Team Kentucky Gallery includes photos by two Berea College seniors

Photos by two Berea College students are currently on display in the Team Kentucky Gallery, located in the state Capitol Building in Frankfort.

Images by Eduardo Alvarez-Esparza and Gaston Jarju—both members of the Berea College Class of 2023—had images chosen from more than 150 entries submitted from across the state. Only 38 photos were chosen for display.

Alvarez-Esparza’s photograph, titled “Underground Silhouette,” is a candid shot captured during a trip to Carter Caves State Resort Park in Olive Hill, Ky.

A business administration major with a concentration in marketing, Alvarez-Esparza started his journey with photography during the COVID-19 pandemic while he was at home in Alabama. He expanded his skills in event photography, student portraits and post-production editing as part of his labor position as an associate photographer for the Berea College Marketing and Communications office.

“Sometimes, we forget to find passions outside of college,” Alvarez-Esparza said. “I’m glad to have found mine and to share it with the world.”

Jarju’s photograph, titled “Adventures with Mountaineers,” was taken during Berea College’s annual Mountain Day at the Pinnacles of Berea.

An international student from Gambia majoring in computer science and minoring in business administration, Jarju took on photography when he started his labor position as a student photographer in Marketing and Communications.

“I wanted to do something what was not coding,” said Jarju. “I wanted to use my creativity in any way. Photography is a way to find beauty in the little things and to find comfort in each moment I capture.”

Gov. Andy Beshear and First Lady Britainy Beshear launched the Team Kentucky Gallery to showcase Kentuckians’ artistic talents in the main halls of the state Capitol in Frankfort. According to the gallery’s website, the Beshears “believe the Capitol, as the people’s house, is the best place to highlight Kentuckians’ voices as represented through art.”

The current exhibit runs through July 31, 2023 and can be viewed here.

Photos and the video news release can be viewed here and here.

Categories: News
Tags: Labor Program, photography

Esteemed New York Times best-selling author Roxane Gay to speak at Berea College convocation

Writer, professor, editor and social commentator Roxane Gay will speak at the Berea College convocations on Thursday, March 2 sponsored by the bell hooks center as part of the center’s March 2023 programming calendar.

Gay will join bell hooks center founder and director, M. Shadee Malaklou, for a conversation about hooks’ fearless feminism. Entitled “Writing Toward a Better World,” the pair will think and dream with hooks about how to write toward a better world, addressing topics ranging from trauma to love to how we dismantle the intersecting structures of oppression that hooks names “imperialist white supremacist capitalist patriarchy.”

Gay’s writing appears in “Best American Mystery Stories 2014,” “Best American Short Stories 2012,” “Best Sex Writing 2012,” “A Public Space,” “McSweeney’s,” “Tin House,” “Oxford American,” “American Short Fiction,” “Virginia Quarterly Review” and many more publications. She is a contributing opinion writer for the New York Times. She is the author of the books “Ayiti,” “An Untamed State,” the New York Times bestselling “Bad Feminist” and “Hunger,” and the nationally bestselling “Difficult Women.” She is also the author of “World of Wakanda” for Marvel. She has several books forthcoming and is also working on television and film projects. In addition, she has a newsletter, “The Audacity” and a podcast, “The Roxane Gay Agenda.”

The convocation begins at 3 p.m. in Phelps Stokes Chapel and is free and open to the public.

On Wednesday, March 15, the bell hooks center will host Jennifer Marley for its Gender Talk series. Gender Talk is a monthly series for which the bell hooks center invites distinguished feminist scholars to speak with Berea’s campus and community about contemporary issues. Marley is the co-founder of a popular podcast about indigenous life-worlds, named “The Red Nation Podcast” and is a doctoral student specializing in queer indigenous studies and indigenous feminism. The event will be from noon to 1 p.m. and is free and open to the public.

 

The following week, on Thursday, March 23, the bell hooks center will host a colloquium event with poet and writer Damaris Hill, who was a friend of bell hooks’. The colloquium series provides an opportunity for students to learn more about how they might apply feminism to their personal and professional practices. The event will be from noon to 1 p.m. and is free and open to the public.

Finally, on Wednesday, March 29, the bell hooks center will host a student activist talk with international Ukrainian Berea College student Anya Kasianova, a member of the Class of 2024. The event will be from noon to 1 p.m. and is free and open to the public.

More information about the bell hooks center can be found here.

