MIT Music & Theater Arts Section
exploring artistic disciplines as cultural, intellectual, and personal avenues of inquiry, discovery, and innovation ⚡️🎶🎭🎨 #mitmusic #mittheater

Today we're celebrating another Levitan Teaching Award winner! Levitan Teaching awardees are nominated by MIT students.
Amadou Lamine Touré (@lamine_lamlam) is a lecturer in MIT's Music and Theater Arts Section (@mitmta) and director of Rambax, an ensemble dedicated to learning the art of sabar, a vibrant drum and dance tradition of the Wolof people of Senegal, West Africa.
“His teaching doesn’t simply revolve around drumming in a circle, but also incorporates deep histories," a student said when describing why Touré deserved his award.
Learn more about this year's Levitan Teaching Award winners at the link in our bio.

Today we're celebrating another Levitan Teaching Award winner! Levitan Teaching awardees are nominated by MIT students.
Amadou Lamine Touré (@lamine_lamlam) is a lecturer in MIT's Music and Theater Arts Section (@mitmta) and director of Rambax, an ensemble dedicated to learning the art of sabar, a vibrant drum and dance tradition of the Wolof people of Senegal, West Africa.
“His teaching doesn’t simply revolve around drumming in a circle, but also incorporates deep histories," a student said when describing why Touré deserved his award.
Learn more about this year's Levitan Teaching Award winners at the link in our bio.

Today we're celebrating another Levitan Teaching Award winner! Levitan Teaching awardees are nominated by MIT students.
Amadou Lamine Touré (@lamine_lamlam) is a lecturer in MIT's Music and Theater Arts Section (@mitmta) and director of Rambax, an ensemble dedicated to learning the art of sabar, a vibrant drum and dance tradition of the Wolof people of Senegal, West Africa.
“His teaching doesn’t simply revolve around drumming in a circle, but also incorporates deep histories," a student said when describing why Touré deserved his award.
Learn more about this year's Levitan Teaching Award winners at the link in our bio.

Today we're celebrating Levitan Teaching Award winner @jayscheib, @mitmta Section Head and the Class of 1949 Professor.
In one student's words, “In 21T.100 (Theater Arts Production), our class mounted a 6.5-hour theatrical production [of playwright @stanlai99's "A Dream Like A Dream] — an almost unimaginable undertaking for a student course. We all joke that ‘Jay has magic.’ But behind that magic is someone who quietly spends countless hours preparing every detail."
Learn more about this year's Levitan Teaching Award winners at the link in our bio.

Today we're celebrating Levitan Teaching Award winner @jayscheib, @mitmta Section Head and the Class of 1949 Professor.
In one student's words, “In 21T.100 (Theater Arts Production), our class mounted a 6.5-hour theatrical production [of playwright @stanlai99's "A Dream Like A Dream] — an almost unimaginable undertaking for a student course. We all joke that ‘Jay has magic.’ But behind that magic is someone who quietly spends countless hours preparing every detail."
Learn more about this year's Levitan Teaching Award winners at the link in our bio.

Today we're celebrating Levitan Teaching Award winner @jayscheib, @mitmta Section Head and the Class of 1949 Professor.
In one student's words, “In 21T.100 (Theater Arts Production), our class mounted a 6.5-hour theatrical production [of playwright @stanlai99's "A Dream Like A Dream] — an almost unimaginable undertaking for a student course. We all joke that ‘Jay has magic.’ But behind that magic is someone who quietly spends countless hours preparing every detail."
Learn more about this year's Levitan Teaching Award winners at the link in our bio.

Bravo to Xinyu Xu ‘26 (@xinyuxu_) for taking home the 2026 Louis Sudler Prize! 🎆
A lighting designer, technical director, carpenter, pianist, and director, Xu came to MIT planning to study computation and cognition until a production of Tick, Tick… Boom changed everything. She switched her major to Theater Arts and never looked back, going on to co-design lighting for the multimedia dance Volta and to light and associate-direct Jay Scheib’s (@jayscheib) six-and-a-half-hour epic A Dream Like a Dream as her senior thesis. “No one goes to theater to see the lights,” she says. “But you can’t see the show without lights. For me, the stage feels like a canvas.”
The Sudler Prize is presented annually to a graduating senior who has demonstrated excellence and the highest standards of proficiency in music, theater, painting, sculpture, design, architecture, or film.
📸 Images courtesy of the artist
🔗 Read more about Xu at the link in bio
#artsatmit #thisismit #sudlerprize #lightingdesign #theaterarts

Bravo to Xinyu Xu ‘26 (@xinyuxu_) for taking home the 2026 Louis Sudler Prize! 🎆
A lighting designer, technical director, carpenter, pianist, and director, Xu came to MIT planning to study computation and cognition until a production of Tick, Tick… Boom changed everything. She switched her major to Theater Arts and never looked back, going on to co-design lighting for the multimedia dance Volta and to light and associate-direct Jay Scheib’s (@jayscheib) six-and-a-half-hour epic A Dream Like a Dream as her senior thesis. “No one goes to theater to see the lights,” she says. “But you can’t see the show without lights. For me, the stage feels like a canvas.”
The Sudler Prize is presented annually to a graduating senior who has demonstrated excellence and the highest standards of proficiency in music, theater, painting, sculpture, design, architecture, or film.
📸 Images courtesy of the artist
🔗 Read more about Xu at the link in bio
#artsatmit #thisismit #sudlerprize #lightingdesign #theaterarts

Bravo to Xinyu Xu ‘26 (@xinyuxu_) for taking home the 2026 Louis Sudler Prize! 🎆
A lighting designer, technical director, carpenter, pianist, and director, Xu came to MIT planning to study computation and cognition until a production of Tick, Tick… Boom changed everything. She switched her major to Theater Arts and never looked back, going on to co-design lighting for the multimedia dance Volta and to light and associate-direct Jay Scheib’s (@jayscheib) six-and-a-half-hour epic A Dream Like a Dream as her senior thesis. “No one goes to theater to see the lights,” she says. “But you can’t see the show without lights. For me, the stage feels like a canvas.”
The Sudler Prize is presented annually to a graduating senior who has demonstrated excellence and the highest standards of proficiency in music, theater, painting, sculpture, design, architecture, or film.
📸 Images courtesy of the artist
🔗 Read more about Xu at the link in bio
#artsatmit #thisismit #sudlerprize #lightingdesign #theaterarts

Congratulations to the four recipients of the 2026 Laya and Jerome B. Wiesner Student Art Awards: Clay Lewis ‘26 (@_claylewis_ ), Andrea Marcano-Delgado PhD ‘26 (@andreanmarcano), Perry Naseck SM ‘25 (@perrynaseck), and Gloria Zhu ‘26 (@riazh_)! 🎉
Lewis, a music major with a minor in computer science, composed scores for the Logarhythms’ (@mitlogs) films and is headed to USC’s screen scoring program. Marcano-Delgado balanced a PhD in chemical biology with a deepening vocal jazz practice, co-founding the MIT Afro Latin Ensemble along the way. Naseck, a Media Lab PhD student, has become the de facto lighting designer for the Thomas Tull Concert Hall while researching live concert visuals for improvised and AI-generated music. And Zhu, a double major in computer science and art and design, created metal wearables featured at the MIT Gala (@mitgala) and has mentored fellow students in MIT’s makerspaces for three years.
Named for past MIT President Jerome B. Wiesner and Laya Wiesner, these awards have honored students whose artistic contributions enrich campus life since 1979.
📸 Images courtesy of the artists
🔗 Learn more about the student artists at the link in bio
#artsatmit #thisismit #wiesnerawards #studentartists #mitarts filmscoring vocaljazz medialab

Congratulations to the four recipients of the 2026 Laya and Jerome B. Wiesner Student Art Awards: Clay Lewis ‘26 (@_claylewis_ ), Andrea Marcano-Delgado PhD ‘26 (@andreanmarcano), Perry Naseck SM ‘25 (@perrynaseck), and Gloria Zhu ‘26 (@riazh_)! 🎉
Lewis, a music major with a minor in computer science, composed scores for the Logarhythms’ (@mitlogs) films and is headed to USC’s screen scoring program. Marcano-Delgado balanced a PhD in chemical biology with a deepening vocal jazz practice, co-founding the MIT Afro Latin Ensemble along the way. Naseck, a Media Lab PhD student, has become the de facto lighting designer for the Thomas Tull Concert Hall while researching live concert visuals for improvised and AI-generated music. And Zhu, a double major in computer science and art and design, created metal wearables featured at the MIT Gala (@mitgala) and has mentored fellow students in MIT’s makerspaces for three years.
Named for past MIT President Jerome B. Wiesner and Laya Wiesner, these awards have honored students whose artistic contributions enrich campus life since 1979.
📸 Images courtesy of the artists
🔗 Learn more about the student artists at the link in bio
#artsatmit #thisismit #wiesnerawards #studentartists #mitarts filmscoring vocaljazz medialab

Congratulations to the four recipients of the 2026 Laya and Jerome B. Wiesner Student Art Awards: Clay Lewis ‘26 (@_claylewis_ ), Andrea Marcano-Delgado PhD ‘26 (@andreanmarcano), Perry Naseck SM ‘25 (@perrynaseck), and Gloria Zhu ‘26 (@riazh_)! 🎉
Lewis, a music major with a minor in computer science, composed scores for the Logarhythms’ (@mitlogs) films and is headed to USC’s screen scoring program. Marcano-Delgado balanced a PhD in chemical biology with a deepening vocal jazz practice, co-founding the MIT Afro Latin Ensemble along the way. Naseck, a Media Lab PhD student, has become the de facto lighting designer for the Thomas Tull Concert Hall while researching live concert visuals for improvised and AI-generated music. And Zhu, a double major in computer science and art and design, created metal wearables featured at the MIT Gala (@mitgala) and has mentored fellow students in MIT’s makerspaces for three years.
Named for past MIT President Jerome B. Wiesner and Laya Wiesner, these awards have honored students whose artistic contributions enrich campus life since 1979.
📸 Images courtesy of the artists
🔗 Learn more about the student artists at the link in bio
#artsatmit #thisismit #wiesnerawards #studentartists #mitarts filmscoring vocaljazz medialab

