#howarth of london blog
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highmarshall-azure · 5 years ago
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tagged by: @stuckwith-harry thanks my dude!!
nicknames: morg, kran, clem, buster(that’s my mum though so doesn't count)
zodiac: scorpio
height: 175 I guess? haven’t measured in a while
hogwarts house: slytherin last I checked but possibly more hufflepuff now
last thing i googled: Howarth London bassoon reeds , I needed me some new reeds babiey
favourite musicians: I never got past 2010 so the hooisers, jamie t, kate nash and a bit of mika atm
song stuck in my head: they told me it rained by jamie t 
following: 851
followers: 406 and only cause of porn blogs
amount of sleep i get: i’m getting 7 at the moment consistently but it’s really not enoughh
lucky numbers: 89, 7, 64
dream job: i’d love to be any kind of musician really either in an orchestra in a band or both just love performing even if i’m scared of it, possibly writing poetry or being a professor (maths) but like one of the old and grumpy ones who’s amazing at teaching
wearing: currently sports shorts and a like £3 top because I've just got back from volleyball which I apparently do now
favourite songs: as well as they told me it rained; rules and don’t say what nobody wants to hear (hoosiers), 2XXX by hello sleepwalkers, likeness of being - jamie t and life in pink : kate nash
instruments: clearly bassoon, also piano and a tiny bit of euphonium but honestly I want to learn as many as possible as long as it’s not too dexterous
facts: it’s a week and a day until my bday, already done more sport this semester than all of last year, on my unis lgbt committee this year, grade 8 in both piano and bassoon, celeste speedrun time is below 55 minutes, used to be given new books from the library at secondary school cause they knew i’d hand them back in the next day
aesthetic: I don’t know changes too often love a good large flowy dress but also like the traditional middle aged men polo shirts and chinos, what even is an aesthetic anyway?
tagging: ooh maybe @kindleln @raggedyradiant @the-awkward-math-writer @aplpaca but honestly if you wany to do it do it
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a13xbedlow · 5 years ago
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Harvard referencing
Bauhaus and design:
Article title:
The Bauhaus
Website title:
Bauhaus100.com
URL:
https://www.bauhaus100.com/the-bauhaus/
 Author
BAUHAUS history
Article title:
BAUHAUS SHOP | Learn how the Bauhaus Movement influenced design  history
Website title:
Shop.bauhaus-movement.com
URL:
https://shop.bauhaus-movement.com/
 Author
Jon Astbury
Article title:
Walter Gropius: the ideas man who founded the Bauhaus
Website title:
Dezeen
URL:
https://www.dezeen.com/2018/11/02/walter-gropius-bauhaus-100-founder-director-architecture-design/
 Article title:
Bauhaus – Art Term | Tate
Website title:
Tate
URL:
https://www.tate.org.uk/art/art-terms/b/bauhaus
 Article title:
Barry Berkus
Website title:
YouTube
URL:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCx9IOGPx6xyS1x9z_tX5QJw
 Author
Dan Howarth
Article title:
10 of Tel Aviv's best examples of Bauhaus architecture
Website title:
Dezeen
URL:
https://www.dezeen.com/2016/08/24/10-tel-aviv-best-examples-bauhaus-residential-architecture/
 Canals:
Article title:
Derby and Sandiacre Canal
Website title:
Derby and Sandiacre Canal
URL:
https://www.derbycanal.org.uk/
 Article title:
Derby & Sandiacre Canal Trust
Website title:
YouTube
URL:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWoUv2X0X4x59A8AK3GWrqg
 Article title:
Cromford Canal | Canal & River Trust
Website title:
Canalrivertrust.org.uk
URL:
https://canalrivertrust.org.uk/enjoy-the-waterways/canal-and-river-network/cromford-canal?gclid=CjwKCAjw_qb3BRAVEiwAvwq6Vp9gG4fx5198t6De8wmpkPcAKmy_74HgSUuKPMqF61y1UNdDpDNW_xoCadYQAvD_BwE
 Article title:
Caen Hill Locks | Canal & River Trust
Website title:
Canalrivertrust.org.uk
URL:
https://canalrivertrust.org.uk/places-to-visit/caen-hill-locks
 Marinas:
Article title:
Mercia Marina | Shopping and holiday destination, and a great day out
Website title:
Merciamarina.co.uk
URL:
http://www.merciamarina.co.uk/
 Article title:
Barton Marina – Moorings and much more…
Website title:
Bartonmarina.co.uk
URL:
http://bartonmarina.co.uk/
 Trams:
Article title:
Blog - Crich Tramway Village
Website title:
Crich Tramway Village
URL:
https://www.tramway.co.uk/?sfid=2271
 Article title:
Crich Tramway Village 2018
Website title:
YouTube
URL:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d0jwRV9oyNg
 Maps:
Author
Transport Matters
Article title:
Maps
Website title:
Transport for London
URL:
https://tfl.gov.uk/maps/
 Article title:
Maps
Website title:
MTA
URL:
https://new.mta.info/maps
 River Derwent and mill sites:
Article title:
Save the date – The Derby Retro Arcade Event
Website title:
Derby Museums
URL:
https://www.derbymuseums.org/locations/museum-of-making
 Article title:
Derwent Valley Mills - Derwent Valley
Website title:
Derwent Valley Mills
URL:
http://www.derwentvalleymills.org/
 Waterwheels:
Author
Nationalmuseet København
Article title:
The Water Wheels of Hama
Website title:
National Museum of Denmark
URL:
https://en.natmus.dk/historical-knowledge/historical-knowledge-the-world/the-lands-of-the-mediterranean/the-far-east/digital-hama-a-window-on-syrias-past/the-water-wheels-of-hama/
 Article title:
Waterwheel - Energy Education
Website title:
Energyeducation.ca
URL:
https://energyeducation.ca/encyclopedia/Waterwheel#:~:text=A%20waterwheel%20is%20a%20type,the%20paddles%2C%20rotating%20a%20wheel.
 Dams:
Author
Hoover Dam Web Designer Bureau of Reclamation
Article title:
Hoover Dam | Bureau of Reclamation
Website title:
Usbr.gov
URL:
https://www.usbr.gov/lc/hooverdam/
 Article title:
Why does this reservoir have plug holes?
Website title:
BBC News
URL:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-derbyshire-50157693
 Article title:
Three Gorges Dam | Facts, Construction, Benefits, & Problems
Website title:
Encyclopedia Britannica
URL:
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Three-Gorges-Dam
  Architect impressions:
Article title:
Artist Impressions
Website title:
Artistimpressions4u.co.uk
URL:
http://artistimpressions4u.co.uk/
 Article title:
Strategies for Drawing Groups of People
Website title:
Jim Leggitt / Drawing Shortcuts
URL:
https://jimleggitt.typepad.com/jim-leggitt-drawing-shortcuts/2011/09/strategies-for-drawing-groups-of-people.html
 Books I used/read:
Author
Mo Zell
Year published:
n.d.
Book title:
The architectural drawing course
 Author
Francis D. K Ching
Year published:
1979
Book title:
Form, space & order
City:
New York
Publisher:
Van Nostrand Reinhold
 Author
Matthew Frederick
Year published:
2007
Book title:
101 things I learned in architecture school
City:
Cambridge, Mass.