###

Categories: News
Tags: bell hooks, bell hooks center, Convocation, Students

Berea College, Local Salon Owner Partnering to Offer Kentucky’s First Beauty Product Vending Machine on Berea College Campus

Berea College is teaming up with You’ve Got Curls Hair Loss center to provide a beauty product vending machine—the first of its kind in Kentucky—in Berea’s Black Cultural Center. (more…)

Categories: News
Tags: Black Cultural Center

Berea College Board of Trustees Elects Two New Members

The Berea College Board of Trustees has elected Dr. Yolanda “Yoli” M. Gallardo and Dr. Dwayne Compton to serve on the Berea College Board of Trustees. (more…)

Categories: News
Tags: Board of Trustees

Berea College Library Offering Historical Look at Dr. Carter G. Woodson

The Berea College Hutchins Library is offering the public a chance to learn more about Berea College graduate and historian Dr. Carter G. Woodson during the library’s upcoming Friday Finds series. (more…)

Categories: News
Tags: Carter G. Woodson, Hutchins Library

Berea College welcomes Award-winning Canadian music group The Wailin’ Jennys

The award-winning trio The Wailin’ Jennys will perform at Berea College on Thursday, Feb. 2 as part of the 2023 Stephenson Memorial Concert series. (more…)

Categories: News
Tags: Convocation, Stephenson Memorial Concert

Berea College Recognizes 74 Students at Mid-Year Ceremony

Berea College recognized 74 students Sunday during its Mid-Year Recognition Ceremony. Carl and Ann Evans, a couple with deep Berea roots, addressed the seniors, who represented 17 states and five different countries.

 

Ann and Carl Evans were speakers at the 2022 mid-year recognition ceremony.

Ann and Carl Evans were speakers at this year’s mid-year recognition ceremony.

(more…)

Categories: News
Tags: alumni, Midyear Graduation

Association for Teaching Black History in Kentucky, Housed at Berea College, Names Inaugural Executive Director

The Association for Teaching Black History in Kentucky—constituted by Berea College, Kentucky State University, the Muhammad Ali Center and Kentucky History Resources, LLC—has hired Chaka Cummings as its inaugural executive director.

Chaka Cummings

The Association for Teaching Black History in Kentucky, housed at Berea College, has named Chaka Cummings as its inaugural executive director.

(more…)

Categories: News
Tags: Carter G. Woodson Center

Berea College Student and Professor Honored with State Awards in Health and Human Performance

A Berea College student and professor were honored with state awards in health and human performance during the 2022 Kentucky Society of Health and Physical Educators (KYSHAPE) Annual Awards.

Robert Immell and Dr. Michelle Thornton

Robert Immell was presented with College Physical Education Student of the Year, and Dr. Michelle Thornton was presented with College Professor of the Year.

Robert Immell was presented with College Physical Education Student of the Year, and Dr. Michelle Thornton was presented with College Professor of the Year.

Immell will graduate in 2024 with a bachelor’s degree in Health and Human Performance P-12 Education. He has been an active member of the Berea College Track and Cross-Country teams since 2020.

Dr. Thornton is an associate professor of Health and Human Performance who has been a member of the Berea faculty since 2016.

“The entire Education Studies Department is extremely proud of Robert Immell and Professor Thornton,” said Dr. Nicholas D. Hartlep, chair of the Education Students Department at Berea College. “Dr. Thornton’s and Mr. Immell’s recognition brings much attention to Berea College and its certification programs.”

SHAPE President Dr. Gavin Washington presided over the 2022 KYSHAPE Annual Awards recently in Berea. KYSHAPE is the state professional association for health and physical education teachers, committed to ensuring students become healthy adults, and in return, make for a better world as healthy adults. KYSHAPE gives students the tools they need to shape, construct and adapt to the world around them with conviction and pride. Students know how to stay well when schools prioritize health and can use that knowledge to thrive for life.

For more information, visit www.kyshape.org.

###

Categories: News
Tags: Health and Human Performance Department, shape america

Multiple Grammy Award Winning Artist Janis Ian Donates Personal Archives to Berea College

Multiple Grammy Award winning recording artist, songwriter and musician Janis Ian has donated her entire archives, along with her father’s 1937 Martin D-18, to Berea College’s Special Collections and Archives at Hutchins Library, where they will be made available for viewing and study in the future. (more…)

Categories: News
Tags: Hutchins Library, Special Collections and Archives

Berea Professor Named One of Four Recipients of the 2022-2024 Restorative Justice Research Community Fellows

Rochelle Arms Almengor, an assistant professor of Peace and Social Justice Studies at Berea College, has been named one of four recipients of the 2022-2024 Restorative Justice Research Community (RJRC) Fellowship. (more…)

Categories: News
Tags: Peace and Social Justice Studies Department

Registration Now Open for Spring Classes at The Woodworking School at Pine Croft

The Woodworking School at Pine Croft, a division of Berea College Student Craft, is now registering for spring 2023 classes.

