All posts by: Tom Moore


UMBC welcomes Beth Saunders as the new curator and head of Special Collections

Curator, educator, and photohistorian Beth Saunders has joined UMBC as the new curator and head of special collections and the gallery at the Albin O. Kuhn Library & Gallery. She will oversee the management, preservation, and exhibition of UMBC’s photography, rare book, and archival collections.

“I’m really looking forward to working with and promoting UMBC’s Special Collections, and hope to increase engagement among students as well as the local Baltimore and wider scholarly communities,” says Saunders.

Beth Saunders

“One of the things that excites me about Special Collections is that it’s a nerdy collection in the best possible way, bridging the sciences, the humanities, the arts, and other fields of research,” she adds. “We have rare books on the occult and paranormal psychology, a science fiction research collection, and a huge number of comic books. Nerd culture is now mainstream culture, which is an interesting turn. Here at UMBC, we have an archaeology of that history.”

Holdings in Special Collections at UMBC include the fields of photography, the history of the biological sciences, the Baltimore Sun newspaper, science fiction literature and popular culture, alternative presses, UMBC history and records, and Maryland manuscript, photograph, and newspaper collections. Of particular strength, the Photography Collections were established in the early 1970s, propelled by the purchase of over 5,000 photographs by pioneering social documentary photographer Lewis Hine. Since then, the collection grew under the supervision of former curator Tom Beck, who retired in 2017, to encompass some 2 million photographs.

“The photography collections are really a treasure trove,” says Saunders. “I can’t think of another university collection with the depth and breadth of UMBC’s; it is truly remarkable.”

A photohistorian’s eye

Saunders will also bring her scholarly and curatorial training to the direction of the Library Gallery, which presents two to three exhibitions per year drawn from objects in Special Collections as well as shows originated by other institutions.

“In thinking about exhibition programming for the Library Gallery, I want to put our collections front and center,” Saunders says. “I’m interested in ways that we can bring together diverse types of materials from Special Collections — from photographs to science fiction fanzines to fifteenth-century scientific treatises — to tell new stories or to reconsider familiar objects or images in a new light.”

Saunders continues, “As a photohistorian, I’m interested in the intersection of art and technology and in the social function of photographs, both historically and in our present time. I also want to raise the profile of our collections by partnering with contemporary artists and by traveling our shows to other institutions.”

Woman in black and white patterned dress stands in next to a library bookshelf, wearing protective gloves.

Saunders comes to UMBC from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where she was assistant curator in the Department of Photographs. While there from 2013 to 2018, she curated the exhibitions Quicksilver Brilliance: Adolf de Meyer Photographs (2017) and Paradise of Exiles: Early Photography in Italy (2017). She co-curated Dream States: Contemporary Photographs and Video (2016), Crime Stories: Photography and Foul Play (2016), Grand Illusions: Staged Photography from the Met Collection (2015), and Fatal Attraction: Piotr Uklánski Selects from the Met Collection (2015). She also assisted on major traveling shows including Irving Penn: Centennial (2017) and Modernism on the Ganges: Raghubir Singh Photographs (2017).

A specialist in the history of photography, Saunders earned a Ph.D. in art history from the CUNY Graduate Center in 2016. She has received numerous awards in support of her research, including the Rome Prize Fellowship from the American Academy in Rome, a Jane and Morgan Whitney Fellowship at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Joan and Stanford Alexander Award from the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

Her writing on the history of photography has appeared in journals, edited volumes, and catalogs. Most recently, she published an essay on the artist Sarah Charlesworth’s Modern History series in the exhibition catalog for Everything is Connected: Art and Conspiracy (The Met, 2018). Saunders has also taught art history at Baruch College, Rhode Island College, and the Rhode Island School of Design.

Welcome reception

The campus community is invited to a reception on November 14, in the Library Gallery, to welcome Beth Saunders and to celebrate the current exhibition in the gallery, Depth of Field: Acquisitions to the Photography Collections, 2008 – 2018. The exhibition will remain on display through December 19. More information on Depth of Field is available on UMBC’s Arts and Culture Calendar.

Library gallery exhibition, with lighting fixtures in the ceiling and photographs on the walls.

