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Alumni panel discusses impact of the Rose on undergrads

by Alana Abramson
Staff writer

News | 4/7/09
Posted online at 7:31 AM EST on 4/7/09

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Karen Chernick '06 speaks about her time as a Brandeis undergraduate and STARR intern at the Rose.
Media Credit: Julian Agin-Liebes
Karen Chernick '06 speaks about her time as a Brandeis undergraduate and STARR intern at the Rose.

A panel consisting of prominent alumni in the art field took place at the Rose Art Museum yesterday in an effort to reflect on the rich heritage of the Rose and the influence the museum has had on the students who have studied there, Prof. Nancy Scott (FA), who introduced the panelists, explained at the event.

Gary Tinterow '76, Kim Rorschach '78, Reva Wolf '78, Andrea Aronson Morgan '80 and Karen Chernick '06 discussed the impact of the Rose on their educational experiences and careers at the panel discussion titled "Education Matters in the Museum," which took place yesterday and was held at the Rose.

The event was co-sponsored by the Rose and the Fine Arts department; it was organized by a student committee consisting of Andrea Fineman '10, Nera Lerner '12, Stella Liberman '09, Maarit Ostrow '11, Julia Sferlazzo '09 and Aly Young '09.

Michael Rush, the director of the Rose, said in his opening remarks preceding the panel that this event showed "that the Rose is still very much alive." He encouraged the audience members to hold out hope that the museum will remain open. "It's not over until it's over," he said.

Rush condemned the administration for its lack of communication with the museum staff. "I've learned a lot about what leadership is and what it isn't," he said, adding that "[University President Jehuda Reinharz] has not been to the museum since Jan. 26. That is not leadership. That is hiding."

Tinterow, now the Engelhard chairman of the department of the 19th Century, Modern and Contemporary Art at the Metropolitan Museum, said during the panel discussion that it breaks his heart to think the museum might close, and that working at the museum while he attended Brandeis played a formative role in his career choice.

"It was the very nature of the Rose's collection that attracted me as a student and inspired me to study art," he said.

Rorschach, the Mary D.B.T and James H. Semans director of the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, said, "the Rose Art Museum made me who I am today. I would not have had the career I have without the Rose." She emphasized that the Rose is vital to Brandeis' reputation, explaining that "the Rose Art Museum is core to the brand of Brandeis University in the broader world in the sense that many people associate the University with the museum," and called on the University for greater transparency in regards to the University's financial state.
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