Publisher:
MIT Press
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zambezidreams94 · 8 years ago
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Critical Rational • This project has changed from my first original idea of photographing and making a magazine of rustic coffee shops in London, which was my first proposal. I changed my whole concept and idea to a, safari magazine based on travel & Style; Zimbabwe, however last semester I feel I could have been shooting a lot more in this specific style, to show in my pitch presentation where I was going with it. From my point I should have been practicing shooting long before. • My guide of Travel & Style - Zimbabwe was to photograph interior designs blending into the surrounding’s landscapes. I choose 5 safari lodges: Changa Safari Camp, The Elephant camp, The Big Cave, The Hide, and Camp Amalinda. I choose these five to create different landscape scenes throughout Zimbabwe. They were also located in different parts of the country. I gave a brief description about my project proposal to the owners of each lodge and through meeting and planning dates with them, they allowed me to stay a few nights at their lodge to photograph it. I felt however I should have done a lot more shooting in the first semester and attempted these sorts of shots. • I collected images for inspiration, which I put into a folder to take with me to get an idea of what to shoot. Another thing I kept in mind was the design and atmosphere of each location such as collateral design approach - stone work, pods, trees, and material used in the architecture relating back to the idea of the place. I got this information from a graphic designer on behance who branded Singita safari lodges (Behance.net, 2017). By breaking it down into a branding idea of what I see the safari lodge as i.e. thinking about colour, texture, and structure. This I felt helped in order for me to have an idea, about what to photograph. However I feel I could have styled the lodges a bit more. • The photography I had in my mind was simple, clean shots showcasing the interior design with the surrounding’s, simple close ups and wide angle shots describing each place. I used a tripod and canon 6D with a lens from 25 to 105mm.I shot at 5:30 in the early morning for the sunrise shoot, and 6:30 for sundowners. I used natural light only throughout all my images. I had to be well organized and style the rooms beforehand in order to shoot early morning. I would like to go on an interior styling course in order to give myself more of an understanding of this specialty of photography which would be beneficial for my images. I experienced some difficulties when planning transport arrangements, as Zimbabwe’s transport is unreliable, also there was overcast weather in December, which is not so great for interior photography but I tried to time it well when the light was bright and shinning inside. • Arriving back in the Uk from Zimbabwe, I bought lightroom. The process was slow as I felt it was so hard to narrow them down as Matt also suggested I needed to be more critical with narrowing it down. However with some progress I selected only the top 20, and from there I began cutting down. My editing workflow was straitening lines in photoshop and editing in lightroom using curves and desaturating my images and making some colours in the image bolder than others, in order to not make it too flat by desaturating the entire colour. After seeing my magazine in print I felt I could have had been a bit bolder with my editing by bringing out certain colours and playing with the hue of them, but still keeping them natural, with that earthy feel. • Many photographers have inspired me in particular Nicole Franzen who I spoke about on my blog; her images are clean, well-contrasted and strong compositions, which make her interior shots so good to the eye. I have also looked into Rhiannon Taylor who is an interior photographer and has a blog called “in bed with me” which indicates well designed hotel and resorts around the world, her page has given me inspiration in order to do this with setting up a blog page for safari lodges showcasing my photography as well as my industry. I want to go into creating content for social media such as instagram, with a specific style making them as a brand. Also with having shown Matt my magazine he also suggested adding text and combining this into my magazine, which is why I think I should have also started a blog about these safari camps. • Working with a graphic designer called Silje who is also studying at the University of Hertfordshire, was a month’s process of meeting up and making decisions. The time in designing this did go quickly as I had all the research beforehand such as maps and what I wanted it to look like, with her natural talent and understanding of the idea I wanted, I felt this worked well. • Research into this type of photography is interesting as my work is not so much in the line for marketing purposes but more for creative content for social media platforms, showcasing natural photography of the place, thinking about colour, style and design, using natural light and showcasing the design of the place creating a group of photos with a specific identity. Trends in this lifestyle photography are becoming widespread due to instagram. • As Taylor also says, many people are blogging about food and fashion and not so much about unique interesting hotels. This is also why I feel I should set up a blog about these places to get my word out as a photographer as well as writing although that is not my strongest point (D'Arcy and D'Arcy, 2017). • As kinfolk magazine has put forward the idea of “slow living” as the subjective way of living meaning through simplicity. Their magazine is described by the creator Nathan Williams as slow living showcasing a peaceful, place for a reader to come” I turned towards this idea when I was photographing the interiors to create simplicity and more so a calming feeling amongst this busisness. As he also says a lot of interior magazines have subscribed to him suggesting that they like the calmness of the magazines inteiors, and leaving out the people and the life that happens in the home. From there I have picked up on this in my Travel & Style magazine. • I want to carry on with this project when I next go home to Zimbabwe, as I feel I would like to build a portfolio specifically on safari lodges in Zimbabwe to develop into a Niche, which I’m learning is important for people to recognize you as something. • All in all I feel I’m quite happy with the overall outcome of my magazine, its simple and the images are calming. Matts advice has helped me a lot during this and so has my classmates either by displaying photographs on the wall and gathering information from them. There’s almost a type of serenity throughout showcasing simple design and landscape as I balance them out by placing them next to each other. I printed them off in order to pair up the pages with a specific colour scheme. I feel as Matt agreed the magazine would have been beneficial maybe with text to invite the reader in, however I was very pleased with the work of the designer that I worked with, who showcased my idea of design well. • I could have been stricter with narrowing down the images. Overall when I saw the prints together with the magazine I was happy as I felt the prints I choose for the exhibition reflected well with the book, giving the viewer an inside into the magazine. I do feel that the prints could have maybe had a bit more saturation. After looking at my proposal which is in my blog, I feel I have achieved what I’ve suggested in there mostly with my idea of the magazine and the outcome of the design in relation to the photography. Reference • Behance.net. (2017). Behance. [online] Available at: https://www.behance.net/gallery/43070925/Singita-Lodge-Collateral [Accessed 2nd May 2017]. • D'Arcy, J. and D'Arcy, J. (2017). Ultimate dream job: The Aussie who sleeps in luxury hotels for a living. [online] Traveller. Available at: http://www.traveller.com.au/in-ben-with-blogger-rhiannon-taylor-stays-in-luxury-hotels-for-a-living-grtkhg [Accessed 13 May 2017]. • Howarth, D. (2017). "Kinfolk got a lot of traction right when we started". [online] Dezeen. Available at: https://www.dezeen.com/2016/03/02/kinfolk-magazine-interview-founder-editor-in-chief-nathan-williams-instagram/ [Accessed 13 May 2017].
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verdiprati · 8 years ago
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Upcoming performances by Sarah Connolly
[NOTE: this post is now out of date. Check the schedule tag on my blog for the most recent version of this list.]
After the jump: an unofficial schedule of Sarah Connolly’s future performances. Those of you in Britain may catch a performance in London, Brighton, Oxford, Worcester, Buxton, Deal, Lewes, or Effingham (Surrey). Those on the Continent may see her in Berlin, Paris, Vienna, Brussels, Barcelona, Rotterdam, Schwarzenberg, Vilabertran (near Figueres, Catalunya), or Città della Pieve (in the province of Perugia). Those of us on this side of the Atlantic can look forward to concert dates in New York, Chicago, San Francisco, Atlanta, and Lenox, Massachusetts. Plus! I am adding online broadcast details as they become available.
This is not an authoritative list. These are the upcoming performances by Sarah Connolly that I have been able to learn about from Connolly's website (not currently being updated), her agent's website (Askonas Holt), Operabase, Connolly's Twitter, and generally ferreting around the web.
Some of these listings are not yet officially confirmed; you should of course check official sources before making plans and be aware that cast changes and cancellations can happen at any time.
I have added links to venue, ticketing, and broadcast information where available. Tips on new information are always welcome! Please contact me via email (verdiprati [at] selveamene [dot] com), Tumblr messaging, or ask box (plain prose only in the ask box; anything with links or an email address will get eaten by Tumblr filters) with corrections or additions.
Berlioz, Les nuits d’été with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment at the Southbank Centre, London, February 20, 2017. Part of a Berlioz and Mendelssohn concert—formerly headlined “Sarah Connolly’s Berlioz,” now “Sarah Connolly’s Nights of Summer”—directed by Kati Debretzeni.
Rossini, Stabat Mater at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, Paris, March 2, 2017. Also starring Patricia Ciofi, Paolo Fanale, and Nahuel di Pierro. With the Orchestre National de France and the Chœur de Radio France conducted by James Gaffigan. Also on the program: Schubert’s Symphony No. 3. Update: although the TCE website still lists Connolly’s name as one of the soloists, the website for the orchestra (which is presumably responsible for the casting) has changed to list Varduhi Abrahamyan as the mezzo soloist.
[New details! Broadcast] This concert is scheduled for live broadcast on France Musique. France Musique keeps most but not all of their broadcasts online for catch-up listening for a few weeks after the original transmission; I can’t promise that this program will be available after the initial broadcast but it seems not unlikely.