The Woodworking School at Pine Croft

Andy Glenn, head of The Woodworking School at Pine Croft, works on a project during this year’s classes. Registration for spring 2023 classes is now open.

(more…)

Categories: News
Tags: Crafts, Woodworking School at Pine Croft

Berea College Hosts the Annual Celebration of Christmas

Musical ensemble members and directors standing in front of audience at the Christmas concert, 2016.

Musical ensemble members and directors standing in front of audience at the Christmas concert, 2016.

Berea College’s Music Department and The Willis D. Weatherford, Jr. Campus Christian Center (CCC) will present “A Celebration of Christmas,” the annual Christmas concert, on Friday, December 2, and Saturday, December 3 at Union Church.  The concert will begin at 7:30 p.m. on both nights. (more…)

Categories: News
Tags: Black Music Ensemble, Bluegrass Ensemble, Campus Christian Center, Concert Choir, Folk-Roots Ensemble, Jazz Ensemble, Mariachi Berea

Berea College, Berea Food Bank Teaming Up to Help Address Food Insecurity

Berea College’s Center for Excellence in Learning through Service (CELTS), along with Berea Colleg

e Alumni Relations and the Berea Food Bank, are teaming up to host a community event to help address food insecurity issues in the community.

Berea College, Berea Food Bank Teaming Up to Help Address Food Insecurity

(more…)

Categories: News
Tags: CELTS

Berea College Names 10th President

The Berea College Board of Trustees has named Dr. Cheryl L. Nixon as the 10th president of Berea College.

Berea College President-Elect Dr. Cheryl L. Nixon

Dr. Cheryl L. Nixon has been chosen as the 10th President of Berea College.

(more…)

Categories: News
Tags: President, Presidential Search

Berea College Archaeology and the Forestry Outreach Center to Host Day-Long Celebration of the History of the Berea College Forest

The Berea College Archaeology Program and the Berea College Forestry Outreach Center will host a day of activities Nov. 12 celebrating the history of the Berea College Forest. Events will take place in and around the Berea College Forestry Outreach Center.

(more…)

Categories: News
Tags: Berea College Forest, Forestry Outreach Center

Berea College Hutchins Library Offers Public Look at the Saint John’s Bible

BEREA, Ky. – The Berea College Hutchins Library’s Special Collections and Archives and the Campus Christian Center are offering the public an opportunity to take a close look at the College’s Heritage Edition of the Saint John’s Bible during Monday afternoon tours through Dec. 12.

Set 111 of the Heritage Edition Saint John’s Bible became a permanent addition to Berea College’s extensive collection of religious texts in 2016.

“This large, seven-volume work is impressive in every way. The book covers are hand-tooled leather with differing designs embossed

St. John's Bible

One volume of the Saint John’s Bible will is on display daily on the main floor of Hutchins Library.

in each. Within, the scriptures are beautifully handwritten and profusely illuminated,” said Tim Binkley, head of Special Collections and Archives. “This powerful publication is meant to be viewed—not just stored on a shelf. One volume is always on display in the Hutchins Library foyer. On Mondays, we bring the other six volumes into the reading room for visitors to view, turn pages and reflect on the timeless texts and images.”

According to the library’s St. John’s Bible page (https://libraryguides.berea.edu/SJB), in the early 1990s, the community of Saint John’s Abbey and University in Collegeville, Minnesota, asked Donald Jackson—renowned calligrapher and official scribe to Queen Elizabeth II—to oversee the crafting of the first completely handwritten, fully illuminated Bible commissioned by a Benedictine Abbey in more than 500 years. Jackson, who had envisioned creating such a Bible at the age of 13, assembled an international team of six calligraphers and 31 artists and coordinated their work through a university committee of art historians, medievalists, artists, scholars and theologians.

The Saint John’s Bible took 11 years to complete (2000-2011). As work proceeded, it became apparent that The St. John’s Bible would need to have a presence far beyond Minnesota. As a result, a full-scale art print Heritage Edition was created with a print run of only 299.  The Heritage Editions are printed on 100 percent cotton paper produced in New Hampshire and include all texts and illuminations. The 1,165 pages are hand-stitched and bound in seven volumes, each measuring 2 feet tall by 3 feet wide when open.

