Barrington Center for the Arts
The following is an computer-generated summary of the video transcript.
So we're walking towards bearing Tin Center for the Arts right now. Then Gordon took over and named the Art Center after Ben used to be there. We have all this set up many place that they're putting on. There's a bunch of little ones and they're happening all over the building. Back here is our cinema classroom, and the storms have classes in there. They do like movie showings and stuff because it's sort of like a mini movie theater. So we have to galleries and banks in a smaller, large salary, and there's usually papers here telling you what it is right now. It's a little empty calories, but that are changing all the time on something sculptures, paintings, all these things. We have a large gallery here, just some of the paintings sort of a black box theater is back there. Have some art, as you'd expect from an art center. So up here in the second floor is where a lot of people will come up and photography Study rehearse. Here's Bethany and Elena demonstrating, studying up here. It's nice and bright were walking through the hallway of the second floor, and they're a bunch of offices and art studios up here. So basically there's like imprinting graphic design to kind of be in there and on the studio. Just kind of cool to see everything when you walk by here. It's really cool because there's so much texture and color. Uh, I'm here with Dr Ju. She's one of the professors of our com department, and she's just gonna tell you a little bit about herself and what we have here. Uh, teaching the communication arts department, some of my favorite classes to teach our principles of marketing and cultural communication. That's something I think is really special about, uh, some of our course offering. That's a way to think about all the ways that religion gets mediated through our bodies, through spaces around us and through popular culture. So I think it's really important for us to be thinking about those ideas. Religion continues to make us think about what is meaningful in our lives. So I hoped you might have an opportunity to be in my class one day. So back behind Barrington, we have a garden, looks kind of bare and dead right now, but in the fall, Andi, think in the spring to Wei have flowers and vegetables that you can just come and pick for free. If you just bring your own bag and some scissors, you can just take the bodies in the forest.