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Connecticut College
Office of Communications
270 Mohegan Avenue
New London, CT 06320

Amy Martin
Editor, CC Magazine
asulliva@conncoll.edu
860-439-2526

CC Magazine welcomes your Class Notes submissions. Please include your name, class year, email, and physical address for verification purposes. Please note that CC Magazine reserves the right to edit for space and clarity. Thank you.

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Online Exclusive Video

The Cube

Professor emerita of art history Barbara Zabel discusses the kinetic sculpture

The iconic sculpture Alamo (15 x 15 x 15 feet), created in 1967 by Bernard (Tony) Rosenthal (1914-2009), is celebrating its 50th anniversary in Astor Place in New York City. Located in the East Village, Alamo became a focus for demonstrations, graffiti artists and pranksters. In 1972, Rosenthal's Memorial Cube, a half-scale "offspring" of Alamo, was installed on the terrace of Cummings Arts Center, a gift of friends and family of Dena Laib Ulin '52, a gallerist in New York City who died in 1972. Like Alamo, Memorial Cube is a kinetic sculpture; if pushed, it can spin around its axis. The sculpture invites playful interaction, one of its delights.



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