“We love to have students and visitors spend time actually paging through these beautiful books,” Binkley said. “Often, our guests find passages or illuminations that really move them. It’s a time to explore, to reflect and put a lot of life together. The tour is not a lecture—it’s an inductive experience and a good opportunity to show one of the great treasures on our campus.”

St. John’s Bible tours take place from 2-3 p.m. every Monday through Dec. 12. Masks are encouraged. Pre-registration is required at least two hours in advance. To register for this experience, visit https://bctrace.com/explore.

Categories: News
Tags: Hutchins Library, Special Collections and Archives, St. John's Bible

Berea College Forestry Outreach Teaming with Berea Tourism to Host Berea Tree Week

BEREA, Ky. – Berea College Forestry Outreach and Berea Tourism will host a tree-planting ceremony to kick off Berea Tree Week, taking place Oct. 8-16 at various locations across Berea.
(more…)

Categories: News
Tags: Forestry Outreach Center, Pinnacles

49th Annual Berea College Celebration of Traditional Music Performances Kick Off with Stephenson Memorial Concert by Jerron Paxton

Multi-instrumental musical wizard Jerron Paxton will present a Stephenson Memorial Concert at 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 13, as part of the 49th Annual Berea

Jerron Paxton

Jerron Paxton will present a Stephenson Memorial Concert on Thursday, Oct. 13.

College Celebration of Traditional Music (CTM). (more…)

Categories: News
Tags: Celebration of Traditional Music, Convocation, Stephenson Memorial Concert

Berea College Library Offering Historical Look at the Art of Quilting

Just in time for cooler weather, Berea College’s Hutchins Library is offering the public an opportunity to learn more about the art of quilting during their “Friday Finds” tours.

Friday Finds quilts

Friday Finds offers a look at numerous quilts, including The Cockscomb No. 9.

(more…)

Categories: News
Tags: Hutchins Library, Special Collections and Archives

Berea College Planetarium Hosting ‘International Observe the Moon Night’ Event

The Berea College Planetarium will host an event Saturday in observance of International Observe the Moon Night.

The event, which is free to the public, will be from 7-8:30 p.m., weather permitting. The planetarium is located on the top floor of the Margaret A. Cargill Natural Sciences and Health Building, 271 North Main Street, Berea.

“International Observe the Moon Night is a great way to learn more about lunar science and exploration,” said Dr. Tracy Hodge, associate professor at Berea College. “We are happy to be able to invite the public back to the Planetarium post-Covid.”

Information on International Observe the Moon Night can be found on NASA’s website.

The Planetarium provides a high-quality educational and entertainment experience that inspires curiosity and wonder about the natural word. Previously, located in the old Hall Science Building, the fully digital Planetarium opened in Berea College’s new Margaret A. Cargill Natural Sciences and Health Building in October 2018.

In addition to Saturday’s special event, the Planetarium offers regular shows weekly. Friday shows are from 7-7:45 p.m., with doors opening at 6:30 p.m. Sunday shows are from 4-4:45 p.m., with doors opening at 3:30 p.m. All shows are open to the public, with masks and vaccinations required. Admission is $5 for adults and $3 for children and seniors.

Upcoming Planetarium shows include:

  • Sept. 30, Oct. 2 – Oasis in Space
  • Oct. 14, 16 – Incoming!
  • Oct. 21, 23 – Europe to the Stars
  • Oct. 28, 30 – Life: A Cosmic Story

The Planetarium is also teaming up with Berea College’s Forestry Outreach Center to host four Star Parties at the Pinnacles in the Berea College Forest. Astronomy students will discuss Native American sky stories and point out constellations in the autumn sky during these events, which will take place from 7-9 p.m. on Oct. 12, Oct. 26, Nov. 9 and Nov. 12. These events are held weather permitting and are free and open to the public.

The Planetarium is also available for rent for private showings and special events.

For more information about events or private showings, call the Planetarium at 859-985-3301.