Congratulations to the four recipients of the 2026 Laya and Jerome B. Wiesner Student Art Awards: Clay Lewis ‘26 (@_claylewis_ ), Andrea Marcano-Delgado PhD ‘26 (@andreanmarcano), Perry Naseck SM ‘25 (@perrynaseck), and Gloria Zhu ‘26 (@riazh_)! 🎉
Lewis, a music major with a minor in computer science, composed scores for the Logarhythms’ (@mitlogs) films and is headed to USC’s screen scoring program. Marcano-Delgado balanced a PhD in chemical biology with a deepening vocal jazz practice, co-founding the MIT Afro Latin Ensemble along the way. Naseck, a Media Lab PhD student, has become the de facto lighting designer for the Thomas Tull Concert Hall while researching live concert visuals for improvised and AI-generated music. And Zhu, a double major in computer science and art and design, created metal wearables featured at the MIT Gala (@mitgala) and has mentored fellow students in MIT’s makerspaces for three years.
Named for past MIT President Jerome B. Wiesner and Laya Wiesner, these awards have honored students whose artistic contributions enrich campus life since 1979.
📸 Images courtesy of the artists
🔗 Learn more about the student artists at the link in bio
#artsatmit #thisismit #wiesnerawards #studentartists #mitarts filmscoring vocaljazz medialab

Congratulations to the four recipients of the 2026 Laya and Jerome B. Wiesner Student Art Awards: Clay Lewis ‘26 (@_claylewis_ ), Andrea Marcano-Delgado PhD ‘26 (@andreanmarcano), Perry Naseck SM ‘25 (@perrynaseck), and Gloria Zhu ‘26 (@riazh_)! 🎉
Lewis, a music major with a minor in computer science, composed scores for the Logarhythms’ (@mitlogs) films and is headed to USC’s screen scoring program. Marcano-Delgado balanced a PhD in chemical biology with a deepening vocal jazz practice, co-founding the MIT Afro Latin Ensemble along the way. Naseck, a Media Lab PhD student, has become the de facto lighting designer for the Thomas Tull Concert Hall while researching live concert visuals for improvised and AI-generated music. And Zhu, a double major in computer science and art and design, created metal wearables featured at the MIT Gala (@mitgala) and has mentored fellow students in MIT’s makerspaces for three years.
Named for past MIT President Jerome B. Wiesner and Laya Wiesner, these awards have honored students whose artistic contributions enrich campus life since 1979.
📸 Images courtesy of the artists
🔗 Learn more about the student artists at the link in bio
#artsatmit #thisismit #wiesnerawards #studentartists #mitarts filmscoring vocaljazz medialab

Congratulations to the four recipients of the 2026 Laya and Jerome B. Wiesner Student Art Awards: Clay Lewis ‘26 (@_claylewis_ ), Andrea Marcano-Delgado PhD ‘26 (@andreanmarcano), Perry Naseck SM ‘25 (@perrynaseck), and Gloria Zhu ‘26 (@riazh_)! 🎉
Lewis, a music major with a minor in computer science, composed scores for the Logarhythms’ (@mitlogs) films and is headed to USC’s screen scoring program. Marcano-Delgado balanced a PhD in chemical biology with a deepening vocal jazz practice, co-founding the MIT Afro Latin Ensemble along the way. Naseck, a Media Lab PhD student, has become the de facto lighting designer for the Thomas Tull Concert Hall while researching live concert visuals for improvised and AI-generated music. And Zhu, a double major in computer science and art and design, created metal wearables featured at the MIT Gala (@mitgala) and has mentored fellow students in MIT’s makerspaces for three years.
Named for past MIT President Jerome B. Wiesner and Laya Wiesner, these awards have honored students whose artistic contributions enrich campus life since 1979.
📸 Images courtesy of the artists
🔗 Learn more about the student artists at the link in bio
#artsatmit #thisismit #wiesnerawards #studentartists #mitarts filmscoring vocaljazz medialab

Congratulations to the four recipients of the 2026 Laya and Jerome B. Wiesner Student Art Awards: Clay Lewis ‘26 (@_claylewis_ ), Andrea Marcano-Delgado PhD ‘26 (@andreanmarcano), Perry Naseck SM ‘25 (@perrynaseck), and Gloria Zhu ‘26 (@riazh_)! 🎉
Lewis, a music major with a minor in computer science, composed scores for the Logarhythms’ (@mitlogs) films and is headed to USC’s screen scoring program. Marcano-Delgado balanced a PhD in chemical biology with a deepening vocal jazz practice, co-founding the MIT Afro Latin Ensemble along the way. Naseck, a Media Lab PhD student, has become the de facto lighting designer for the Thomas Tull Concert Hall while researching live concert visuals for improvised and AI-generated music. And Zhu, a double major in computer science and art and design, created metal wearables featured at the MIT Gala (@mitgala) and has mentored fellow students in MIT’s makerspaces for three years.
Named for past MIT President Jerome B. Wiesner and Laya Wiesner, these awards have honored students whose artistic contributions enrich campus life since 1979.
📸 Images courtesy of the artists
🔗 Learn more about the student artists at the link in bio
#artsatmit #thisismit #wiesnerawards #studentartists #mitarts filmscoring vocaljazz medialab

