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Arts & Culture

Research Relationship with New Zealand’s Massey University Sealed with Joint Agreement

Friday, September 18, 2015, By Erica Blust
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Research and Creative

Five years after initiating collaborations with Massey University, 鶹ƵUniversity has signed a memorandum of understanding with its New Zealand counterpart.

College of Creative Arts Pro Vice-Chancellor Professor Claire Robinson, Vice-Chancellor Steve Maharey, US Ambassador Mark Gilbert, Professor Kendall Phillips from 鶹ƵUniversity and Professor Kingsley Baird from Massey’s School of Art celebrate the signing of the memorandum of understanding between Massey and Syracuse.

College of Creative Arts Vice Chancellor Professor Claire Robinson, Vice Chancellor Steve Maharey, U.S. Ambassador Mark Gilbert, Professor Kendall Phillips from 鶹ƵUniversity and Professor Kingsley Baird from Massey’s School of Art, from left, celebrate the signing of the memorandum of understanding between Massey and Syracuse.

The memorandum formalizes the importance of the fine arts and design links between the two universities and outlines potential future cooperation.

Kendall Phillips, a professor of communication and rhetorical studies and associate dean of global academic programs and initiatives in the (VPA), signed the agreement with Massey Vice Chancellor Steve Maharey in Wellington. The signing was attended by Mark Gilbert, U.S. ambassador to New Zealand and Samoa; James Fathers, the Iris Magidson Endowed Chair of Design Leadership in VPA’s School of Design; and invited guests.

“Massey University is an excellent potential partner for Syracuse,” says Phillips. “As one of the top universities in New Zealand, Massey offers a variety of outstanding programs and boasts many renowned faculty. For VPA in particular, Massey’s College of Creative Arts has been and will continue to be a good partner. While New Zealand is a relatively small country and quite a distance away, it is a fascinating place with an interesting culture and a thriving media arts industry.”

Since 2010, SU has enjoyed a flourishing research relationship with Massey’s College of Creative Arts that has included jointly organizing a conference on contained memory in Wellington in 2010, symposia in 2013 and 2014, interactive Skype events and faculty visits. Massey School of Art and School of Design Professors Kingsley Baird, Ross Hemera and Sally Morgan visited the SU campus last year. Earlier in September, Massey hosted a visit by Phillips for the Triggering Memory Symposium, where he also delivered a keynote public lecture.

Baird, Morgan and Phillips are part of the Memory Waka, a research group aimed at building a memory research and teaching partnership between Massey and Syracuse, as well as York St John University in England.

  • Author

Erica Blust

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