[New details!] Recital at the Holywell Music Room, Oxford, March 6, 2016. Part of Connolly’s service as Oriel College's Visiting Musician for the 2016-17 academic year. Although the Oriel website does not mention Connolly’s accompanist nor the repertoire chosen for the recital, it would appear from Joseph Middleton’s website that the two of them will be performing the same works by Schumann, Mahler, Poulenc, Copland, and Richard Rodney Bennett programmed for their US tour (see the next three entries). 
Recital at Spivey Hall, Clayton State University, Atlanta, March 11, 2017. With Joseph Middleton. Works by Schumann, Mahler, Poulenc, Copland, and Richard Rodney Bennett. Broadcast possibility: many of the performances at Spivey Hall are recorded for deferred broadcast.
Recitals at the Park Avenue Armory in New York, March 15 and 17, 2017. With Joseph Middleton. The Armory website does not mention the repertoire, but presumably the recital program on both nights will be the same as Connolly and Middleton are performing together in Atlanta (above) and San Francisco (below). After-the-fact UPDATE: Berlioz’ Les nuits d’été was substituted for the Mahler Rückert-lieder in the New York performances (I don’t know why, but maybe the venue asked for something different).
Recital at the Herbst Theatre, San Francisco, March 23, 2017. With Joseph Middleton. Songs by Schumann, Mahler, Poulenc, Copland, and Richard Rodney Bennett. Special note: according to the San Francisco Performances season brochure (PDF link), this concert is available for sponsorship by a Concert Partner. For a donation of $750 or more, a Concert Partner receives benefits including tickets to the performance and an opportunity to meet the artist.
Mahler, Das Lied von der Erde with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Chicago, March 30, March 31, and April 1, 2017. With Stephen Gould [edited after the fact: Gould withdrew from the second and third performances due to illness and was replaced by Richard Cox]. Bernard Haitink James Conlon [PDF] conducts. In a program also containing Schubert’s Symphony No. 8 (previously listed as Haydn’s Symphony No. 60). 
Mahler, Symphony No. 8 “Symphony of a thousand” with the London Philharmonic Orchestra at the Royal Festival Hall, London, April 8, 2017. With Melanie Diener Judith Howarth, Anne Schwanewilms, Sofia Fomina, Patricia Bardon, Torsten Kerl Barry Banks, Matthias Goerne Stephen Gadd, Matthew Rose, the London Philharmonic Choir, and the Tiffin Boys’ Choir. Conducted by Vladimir Jurowski. UPDATE: As of April 6, Sarah Connolly has been replaced by Michaela Selinger.
[New details] Recital at Wigmore Hall, London, April 10, 2017. With Joseph Middleton. The recently-updated program features works by John Ireland, Frank Bridge, Gustav Holst, Benjamin Britten, and Sir Richard Rodney Bennett along with the first London performance of the Torsten Rasch song cycle A Welsh Night that Connolly and Middleton premiered at the Three Choirs Festival in 2015. In A Welsh Night, Rasch sets a collection of poems by the Welsh poet Alun Lewis; an orchestrated version of the songs will be premiered at the 2017 Three Choirs Festival, again with Connolly as the vocalist (see concert details below). UPDATE: As of April 7, Wigmore Hall has announced that Kitty Whately will step in for Sarah Connolly on Monday afternoon. As of this writing, the program details have been erased from the Wigmore website; presumably changes will be made, especially since the Rasch songs were written for Sarah Connolly and would not be in any other singer’s repertoire yet.
[Broadcast] As part of the BBC Radio 3 Lunchtime Concerts series, this recital will be broadcast live on BBC Radio 3.
Handel, Arias and Duets, Gala Concert of the Investec International Music Festival, St Theresa’s School, Effingham, Surrey, May 7, 2017. With Rosemary Joshua and The English Concert conducted by Harry Bicket.
[New!] Recital at the Brighton Festival, All Saints Church, Hove, May 11, 2017. With Joseph Middleton. Works by Schumann, Berlioz, Poulenc, Copland, and R. R. Bennett.
Brett Dean, Hamlet (Gertrude) at Glyndebourne, June 11 to July 6, 2017. Also starring Allan Clayton (Hamlet), Barbara Hannigan (Ophelia), Rod Gilfry (Claudius), Kim Begley (Polonius), and John Tomlinson (Ghost of Old Hamlet). With the London Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Vladimir Jurowski. Booking opens to the public on March 5, 2017.
[Livestream] The July 6 performance of Hamlet is scheduled for livestreaming to cinemas and online; the online stream will be free to watch. Hat tip to Avis Melodia for pointing this out in the Sarah Connolly fan group on Facebook.
Recital at Schubertiade Schwarzenberg, Austria, June 19, 2017. With Graham Johnson. Various works by Schubert, Brahms, and Wolf.
[New details!] Recital at the Deal Festival, St George’s Church, Deal, Kent, July 8, 2017. With Joseph Middleton in a program titled “Love and Life.”
Wagner, Das Rheingold (Fricka) at Tanglewood in Lenox, Massachusets, July 15, 2017. In a concert performance with the Boston Symphony Orchestra conducted by Andris Nelsons. Also starring Thomas J. Mayer (Wotan), Kim Begley (Loge), David Cangelosi (Mime), Jochen Schmeckenbecker (Alberich), Morris Robinson (Fasolt), Ain Anger (Fafner), Malin Christensson (Freia), Jacqueline Echols (Woglinde), Catherine Martin (Wellgunde), Renée Tatum (Flosshilde), Patricia Bardon (Erda), David Butt Philip (Froh), and Ryan McKinney (Donner).
[Broadcast: TBC] Although it is not yet on the broadcast schedule as of this writing, this Saturday night concert by the BSO will almost certainly be broadcast (and made available for listening on demand) by WGBH.
Recital at the Buxton Festival, Buxton, July 22, 2017. With Joseph Middleton. Songs by Schumann, Berlioz, Poulenc, Copland, and R. R. Bennett. (Thanks to an eagle-eyed Connolly fan for tipping me off to this listing!)
[New!] Solo performance in a fundraising concert for Common and Kind, Union Chapel, Islington, London, July 25, 2017. Mentioned passim in a Facebook post by the charity. Details TBA.
Torsten Rasch, A Welsh Night at the Three Choirs Festival, Worcester, July 26, 2017. In a concert with Strauss’s Metamorphosen and Janáček’s Glagolitic Mass. Conducted by Frank Beermann. A newly orchestrated version of Rasch’s song sequence A Welsh Night will be premiered at the 2017 Three Choirs Festival; Sarah Connolly performed the original version for mezzo-soprano and piano with Joseph Middleton at their 2015 Three Choirs recital.
Recital at Incontri in Terra di Siena [PDF link], Teatro degli Avvaloranti, Città della Pieve, Perugia, Italy, August 5, 2017. With accompanist Julius Drake. Program details TBC. Tickets go on sale April 1 and the festival website advises that “Booking is essential due to the limited number of seats.”
[New!] Recital at the Schubertíada Vilabertran, Vilabertran (near Figueres), Catalunya, August 24, 2017. With Malcolm Martineau. Songs by R. Strauss, Zemlinsky, Eisler, Korngold, Copland, and Britten. Broadcast possibility: many recitals from the 2015 Schubertíada Vilabertran, where Connolly made her festival debut, were broadcast either live or deferred on Catalunya Música; I’m hoping this recital from the 2017 festival will come up for broadcast, too.
[New!] Mahler, Symphony No. 2, “Resurrection,” with the Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin, September 20, 2017. Vladimir Jurowski conducts and Maria Bengtsson sings the soprano part. Also with the Rundfunkchor Berlin. Tickets go on sale July 17, 2017.
[Broadcast] No details yet, but the Deutschlandradio Kultur logo appears on the page under the phrase “Concert with,” so I am assuming the concert will be broadcast either live or deferred. 
Recital at Wigmore Hall, London, September 29, 2017. With Malcolm Martineau. Just the date is mentioned in the Wigmore Hall season brochure [PDF link], but thanks to an informant with access to a recent print mailing from the Wigmore, I can tell you that the program includes songs by Strauss, Zemlinsky, Eisler, Korngold, Copland, and Britten.
Mahler, Das Lied von der Erde at Kings Place, London, October 14, 2017. With Andrew Staples and the Aurora Orchestra conducted by Nicholas Collon. Das Lied will be played in an arrangement by Iain Farrington for sixteen instruments. This concert, oddly enough, is part of the orchestra’s “Mozart’s Piano” series, pairing Das Lied with Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 11.