Congratulations to the four recipients of the 2026 Laya and Jerome B. Wiesner Student Art Awards: Clay Lewis ‘26 (@_claylewis_ ), Andrea Marcano-Delgado PhD ‘26 (@andreanmarcano), Perry Naseck SM ‘25 (@perrynaseck), and Gloria Zhu ‘26 (@riazh_)! 🎉
Lewis, a music major with a minor in computer science, composed scores for the Logarhythms’ (@mitlogs) films and is headed to USC’s screen scoring program. Marcano-Delgado balanced a PhD in chemical biology with a deepening vocal jazz practice, co-founding the MIT Afro Latin Ensemble along the way. Naseck, a Media Lab PhD student, has become the de facto lighting designer for the Thomas Tull Concert Hall while researching live concert visuals for improvised and AI-generated music. And Zhu, a double major in computer science and art and design, created metal wearables featured at the MIT Gala (@mitgala) and has mentored fellow students in MIT’s makerspaces for three years.
Named for past MIT President Jerome B. Wiesner and Laya Wiesner, these awards have honored students whose artistic contributions enrich campus life since 1979.
📸 Images courtesy of the artists
🔗 Learn more about the student artists at the link in bio
#artsatmit #thisismit #wiesnerawards #studentartists #mitarts filmscoring vocaljazz medialab
The 2026 Student Art Awards celebrate nine artists whose work spans lighting design, live coding, fabrication, film scoring, vocal jazz, and more. ✨
Xinyu Xu ‘26 (@xinyuxu_) takes home the Louis Sudler Prize for her transformative lighting design in MIT Theater Arts productions. The Laya and Jerome B. Wiesner Student Art Awards go to Clay Lewis ‘26 (@_claylewis_), Andrea Marcano-Delgado PhD ‘26 (@andreanmarcano), Perry Naseck SM ‘25 (@perrynaseck), and Gloria Zhu ‘26 (@riazh_) for their wide-ranging contributions to MIT’s creative life. And the Harold and Arlene Schnitzer Prize in the Visual Arts honors Coco Allred SMACT ‘26 (@coco_allred), C Jacob Payne MArch ‘27 (@cjacobpayne), Jessica Stringham SM ‘26 (@_thisxorthat), and Harrison White MArch ‘27 for distinguished bodies of work in visual art, design, and interactive media.
🔗 Read more about all the winners at the link in bio
#artsatmit #thisismit #studentart #mitarts #studentartawards
Mariano Salcedo '25 (@marianoawesome) is a master’s student in MIT's Music Technology and Computation Graduate Program. He's designing an AI to visualize and express music and other sounds.
The new graduate program is a collaboration between MIT Music and Theater Arts (@mitmta) in the School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences, and the School of Engineering (@mit_engineering).

some fabulous pics by @costanzatinti + video by tony of the show we had the pleasure to play this past saturday for MIT’s lighting design midterm !!
this was one of the coolest things i’ve ever been a part of !!
some fabulous pics by @costanzatinti + video by tony of the show we had the pleasure to play this past saturday for MIT’s lighting design midterm !!
this was one of the coolest things i’ve ever been a part of !!

some fabulous pics by @costanzatinti + video by tony of the show we had the pleasure to play this past saturday for MIT’s lighting design midterm !!
this was one of the coolest things i’ve ever been a part of !!

some fabulous pics by @costanzatinti + video by tony of the show we had the pleasure to play this past saturday for MIT’s lighting design midterm !!
this was one of the coolest things i’ve ever been a part of !!

some fabulous pics by @costanzatinti + video by tony of the show we had the pleasure to play this past saturday for MIT’s lighting design midterm !!
this was one of the coolest things i’ve ever been a part of !!
Ken Urban is a senior lecturer of dramatic writing in MIT Theater. He is an award-winning playwright, screenwriter, and musician.
In the classroom, Urban says he treats his students as real-world playwrights, encouraging them to write characters and create worlds that are different from their own.
“One of the things students often write about in my classes, as STEM majors, is the ethical implications of the work that they do,” he says.
Learn more about Urban’s approach to teaching at MIT in this video spotlight.

MIT alum and distinguished cellist Carlos Prieto ’59 returned to campus on March 31 for an afternoon of conversation and music, co-hosted by the SHASS Dean’s Office, the Lewis Music Library, and the Emerson/Harris Program. Prieto presented his most recent book to the MIT Libraries and performed before an audience of students, faculty, staff, and friends of MIT Music. Two Emerson/Harris cellists, Jasper Lee and Chengyu Li, also performed. The event highlighted the extraordinary artistry and interdisciplinary spirit thriving at MIT.

