Category Archives: alumni

Douglas Wolf, BM’75 received the Utah Percussive Arts Society’s 2014 Service Award

Douglas Wolf, BM’75 received the Utah Percussive Arts Society’s 2014 Service Award. This is a lifetime achievement award from the Utah Chapter of PAS and recognizes Wolf’s 38 years of service as a percussion teacher and performer in Utah. In 1977, Wolf established the Utah PAS Day of Percussion festival, which has grown to include more than 800 student participants annually. Wolf continues to serve as head of the Percussion Program at the University of Utah School of Music and he maintains a busy performing schedule as percussionist with the Utah Symphony Orchestra, Utah Opera Company, and Ballet West. The Utah Chapter of PAS said of Wolf, “His influence of excellence has had a profound and long-lasting effect on the percussion community in the state of Utah, leaving a legacy which will continue to blossom in future generations.”

Douglas Wolf
Professor Douglas Wolf (left) receives the Utah Percussive Arts Society’s 2014 Service Award from Utah PAS President, Michael Sammons (right).

College of Music Alum making splash in Omaha, NE

There will be weird.

Amanda DeBoer Bartlett knows it. She expects it. Frankly, she invited it.

As the lead organizer behind Omaha Under the Radar, DeBoer has put together a four-day, seven-venue celebration of experimental music, theater and dance. The festival opens Thursday at Joslyn Art Museum and concludes next Sunday at Bancroft Street Market. In between are stops at House of Loom, Slowdown, Kaneko, the Union for Contemporary Art and Accelerando Coffee House in Rockbrook.

The question now is how weird will it get, and are you ready for it?

Read more!

BGSU music alumnus named president of University of West Georgia

Dr. Kyle Marrero was appointed the seventh president of the University of West Georgia on July 1, 2013 and has many years of leadership experience in academia and the arts.

Dr. Kyle Marrero, president of the University of West Georgia

He holds both bachelor and master of music degrees from Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio, and earned his Doctorate of Musical Arts (D.M.A.) in vocal performance from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Marrero also has studied music education and vocal performance at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, and Arizona State University, Tempe, as well as the German language at the Goethe-Institute in Munich, Germany.

Prior to his appointment at UWG, Marrero held the position of vice president for University Advancement at the University of West Florida since August 2009. In that position, he provided executive leadership to advance the mission of the university in the areas of alumni relations, development, marketing, communications and the University of West Florida Foundation.

He was given primary responsibility by the university president to lead the university’s effort to achieve the Carnegie Community and Curricular Engagement and Outreach and Partnerships Classification Award for 2015. This goal served as one of the benchmarks of success specifically aligned to engaging in community partnerships that respond to mutual concerns and opportunities and that advance the economy and quality of life in a region.

Under his leadership, the advancement office made significant contributions to a recorded 20 percent increase in enrollment, completed the largest capital campaign in the institution’s history by raising $39.2 million toward a $35 million fundraising goal, and increased the Foundation investment portfolio from $45 to $60 million.

Marrero’s background is in music, and prior to his position as vice president for University Advancement, he served as first the chair of the Department of Music and then as the director of the School of Fine and Performing Arts at the University of West Florida.

Prior to his work at the University of West Florida, Marrero has taught voice, opera and conducting at a number of institutions in Louisiana, Michigan and Ohio.

He previously served as the artistic director of the Pensacola Opera, a position he held since June 2000. During his tenure, the company was recognized for exponential growth and quality. He developed a comprehensive education and outreach program serving 20,000 school children and 10,000 adults in Northwest Florida and received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and Opera America for programming and education.

Between 1998 and 2002, Marrero was the artistic director of Opera Southwest in Albuquerque, New Mexico. He has produced and directed an extensive number of operas in this facet of his career. Marrero also has served as a judge for a number of opera and vocal competitions and has performed on stage with a number of opera companies worldwide in principal roles, as well as maintaining an extensive career as a recitalist and performer with symphony orchestras.

Marrero is married to opera performer Jane Redding Marrero, and they have a daughter, Lily.

Display highlights ‘Wonderland’ Xtravaganza

The community is invited to a “Wonderland” of the arts at Bowling Green State University on Dec. 6 during the ninth annual ArtsX event, from 6-10 p.m. in The Wolfe Center for the Arts, Kobacker Hall and the Fine Arts Center.

The immersive arts experience will begin even before visitors enter a building, with “Cinema Optique!” Nowhere else in northwest Ohio can visitors enjoy a cinematic experience on a surface nearly as long as a football field.

