Renovated galleries at RISD Museum cast ancient treasures in new light

PROVIDENCE — He was carved nearly 1,000 years ago from the wood of a giant cryptomeria, a type of cypress native to Japan. Since then, he’s been worshiped as a god, survived a devastating fire, endured a lengthy ocean voyage and delighted generations of Rhode Island art lovers.

Still, there’s a good chance the majestic “Buddha Dainichi Nyorai” — better known as the RISD Museum’s big wooden Buddha — has never had it so good.

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RISD Launches Presidential Search

In an email to RISD faculty, Board Chair Michael Spalter has announced that the search for a new president is underway.

The board has appointed an 11-member search committee, which includes representatives from the RISD Museum, the faculty and the board of trustees.

The university has hired executive search firm Isaacson Miller to help with the search.

RISD’s former President John Maeda stepped down unexpectedly in the middle of the academic year to take a venture capital job in Silicon Valley.

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Brian J. Shanley: More families good for Smith Hill (the neighborhood)

Providence College recently granted $750,000 to be distributed over three years to the Smith Hill Community Development Corporation (CDC), a nonprofit organization whose mission and purpose is to provide safe, affordable housing for the people in the Smith Hill area of Providence. While several other local institutions of higher education have done and continue to do outstanding community work, I believe our partnership with the CDC is without precedent in Rhode Island.

The college has worked closely with the CDC, especially through our Feinstein Institute for Public Service. We have, for example, facilitated a number of programs for community youth. We have brought a number of our classes to an off-campus neighborhood site owned by the CDC (the PC/Smith Hill Annex on Douglas Avenue), with those classes being open to both PC students and to members of the local community. We also use the annex as meeting and program space in the community that is accessible to both college and community groups. In our latest partnership endeavor, the college and CDC have opened a fair-trade coffee café, also on Douglas Avenue. This small business is owned by the CDC, but run by a group of PC students.

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Newport author Wurman stresses importance of curiosity at Salve Regina commencement

NEWPORT — Blinking in brilliant sunshine and refreshed by a cool morning breeze, 658 students of Salve Regina University picked up their degrees Sunday from Jane Gerety, Salve president.

A large, white tent and the campus’s numerous leafy trees provided shade as the waters of Easton Bay glittered, and some of the thousands of relatives and friends of the graduates at the 64th annual commencement took time to explore Cliff Walk, which runs past the campus.

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