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In Case You Missed It: Trivia Night

By Annabel Steele

On Thursday, September 27, the McMullen Museum played host to a fierce competition as teams battled it out over visual culture trivia.

The stage was set with free pizza and drinks out on the third floor terrace. When all of the teams were fed and watered, the showdown began. There were five rounds, each with five questions apiece. Each question had a visual component, testing students’ knowledge even more than the average trivia night. For example, people might be able to name the ten most popular herbs found in the average grocery store—but at visual culture trivia night, they had to name all ten and match them up with the correct photo.

The questions tested students’ knowledge on a range of topics. Categories represented included sports, art, fashion, architecture, marine biology, anatomy and geography, among others. Some questions had only part, while others included multiple components, allowing teams to earn partial points even if they could not correctly answer the entire question. Each question was displayed over a projector, and teams had anywhere from a minute and a half to 10 minutes to write out their answers.

For most of the night, almost all the teams remained locked in tight competition. Eventually, one team of graduate students, English Experts, began to pull away and build a comfortable lead. Even so, by the final question, the scores were so close that it was anyone’s game. In the final question, teams were asked to name national parks and match them to their location on a map of the United States.

In the end, English Experts held on for the first-place finish, earning McMullen t-shirts, umbrellas and catalogues for their win. The second and third place teams also received prizes.

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In Case You Missed It: Fall 2018 Student Opening

By Annabel Steele

The McMullen Museum kicked off the new year with an Art After Dark event on Friday, Sep. 7. Students enjoyed refreshments and participated in activities while learning about the semester’s exhibitions, Strategies of Engagement by Carrie Mae Weems and Not There, Not Here by Boston College professor Hartmut Austen.

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Weems’s work encourages us to critically examine American society and identify and acknowledge imbalances of power and miscarriages of justice. Accordingly, many of the activities touched upon themes of social justice and American identity.

In the first floor conference center, students were able to take selfies of themselves and write down what America or American identity means to them on the photos. The photos were then clipped up in a room while one of Weems’s videos played in the background. Meanwhile, the button-making station proved to be highly popular, as students designed buttons from templates and from scratch. One of the most popular slogans from the evening was “Bring Back Late Night.”

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On the third floor, students identified the topics they are most passionate about by putting stickers on posters, creating a visual representation of the issues that concern the student body. On the terrace, students enjoyed the late-summer golden hour over Boston and watched Dear White People and Random Acts of Flyness.

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Throughout the night, students enjoyed performances from groups such as the Beats, Sexual Chocolate and F.I.S.T.S in the museum lobby. They also wandered through the second floor gallery, observing Weems’s works as the exhibition officially opened for the semester.

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In Case You Missed It: Lunar New Year Celebration

By Echo Zhuge

The Chinese New Year has celebrated the spirit of communities and  families for thousands of years. The traditions, rituals, and decorations leading up to Lunar New Year remain to this day, traveling beyond cultural borders. The McMullen Museum celebrated these long-held traditions this past Saturday, February 10, 2018.

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In light of contemporary Chinese artist Cao Jun’s spring exhibition, Cao Jun: Hymns to Nature, at the McMullen Museum, three cultural clubs–the Chinese Student Association, the Korean Student Association, and the Philippine Society of Boston College–came together and co-hosted a celebration of the upcoming Lunar New Year, which begins on February 16, 2018.

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In the conference center, freshmen representatives dressed in qipao and indigo silk blouses presented the history and cultural significance of the New Year to visitors along with Chinese scallion pancakes and Korean seafood pancakes. After this presentation, guests were invited to watch a lion dance performance. The museum was buzzing with the thunderous sound of a drum and jubilant movement.

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After the lion dance, guests were invited to participate in numerous arts and crafts throughout the museum, including making Chinese knots, paper-cuttings, lanterns, and dragon puppets. The Chinese Student Association handed out red envelopes with chocolates to children and families who came to celebrate with the museum.

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