[New! Details TBA] Participation in the Oxford Lieder Festival, Oxford, October 13-28. The theme for 2017 is “The Last of the Romantics—Mahler and Fin-de-Siècle Vienna.” I will update this list when I learn more about the details of Connolly’s participation.
[New!] Wagner, Tristan und Isolde (Brangäne) at the Gran Teatre del Liceu, Barcelona, November 28 and December 2, 4, 7, 10, 12, and 15, 2017. With Stefan Vinke (Tristan), Iréne Theorin (Isolde), Albert Dohmen (Marke), Greer Grimsley (Kurwenal), et al., in a production directed by Àlex Ollé. Musical direction by Josep Pons.
[New!] Handel, Ariodante (title role) at the Wiener Staatsoper, February 24 and 26 and March 1, 4, and 8, 2018. With Chen Reiss (Ginevra), Hila Fahima (Dalinda), Christphe Dumaux (Polinesso), and Rainer Trost (Lurcanio). The casting of the King of Scotland seems to be TBA. The production is directed by David McVicar and the music is supplied by Les Arts Florissants conducted by William Christie. 
[Livestream] The opera is scheduled for livestreaming on Sunday, March 4. There is a fee of €14 to watch the livestream.
[New!] Mahler, Symphony No. 8 “Symphony of a Thousand” at de Doelen, Rotterdam, March 23 and 25, 2018. With the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Yannick Nézet-Séguin. The other soloists are Angela Meade, Erin Wall, Lisette Oropesa, Mihoko Fujimura, Michael Schade, Markus Werba, and Christof Fischesser. On choral duty are the Groot Omroep Koor, Rotterdam Symphony Chorus, Orfeon Donostiarra, and Nationaal Kinderkoor.
[New!] Mahler, Symphony No. 8 “Symphony of a Thousand” at BOZAR Centre for Fine Arts, Brussels, March 24, 2018. With the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra; same details as the Rotterdam performances listed above. Broadcast possibility: this concert is part of the 2018 Klarafestival sponsored by the Klara radio station, so it seems like a good candidate for broadcast.
[Masterclasses] Teaching duties for the Britten-Pears Young Artist Programme at Snape Maltings in Aldeburgh, England, March 23-April 1, 2018. A course on Handel’s Theodora to be co-taught with conductor Christian Curnyn. Although this doesn’t really count as a performance by Sarah Connolly, I am adding it to my “unofficial schedule” of her work with the thought that fans who live in the area might want to attend some of the public masterclasses Sarah Connolly will be teaching or the culminating performance by young artists she will have coached. (Note that the first weekend of this program clashes with the Mahler 8 concerts in Rotterdam, above; it is possible the students will start out working with Christian Curnyn and will pick up with Sarah Connolly a few days into the program.) 
[New!] Wagner, Das Rheingold and Die Walküre (Fricka in both) at the Royal Opera, London, September 24 through October 28, 2018. A revival of Keith Warner’s Ring Cycle, with Antonio Pappano conducting. For cast and date details, see the ROH web pages linked above. 
Previous versions of this list can be found under the schedule tag on this blog. This version published on February 18, 2017. Edited February 23 to add the Rotterdam Mahler 8, Schubertíada Vilabertran, and the France Musique broadcast of the Rossini Stabat Mater. Edited February 26 to add the accompanist and repertoire for the Oriel recital. Edited February 28 to reflect Connolly’s replacement in the Rossini Stabat Mater. Edited March 9 to add the Oxford Lieder Festival. Edited March 10 to add the Liceu Tristan. Edited March 13 to add the Common and Kind fundraiser. Edited March 19 to update details for the Deal Festival. Edited March 20 to correct the list of composers represented in Connolly’s spring 2017 recital tour with Joseph Middleton. Edited March 22 to add the Brussels performance of Mahler 8. Edited March 24 to update the repertoire for the April 10 recital at the Wigmore and to tweak details of the Park Avenue Armory and Chicago Symphony Orchestra concerts. Edited April 4 to tweak the Chicago concert details and add a link to the BBC Radio 3 broadcast of the Wigmore Hall concert on April 10. Edited April 6 to reflect the casting changes for the LPO Mahler 8, to update the link for the Rasch piece at the Three Choirs Festival, and to add the Vienna Ariodante and the Covent Garden Ring Cycle. Edited April 7 to add the Mahler 2 in Berlin and to reflect Connolly’s withdrawal from the Wigmore Hall lunchtime recital on April 10. Edited April 8 to add program details for the September 29 recital at Wigmore Hall. I may continue to edit this list if I receive new information.
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anabelleevagelatos-blog · 6 years ago
Text
Reference List
Art Gallery NSW, n.d. Brett Whiteley. [online] Available at: https://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/collection/artists/whiteley-brett/ [Accessed 22 March 2019]
Barker, C 2012, Cultural Studies: Theory and Practice, 4th edn, Sage Publications, London
Bonney, G n.d,. Laura McCafferty. [online] Available at: https://www.designsponge.com/2006/10/laura-mccafferty.html [Accessed March 26 2019]
Callaghan, L n.d,. Panophobia. [online] Available at: https://www.lauracallaghanillustration.com/Panophobia [Accessed March 26 2019]
Cherry, K 2018. What is the unconscious?. [online] Available at: https://www.verywellmind.com/what-is-the-unconscious-2796004 [Accessed 24 March 2019]
Cox, W 2018 Airborne Chocolate Mousse and French Resistance Mayonnaise: Artist Mirka Mora and her Culinary Legacy. [online] Available at: https://www.broadsheet.com.au/melbourne/art-and-design/article/airborne-chocolate-mousse-and-french-resistance-mayonnaise-artist-mirka-mora-and-her-culinary-legacy [Accessed March 26 2019]
Dulaney, E 2017, ‘Who am I and how often?: Variation in Self essentialism beliefs, cognitive style and well being’ , Personality and Individual Differences, Vol. 136, p. 148 – 150
Glavaneău, V 2014 ‘Creativity, identity and representation: Towards a socio cultural theory of creative identity’, New ideas in psychology, Vol. 34, p. 12-21
Genius, 2013. Feels Giraffage. [online] Available at: https://genius.com/Giraffage-feels-lyrics [Accessed 22 March 2019]
Howarth, S 2015. Marcel Duchaump The Fountain. [online] Available at: https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/duchamp-fountain-t07573 [Accessed: 23 March 2019]
Kadlac, A 2017 ‘The Challenge of Authenticity: Enhancement and Accurate Self Presentation’, Journal of applied philosophy, Vol.34, p.790 – 808
Karipoff, V 2018. The Making of Mirka. [online] Available At: https://artguide.com.au/the-making-of-mirka [Accessed March 27 2019]
Landy, J 2018. Fractured Identities. [online] Available at: https://www.philosophytalk.org/blog/fractured-identities [Accessed 24 March]
McCafferty, L n.d,. About Laura McCafferty. [online] Available at: https://lauramccafferty.weebly.com/about.html [Accessed March 26 2019]
MrSuicideSheep 2012, Giraffage – Feels, online video, 6 June, MrSuicideSheep, viewed 22 March 2019, <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FAs4wXY6P4I>
Museum of Contemporary Art, 2013. A Room Without a View, 2013 [online] Available at: https://www.mca.com.au/artists-works/works/2016.14A-I/ [Accessed March 25 2019]
O’Brien, D n.d,. The Epistemology of perception, [online] Available at: https://www.iep.utm.edu/epis-per/ [Accessed 25 March 2019]
Polly, N 2017. Be you but better. [online] Available at: https://www.pollynor.com/Be-You-But-Better [Accessed 24 March]
Sayej, N 2019. ‘The world looked different to him’: Charles White’s black America. [online] Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2019/mar/01/the-world-looked-different-to-him-charles-whites-black-america [Accessed: 23 March 2019]
Tauber, A 2013 ‘Philosophy, Psychiatry and Psychology’, FREUD WITHOUT OEDIPUS: The cognitive unconscious, Vol.20, p.231-241
Wlodarczack, G n,d. Gosia Wlodarczack Statement [online] Available at: http://www.gosiawlodarczak.com/Pages/Statement.html [Accessed March 25 2019]
WOW, 2018. Giovanni Forlino - accessible to the Masses – Artist Profile. [online] Available at: https://wowxwow.com/artist-profile/giovanni-forlino-ap [Accessed 24 March]
Yacobi, B 2012. The limits of Authenticity. [online] Available at: https://philosophynow.org/issues/92/The_Limits_of_Authenticity [Accessed 24 March 2019]
0 notes
khanguadalupe · 8 years ago
Text
Michigan State University College of Law Ranks Number One
We’re all familiar with Michigan State University’s athletic prowess. As a Notre Dame graduate, I’ve seen on TV any number of football losses at East Lansing. Basketball Coach Tom Izzo has kept the Spartans near the top nationally for what seems like twenty years.