MIT alum and distinguished cellist Carlos Prieto ’59 returned to campus on March 31 for an afternoon of conversation and music, co-hosted by the SHASS Dean’s Office, the Lewis Music Library, and the Emerson/Harris Program. Prieto presented his most recent book to the MIT Libraries and performed before an audience of students, faculty, staff, and friends of MIT Music. Two Emerson/Harris cellists, Jasper Lee and Chengyu Li, also performed. The event highlighted the extraordinary artistry and interdisciplinary spirit thriving at MIT.

MIT alum and distinguished cellist Carlos Prieto ’59 returned to campus on March 31 for an afternoon of conversation and music, co-hosted by the SHASS Dean’s Office, the Lewis Music Library, and the Emerson/Harris Program. Prieto presented his most recent book to the MIT Libraries and performed before an audience of students, faculty, staff, and friends of MIT Music. Two Emerson/Harris cellists, Jasper Lee and Chengyu Li, also performed. The event highlighted the extraordinary artistry and interdisciplinary spirit thriving at MIT.

MIT alum and distinguished cellist Carlos Prieto ’59 returned to campus on March 31 for an afternoon of conversation and music, co-hosted by the SHASS Dean’s Office, the Lewis Music Library, and the Emerson/Harris Program. Prieto presented his most recent book to the MIT Libraries and performed before an audience of students, faculty, staff, and friends of MIT Music. Two Emerson/Harris cellists, Jasper Lee and Chengyu Li, also performed. The event highlighted the extraordinary artistry and interdisciplinary spirit thriving at MIT.

MIT alum and distinguished cellist Carlos Prieto ’59 returned to campus on March 31 for an afternoon of conversation and music, co-hosted by the SHASS Dean’s Office, the Lewis Music Library, and the Emerson/Harris Program. Prieto presented his most recent book to the MIT Libraries and performed before an audience of students, faculty, staff, and friends of MIT Music. Two Emerson/Harris cellists, Jasper Lee and Chengyu Li, also performed. The event highlighted the extraordinary artistry and interdisciplinary spirit thriving at MIT.

MIT alum and distinguished cellist Carlos Prieto ’59 returned to campus on March 31 for an afternoon of conversation and music, co-hosted by the SHASS Dean’s Office, the Lewis Music Library, and the Emerson/Harris Program. Prieto presented his most recent book to the MIT Libraries and performed before an audience of students, faculty, staff, and friends of MIT Music. Two Emerson/Harris cellists, Jasper Lee and Chengyu Li, also performed. The event highlighted the extraordinary artistry and interdisciplinary spirit thriving at MIT.

MIT alum and distinguished cellist Carlos Prieto ’59 returned to campus on March 31 for an afternoon of conversation and music, co-hosted by the SHASS Dean’s Office, the Lewis Music Library, and the Emerson/Harris Program. Prieto presented his most recent book to the MIT Libraries and performed before an audience of students, faculty, staff, and friends of MIT Music. Two Emerson/Harris cellists, Jasper Lee and Chengyu Li, also performed. The event highlighted the extraordinary artistry and interdisciplinary spirit thriving at MIT.

MIT alum and distinguished cellist Carlos Prieto ’59 returned to campus on March 31 for an afternoon of conversation and music, co-hosted by the SHASS Dean’s Office, the Lewis Music Library, and the Emerson/Harris Program. Prieto presented his most recent book to the MIT Libraries and performed before an audience of students, faculty, staff, and friends of MIT Music. Two Emerson/Harris cellists, Jasper Lee and Chengyu Li, also performed. The event highlighted the extraordinary artistry and interdisciplinary spirit thriving at MIT.

“Hiii-iii! I’m Spider Rabbit,” beams the man in white coveralls, floppy paper ears, and chalky face paint. Played in March to a packed house at MIT and currently at La MaMa in New York, Spider Rabbit is a surreal solo one-act by poet Michael McClure, brought to life by MIT senior lecturer Dan Safer and actor Tony Torn.
The pair spent an intensive week on campus working with creative collaborators and MIT students to develop a production they’d begun building together a few years ago. For Torn, who taught acting at the Institute a few years ago, the chance to work with students again was a perk of rehearsing on campus. Students like Joy Ma ‘25, completing an MEng after earning her bachelor’s in physics and computer science, joined the production team during rehearsals—one of over 10 theater classes she’s taken at MIT. As Torn puts it, “once [MIT students] see theater as a different kind of creative problem to be solved, they immediately lock in.”
Spider Rabbit is now playing at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in New York through April 12.
🔗 Read the full story at the link in our bio
📸 Photos by Ben Rose/MIT and HErickson/MIT
#artsatmit #thisismit #experimentaltheater #lamamaetc #theaterarts

