In a class taught by Professor Barry Perlus, "one technical assignment was to create your own camera," Todd said. He's pursued several in photography alone. Todd made a series of 3-D images of Cornell scenes in the winter with a stereographic camera he built for a photography class. It's important to pursue your niches here." Cornell's a huge school, there are so many things you can get interested in. "I may have been the first fine arts student to approach him. "I was just looking into the major, and right away the two of us each became interested in what the other was working on," Todd says. Todd's academic career was influenced early on by American studies program chair R. "You have to complete all the requirements for both degrees separately." "I've spent some summers here, too it's expected," Todd says. The fourth Cornellian in his family, Todd, 23, of Chappaqua, N.Y., studied photography abroad in the spring of 2004, via the Cornell in Rome program. in American studies with an additional concentration in visual studies. Todd also is earning two degrees, a B.F.A. He designs brochures and provides photography for Cornell Outdoor Education, is an active member of the group and he recently led his fourth Wilderness Reflections outing for incoming freshmen. He is a member of the Cayuga's Waiters a cappella group and Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. Fifth-year student David Evan Todd has taken that dictum further than most. Incoming students are typically advised to make the most of their time at Cornell.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |