-cutler-proves-to-be-truly-savvy-musician-at-uca/ /bearblog/2017/02/24/artist-in-residence-dr-david-cutler-proves-to-be-truly-savvy-musician-at-uca/#respond Fri, 24 Feb 2017 17:18:04 +0000 /bearblog/?p=2027 Dr. David Cutler, author of the 2010 book “The Savvy Musician,” visited the University of Central Arkansas as artist in residence Feb. 19-21.

During his first night at UCA, David Cutler and his music were featured in “Concert and Conversation: Borrowing, Stealing, and Breaking the Rules” at 7:30 in the Snow Fine Arts Recital Hall.

“Concert and Conversation” was reimagining what music can be. The event began at 7:30 in the Recital Hall and featured several of Cutler’s compositions.

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Cutler balances a varied career as a jazz and classical composer, pianist, educator, arranger, conductor, collaborator, concert producer, author, blogger, consultant, speaker, advocate and entrepreneur. In fact, a recent career diagram illustrated that he maintains no less than 24 income streams!

One of the world’s leading voices on arts leadership, career, and Cutler’s book “The Savvy Musician: Building a Career, Earning a Living, & Making a Difference” was heralded by Jeffrey Zeigler of the Kronos Quartet as “Hands down, the most valuable resource available for aspiring musicians.”

Cutler is director of Music Entrepreneurship at the University of South Carolina, and he also teaches there.

 

Cutler, one of the world’s leading voices on arts career and entrepreneurship training, has offered ground-breaking seminars for organizations such as the Julliard School, Dutch Classical Music Meeting, New World Symphony Orchestra and Chamber Music America. In 2013, he founded The SAVVY Arts Venture Challenge, an experiential workshop that trains participants to innovate, collaborate and build arts-businesses from the ground up. In June 2016, he directed a College Music Society Summit focused on the future of 21st century college music schools.

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Residency activities, all free and open to the public, included:

Feb. 19, 7:30 p.m. — Public concert featuring compositions by Cutler performed by BTĚěĚĂmusic faculty in Snow Fine Arts Center Recital Hall. Concert includes a conversation on creating innovative experiences and opportunities in music.
Feb. 20, 7 p.m. — Community presentation: “Doing the Wrong Thing and How It Can Lead to Success in the Arts” with Q&A and reception, BTĚěĚĂDowntown, 1105 W. Oak St., Conway.
Feb. 21, 10:50 a.m. — Public presentation: “How Music Education Can Change the World (and Why it Often Doesn’t),” Snow Fine Arts Center Recital Hall.
Feb. 21, 1:40 p.m. — Public presentation: “A Life in the Arts: Nine BIG Ideas on Career and Financial Success,” Snow Fine Arts Center Recital Hall.

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BTĚěĚĂto Hold Events To Commemorate the 75th Anniversary of Executive Order 9066 & Internment of Japanese-Americans During World War II /bearblog/2017/02/20/uca-to-hold-events-to-commemorate-the-75th-anniversary-of-executive-order-9066-internment-of-japanese-americans-during-world-war-ii/ /bearblog/2017/02/20/uca-to-hold-events-to-commemorate-the-75th-anniversary-of-executive-order-9066-internment-of-japanese-americans-during-world-war-ii/#respond Mon, 20 Feb 2017 14:25:18 +0000 /bearblog/?p=2012 “’An Artist’s Sense of Purpose’: Art, Activism, and Community in Conway,” events will commemorate the 75th Anniversary of Executive Order 9066 and the internment of Japanese-Americans During World War II, Feb. 20-27, 2017, sponsored by BTĚěĚĂCollege of Fine Arts and Communication, the Hendrix College Asian Studies Program and the Japan Outreach Initiative.

Schedule of Events
Feb. 20-24
· On view: selections of artwork from the Gould-Vogel collection of Japanese-American Internment art and artifacts (on loan from the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies), 10 am- 5 pm M-F (with extended hours until 7 pm on Thursday), Fireplace Room, McCastlain Hall, UCA

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Feb. 21-27
· On view: sculpture display, “Life Interrupted: 10 Internment Camps,” by Nancy Chikaraishi, daughter of Rohwer Internment Camp survivors, Mills Library, Hendrix College (Free and open to the public; no tickets required)

Feb. 22
· 4:30 pm, Commemorative Ceremony, featuring Ms. Aya Murata, Coordinator, Japan Outreach Initiative, Mills Library, Hendrix College (Free and open to the public; no tickets required)
· 4:45 pm, Community Forum/Conversation: “WWII Internment and Conway: Lessons for Today,” featuring Hendrix College President Dr. William Tsutsui, Rohwer survivor Richard Yada, and Dr. Edma Delgado Solórzano of UALR, Mills Center Rm. A, Hendrix College (Free and open to the public; no tickets required)
· 7:30 pm, Film Screening, “Relocation, Arkansas: Aftermath of Incarceration” (2015, 1 hr. 20 min.; written and directed by Vivienne Schiffer) and Q & A with Richard Yada, Rohwer survivor, Mills Center, Hendrix College (Free and open to the public; no tickets required)

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About “Relocation, Arkansas: Aftermath of Incarceration” (2015, written and directed by Vivienne Schiffer) “Relocation, Arkansas: Aftermath of Incarceration” explores the effect of the Japanese American incarceration experience in Arkansas during WWII on the generation that was born after the camps closed, the unlikely tale of those Japanese Americans who remained behind, and the even more unlikely tale of how a small town Arkansas mayor of Italian descent became a legend in the Japanese American community. But with its themes of the complexity and hypocrisy of race relations in America, journeys toward forgiveness and healing, and cross-community understanding, the film transcends regional and cultural constraints unlike any other film on the incarceration experience (courtesy of IMBd).

About Nancy Chikaraishi: Nancy Chikaraishi’s parents were prisoners in the Rohwer, AR, Japanese American internment camp during World War II. Listening to her parents tell their stories of how this major event impacted their lives, prompted her to create artwork (paintings, drawings, prints, and sculpture) that illuminates the costs of racial discrimination. The artist wrote: “Xenophobia remains a relevant issue of the 21st century. By acknowledging the racial injustices inflicted upon Japanese Americans during WWII, I hope to bring awareness to the consequences of fear based on otherness and prejudice.” Chikaraishi currently lives in Springfield, MO, where she is the assistant professor of architecture at Drury University.

About Executive Order 9066: On February 19, 1942, in response to the bombing of Pearl Harbor, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, giving the Secretary of War the power to designate military areas from which “any or all persons may be excluded,” and authorized military commanders to initiate orders to forcibly remove 120,000 Japanese Americans and persons of Japanese ancestry from the West Coast to ten internment camps in seven western states, including two in the Arkansas Delta (Rohwer and Jerome). Approximately 17,000 “evacuees” were brought by train to Arkansas where they were imprisoned behind barbed wire for three years.

The University of Central Arkansas and Hendrix College have unique connections to the history of Japanese Internment during World War II.

BTĚěĚĂgraduate Mabel Rose Jamison was a Caucasian art teacher at Rohwer who saved her students’ artworks, later displaying them to publicize the injustice of internment. They are now held at the Smithsonian, the Japanese American National Museum, and the Butler Center in Little Rock.

After visiting the Arkansas camps in 1943, Hendrix College art faculty members Floy Hanson and Louis and Elsie Freund staged an exhibition of artwork by renowned artist and Jerome internee Henry Sugimoto at Hendrix in 1944. After meeting Sugimoto at Hendrix, English professor Paul Faris visited Rohwer in 1945, where he photographed life in the Arkansas camps while his wife Ann conducted oral history interviews with internees. These experiences, Henry Sugimoto later recalled, inspired “an artist’s sense of purpose” to document and remember the experience of internment.

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UCA’s Community Development Institute Teams Up With BTĚěĚĂArt Students To Promote NLR Neighborhood /bearblog/2017/02/10/cdi-teams-up-with-uca-art-students-to-promote-nlr-neighborhood/ /bearblog/2017/02/10/cdi-teams-up-with-uca-art-students-to-promote-nlr-neighborhood/#respond Fri, 10 Feb 2017 16:22:45 +0000 /bearblog/?p=1964 The Community Development Institute team at the University of Central Arkansas worked with the Park Hill Neighborhood in North Little Rock to conduct a business survey in 2016 and also connected leaders in the area with BTĚěĚĂstudents from Professor Li Zeng’s art class to create a fantastic commercial to showcase the Park Hill area.

The video showcases why the neighborhood’s tagline is “Perfectly Park Hill!”

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Service-Learning Class Is “Hungry for Sustainable Solutions” to Food Insecurity in Arkansas /bearblog/2016/12/12/service-learning-class-is-hungry-for-sustainable-solutions-to-food-insecurity-in-arkansas/ /bearblog/2016/12/12/service-learning-class-is-hungry-for-sustainable-solutions-to-food-insecurity-in-arkansas/#respond Mon, 12 Dec 2016 14:41:49 +0000 /bearblog/?p=1763 Each semester, BTĚěĚĂprofessor Amy Hawkins’ service-learning class, Cases and Campaigns, participates in a competitive senior capstone project. PRLS 4305 Public Relations Cases and Campaigns is the capstone course for all public relations majors at UCA.

“Since 2005 when I began teaching the class, we have worked with a different nonprofit client each fall and spring semester, ranging from organizations that serve disadvantaged populations to those that focus on the fine arts,” said Hawkins.

PR Cases and Campaigns is also a service-learning course in which students achieve the learning objectives of the course while simultaneously meeting real community needs. Students work in teams in a competitive agency model to develop comprehensive PR campaign proposals to raise awareness, change attitudes, and call target audiences to action. At the end of the semester teams each pitch their campaign proposal to the client who then selects a winning team.

This semester four teams worked with the Arkansas Hunger Relief Alliance led by Executive Director Kathy Webb.

Webb praised all four teams’ efforts, noting the caliber of work surpasses many graduate student projects she’s encountered over the past few years.

The winning team, consisting of Ashley Godwin, Ty Hollowell, Mayson Tunstall and Julia Woods, pitched a winning PR plan with the tagline “Hungry for Sustainable Solutions.”

 

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For more information about the Arkansas Hunger Relief Alliance, visit their .

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