Michigan State’s Law School though, which I am sure has received national recognition in the past, has not been discussed historically with the likes of Harvard, Yale, Stanford and Michigan.
No longer. The Spartans are getting known, and known in a big way for their law graduates who have harnessed the power of the Internet to learn, to network and to build a name for themselves.
Law firms and other organizations are seeking out Michigan State grads because of what they have learned on the innovation and technology front – and in a good number of cases seeking out particular law students and offering them jobs.
You got it. Students and law grads being offered jobs by companies and firms seeking them out. Not students and grads applying for jobs as is the customary way students are taught it’s done.
What happened?
The law school recognized what the rest of the country knew. The Internet was a powerful tool for learning and networking – and that everyone and their brother was using it. Why not a law school’s students?
First there was ReInvent Law (video channel in absence of site) launched by then Michigan State Law professors, Dan Katz and Renee Knake. When you put on conferences featuring legal innovators in Chicago, Palo Alto, New York City and London, folks take notice. Especially when you’re selling out large venues packed with practicing lawyers, legal tech executives, law students and law professors.
Then Dan Linna left nine years of large law practice to become Assistant Dean for Career Development and a professor at MSU Law, along with serving as an adjunct professor at the University of Michigan Law School.
Without putting words in Linna’s mouth, he saw what was bubbling up at MSU Law. An opportunity to expand the curriculum to include the business of law in ways not taught before – the use of technology, innovation, project management and lean business processes to change the way legal services are delivered by major law firms.
You add guys such as Ken Grady as an adjunct professor and now a full time professor, and you have a real force. Grady, who’s known internationally, in large part through blogging and social media, for transformation in legal and has worked as general counsel, large law partner and CEO of SeyfarthLean.
About this time MSU Law students started using the Internet. Blogging, Twitter, LinkedIn, About.me and Facebook, all on professional matters. These kids were bringing it.
So much so that MSU Law students starting citing my blog and sharing items I posted to Twitter. As a result, I heard them and got to know them – from 2,000 miles away. I started spreading the word, online and offline. Other influencers did the same.
These students invited me back to East Lansing to share my thoughts on blogging and social media – as well as to judge a social media contest the law school was conducting for students.
I went. What an incredible afternoon, I was welcomed and introduced by then Dean, Joan Howarth.
I discovered that social media and blogging was not only taught at the law school, but that students needed to use what they learned over a semester or more. The contest was an opportunity to share the results – not just a beauty contest with followers, but in internships gained and invitations to speak in San Francisco.
I asked Dean Howarth, “Why? How?” She said what else was she to do, stand by and watch what was happening to law grads and law students. Howarth, who had yet develop her Facebook prowess (came with her attending a day long MSU Law social media bootcamp), empowered change and the use of social media – as a gift to the law school and its students – whether she knew it or not.
I was at a legal technology meetup earlier this year when a lawyer heard me talking about Michigan State’s tech, innovation and social media bent. He said that his firm, a large one, looks for Michigan State grads because of exactly that.
More powerful than MSU Law’s reputation, or maybe the cause of its reputation, is its students’ use of social media itself.
Pat Ellis, who graduated two or three years ago, landed a job on graduation at the second largest law firm in Detroit because of his blogging and social media use. He quit after a year when the firm did not walk the talk of bringing efficiencies and project management to the delivery of legal services.
Someone suggested to Ellis on Twitter that he apply for a position with the general counsel’s office at General Motors. Craig Glidden, a leader in managing complex legal issues around the world had been named General Counsel and for Ellis, it would be a great learning and support opportunity. He got the job.
I met Ellis on Twitter, as then, @spartylegal, and via his blogging. I had the pleasure of joining him in a presentation to MSU Law students, with Dean Howarth and faculty attending.
Ellis advised students that what they thought was important no longer was. A tier one law school, top grades and law review were no longer what separated you from others. The Internet enabled students to blog, with posts seen in a day by a law professor across the country, versus never for a law review article. Social media democratized things for the little guy. Opportunities awaited, per Ellis.
Ellis is not alone.
Irene Mo, a recent MSU Law graduate took innovation classes, participated in blogging and social media bootcamps at the school and served as an innovation assistant for the school’s LegalRnD program.
She’s now an ABA Innovation Fellow developing tools to reduce privacy and data security risks for low-income people. An associate position at a leading Chicago privacy and security law firm awaits – this based on MO’s Twitter exchanges with the managing partner.
Samir Patel came to MSU Law planning to be a sports agent – and why not, with the Spartan’s athletic prowess. But he attended a MSU Law social media bootcamp.
One thing led to another and Patel was clerking for a leading blockchain law firm in London because of identifying a niche he could get after with Twitter and blogging – the use of blockchain in professional athletes’ contracts. Patel didn’t ask for the clerkship, the firm asked him on Twitter.
Then, it turned out that someone Patel was interacting with on Twitter was a practice group lead at Holland & Knight. Patel, who just graduated, is joining Holland & Knight in Miami as a result.
Linna has brought real structure to it all launching, two years ago, LegalRnD, MSU Law’s Center for Legal Services Innovation.
LegalRnD is dedicated to improving legal-service delivery and access across the legal industry. It accomplishes this through research and development of efficient, high-quality legal-service delivery tools and systems — heavily relying on the net and social media/blogging for learning and networking.
LegalRnD brings together professionals from a broad range of disciplines. Students are trained in established business concepts and study them with partners, including: legal aid organizations, solo practitioners, corporate legal departments, law firms, courts, and entire justice systems.
Its curriculam, harnessing the powers of networking through the net via blogging and social media, covers:
Artificial intelligence & law
Delivering legal services, the new landscape
Quantitative analysis for lawyers
Information privacy and security
Litigation data and process
Entrepreneurial lawyering
Young people choose law schools for a whole lot of reasons. Usually based on the school’s name and rank.
If I am looking to understand what’s possible, achieve extraordinary things and have employers ask me if I want to work for them in areas of interest to me — all because I’ve learned to used the Internet to learn, network and build a name I’m looking for a law school which can deliver on that front.
MSU Law ranks number one in that poll.
Michigan State University College of Law Ranks Number One published first on http://fergusonlawatty.tumblr.com
0 notes
jimgsimon · 8 years ago
Text
Michigan State University College of Law Ranks Number One
We’re all familiar with Michigan State University’s athletic prowess. As a Notre Dame graduate, I’ve seen on TV any number of football losses at East Lansing. Basketball Coach Tom Izzo has kept the Spartans near the top nationally for what seems like twenty years.
Michigan State’s Law School though, which I am sure has received national recognition in the past, has not been discussed historically with the likes of Harvard, Yale, Stanford and Michigan.
No longer. The Spartans are getting known, and known in a big way for their law graduates who have harnessed the power of the Internet to learn, to network and to build a name for themselves.
Law firms and other organizations are seeking out Michigan State grads because of what they have learned on the innovation and technology front – and in a good number of cases seeking out particular law students and offering them jobs.
You got it. Students and law grads being offered jobs by companies and firms seeking them out. Not students and grads applying for jobs as is the customary way students are taught it’s done.
What happened?
The law school recognized what the rest of the country knew. The Internet was a powerful tool for learning and networking – and that everyone and their brother was using it. Why not a law school’s students?
First there was ReInvent Law (video channel in absence of site) launched by then Michigan State Law professors, Dan Katz and Renee Knake. When you put on conferences featuring legal innovators in Chicago, Palo Alto, New York City and London, folks take notice. Especially when you’re selling out large venues packed with practicing lawyers, legal tech executives, law students and law professors.