Featured image: Beth Saunders in UMBC’s archival collections. Photos by Marlayna Demond ’11 for UMBC.

Library Gallery displays recent acquisitions in “Depth of Field” exhibition

On Wednesday, August 29, the Albin O. Kuhn Library Gallery launches UMBC’s Fall 2018 arts season with the exhibition Depth of Field, presenting approximately one hundred images acquired over the last ten years by UMBC’s Photography Collections through gifts from donors and artists. The photographs on view highlight the breadth and depth of the collection and illustrate the range of forms, technology, and artists that historically shaped the medium and are presently impacting its ongoing evolution.

N. Jay Jaffee, Woman and Young Girl in Subway, 1951, Gelatin silver print, selenium toned, Accession no. P2012-17-012, Gift of Paula Hackeling

Featured artists in the exhibition include Albert Arthur Allen, Laurie Brown, Kristin Capp, Clarence Carvell BFA ’93, Chim (David Seymour), William Eggleston, Donna Ferrato, Robert Fichter, Todd Forsgren, Peggy Fox, Sally Gall, Ralph Gibson, Penny Harris, Sam Holden, Irina Ionesco, Walter Iooss, Lotte Jacobi, N. Jay Jaffee, Brian Jones, Nate Larson, David S. Lavine, Alen MacWeeney, Mary Ellen Mark, Fred McDarrah, Dorothy Norman, David Seltzer, Steve Szabo, Barbara Traub, Peter Turnley, and Robert VonSternberg. Additionally, the exhibition features daguerreotypes, painted photographs, and post-mortem photographs. Depth of Fieldis curated by Emily Hauver, who is curator of exhibition for the gallery.

The Photography Collections at UMBC contain more than two million photographs, with an emphasis on the formats, processes, genres, and technological evolution of the medium and images demonstrating the social impact of photography. Works include photography that has influenced public thought or legislation such as Lewis Hine’s photographs of child labor and the mining photographs (1870–1895) of George Bretz. These photographs have been used by scholars from around the world and have been loaned to venerable institutions including the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the National Gallery of Art.

Collection holdings also illustrate the development of the aesthetic principles of photography. Works by Ansel Adams, Diane Arbus, Berenice Abbott, A. Aubrey Bodine, Bill Brandt, Eileen Cowin, Barbara Crane, Judy Dater, William Eggleston, Robert Frank, Roland Freeman, Lotte Jacobi, Alfred Cheney Johnston, Stephen Marc, David Plowden, Albert Renger-Patzsch, Walter Rosenblum, Jaromir Stephany (professor of visual arts, deceased), Steve Szabo, James Van Der Zee, Edward Weston, Minor White, members of the Photo-Secession, and hundreds of other artists are represented.

Also noteworthy are the hundreds of thousands of newspaper and wire service photographs from the Baltimore Sun and Underwood & Underwood. These photographs, along with other images held such as panoramic views of Maryland by the Hughes Company, constitute a great resource for study of Maryland history.

Lotte Jacobi, Marlene Dietrich, 1929 Platinum print, Accession no. P2013-31-014, Gift of Louis Klaitman

The collections are supported by extensive holdings of books, apparatuses, and ephemera spanning the entire history of photography from 1839 to the present. Over 8,000 individual pieces of equipment reveal the progression of the technology of the photographic medium. The archival holdings in photography provide researchers with rich resources to further study a particular artist, including the papers of Jim Amos, Mildred Grossman, and Jaromir Stephany.

Related to the Photography Collections is the Edward L. Bafford Photographic Book Collection, a holding of about 40,000 volumes. The book collection ranges from the announcement of the invention of the daguerreotype in the Comptes rendu hebdomdaires des séances de l’Academie des sciences (1839), to the Decisive Moment (1950), and Sleeping by the Mississippi (2004). More information about the Photography Collections can be found here.