“Hiii-iii! I’m Spider Rabbit,” beams the man in white coveralls, floppy paper ears, and chalky face paint. Played in March to a packed house at MIT and currently at La MaMa in New York, Spider Rabbit is a surreal solo one-act by poet Michael McClure, brought to life by MIT senior lecturer Dan Safer and actor Tony Torn.
The pair spent an intensive week on campus working with creative collaborators and MIT students to develop a production they’d begun building together a few years ago. For Torn, who taught acting at the Institute a few years ago, the chance to work with students again was a perk of rehearsing on campus. Students like Joy Ma ‘25, completing an MEng after earning her bachelor’s in physics and computer science, joined the production team during rehearsals—one of over 10 theater classes she’s taken at MIT. As Torn puts it, “once [MIT students] see theater as a different kind of creative problem to be solved, they immediately lock in.”
Spider Rabbit is now playing at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in New York through April 12.
🔗 Read the full story at the link in our bio
📸 Photos by Ben Rose/MIT and HErickson/MIT
#artsatmit #thisismit #experimentaltheater #lamamaetc #theaterarts

“Hiii-iii! I’m Spider Rabbit,” beams the man in white coveralls, floppy paper ears, and chalky face paint. Played in March to a packed house at MIT and currently at La MaMa in New York, Spider Rabbit is a surreal solo one-act by poet Michael McClure, brought to life by MIT senior lecturer Dan Safer and actor Tony Torn.
The pair spent an intensive week on campus working with creative collaborators and MIT students to develop a production they’d begun building together a few years ago. For Torn, who taught acting at the Institute a few years ago, the chance to work with students again was a perk of rehearsing on campus. Students like Joy Ma ‘25, completing an MEng after earning her bachelor’s in physics and computer science, joined the production team during rehearsals—one of over 10 theater classes she’s taken at MIT. As Torn puts it, “once [MIT students] see theater as a different kind of creative problem to be solved, they immediately lock in.”
Spider Rabbit is now playing at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in New York through April 12.
🔗 Read the full story at the link in our bio
📸 Photos by Ben Rose/MIT and HErickson/MIT
#artsatmit #thisismit #experimentaltheater #lamamaetc #theaterarts

“Hiii-iii! I’m Spider Rabbit,” beams the man in white coveralls, floppy paper ears, and chalky face paint. Played in March to a packed house at MIT and currently at La MaMa in New York, Spider Rabbit is a surreal solo one-act by poet Michael McClure, brought to life by MIT senior lecturer Dan Safer and actor Tony Torn.
The pair spent an intensive week on campus working with creative collaborators and MIT students to develop a production they’d begun building together a few years ago. For Torn, who taught acting at the Institute a few years ago, the chance to work with students again was a perk of rehearsing on campus. Students like Joy Ma ‘25, completing an MEng after earning her bachelor’s in physics and computer science, joined the production team during rehearsals—one of over 10 theater classes she’s taken at MIT. As Torn puts it, “once [MIT students] see theater as a different kind of creative problem to be solved, they immediately lock in.”
Spider Rabbit is now playing at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in New York through April 12.
🔗 Read the full story at the link in our bio
📸 Photos by Ben Rose/MIT and HErickson/MIT
#artsatmit #thisismit #experimentaltheater #lamamaetc #theaterarts

“Hiii-iii! I’m Spider Rabbit,” beams the man in white coveralls, floppy paper ears, and chalky face paint. Played in March to a packed house at MIT and currently at La MaMa in New York, Spider Rabbit is a surreal solo one-act by poet Michael McClure, brought to life by MIT senior lecturer Dan Safer and actor Tony Torn.
The pair spent an intensive week on campus working with creative collaborators and MIT students to develop a production they’d begun building together a few years ago. For Torn, who taught acting at the Institute a few years ago, the chance to work with students again was a perk of rehearsing on campus. Students like Joy Ma ‘25, completing an MEng after earning her bachelor’s in physics and computer science, joined the production team during rehearsals—one of over 10 theater classes she’s taken at MIT. As Torn puts it, “once [MIT students] see theater as a different kind of creative problem to be solved, they immediately lock in.”
Spider Rabbit is now playing at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in New York through April 12.
🔗 Read the full story at the link in our bio
📸 Photos by Ben Rose/MIT and HErickson/MIT
#artsatmit #thisismit #experimentaltheater #lamamaetc #theaterarts

“Hiii-iii! I’m Spider Rabbit,” beams the man in white coveralls, floppy paper ears, and chalky face paint. Played in March to a packed house at MIT and currently at La MaMa in New York, Spider Rabbit is a surreal solo one-act by poet Michael McClure, brought to life by MIT senior lecturer Dan Safer and actor Tony Torn.
The pair spent an intensive week on campus working with creative collaborators and MIT students to develop a production they’d begun building together a few years ago. For Torn, who taught acting at the Institute a few years ago, the chance to work with students again was a perk of rehearsing on campus. Students like Joy Ma ‘25, completing an MEng after earning her bachelor’s in physics and computer science, joined the production team during rehearsals—one of over 10 theater classes she’s taken at MIT. As Torn puts it, “once [MIT students] see theater as a different kind of creative problem to be solved, they immediately lock in.”
Spider Rabbit is now playing at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in New York through April 12.
🔗 Read the full story at the link in our bio
📸 Photos by Ben Rose/MIT and HErickson/MIT
#artsatmit #thisismit #experimentaltheater #lamamaetc #theaterarts

