New Work in WashPost and Tricycle

New Work in WashPost and Tricycle

I wrote for The Washington Post about what I learned from my son (Class of '22) when he flew back to the nest because of the pandemic (https://wapo.st/3vxQzLG). And in a new piece in Tricycle's Summer issue, I explore how I reconnected with my Tibetan ancestors and myself (https://bit.ly/3fRr2GP). I was recently named a Contributing Editor at Tricycle.

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Chelsea Music Festival - June 25-26, 2021 - Weaving the Moment

Chelsea Music Festival - June 25-26, 2021 - Weaving the Moment

We are thrilled to announce our 2021 virtual Festival, titled Weaving the Moment this June 25th & 26th, which includes an exclusive weekend of concerts, conversation, and culinary excitement through brand new recordings and talks with musicians, artists, chefs, and Artistic Directors Melinda Lee Masur and Ken-David Masur.

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Princetonians Play Prominent Role in Sanford Biggers's Rockefeller Center Campus-Wide Takeover, Featuring "Oracle"

Princetonians Play Prominent Role in Sanford Biggers's Rockefeller Center Campus-Wide Takeover, Featuring "Oracle"

Sanford Biggers's take over of New York’s Rockefeller Center began on 5/5/21 with a campus-wide art installation headlined by Oracle, a monumental bronze sculpture that—standing 25 feet tall and weighing in at over 15,000 pounds—is the Harlem-based artist’s largest work to date. Mark Hines (P94) and Jordan Hines (P23) collaborated with the Artist at various stages of the creative digital process of Oracle.

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Check Out My New Book of Poems All About the Pandemic!

Check Out My New Book of Poems All About the Pandemic!

I’m really excited to share my new book, Love Too Can Spread, a collection of my poems all about the pandemic, just recently published.

The book captures the strangeness of this past year with poems of mine on everything from grocery shopping to grief to Grandma’s never-ending challenges with Zoom.


Especially in this transitional moment in the pandemic, I’m confident people will find this book deeply meaningful, as we reflect on all that we’ve just experienced and learned over the past year, and begin looking forward to all that comes next.

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Public Art: “Taking Pause” Explores What is Irreplaceable to Us

Public Art: “Taking Pause” Explores What is Irreplaceable to Us

“What is irreplaceable to you?” Capturing diverse answers from the local community, a public art installation now graces Dohm Alley, near the corner of Nassau and Witherspoon Streets. The Princeton University Humanities Council and the Arts Council of Princeton (ACP) are co-hosting the exhibit that runs through October. It features portraits and stories arranged by ACP Artist-in-Residence Robin Resch, a Princeton-based photographer who earned her Master’s in Architecture from Princeton University in 2003.

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