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The Bowdoin Review

Art

Professor David Collings: Giving and Receiving in Literature and Life

Written by: Jiankun Wu '21
Published on: May 6, 2018

Outside the white-latticed window of Massachusetts Hall, I witnessed the fall of the last ruddy leaf in November with my Oxford edition of Les Liaisons Dangereuses in hand. With Professor David Collings, I had my first “French pronunciation” class–The Ravages of Love, a first-year seminar through the English Department. Lost in his soothing voice, we […]

Categories: ArtTags: Literature

Color in a White House: The Obamas Reimagined

Written by: Holly Lyne '21
Published on: January 1, 2018

The Presidential Portraits exhibition of the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery houses presidential art ranging from a bust of Woodrow Wilson to a gold-framed photograph of Martin van Buren. Evoking emotional responses from warmth to awe, the Presidential Portraits claim to “tell the American story,” and the newest chapter about to be included is that of […]

Categories: Art, FeaturesTags: Presidential Portraiture

The Art of the Revolutions: May ’68 and the Arab Spring

Written by: Sarisha Kurup
Published on: November 12, 2017

In May of next year, we will commemorate the fifty-year anniversary of the protests that erupted across the world in 1968. Perhaps the most well known of these movements was the one that took place in Paris, in which the Left Bank, for a month, was turned into something of a war zone—barricades, Molotov cocktails, […]

Categories: ArtTags: Revolution

The Fault with Fast Fashion

Written by: Katie Galletta
Published on: October 31, 2017

What do H&M, Zara, Primark, Topshop, and Forever 21 all have in common? Flashy advertisements and constant sales, sure. The latest fashions, of course. Cheap clothes, most definitely. But behind all the carefully curated racks of polyester-blended fabric lurks an industry that is hardly in style. These stores are major suppliers of fast fashion. Fast […]

Categories: ArtTags: Retail

The Color of Feeling: The Life and Work of Howard Hodgkin

Written by: Olivia Muro
Published on: June 15, 2017

Memoirs Regarded as “one of the greatest artists and colorists of his generation,” Gordon Howard Eliot Hodgkin was born on August 6, 1932, in Hammersmith, London. He knew early on that he would be a painter. It was a fitting aspiration for a child surrounded by countless sources of creativity and innovation: his family—illustrious Quakers […]

Categories: ArtTags: Abstraction

The Globalist’s Deserted Island Survival Guide

Written by: Julian Barajas
Published on: April 17, 2017

You’re Stuck On A Deserted Island: Here Are The Three Things You Should Bring With You To Make Sure That You Survive For As Long As Possible There’s something glamorous about islands. At least, that’s what society has trained society to think. We equate a sunny island with happiness and success. Paradise. Everyone wants their […]

Categories: ArtTags: Hypotheticals

Book Review: Version Control

Written by: Paige O'Connor '20
Published on: March 14, 2017

LIGHT Courtesy Alex Johnson/flickr.com

Imagine you are sitting in a coffee shop on a Sunday afternoon. You open your laptop and pull up a Word document, preparing to begin a history paper that is due the next day. Suddenly, a live video feed of President Donald Trump fills your screen. He is staring directly into your eyes. “Hello, good […]

Categories: ArtTags: Sci-fi

The Delusions of Sophisticated Ink

Written by: Kristina Karlsson
Published on: February 27, 2017

“So, what’s the story?” she asked me, with a tone between bemusement and condescension. I was floating somewhere off the coast of Dakar when a fellow American in my study abroad program began her questioning. She was, of course, waiting to hear my prepared meaningful justification for the large tattoo on my hip. At the […]

Categories: ArtTags: Tattoos

Revisiting Will Smith in The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air

Written by: Julian Barajas
Published on: December 13, 2016

What makes a TV show protagonist so special? Think of the most compelling show you know and imagine the protagonist. Yes, just like Alex Trebek, very good. Compelling protagonists are essential for attracting viewers to a TV show, and more importantly, bringing you back for more. They have to make you obsessed. They’re like the […]

Categories: ArtTags: TV Protagonists

The Pop Culture Matrix

Written by: Drew van Kuiken '17 and Simon Close
Published on: November 15, 2016

Disclaimers: Big data might save the world, but this exercise is entirely subjective. Any references from before 2008 come from covers of Us Weekly that we saw in the grocery store. Names that appear on the matrix might more accurately be associated with public perception of the individual rather than with their true character (e.g., […]

Categories: Art, FeaturesTags: mx + Bey

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