If you crossed paths on the Augsburg campus with history professor Phil Adamo, you would quickly learn of his enthusiasm for the history of the place. You may even hear him share one of the many stories that make Augsburg鈥檚 150-year history so intriguing.
Phil Adamo came to Augsburg in 2001, after completing his PhD in medieval history at The Ohio State University. In 2015, he was named 鈥淢innesota Professor of the Year鈥 for 2015 by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and the Council for Advancement and Support of Education, the same year he began as Director of Augsburg鈥檚 nationally recognized Honors Program. Since 2013, he鈥檚 been working with students on a history of Augsburg for its sesquicentennial celebration in 2019.
When asked what made him decide to sponsor a work of art for the Hagfors Center Art and Identity initiative, here is what he said:
鈥淢ost people don鈥檛 know I鈥檓 a bit of an art collector. I go to all the student shows and have purchased student self-portraits and other contemporary art. I鈥檓 a fan of art and want to support artists. When I found out about the Art and Identity initiative, I started looking at the portfolio of stories about the artists. In fact, I watched every video story on the various artists.
鈥淚 noticed the collection includes work by former campus photographer Stephen Geffre. Stephen and I have worked on several projects together over the years. In my current work, writing the history of Augsburg, Stephen took many of the images I鈥檓 using. I鈥檝e also bought some of his photography. Then I found out he is a multi-dimensional artist, working as a sculptor. The piece he鈥檚 doing for the Hagfors Center appeals to me because it brings to life something of the College鈥檚 past. .
鈥淚 appreciate the way objects tell stories, which is something I鈥檓 exploring in my history of Augsburg. This object Stephen is creating tells a story, that links to some of the stories I want to tell. For example, when the original Science Hall was built, in the late 1940s, students lamented the removal of an old tree during construction. 鈥極ne thing that really bothers me,鈥 one student said, 鈥榠s that someone had that beautiful, scrubby old tree by Science Hall cut down鈥攊t was the best and the only shade on campus 鈥 a person needs a tree for shade now and then.鈥
鈥淪tephen鈥檚 piece is large and dramatic. It will hang in the new building not far from where the elm trees in the quad once stood. For almost 75 years, half the life of the College, students, staff and faculty walked past those trees, sat in their shade, watched their leaves turn in the fall. Now, when you come down the main hallway of the first floor, you鈥檒l walk directly towards a cross-section of one of these trees, showing the history of Augsburg in its rings. Stephen鈥檚 piece adds an outline of the tree, suggestive of what once was there, but now is just a memory. That鈥檚 what historians do.鈥
鈥斅燽y Catherine Reid Day