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Arts Festival Showcases Artistic Talent of YU's Aspiring Actors, Musicians, Artists, and Writers

Mar 27, 2008 -- From the harmonica and Italian Baroque music, to the basics of photography and Yiddish film, this year’s Yeshiva University Arts Festival gathered the top artistic talent among Stern College, Yeshiva College, and Sy Syms students in a diverse showcase of talent in April. “The arts festival brought together student artwork and creative events to enliven the undergraduate campuses with a sense of creative spirit and inspiration,” said Joshua Fisher, a Yeshiva college student and this year’s student organizer. The arts festival, which ran until April 14, was an opportunity for students to show off their abilities in the visual arts, drama, Torah, film, literature/poetry, and music. It also generated cultural appreciation and awareness among the student body. The festival opened with a jazz celebration against the backdrop of a gallery of aspiring students’ photographs, film, and paintings in Weissberg Commons on March 30. Aspiring actresses at Stern College performed The Odd Couple at various times as well as a series of monologues on April 8. Musical virtuosos played Mozart and Schubert, as well as student compositions, as part of the Classical Concert with YU A Capella on April 6. “It’s important for anyone who sings or performs to get performance experience,” said violinist Rachel Rubinstein, a junior at Stern, who played Gabrielli, an Italian Baroque composer, with the Stern College Chamber Ensemble at the concert. “We worked on this piece in class for the entire semester, so it was a great feeling to perform the piece for an audience and have them enjoy it.” Open Mic Night on April 2 provided a more informal setting for poets, musicians, and artists to perform impromptu. For audience members who prefered more conventional entertainment, there were screenings of Yiddish, and one French, films. In addition, the festival featured prominent personalities in the arts and stimulating speakers to round out the event. Klezmer star Greg Wall and his band Later Prophets performed a jazz show, and Tobi Kahn, a sculptor of Jewish ceremonial objects, delivered a lecture on “Seeing the Beauty in God’s Wisdom.” A panel discussion on “Midrash and the Creative Mind” brought together YU rabbis, professors, and poets.