Then Dan Linna left nine years of large law practice to become Assistant Dean for Career Development and a professor at MSU Law, along with serving as an adjunct professor at the University of Michigan Law School.
Without putting words in Linna’s mouth, he saw what was bubbling up at MSU Law. An opportunity to expand the curriculum to include the business of law in ways not taught before – the use of technology, innovation, project management and lean business processes to change the way legal services are delivered by major law firms.
You add guys such as Ken Grady as an adjunct professor and now a full time professor, and you have a real force. Grady, who’s known internationally, in large part through blogging and social media, for transformation in legal and has worked as general counsel, large law partner and CEO of SeyfarthLean.
About this time MSU Law students started using the Internet. Blogging, Twitter, LinkedIn, About.me and Facebook, all on professional matters. These kids were bringing it.
So much so that MSU Law students starting citing my blog and sharing items I posted to Twitter. As a result, I heard them and got to know them – from 2,000 miles away. I started spreading the word, online and offline. Other influencers did the same.
These students invited me back to East Lansing to share my thoughts on blogging and social media – as well as to judge a social media contest the law school was conducting for students.
I went. What an incredible afternoon, I was welcomed and introduced by then Dean, Joan Howarth.
I discovered that social media and blogging was not only taught at the law school, but that students needed to use what they learned over a semester or more. The contest was an opportunity to share the results – not just a beauty contest with followers, but in internships gained and invitations to speak in San Francisco.
I asked Dean Howarth, “Why? How?” She said what else was she to do, stand by and watch what was happening to law grads and law students. Howarth, who had yet develop her Facebook prowess (came with her attending a day long MSU Law social media bootcamp), empowered change and the use of social media – as a gift to the law school and its students – whether she knew it or not.
I was at a legal technology meetup earlier this year when a lawyer heard me talking about Michigan State’s tech, innovation and social media bent. He said that his firm, a large one, looks for Michigan State grads because of exactly that.
More powerful than MSU Law’s reputation, or maybe the cause of its reputation, is its students’ use of social media itself.
Pat Ellis, who graduated two or three years ago, landed a job on graduation at the second largest law firm in Detroit because of his blogging and social media use. He quit after a year when the firm did not walk the talk of bringing efficiencies and project management to the delivery of legal services.
Someone suggested to Ellis on Twitter that he apply for a position with the general counsel’s office at General Motors. Craig Glidden, a leader in managing complex legal issues around the world had been named General Counsel and for Ellis, it would be a great learning and support opportunity. He got the job.
I met Ellis on Twitter, as then, @spartylegal, and via his blogging. I had the pleasure of joining him in a presentation to MSU Law students, with Dean Howarth and faculty attending.
Ellis advised students that what they thought was important no longer was. A tier one law school, top grades and law review were no longer what separated you from others. The Internet enabled students to blog, with posts seen in a day by a law professor across the country, versus never for a law review article. Social media democratized things for the little guy. Opportunities awaited, per Ellis.
Ellis is not alone.
Irene Mo, a recent MSU Law graduate took innovation classes, participated in blogging and social media bootcamps at the school and served as an innovation assistant for the school’s LegalRnD program.
She’s now an ABA Innovation Fellow developing tools to reduce privacy and data security risks for low-income people. An associate position at a leading Chicago privacy and security law firm awaits – this based on MO’s Twitter exchanges with the managing partner.
Samir Patel came to MSU Law planning to be a sports agent – and why not, with the Spartan’s athletic prowess. But he attended a MSU Law social media bootcamp.
One thing led to another and Patel was clerking for a leading blockchain law firm in London because of identifying a niche he could get after with Twitter and blogging – the use of blockchain in professional athletes’ contracts. Patel didn’t ask for the clerkship, the firm asked him on Twitter.
Then, it turned out that someone Patel was interacting with on Twitter was a practice group lead at Holland & Knight. Patel, who just graduated, is joining Holland & Knight in Miami as a result.
Linna has brought real structure to it all launching, two years ago, LegalRnD, MSU Law’s Center for Legal Services Innovation.
LegalRnD is dedicated to improving legal-service delivery and access across the legal industry. It accomplishes this through research and development of efficient, high-quality legal-service delivery tools and systems — heavily relying on the net and social media/blogging for learning and networking.
LegalRnD brings together professionals from a broad range of disciplines. Students are trained in established business concepts and study them with partners, including: legal aid organizations, solo practitioners, corporate legal departments, law firms, courts, and entire justice systems.
Its curriculam, harnessing the powers of networking through the net via blogging and social media, covers:
Artificial intelligence & law
Delivering legal services, the new landscape
Quantitative analysis for lawyers
Information privacy and security
Litigation data and process
Entrepreneurial lawyering
Young people choose law schools for a whole lot of reasons. Usually based on the school’s name and rank.
If I am looking to understand what’s possible, achieve extraordinary things and have employers ask me if I want to work for them in areas of interest to me — all because I’ve learned to used the Internet to learn, network and build a name I’m looking for a law school which can deliver on that front.
MSU Law ranks number one in that poll.
0 notes
michaelmfergusonusa · 8 years ago
Text
Michigan State University College of Law Ranks Number One
We’re all familiar with Michigan State University’s athletic prowess. As a Notre Dame graduate, I’ve seen on TV any number of football losses at East Lansing. Basketball Coach Tom Izzo has kept the Spartans near the top nationally for what seems like twenty years.
Michigan State’s Law School though, which I am sure has received national recognition in the past, has not been discussed historically with the likes of Harvard, Yale, Stanford and Michigan.
No longer. The Spartans are getting known, and known in a big way for their law graduates who have harnessed the power of the Internet to learn, to network and to build a name for themselves.
Law firms and other organizations are seeking out Michigan State grads because of what they have learned on the innovation and technology front – and in a good number of cases seeking out particular law students and offering them jobs.
You got it. Students and law grads being offered jobs by companies and firms seeking them out. Not students and grads applying for jobs as is the customary way students are taught it’s done.
What happened?
The law school recognized what the rest of the country knew. The Internet was a powerful tool for learning and networking – and that everyone and their brother was using it. Why not a law school’s students?
First there was ReInvent Law (video channel in absence of site) launched by then Michigan State Law professors, Dan Katz and Renee Knake. When you put on conferences featuring legal innovators in Chicago, Palo Alto, New York City and London, folks take notice. Especially when you’re selling out large venues packed with practicing lawyers, legal tech executives, law students and law professors.
Then Dan Linna left nine years of large law practice to become Assistant Dean for Career Development and a professor at MSU Law, along with serving as an adjunct professor at the University of Michigan Law School.
Without putting words in Linna’s mouth, he saw what was bubbling up at MSU Law. An opportunity to expand the curriculum to include the business of law in ways not taught before – the use of technology, innovation, project management and lean business processes to change the way legal services are delivered by major law firms.
You add guys such as Ken Grady as an adjunct professor and now a full time professor, and you have a real force. Grady, who’s known internationally, in large part through blogging and social media, for transformation in legal and has worked as general counsel, large law partner and CEO of SeyfarthLean.
About this time MSU Law students started using the Internet. Blogging, Twitter, LinkedIn, About.me and Facebook, all on professional matters. These kids were bringing it.
So much so that MSU Law students starting citing my blog and sharing items I posted to Twitter. As a result, I heard them and got to know them – from 2,000 miles away. I started spreading the word, online and offline. Other influencers did the same.
These students invited me back to East Lansing to share my thoughts on blogging and social media – as well as to judge a social media contest the law school was conducting for students.
I went. What an incredible afternoon, I was welcomed and introduced by then Dean, Joan Howarth.
I discovered that social media and blogging was not only taught at the law school, but that students needed to use what they learned over a semester or more. The contest was an opportunity to share the results – not just a beauty contest with followers, but in internships gained and invitations to speak in San Francisco.
I asked Dean Howarth, “Why? How?” She said what else was she to do, stand by and watch what was happening to law grads and law students. Howarth, who had yet develop her Facebook prowess (came with her attending a day long MSU Law social media bootcamp), empowered change and the use of social media – as a gift to the law school and its students – whether she knew it or not.