Many of the images in Depth of Field were gifts from the artists. Additional contributions were made by John Belling; Abigail Bialer; Stephen Bilkis; Stanley Burns; Sara Cleary-Burns; Mark Connelly; Alice Dana; Joseph D’Angelo; Kevin Debbs; Kathleen Ewing; Margery Fisher; Timothy Grell; Paula Hackeling; Jerry Harlowe; Stockton Todd Holden, Mina Horn, and Donna Sherman; Mark Jaffe; Faustine Jones-Wilson; Marina Kirshenbaum; Louis Klaitman; Elizabeth Krueger; Amy Loeserman; Ron Sadi; Sonia and Rahul Shah; Bill Shneiderman; Lee Skolnick; Sean Sullivan; Matthew E. Trevenen; Michael Trevenen; Joseph Triolo; Sean Westley; and Michael Woodhouse.

The exhibition will continue on display through December 19. The Library Gallery is open Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with extended hours on Thursday until 8 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday from 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. Admission is free. Additional information about the exhibition can be found here.

Images: (1) Todd Forsgren, Adelaide’s Warbler (Setophaga adelaidae), 2009 (detail), from the series Ornithological PhotographsInkjet print, Accession no. P2016-07-001, gift of the artist. (2)  N. Jay Jaffee, Woman and Young Girl in Subway, 1951, Gelatin silver print, selenium toned, Accession no. P2012-17-012, gift of Paula Hackeling. (3) Lotte Jacobi, Marlene Dietrich, 1929, Platinum print, Accession no. P2013-31-014, gift of Louis Klaitman.

UMBC’s Maia Schechter lights up the stage at the Kennedy Center

On Saturday, June 9, the stage of Terrace Theater at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C., will be graced by the choreography of new UMBC alumna Maia Schechter ’18, dance. Schechter is a Linehan Artist Scholar whose work was selected for the finals of the American College Dance Festival (ACDF) through a nationally competitive process. Her dance, Now Elsewhere, previously has been performed at West Chester University in Pennsylvania and twice at UMBC.

Now Elsewhere is a dance that explores the emotions and events that happen after someone passes away,” explains Schechter. “Throughout the dance there is a range of movement that begins as very minimal and gestural and grows into an explosive full-body expression. The dancers experience their loss together and individually, which can be seen in solo and ensemble work, as their relationships are ever changing throughout the dance.”

Maia Schechter

Six UMBC students and alumni will perform the dance, including Emily Godfrey ’20, dance; Clarisse Lukban ’20, dance and biology; Kasey Mannion ’19, dance and elementary education certification; Briana Norwood ’20, dance; Giavanni Powell ’19, dance; and Kendra Welborn ’17, dance.

ACDF adjudicators commended Schechter for the clarity of her vision. “We chose Now Elsewhere with deep appreciation of its unusual compositional structure, and its taut, compelling performance,” they said. “The work demands that its performers work with physical accuracy and synchronicity as well as emotional transparency in its abstract rendering of a community reforming itself.”

The American College Dance Festival performances at the Kennedy Center feature works by young choreographers from thirty colleges and universities across the country. “I’m very honored to be presenting this dance at the National College Dance Festival,” says Schechter, “and cannot wait to be surrounded by other artists. These festivals are a wonderful opportunity to share work and unite young choreographers in the field.”

Tickets to the festival are available online through Kennedy Center.

Now Elsewhere by Maia Schechter

Photos by Marlayna Demond ’11 for UMBC.

Lisa Moren brings Baltimore’s McKeldin Fountain back to life with NONUMENT 01

Baltimore’s McKeldin Fountain, an icon of Brutalist architecture, may have been demolished in 2016, but Lisa Moren, professor of visual arts, wants to ensure visitors can still experience its presence and history. On Saturday, May 19, from 1 to 4 p.m. at the former site of the fountain at the intersection of Pratt and Light Streets, she will officially launch her augmented reality app NONUMENT 01::McKeldin Fountain, a project created in partnership with James Mayhew, MFA ’10, IMDA, and Slovenian artists Martin Bricelj Baraga and Neja Tomšič. The launch event is free and open to the public.

The app, which is available for both iOS and Android devices, projects a full-scale 3D image of McKeldin Fountain onto tablet or smartphone screens, creating the illusion that the fountain is present in the surrounding environment. The fountain’s history is told through various interactive “memory artifacts,” such as koi fish and protest signs, which when clicked will show interviews with Baltimore residents sharing their memories of events at McKeldin Square. The app can be downloaded for free and used anywhere in the world, but its effects are best realized when used on McKeldin Square where the fountain once stood.