 

Categories: News
Tags: Forestry Outreach Center, Pinnacles, planetarium

Berea College hosting Inaugural bell hooks day

In remembrance of the late bell hooks, iconic feminist scholar and former Distinguished Professor in Residence in Appalachian Studies, Berea College will host the inaugural bell hooks day on Wednesday, Sept. 21 from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.

bell hooks presenting papers to Berea College in 2015

bell hooks speaking during the formal presentation of her papers to Berea College on April 10, 2017.
(Photo: Bethany Posey ’18)

In honor of hooks’ 70th birthday, which would have been this year, the bell hooks center will celebrate her life, love and legacy. Several events will be held on campus as part of the celebration.

bell hooks day will kick off with a ribbon-cutting ceremony on bell hooks way on Berea’s campus at 10:30 a.m. Previously named Campus Drive, bell hooks way is located off Main Street and runs between the Berea College Farm Store and the Margaret A. Cargill Natural Sciences and Health building.

The ceremony will also include remarks from the Dr. M. Shadee Malaklou, director of the bell hooks center; Associate Provost Dr. Eileen McKiernan-Gonzalez and Vice President for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Dr. Dwayne Mack.

“bell hooks day is an opportunity to honor and further her dissident feminist interventions, both in the material we choose to teach and in the activities in which we choose to participate,” said Dr. Malaklou. “For our teaching to be transgressive, as hooks insisted that it must, we must translate what we have learned at institutions of higher education into jargon-free language that students can at once grasp and apply to their daily lives. The personal is politics, as feminists implore.”

Born Gloria Jean Watkins on Sept. 25, 1952, hooks grew up in the segregated town of Hopkinsville, Kentucky. Her upbringing urged her to challenge topics such as racism and patriarchal norms. She adopted the name bell hooks to honor her great-grandmother, Bell Blair Hooks, but she used all lowercase letters to focus on the importance of her writings, not her name.

As a 19-year-old undergraduate at Stanford University, hooks wrote her first book, “Ain’t I a Woman: Black Women and Feminism.” Upon graduation, she continued authoring several books and began gaining a reputation as a public intellectual. She taught at institutions such as Stanford, Yale and The City College of New York before becoming a professor in residence at Berea College in 2004. Upon her arrival, she drew particularly close to our fifth, sixth, and eighth Great Commitments about interracial education, gender equality, and service to Appalachia, respectively. The bell hooks institute was established at Berea College in 2014, and in honor of hooks’ legacy, the bell hooks center opened in fall 2021.

In her lifetime, hooks wrote more than 30 books and articles articulating the need for feminism and societal change. She often invited prominent scholars and activists to Berea’s campus like Cornel West and Gloria Marie Steinem. She has been celebrated for her work in countless outlets, including Time magazine, which named her one of its “100 Women of the Year” in 2020. In the last few years before her death in December 2021, hooks bemoaned the absence of feminism in today’s society.

Beginning at 11:30 a.m., the bell hooks center will host hooks’ colleague and friend Monica Casper for a Gender Talk discussing hooks’ ideas about reproductive freedom. The Gender Talk will be held in the Alumni Building’s Activities Room.

From 1-3 p.m., Berea College students and community members are invited to the Carter G. Woodson Center for Interracial Educational and the Black Cultural Center for activities including flower crown-making and graffiti-making. Student Life will sponsor a DJ, kettle corn, caricaturist and more. The day will conclude with a faculty workshop on public scholarship: “How to talk to ‘the public’ when ‘the public’ talks back?” The hour-long workshop will take place at 4 p.m. in the bell hooks center located in Room 106 of Draper Building.

All events are open to the public, and masks are required.

For more information on the bell hooks center, visit https://legacy.berea.edu/bhc/.

Categories: News
Tags: bell hooks center

Dr. Kathy Bullock and Friends Uncovering the Songs of Slavery and Emancipation

Dr. Kathy Bullock and Friends will perform the “Songs of Slavery and Emancipation,” a powerful collection of songs originally written and sung by abolitionists and enslaved people in hopes of freedom on Sunday, Sept. 18, at 3 p.m. in Berea College’s Phelps Stokes Chapel. The performance is part of the Stephenson Concert Series. Dr. Bullock, the former chairperson of the College’s Music Department, is one of three music directors on the project.

(more…)

Categories: News
Tags: Convocation, Music Department, Stephenson Memorial Concert

Berea College Named No. 5 Liberal Arts College, No. 1 Best Bang for the Buck in the South in Washington Monthly’s 2022 College Guide

BEREA, Ky. – “Washington Monthly” ranks Berea College as the No. 5 liberal arts college in the nation in its 2022 College Guide and Rankings, up eight spots from the 2021 rankings. Additionally, the College retained its ranking as the No. 1 Best Bang for the Buck College in the South in this year’s guide – making it five out of the last six years that Berea landed the top spot for affordability. (more…)

Categories: News
Tags: Admissions, college rankings, Washington Monthly