I was at a legal technology meetup earlier this year when a lawyer heard me talking about Michigan State’s tech, innovation and social media bent. He said that his firm, a large one, looks for Michigan State grads because of exactly that.
More powerful than MSU Law’s reputation, or maybe the cause of its reputation, is its students’ use of social media itself.
Pat Ellis, who graduated two or three years ago, landed a job on graduation at the second largest law firm in Detroit because of his blogging and social media use. He quit after a year when the firm did not walk the talk of bringing efficiencies and project management to the delivery of legal services.
Someone suggested to Ellis on Twitter that he apply for a position with the general counsel’s office at General Motors. Craig Glidden, a leader in managing complex legal issues around the world had been named General Counsel and for Ellis, it would be a great learning and support opportunity. He got the job.
I met Ellis on Twitter, as then, @spartylegal, and via his blogging. I had the pleasure of joining him in a presentation to MSU Law students, with Dean Howarth and faculty attending.
Ellis advised students that what they thought was important no longer was. A tier one law school, top grades and law review were no longer what separated you from others. The Internet enabled students to blog, with posts seen in a day by a law professor across the country, versus never for a law review article. Social media democratized things for the little guy. Opportunities awaited, per Ellis.
Ellis is not alone.
Irene Mo, a recent MSU Law graduate took innovation classes, participated in blogging and social media bootcamps at the school and served as an innovation assistant for the school’s LegalRnD program.
She’s now an ABA Innovation Fellow developing tools to reduce privacy and data security risks for low-income people. An associate position at a leading Chicago privacy and security law firm awaits – this based on MO’s Twitter exchanges with the managing partner.
Samir Patel came to MSU Law planning to be a sports agent – and why not, with the Spartan’s athletic prowess. But he attended a MSU Law social media bootcamp.
One thing led to another and Patel was clerking for a leading blockchain law firm in London because of identifying a niche he could get after with Twitter and blogging – the use of blockchain in professional athletes’ contracts. Patel didn’t ask for the clerkship, the firm asked him on Twitter.
Then, it turned out that someone Patel was interacting with on Twitter was a practice group lead at Holland & Knight. Patel, who just graduated, is joining Holland & Knight in Miami as a result.
Linna has brought real structure to it all launching, two years ago, LegalRnD, MSU Law’s Center for Legal Services Innovation.
LegalRnD is dedicated to improving legal-service delivery and access across the legal industry. It accomplishes this through research and development of efficient, high-quality legal-service delivery tools and systems — heavily relying on the net and social media/blogging for learning and networking.
LegalRnD brings together professionals from a broad range of disciplines. Students are trained in established business concepts and study them with partners, including: legal aid organizations, solo practitioners, corporate legal departments, law firms, courts, and entire justice systems.
Its curriculam, harnessing the powers of networking through the net via blogging and social media, covers:
Artificial intelligence & law
Delivering legal services, the new landscape
Quantitative analysis for lawyers
Information privacy and security
Litigation data and process
Entrepreneurial lawyering
Young people choose law schools for a whole lot of reasons. Usually based on the school’s name and rank.
If I am looking to understand what’s possible, achieve extraordinary things and have employers ask me if I want to work for them in areas of interest to me — all because I’ve learned to used the Internet to learn, network and build a name I’m looking for a law school which can deliver on that front.
MSU Law ranks number one in that poll.
0 notes
antonioriley · 8 years ago
Text
Michigan State University College of Law Ranks Number One
We’re all familiar with Michigan State University’s athletic prowess. As a Notre Dame graduate, I’ve seen on TV any number of football losses at East Lansing. Basketball Coach Tom Izzo has kept the Spartans near the top nationally for what seems like twenty years.
Michigan State’s Law School though, which I am sure has received national recognition in the past, has not been discussed historically with the likes of Harvard, Yale, Stanford and Michigan.
No longer. The Spartans are getting known, and known in a big way for their law graduates who have harnessed the power of the Internet to learn, to network and to build a name for themselves.
Law firms and other organizations are seeking out Michigan State grads because of what they have learned on the innovation and technology front – and in a good number of cases seeking out particular law students and offering them jobs.
You got it. Students and law grads being offered jobs by companies and firms seeking them out. Not students and grads applying for jobs as is the customary way students are taught it’s done.
What happened?
The law school recognized what the rest of the country knew. The Internet was a powerful tool for learning and networking – and that everyone and their brother was using it. Why not a law school’s students?
First there was ReInvent Law (video channel in absence of site) launched by then Michigan State Law professors, Dan Katz and Renee Knake. When you put on conferences featuring legal innovators in Chicago, Palo Alto, New York City and London, folks take notice. Especially when you’re selling out large venues packed with practicing lawyers, legal tech executives, law students and law professors.
Then Dan Linna left nine years of large law practice to become Assistant Dean for Career Development and a professor at MSU Law, along with serving as an adjunct professor at the University of Michigan Law School.
Without putting words in Linna’s mouth, he saw what was bubbling up at MSU Law. An opportunity to expand the curriculum to include the business of law in ways not taught before – the use of technology, innovation, project management and lean business processes to change the way legal services are delivered by major law firms.
You add guys such as Ken Grady as an adjunct professor and now a full time professor, and you have a real force. Grady, who’s known internationally, in large part through blogging and social media, for transformation in legal and has worked as general counsel, large law partner and CEO of SeyfarthLean.
About this time MSU Law students started using the Internet. Blogging, Twitter, LinkedIn, About.me and Facebook, all on professional matters. These kids were bringing it.
So much so that MSU Law students starting citing my blog and sharing items I posted to Twitter. As a result, I heard them and got to know them – from 2,000 miles away. I started spreading the word, online and offline. Other influencers did the same.
These students invited me back to East Lansing to share my thoughts on blogging and social media – as well as to judge a social media contest the law school was conducting for students.
I went. What an incredible afternoon, I was welcomed and introduced by then Dean, Joan Howarth.
I discovered that social media and blogging was not only taught at the law school, but that students needed to use what they learned over a semester or more. The contest was an opportunity to share the results – not just a beauty contest with followers, but in internships gained and invitations to speak in San Francisco.
I asked Dean Howarth, “Why? How?” She said what else was she to do, stand by and watch what was happening to law grads and law students. Howarth, who had yet develop her Facebook prowess (came with her attending a day long MSU Law social media bootcamp), empowered change and the use of social media – as a gift to the law school and its students – whether she knew it or not.
I was at a legal technology meetup earlier this year when a lawyer heard me talking about Michigan State’s tech, innovation and social media bent. He said that his firm, a large one, looks for Michigan State grads because of exactly that.
More powerful than MSU Law’s reputation, or maybe the cause of its reputation, is its students’ use of social media itself.
Pat Ellis, who graduated two or three years ago, landed a job on graduation at the second largest law firm in Detroit because of his blogging and social media use. He quit after a year when the firm did not walk the talk of bringing efficiencies and project management to the delivery of legal services.
Someone suggested to Ellis on Twitter that he apply for a position with the general counsel’s office at General Motors. Craig Glidden, a leader in managing complex legal issues around the world had been named General Counsel and for Ellis, it would be a great learning and support opportunity. He got the job.
I met Ellis on Twitter, as then, @spartylegal, and via his blogging. I had the pleasure of joining him in a presentation to MSU Law students, with Dean Howarth and faculty attending.
Ellis advised students that what they thought was important no longer was. A tier one law school, top grades and law review were no longer what separated you from others. The Internet enabled students to blog, with posts seen in a day by a law professor across the country, versus never for a law review article. Social media democratized things for the little guy. Opportunities awaited, per Ellis.
Ellis is not alone.
Irene Mo, a recent MSU Law graduate took innovation classes, participated in blogging and social media bootcamps at the school and served as an innovation assistant for the school’s LegalRnD program.
She’s now an ABA Innovation Fellow developing tools to reduce privacy and data security risks for low-income people. An associate position at a leading Chicago privacy and security law firm awaits – this based on MO’s Twitter exchanges with the managing partner.
Samir Patel came to MSU Law planning to be a sports agent – and why not, with the Spartan’s athletic prowess. But he attended a MSU Law social media bootcamp.