“Hiii-iii! I’m Spider Rabbit,” beams the man in white coveralls, floppy paper ears, and chalky face paint. Played in March to a packed house at MIT and currently at La MaMa in New York, Spider Rabbit is a surreal solo one-act by poet Michael McClure, brought to life by MIT senior lecturer Dan Safer and actor Tony Torn.
The pair spent an intensive week on campus working with creative collaborators and MIT students to develop a production they’d begun building together a few years ago. For Torn, who taught acting at the Institute a few years ago, the chance to work with students again was a perk of rehearsing on campus. Students like Joy Ma ‘25, completing an MEng after earning her bachelor’s in physics and computer science, joined the production team during rehearsals—one of over 10 theater classes she’s taken at MIT. As Torn puts it, “once [MIT students] see theater as a different kind of creative problem to be solved, they immediately lock in.”
Spider Rabbit is now playing at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in New York through April 12.
🔗 Read the full story at the link in our bio
📸 Photos by Ben Rose/MIT and HErickson/MIT
#artsatmit #thisismit #experimentaltheater #lamamaetc #theaterarts

“Hiii-iii! I’m Spider Rabbit,” beams the man in white coveralls, floppy paper ears, and chalky face paint. Played in March to a packed house at MIT and currently at La MaMa in New York, Spider Rabbit is a surreal solo one-act by poet Michael McClure, brought to life by MIT senior lecturer Dan Safer and actor Tony Torn.
The pair spent an intensive week on campus working with creative collaborators and MIT students to develop a production they’d begun building together a few years ago. For Torn, who taught acting at the Institute a few years ago, the chance to work with students again was a perk of rehearsing on campus. Students like Joy Ma ‘25, completing an MEng after earning her bachelor’s in physics and computer science, joined the production team during rehearsals—one of over 10 theater classes she’s taken at MIT. As Torn puts it, “once [MIT students] see theater as a different kind of creative problem to be solved, they immediately lock in.”
Spider Rabbit is now playing at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in New York through April 12.
🔗 Read the full story at the link in our bio
📸 Photos by Ben Rose/MIT and HErickson/MIT
#artsatmit #thisismit #experimentaltheater #lamamaetc #theaterarts

“Hiii-iii! I’m Spider Rabbit,” beams the man in white coveralls, floppy paper ears, and chalky face paint. Played in March to a packed house at MIT and currently at La MaMa in New York, Spider Rabbit is a surreal solo one-act by poet Michael McClure, brought to life by MIT senior lecturer Dan Safer and actor Tony Torn.
The pair spent an intensive week on campus working with creative collaborators and MIT students to develop a production they’d begun building together a few years ago. For Torn, who taught acting at the Institute a few years ago, the chance to work with students again was a perk of rehearsing on campus. Students like Joy Ma ‘25, completing an MEng after earning her bachelor’s in physics and computer science, joined the production team during rehearsals—one of over 10 theater classes she’s taken at MIT. As Torn puts it, “once [MIT students] see theater as a different kind of creative problem to be solved, they immediately lock in.”
Spider Rabbit is now playing at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in New York through April 12.
🔗 Read the full story at the link in our bio
📸 Photos by Ben Rose/MIT and HErickson/MIT
#artsatmit #thisismit #experimentaltheater #lamamaetc #theaterarts

“Hiii-iii! I’m Spider Rabbit,” beams the man in white coveralls, floppy paper ears, and chalky face paint. Played in March to a packed house at MIT and currently at La MaMa in New York, Spider Rabbit is a surreal solo one-act by poet Michael McClure, brought to life by MIT senior lecturer Dan Safer and actor Tony Torn.
The pair spent an intensive week on campus working with creative collaborators and MIT students to develop a production they’d begun building together a few years ago. For Torn, who taught acting at the Institute a few years ago, the chance to work with students again was a perk of rehearsing on campus. Students like Joy Ma ‘25, completing an MEng after earning her bachelor’s in physics and computer science, joined the production team during rehearsals—one of over 10 theater classes she’s taken at MIT. As Torn puts it, “once [MIT students] see theater as a different kind of creative problem to be solved, they immediately lock in.”
Spider Rabbit is now playing at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in New York through April 12.
🔗 Read the full story at the link in our bio
📸 Photos by Ben Rose/MIT and HErickson/MIT
#artsatmit #thisismit #experimentaltheater #lamamaetc #theaterarts

