UF Today

Features Winter 2009

Be Still My Body

Be Still My Body

 

Story by SARAH L. STEWART (BSJ '05)
Photo by BRIAN KRATZER

Kim Pacetti taught herself tricks to hide the shaking. She'd sit on her hands, cross her legs and clamp them together, exhausting herself trying to assert some authority over her movements. But a dozen years into her battle with Parkinson's disease — a battle that began when Pacetti was 36 — the Parkinson's was winning. She lived in constant, uncontrollable motion; she couldn't even sit in a chair without slipping out.

Masters of Arts

Masters of Arts

 

Through the twisted mangroves in the dark of night, slick, tea-colored water glistens. Evening has descended in Jerry Cutler's painted woodland world. Cutler's moody, energetic artwork hangs in the Samuel P. Harn Museum of Art as part of the 45th annual Art Faculty Exhibition, a masterful collection of pieces from 24 School of Art and Art History faculty members.

Where Can We Run?

Where Can We Run

 

Story by ALISSON CLARK (BSJ ’98)
Illustration by IGOR MORSKI

Opening night was just a week away, but the production was in tatters. The script was changing by the minute. One actress was in tears. Another had stormed out of rehearsal in UF's McGuire Pavilion after a shouting match with cast members. Director Mikell Pinkney called a 10-minute break from rehearsals of "Where Can We Run?" He leaned back in his front-row seat and let out a long, weary sigh.