One thing led to another and Patel was clerking for a leading blockchain law firm in London because of identifying a niche he could get after with Twitter and blogging – the use of blockchain in professional athletes’ contracts. Patel didn’t ask for the clerkship, the firm asked him on Twitter.
Then, it turned out that someone Patel was interacting with on Twitter was a practice group lead at Holland & Knight. Patel, who just graduated, is joining Holland & Knight in Miami as a result.
Linna has brought real structure to it all launching, two years ago, LegalRnD, MSU Law’s Center for Legal Services Innovation.
LegalRnD is dedicated to improving legal-service delivery and access across the legal industry. It accomplishes this through research and development of efficient, high-quality legal-service delivery tools and systems — heavily relying on the net and social media/blogging for learning and networking.
LegalRnD brings together professionals from a broad range of disciplines. Students are trained in established business concepts and study them with partners, including: legal aid organizations, solo practitioners, corporate legal departments, law firms, courts, and entire justice systems.
Its curriculam, harnessing the powers of networking through the net via blogging and social media, covers:
Artificial intelligence & law
Delivering legal services, the new landscape
Quantitative analysis for lawyers
Information privacy and security
Litigation data and process
Entrepreneurial lawyering
Young people choose law schools for a whole lot of reasons. Usually based on the school’s name and rank.
If I am looking to understand what’s possible, achieve extraordinary things and have employers ask me if I want to work for them in areas of interest to me — all because I’ve learned to used the Internet to learn, network and build a name I’m looking for a law school which can deliver on that front.
MSU Law ranks number one in that poll.
Michigan State University College of Law Ranks Number One published first on http://personalinjuryattorneyphiladelph.tumblr.com/
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tyronearmstrong · 8 years ago
Text
Michigan State University College of Law Ranks Number One
We’re all familiar with Michigan State University’s athletic prowess. As a Notre Dame graduate, I’ve seen on TV any number of football losses at East Lansing. Basketball Coach Tom Izzo has kept the Spartans near the top nationally for what seems like twenty years.
Michigan State’s Law School though, which I am sure has received national recognition in the past, has not been discussed historically with the likes of Harvard, Yale, Stanford and Michigan.
No longer. The Spartans are getting known, and known in a big way for their law graduates who have harnessed the power of the Internet to learn, to network and to build a name for themselves.
Law firms and other organizations are seeking out Michigan State grads because of what they have learned on the innovation and technology front – and in a good number of cases seeking out particular law students and offering them jobs.
You got it. Students and law grads being offered jobs by companies and firms seeking them out. Not students and grads applying for jobs as is the customary way students are taught it’s done.
What happened?
The law school recognized what the rest of the country knew. The Internet was a powerful tool for learning and networking – and that everyone and their brother was using it. Why not a law school’s students?
First there was ReInvent Law (video channel in absence of site) launched by then Michigan State Law professors, Dan Katz and Renee Knake. When you put on conferences featuring legal innovators in Chicago, Palo Alto, New York City and London, folks take notice. Especially when you’re selling out large venues packed with practicing lawyers, legal tech executives, law students and law professors.
Then Dan Linna left nine years of large law practice to become Assistant Dean for Career Development and a professor at MSU Law, along with serving as an adjunct professor at the University of Michigan Law School.
Without putting words in Linna’s mouth, he saw what was bubbling up at MSU Law. An opportunity to expand the curriculum to include the business of law in ways not taught before – the use of technology, innovation, project management and lean business processes to change the way legal services are delivered by major law firms.
You add guys such as Ken Grady as an adjunct professor and now a full time professor, and you have a real force. Grady, who’s known internationally, in large part through blogging and social media, for transformation in legal and has worked as general counsel, large law partner and CEO of SeyfarthLean.
About this time MSU Law students started using the Internet. Blogging, Twitter, LinkedIn, About.me and Facebook, all on professional matters. These kids were bringing it.
So much so that MSU Law students starting citing my blog and sharing items I posted to Twitter. As a result, I heard them and got to know them – from 2,000 miles away. I started spreading the word, online and offline. Other influencers did the same.
These students invited me back to East Lansing to share my thoughts on blogging and social media – as well as to judge a social media contest the law school was conducting for students.
I went. What an incredible afternoon, I was welcomed and introduced by then Dean, Joan Howarth.
I discovered that social media and blogging was not only taught at the law school, but that students needed to use what they learned over a semester or more. The contest was an opportunity to share the results – not just a beauty contest with followers, but in internships gained and invitations to speak in San Francisco.
I asked Dean Howarth, “Why? How?” She said what else was she to do, stand by and watch what was happening to law grads and law students. Howarth, who had yet develop her Facebook prowess (came with her attending a day long MSU Law social media bootcamp), empowered change and the use of social media – as a gift to the law school and its students – whether she knew it or not.
I was at a legal technology meetup earlier this year when a lawyer heard me talking about Michigan State’s tech, innovation and social media bent. He said that his firm, a large one, looks for Michigan State grads because of exactly that.
More powerful than MSU Law’s reputation, or maybe the cause of its reputation, is its students’ use of social media itself.
Pat Ellis, who graduated two or three years ago, landed a job on graduation at the second largest law firm in Detroit because of his blogging and social media use. He quit after a year when the firm did not walk the talk of bringing efficiencies and project management to the delivery of legal services.
Someone suggested to Ellis on Twitter that he apply for a position with the general counsel’s office at General Motors. Craig Glidden, a leader in managing complex legal issues around the world had been named General Counsel and for Ellis, it would be a great learning and support opportunity. He got the job.
I met Ellis on Twitter, as then, @spartylegal, and via his blogging. I had the pleasure of joining him in a presentation to MSU Law students, with Dean Howarth and faculty attending.
Ellis advised students that what they thought was important no longer was. A tier one law school, top grades and law review were no longer what separated you from others. The Internet enabled students to blog, with posts seen in a day by a law professor across the country, versus never for a law review article. Social media democratized things for the little guy. Opportunities awaited, per Ellis.
Ellis is not alone.
Irene Mo, a recent MSU Law graduate took innovation classes, participated in blogging and social media bootcamps at the school and served as an innovation assistant for the school’s LegalRnD program.
She’s now an ABA Innovation Fellow developing tools to reduce privacy and data security risks for low-income people. An associate position at a leading Chicago privacy and security law firm awaits – this based on MO’s Twitter exchanges with the managing partner.
Samir Patel came to MSU Law planning to be a sports agent – and why not, with the Spartan’s athletic prowess. But he attended a MSU Law social media bootcamp.
One thing led to another and Patel was clerking for a leading blockchain law firm in London because of identifying a niche he could get after with Twitter and blogging – the use of blockchain in professional athletes’ contracts. Patel didn’t ask for the clerkship, the firm asked him on Twitter.
Then, it turned out that someone Patel was interacting with on Twitter was a practice group lead at Holland & Knight. Patel, who just graduated, is joining Holland & Knight in Miami as a result.
Linna has brought real structure to it all launching, two years ago, LegalRnD, MSU Law’s Center for Legal Services Innovation.
LegalRnD is dedicated to improving legal-service delivery and access across the legal industry. It accomplishes this through research and development of efficient, high-quality legal-service delivery tools and systems — heavily relying on the net and social media/blogging for learning and networking.
LegalRnD brings together professionals from a broad range of disciplines. Students are trained in established business concepts and study them with partners, including: legal aid organizations, solo practitioners, corporate legal departments, law firms, courts, and entire justice systems.
Its curriculam, harnessing the powers of networking through the net via blogging and social media, covers:
Artificial intelligence & law
Delivering legal services, the new landscape
Quantitative analysis for lawyers
Information privacy and security
Litigation data and process
Entrepreneurial lawyering
Young people choose law schools for a whole lot of reasons. Usually based on the school’s name and rank.
If I am looking to understand what’s possible, achieve extraordinary things and have employers ask me if I want to work for them in areas of interest to me — all because I’ve learned to used the Internet to learn, network and build a name I’m looking for a law school which can deliver on that front.
MSU Law ranks number one in that poll.
Michigan State University College of Law Ranks Number One published first on https://personalinjuryattorneyphiladelphiablog.wordpress.com/
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howarthoflondon-blog · 13 years ago
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We have moved!
You can now find our full blog over on Wordpress!
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All our articles have been transferred across so you won't miss anything!
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