The 250-foot-wide “screen” is the Wolfe Center’s sloping south wall facing the Fine Arts Center. Throughout the evening 3-D art projections of custom-made films and 3D animations will make the wall appear to come alive in a constantly changing display. Four large projectors producing 14,000 lumens of light will beam live-action and animated films to create a visual spectacle.

“The clean lines and smooth surface of this new building inspired us to develop content custom made for the architecture — over seven million pixels per frame,” said Heather Elliott-Famularo, chair of the digital arts department.

Students of Elliott-Famularo and film instructor Thomas Castillo created the projection-mapped art works in a collaborative class between the School of Art and the Department of Theatre and Film. Their students will also have an exhibition of video installations, “The Wunderkammer,” in the Willard Wankelman Gallery

Corporations such as LG, Nike and Audi have used the projection mapping technique to advertise their products; global cities like Moscow, Quebec, Dubai and Shanghai have lit up the night, transforming their buildings into 3-D works of art. But never before has it been done on such a large scale in this region.

Indoors throughout the evening, the arts and talents of faculty and students will be showcased in performances, exhibits, hands-on activities, a film premiere and a Festival Series concert. Holiday shoppers can find handmade gifts crafted by BGSU art students while being entertained by performers of all types.

Events include the 63rd annual Faculty and Staff Exhibition of mixed media, print, paint, glass and graphics in the Dorothy Uber Bryan Gallery; dramatic readings, aluminum pours, glass blowing, aerial acts and improvised comedy. Children will enjoy the costumed characters, jugglers and archaeological “digs.”

The 7 p.m. Festival Series concert in Kobacker will feature soprano Kisma Jordan, a BGSU alumna, as soloist, plus 200 students, faculty and community members along with some of BGSU’s top ensembles, including the BG Philharmonia, University Choral Society, BGSU Wind Symphony Brass and BGSU’s Heart and Music musical theater students.

Filled with classics like “You’re a Mean One, Mr. Grinch,” traditional carols and some special holiday medleys, “the concert has evolved into a holiday performance of epic proportions,” said Susan Hoekstra, director of public events for the College of Musical Arts. Hoekstra hinted there would be some surprise soloists in the Haydn “Toy Symphony,” where toys take center stage.

Tickets can be purchased at BGSU.edu/FestivalSeries or by calling the box office at 419-372-8171.

ArtsX visitors can also see the premiere of film faculty member Daniel Eric Williams’ movie “Hacked,” a story set in a world where technology rules, privacy is suspect, and everyone is potentially a terrorist — and where one keystroke will destroy your life. Williams will follow the film with remarks about the process and film. The screening begins at 9 p.m. in the Donnell Theatre at the Wolfe Center.

BGSU will also welcome back Jonathan Van Dyke, an expert in interactive photography experiences. This spring he left an impression with his gallery ARTalk. For a preview, visit his website: http://jonathanvandyke.com.

“It’s hard to believe ArtsX is nine years old,” said Abigail Cloud, ArtsX board member and a graduate student in the Creative Writing program. “ArtsX was created to give students a chance to show and sell their work to the community. It’s been growing treelike; the branches keep growing out and incorporating more arts areas.”

ArtsX comprises contributions from the students and faculty of the College of Musical Arts, School of Art, the Department of Theatre and Film, Creative Writing, Interior Design and Architecture and Environmental Design, as well as numerous student groups and clubs.

Visit the Arts website for more details.

BGSU Festival Series concert celebrates the season

BOWLING GREEN, O.—The holiday Festival Series performance at Bowling Green State University on Dec. 6 will live up to its name, presenting a festival of music, poetry, dance, theater and more.

The 7 p.m. concert in Kobacker Hall will feature soprano Kisma Jordan, a BGSU alumna, as soloist with the BG Philharmonia in Bach/Gounod’s “Ave Maria,” plus 200 students, faculty and community members along with some of BGSU’s top ensembles, including the University Choral Society, BGSU Wind Symphony Brass and BGSU’s Heart and Music musical theater students.

Filled with classics like “You’re a Mean One, Mr. Grinch,” traditional carols and some special holiday medleys, “the concert has evolved into a holiday performance of epic proportions,” said Susan Hoekstra, director of public events for the College of Musical Arts. Hoekstra hinted there would be some surprise soloists in the Haydn “Toy Symphony,” where toys take center stage.

The award-winning Prestige Barbershop Quartet will bring their harmonies to “What Child Is This?” and the bouncy rhythms of “Sleigh Ride” will liven the pace.

Tickets can be purchased at BGSU.edu/FestivalSeries or by calling the box office at 419-372-8171.

The concert is part of a whole evening of entertainment with BGSU’s family-friendly ArtsX events across campus.