Humanities @ Home: Award Winners

Congratulations to the 2021 Award Winners:

First Place: Jen Douglas
Second Place:Ìý &
Honorable Mentions:ÌýMichael Barnett, , JP Mayer, Anjali Misra, Alexandra Schultz

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poster with humanities @ home, backdrop floral

Humanities @ Home: Humanities & Healing Call for Works

CU Advancement and the Center for Humanities & the Arts (CHA) collaboratedÌýto promote humanities and arts and to document the ways our community is responding in view of to the mass shooting that occurred at the Table Mesa King Soopers on March 22, 2021.

We invited anyone in the ²ÊÃñ±¦µä community (staff, student, faculty) to use art and/or humanistic perspectives, tools, resources, and methods to produce a work over summer 2021.Ìý

Top projects received $1,000 each
Honorable Mentions receivedÌý$250 each

We strongly encouraged collaborations and partnerships, but the applicant MUST have had an active ²ÊÃñ±¦µä affiliation in fall 2021 when the awards wereÌýhonored.

Projects must also have hadÌýthe capability of being shared digitally.Ìý

The deadline has passed.

One Year Later: Reflections and Resiliency after the Boulder Shooting (April 10, 2022) featured the CU Center for Humanities & the Arts (CHA)’s Humanities @ Home competition winners and community members Jen Douglas, undergraduate student; Jessica Lawson, Instructor and alumna; and Ross Taylor, Assistant Professor of Journalism. The event will be moderated by Divisional Dean for Arts and Humanities John-Michael Rivera, whose research focuses on gun violence. Our panelists spoke on their art, their process, and how the act of creating has helped each of them reflect upon the March 22 Boulder Shooting at the Table Mesa King Soopers.

Thank you to everyone who joined Colorado Chautauqua and ²ÊÃñ±¦µä's Center for Humanities & the Arts for this in-person event showcasing resiliency through the creation of art as a response to gun violence in our local community. To see pictures from the One Year Later event, visit our event page: /cha/2022/03/07/one-year-later-reflections-and-resiliency-after-boulder-shooting

#BoulderStrong Resource Center

Rebuilding lives through therapy and partnership

TheÌýÌýis a safe place of healing and support dedicated to serving as a resource and referral center for residents, visitors and first responders affected by the Boulder Table Mesa tragedy. It is a multi-agency resource hub managed byÌýÌýof Boulder, Colorado and sponsored by King Soopers.

The center’s trained professionals know that people process grief and trauma differently and on their own timeline. As a result, therapy is never forced. In fact, therapy may not be for everyone, and that is okay. Our goal is to help you work through the traumatic experience to move forward in your life. Each person’s journey and timetable are different. Some people may need to play with a comfort dog while others may need someone to talk to. It’s all about helping you heal.