Mariano Salcedo (@marianoawesome), a student in @mitmta and @mit_engineering's Music Technology and Computation Graduate Program, is designing an AI to visualize and express music and other sounds. The simulation tool he designed observes Neural Cellular Automata (NCA) as it reacts to audio in real time.
“What if we could improve the ways we model self-organized systems?” he asks. “That is, systems like multicellular organisms, flocks of birds, or societies that interact locally but exhibit interesting behaviors.”
Learn more about Mariano's research, his time inside and outside the classroom, and more at the link in our bio.
Danny Yang (@dannyfyang) is a senior majoring in biology (@mitbiology) and minoring in Japanese (@mit.global.languages).
In this video spotlight, Danny talks about one of his most memorable SHASS classes, 21M.030 (Introduction to World Music), where students study global music traditions and cultures. "That's not something that I really experienced before coming to MIT. It was something that I was extremely moved by when I took that class."
인스타그램 스토리 뷰어는 인스타그램 스토리, 비디오, 사진 또는 IGTV를 비밀리에 보고 저장할 수 있는 간단한 도구입니다. 이 서비스를 통해 콘텐츠를 다운로드하고 언제든지 오프라인으로 즐길 수 있습니다. 인스타그램에서 나중에 확인하고 싶은 흥미로운 콘텐츠를 찾거나 익명으로 스토리를 보고 싶다면, 우리 뷰어가 적합합니다. Anonstories는 신원을 숨길 수 있는 훌륭한 솔루션을 제공합니다. 인스타그램은 2023년 8월에 스토리 기능을 출시했으며, 이 기능은 흥미롭고 시간에 민감한 형식으로 빠르게 다른 플랫폼에 채택되었습니다. 스토리는 사용자가 텍스트, 이모지 또는 필터로 보강된 사진, 비디오 또는 셀카를 공유할 수 있게 해주며, 24시간 동안만 표시됩니다. 이 제한된 시간 동안 높은 참여를 유도하며 일반 게시물보다 더 많은 반응을 얻을 수 있습니다. 오늘날 스토리는 소셜 미디어에서 연결하고 소통하는 가장 인기 있는 방법 중 하나입니다. 그러나 스토리를 볼 때, 제작자는 자신의 뷰어 목록에서 당신의 이름을 볼 수 있으며, 이는 개인 정보 보호에 대한 우려를 일으킬 수 있습니다. 만약 스토리를 아무도 모르게 탐색하고 싶다면? 그때 Anonstories가 유용해집니다. 이 도구는 신원을 드러내지 않고 공개된 인스타그램 콘텐츠를 볼 수 있게 해줍니다. 관심 있는 프로필의 사용자명을 입력하면 해당 프로필의 최신 스토리를 확인할 수 있습니다. Anonstories 뷰어의 특징: - 익명 브라우징: 뷰어 목록에 나타나지 않고 스토리를 볼 수 있습니다. - 계정 필요 없음: 인스타그램 계정에 가입하지 않고 공개 콘텐츠를 볼 수 있습니다. - 콘텐츠 다운로드: 스토리 콘텐츠를 직접 다운로드하여 오프라인에서 사용할 수 있습니다. - 하이라이트 보기: 24시간 제한을 넘어서 인스타그램 하이라이트를 볼 수 있습니다. - 리포스트 모니터링: 개인 프로필의 스토리 리포스트나 참여도를 추적할 수 있습니다. 제한 사항: - 이 도구는 공개 계정에서만 작동하며, 개인 계정은 접근할 수 없습니다. 장점: - 개인 정보 보호 친화적: 인스타그램 콘텐츠를 보면서도 눈에 띄지 않습니다. - 간단하고 쉬움: 앱 설치나 등록이 필요 없습니다. - 독점 도구: 인스타그램에서 제공하지 않는 방식으로 콘텐츠를 다운로드하고 관리할 수 있습니다.
인스타그램 업데이트를 비밀리에 추적하고 개인 정보를 보호하며 익명으로 남을 수 있습니다.
개인 프로필 뷰어를 사용하여 쉽게 프로필과 사진을 익명으로 볼 수 있습니다.
이 무료 도구는 인스타그램 스토리를 익명으로 볼 수 있게 해주며, 스토리 업로더에게 활동을 숨길 수 있습니다.
Anonstories는 사용자가 인스타그램 스토리를 볼 때 제작자에게 알림을 보내지 않도록 합니다.
iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, Chrome, Safari와 같은 최신 브라우저에서 원활하게 작동합니다.
로그인 정보 없이 안전하고 익명으로 브라우징할 수 있습니다.
사용자는 간단히 사용자명을 입력하여 공개된 스토리를 볼 수 있습니다. 계정이 필요하지 않습니다.
사진(JPEG)과 비디오(MP4)를 쉽게 다운로드합니다.
이 서비스는 무료로 제공됩니다.
비공개 계정의 콘텐츠는 팔로워만 접근할 수 있습니다.
파일은 개인적 또는 교육적 용도로만 사용 가능하며 저작권 규정을 준수해야 합니다.
공개된 사용자명을 입력하여 스토리를 보거나 다운로드할 수 있습니다. 서비스는 콘텐츠를 로컬에 저장할 수 있는 직접 링크를 생성합니다.