Nonument 01 image

“McKeldin Fountain was a place where ordinary citizens could express themselves creatively, relax, or stand up for their values,” says Moren. “The story of its destruction, which included little public input, points to the diminishment of public spaces worldwide. In terms of public art, quality of life, and free speech, we feel a loss for the residents of Baltimore.”

Audio engineering for the app was provided by Timothy Nohe, professor of visual arts, and Lexie Mountain, MFA ’14, IMDA, with additional contributions of 3D models by Ben Shaffer ’16, visual arts, and the Imaging Research Center’s Ryan Zuber ’04, visual arts.

Nonument 01 image

Following the event at McKeldin Square on May 19, participants are invited to move to Maryland Art Place on Saratoga Street for an exhibit featuring video installations of content used in the app and mixed reality media.

See here for a March 2017 UMBC News story on the development of NONUMENT 01.

For more information about NONUMENT 01, visit its website here.

Images courtesy of Lisa Moren.

Gift of two historic violins provides opportunities for music students

Cornelia Rottler Edwards band

This spring, the department of music welcomes new members to the UMBC community: two violins and a violin bow, contributed to the department by Joel Liebman, professor of chemistry and biochemistry, and his life partner Kathleen F. (Kay) Edwards, professor in the doctor of management program, University of Maryland University College.
The gift of the instruments will be acknowledged on Tuesday, May 15, at the Department of Music Honors Showcase, at which violinist Airi Yoshioka, professor of music, will perform Edward Elgar’s Salut d’amour, Op. 12, on one of the violins.
“We’re very pleased to donate our families’ violins to the department of music,” say Liebman and Edwards. “We were both students of music, and we hope that UMBC violin students will be able to learn on, enjoy and perform with these family instruments, continuing legacies of music, family, and community.”

The violins come with family history and photographs. In one image (above), Joel Liebman’s grandfather, William Spitz, a concert musician who attended the Vienna Conservatory, poses proudly with one of the violins. In another (below), Kathleen Edwards’ mother, Cornelia Rotter Edwards, a self-taught musician, poses with the Ste. Genevieve Juvenile Band.

“Many of our students are talented but from arrive at UMBC with instruments that are not high quality,” said Linda Dusman, professor of chair of music. “We plan to loan these instruments to our top violinists to use for practice and performance during the academic year so that their development as young artists will be enhanced and accelerated as a result. The ability to hear, experience, and create the musical nuances a fine instrument enables will prepare them well for lives as professional musicians.”
Restoration of the violins and the bows was made possible by the Linehan Fund for Excellence in the Arts.
More information about the Honors Showcase concert, which will take place in Earl and Darielle Linehan Concert Hall, can be found here.
Photos courtesy of Joel Liebman and Kathleen F. Edwards.

Morgan Chadderton to pursue study of Slavic languages through Fulbright in Kyrgyzstan

Morgan Chadderton B.A., Modern Languages, Linguistics & Intercultural Communication (French and Russian) Minor: Political Science Summa Cum Laude Hometown: Edgewood, Maryland Plans: Fulbright English Teaching Assistant, Kyrgyzstan

As the first member of my family to attend university, I was not quite sure what to expect, but I knew from my first campus tour that UMBC would be a place where I could succeed.

Morgan Chadderton’s time at UMBC has been defined by an intellectual curiosity driving her to pursue a broad range of interests in the social sciences and humanities. From day one at UMBC, she says, “I was encouraged to go beyond the usual single-degree path, as well as to conduct research, explore new subjects, study abroad in two countries, and get involved with student life.”
Chadderton, a Humanities Scholar in UMBC’s Honors College, received a highly selective U.S. Department of State Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship that provided her an opportunity to study in Kyrgyzstan in June 2016. She also completed a study abroad in Lyon, France, and continued to excel academically at UMBC. She is graduating with a perfect GPA, has been inducted into the Phi Beta Kappa honor society, and received the Overall Academic Achievement Award in the modern languages, linguistics, and intercultural communications department.

As president of the UMBC Russian Club, Chadderton helped plan a special event in December 2017, designed to highlight the culture of former Soviet states in an immersive and informative way. Photo courtesy of Chadderton.

Through each new educational and leadership experience, Chadderton found opportunities to grow. She shares, “As a Humanities Scholar, I felt I belonged to a community of like-minded people. As a member of the Honors College, I was able to explore interdisciplinary topics and learn from new perspectives. As president of Russian Club, I was able to share meaningful cultural exchanges.” Chadderton also served as a conversation partner for the English Language Institute, helping English language learners practice their conversational skills, and served as a note-taker for students with disabilities in courses on American government and politics, and Soviet civilization and culture.
Ultimately, Chadderton says, “I found all of these opportunities promote the same concept: everything can be a learning experience.” She looks forward to soon returning to Kyrgyzstan as a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant, before beginning a graduate degree in Slavic languages and Russian studies.
Portrait by Marlayna Demond ’11 for UMBC.

Mollye Bendell explores new artistic pathways, from Smithsonian to FabLab to a Wave Farm residency

Mollye Bendell M.F.A., Intermedia and Digital Arts Hometown: Annapolis, Maryland Plans: Artist residency at Wave Farm in Acra, New York

UMBC provided amazing faculty who really took the time to personally mentor me. I was given the creative freedom and conceptual guidance to learn a lot of new skill sets such as algorithmic modeling, codeable objects, programming for virtual reality environments, electronics production, and many others.

During her time as a graduate student in the department of visual art’s intermedia and digital arts program, Mollye Bendell led the setup of a new fabrication facility, the FabLab, and also worked at the Smithsonian Institution’s design shop as a fabricator for public displays and museum exhibitions. She taught classes on lab equipment, including computer-aided design (CAD) software, laser cutters, and a computer numerical control (CNC) router.
Bendell also served as a student leader, teacher, and mentor on campus. She was a member of the Graduate Student Senate and taught Visual Concepts III: Three-dimensional Form, Space and Interaction.

Mollye Bendell — Wander-Wonder
Bendell’s thesis exhibition artwork, Wander/Wonder, incorporated two interactive experiences: Wander, a walkable street map of Baltimore City with all the buildings removed except the psychic reader businesses, and Wonder, a fly-through digital astral plane within a virtual reality environment. Rolling the crystal ball controls both sides of the project simultaneously.

In 2016, Bendell’s artwork XXchange was exhibited at Area 405 in Baltimore, and in 2017 she participated in UMBC’s Spark II gallery at Light City with Resistant Cells. Also in 2017, her works Artists for Truth and FFPP: Feminism Fights Patriarchal Power, were displayed at Space Camp in Baltimore, and her work FFMM: Feminism Fights Military Morals was displayed at the Ballroom Gallery in Baltimore.
This May, Bendell will present her master’s thesis exhibition, Wander/Wonder, at the conference “Politics of the Machines — Art and After” in Copenhagen, Denmark. She’ll then move on to an artist residency at Wave Farm in Acra, New York.
Portrait by Marlayna Demond ’11 for UMBC.

Emmanuel Mones creates men’s streetwear brand to prompt public discussion of gender, sexuality, and equality

Emmanuel Mones B.F.A., Visual Arts Magna Cum Laude Hometown: Columbia, Maryland Plans: To launch a men’s streetwear brand, ALT.MASC

The UMBC visual arts department gave me this great balance of guidance and freedom that has helped me come to realize what it is that I want to pursue in my future. My mentors taught me to see the value of my personal experiences as source material for my work. They taught me the sound of my own creative voice.

Emmanuel Mones has capped off an innovative and fruitful creative career at UMBC with a thought-provoking senior project: creating the men’s streetwear brand ALT.MASC.
Developed through the support of an Undergraduate Research Award, “ALT.MASC: Redefining Masculinity through Fashion and Photography” seeks to challenge existing, limited models of masculinity with alternative visions of masculinity that are more inclusive. Through fashion and photography, Mones hopes to encourage public discourse on gender, sexuality, and equality. After graduation, Mones plans to launch the ALT.MASC brand and its accompanying publication, Wonderboy Magazine.

Mones shares that this image will be one of the covers for the future Wonderboy Magazine, which reflects his time at UMBC in combining the skills he’s learned as an artist with the creative voice he’s honed, exploring his identity as a queer immigrant person of color.

Mones shares that the faculty mentorship he received has been key in his growth as an artist addressing challenging societal questions. “Obviously, through my classes, I learned the craft of art making — photography, video, and design. But, in those classes, my professors gave me a lot of freedom to follow my own intellectual curiosities,” says Mones. “They encouraged me to ask my own questions, and to make use of the class projects to find answers.”
While at UMBC, Mones has received an Imagining America Scholarship and a Smithsonian Minority Awards Scholarship. He has also worked as an intern with the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center (APAC), and had an APAC fellowship the following year. He was also the recipient of the Bartleby Annual Prize from UMBC’s creative arts journal.
Portrait by Marlayna Demond ’11 for UMBC.

Andrea Davis to continue enriching students’ college experience through graduate study in student affairs

Andrea Davis B.A., Sociology Minor: Africana Studies Magna Cum Laude Hometown: Nyack, New York Plans: M.A., Ohio State University

In all of the positions that I have held on campus, I have been treated by staff and faculty as a partner. I have had the opportunity to create curriculum, programs, and experiences that affect students’ leadership development, and it wouldn’t have been possible without all of the tools, resources, and support that UMBC provides.

Andrea Davis has been a major force in UMBC’s student leadership throughout her time on campus, particularly in the area of student life. A Sondheim Public Affairs Scholar, Davis has served as president of the Student Events Board (seb), a Civic Engagement and Leadership Intern for the Office of Student Life, and a Senior Orientation Peer Advisor. She has also supported the Student Government Association vice president as an executive aid, and served as an executive member of the UMBC Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa, a national leadership honors society.
NASPA, the national association for Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education, selected Davis for their undergraduate fellows program, which provides mentorship for promising students with an interest in entering the student affairs profession. She also received the Residential Life Student Success Scholarship, the Residential Life Clarence E. Robinson, Jr. Memorial Scholarship, and a Student Affairs Leadership Award.

For four years Andrea Davis has worked with (seb)’s executive board team, featured here in a photo from 2017. Photo courtesy of Davis.

Davis has excelled academically, receiving the Second Generation Scholarship in Africana studies, the Africana studies Award for Academic Excellence, and the Lewis Award in sociology. She also co-organized UMBC’s first Black Lives Matter Week, as well as numerous other events focused on community-building at UMBC.
“UMBC has helped me achieve my goals by cultivating an environment that emphasizes the importance of student voice and citizenship,” Davis says. “I felt empowered at UMBC to make positive change on campus because of support from staff and faculty.”
Davis will continue to focus on helping students have a positive and enriching college experience through pursuing a master’s degree in educational studies for higher education and student affairs at The Ohio State University.
Portrait by Marlayna Demond ’11 for UMBC.

Peaceworker Fellow Ciara Christian to extend community-engaged scholarship through Ph.D.

Ciara Christian M.A., Applied Sociology Hometown: Springfield, Ohio Plans: Ph.D., UMBC

UMBC has prepared me in myriad ways as an engaged scholar, young professional, and public servant. UMBC has taught me to believe in myself and in my capabilities, and to use them to serve others.

Ciara Christian came to UMBC’s master’s in applied sociology program as a Shriver Peaceworker Fellow, after returning from Peace Corps service in Rwanda. She shares, “Through my experiences, I have learned the importance of interdisciplinarity and seeing the connections across disciplines to address complex, societal challenges. I have learned about the importance of truly engaging community as partners in applied scholarship, and about the symbiotic relationship that occurs when scholars approach communities with an asset-based framework, acknowledging their existing knowledge and capacity.”
While at UMBC, Christian pursued community-engaged scholarship through participatory action research in Baltimore City as well as through her work as coordinator of UMBC’s Grand Challenge Scholars Program, where students of all majors learn how they can effectively collaborate to address important societal problems.

Ciara Christian with three other women, holding papers and clapping.
While at UMBC, Ciara Christian was inducted into Alpha Kappa Delta, the International Sociology Honor Society. Photo courtesy of Christian.

In 2017, as a Sondheim Nonprofit Leadership Fellow, Christian interned at Baltimore Neighborhood Indicators Alliance (BNIA). There, she was primarily responsible for organizing Baltimore Data Day, an annual workshop that brings together over 300 community leaders, community groups, nonprofits, government entities, and socially-minded technologists to learn how to access and utilize available public data about their neighborhoods to advocate for change.
Christian will soon begin UMBC’s Ph.D. program in language, literacy, and culture, with a focus on work that prioritizes diversity, equity, and inclusion.
Portrait by Marlayna Demond ’11 for UMBC.

Choreographer Maia Schechter’s critically acclaimed “Now Elsewhere” to be featured at the Kennedy Center

Maia Schechter B.A., Dance Magna Cum Laude Hometown: Glen Rock, Pennsylvania Plans: Presenting choreography at the National College Dance Festival; studying with the NW Dance Project

The UMBC dance department has offered incredible support. In addition to cultivating my dance technique, many teachers have introduced me to renowned dance companies and intensives that have helped me network and develop as an artist. Thanks to my teachers, I am setting and achieving goals I never thought would be possible.

Maia Schechter came to UMBC as a Linehan Artist Scholar and a member of the Honors College, driven to pursue a career in dance. She quickly got to work developing her technique as a dancer and choreographer, and taking chances on unique opportunities to grow her craft.
In the summer of her sophomore year, she was accepted to the competitive Broadway Dance Center Summer Professional Intensive in New York City, and in the summer of her junior year she was one of twelve women accepted into the highly competitive Jacob’s Pillow Contemporary Dance Program. These opportunities were supported by a Linehan Summer Study Award and a Summer Dance Study and Research Award from the dance department. She also served as the vice president of the Dance Council of Majors.

This image was taken during a tech rehearsal for Now Elsewhere, Schechter’s senior project, which will be performed at the National College of Dance Festival. Photo by Rachel Morin Photography.

Schechter has received College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences Student Awards for Outstanding Junior in Dance, and Outstanding Senior in Choreography and Performance. During her senior year, her piece Tipping Point, co-choreographed with Ryan Bailey ‘16, dance, was selected for the Maryland Choreographers Showcase. Most recently, her choreography Now Elsewhere was presented at the American College Dance Association Mid-Atlantic North Regional Conference at West Chester University. Judges then selected the work to be presented at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts as part of the American College Dance Association National Festival in June 2018, the association’s highest honor.
Since her freshman year, Maia has supported numerous faculty research projects, performing with Baltimore Dance Project in works by professors Carol Hess and Doug Hamby. She has appeared with Baltimore Dance Project in the Akimbo Artwalk Festival in Station North, Baltimore, Light City Baltimore, and in residence at Washington College.
Portrait by Marlayna Demond ’11 for UMBC.

Richard Elliott to continue research on U.S. political rhetoric through Ph.D. at Johns Hopkins University

Richard Elliott
B.A., American Studies and Political Science
Cum Laude
Hometown: Bowie, Maryland
Plans: Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University

UMBC has given me the opportunity to craft my own research projects, interact with people from all over the world, and expand my academic abilities. I’m very proud to have attended UMBC and I’ve learned so much here.

Richard Elliott is fascinated by politics, and has pursued this interest through both scholarship and student leadership. Elliott founded the UMBC Progressives, a group designed to catalyze social and political progress at UMBC and in the surrounding Baltimore community. He has also served on the executive board of Omicron Delta Kappa, a national leadership honor society.

Richard Elliott

Elliott is a McNair Scholar, and his research on the Tea Party’s effect on conservative political discourse actually began at the McNair Summer Institute at UMBC. He continued his work through a summer fellowship at the University of California, Irvine, and later published findings in the European Journal of American Studies, the journal Political Behavior, Proceedings of the 2017 National Conference of Undergraduate Research, the 2017 UMBC Review, and several e-journals.

Elliott has been accepted to the Ph.D. program in political science at Johns Hopkins University with a full fellowship.

Portrait by Marlayna Demond ’11 for UMBC.