SyracuseArts.Net logo
  Home Calendar Search Directory  
   

Events for Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Time TBD Syracuse Builds: After the Master Plan Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:00 AM-9:00 PM Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center

9:00 AM-9:00 PM Newfoundland and Other Journeys Fayetteville Free Library

9:00 AM-6:00 PM The Eye of the FaithKeeper: The Haudenosaunee Art of Oren Lyons Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: Donalee Peden-Wesley Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Tango Point of Contact Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-5:00 PM The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

10:00 AM-9:00 PM Four to the Fore Associated Artists of Central New York

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Gullah Lifestyles: A Culture Under Attack and Confederate Currency: The Color of Money Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM The Art of George Mayocole Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Angelika Rinnhofer: Sammelsurium Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Train of Thought: Serial Images from the Light Work Collection Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Artist Showcase: Images by Brian Arnold Light Work Gallery

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum

11:30 AM-4:30 PM Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum

11:30 AM-4:30 PM Yves Saint Front Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art

7:30 PM Misery Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

7:30 PM Mountains Beyond Mountains University Lectures, featuring Tracy Kidder, author

8:00 PM Windjammer Vocal Jazz Syracuse University Setnor School of Music

Events for Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Time TBD Syracuse Builds: After the Master Plan Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:00 AM-9:00 PM Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center

9:00 AM-9:00 PM Newfoundland and Other Journeys Fayetteville Free Library

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: Donalee Peden-Wesley Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-6:00 PM The Eye of the FaithKeeper: The Haudenosaunee Art of Oren Lyons Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Tango Point of Contact Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-5:00 PM The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

10:00 AM-9:00 PM Four to the Fore Associated Artists of Central New York

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts

10:00 AM-5:00 PM The Art of George Mayocole Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Gullah Lifestyles: A Culture Under Attack and Confederate Currency: The Color of Money Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Train of Thought: Serial Images from the Light Work Collection Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Angelika Rinnhofer: Sammelsurium Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Artist Showcase: Images by Brian Arnold Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-2:00 PM Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum

11:30 AM-4:30 PM Yves Saint Front Syracuse University Art Museum

11:30 AM-4:30 PM Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art

12:30 PM Lavender Trio Civic Morning Musicals, featuring The Hamilton College Dance Team

3:00 PM The Great Flood of Florence Syracuse University College of Visual and Performing Arts, featuring Swietlan Nicholas Kraczyna

5:30 PM Jay McInerney, fiction Raymond Carver Reading Series

7:30 PM Tracy Kidder Friends of the Central Library Author Series

7:30 PM Misery Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

Events for Thursday, November 8, 2007

Time TBD Syracuse Builds: After the Master Plan Syracuse University School of Architecture

Time TBD Million Dollar Blocks: Justice and the City ThINC

9:00 AM-9:00 PM Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center

9:00 AM-9:00 PM Newfoundland and Other Journeys Fayetteville Free Library

9:00 AM-6:00 PM The Eye of the FaithKeeper: The Haudenosaunee Art of Oren Lyons Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Tango Point of Contact Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-5:00 PM The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

10:00 AM-9:00 PM Four to the Fore Associated Artists of Central New York

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Gullah Lifestyles: A Culture Under Attack and Confederate Currency: The Color of Money Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM The Art of George Mayocole Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Angelika Rinnhofer: Sammelsurium Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Train of Thought: Serial Images from the Light Work Collection Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Artist Showcase: Images by Brian Arnold Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-2:00 PM Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum

11:30 AM-8:00 PM Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum

11:30 AM-8:00 PM Yves Saint Front Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Maximum Color Delavan Art Gallery

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art

2:00 PM Film Series: Just an American Boy Onondaga Community College

5:00 PM-8:00 PM Cosmology: Works by Alan Singer Redhouse

6:45 PM Death Joins the Club Acme Mystery Company

7:00 PM Film Series: Just an American Boy Onondaga Community College

7:30 PM Cinema Thursday: The Gullah Connection Community Folk Art Center

7:30 PM 2008 Festival Prescreening Syracuse International Film Festival

7:30 PM Misery Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Major Arcana LeMoyne College

8:00 PM The Paul Carlon Octet with Special Guest Christelle Durandy

8:00 PM Excelsior Cornet Band Syracuse University Setnor School of Music

9:00 PM Rocky Horror Picture Show Redhouse

Events for Friday, November 9, 2007

Time TBD Syracuse Builds: After the Master Plan Syracuse University School of Architecture

Time TBD Million Dollar Blocks: Justice and the City ThINC

9:00 AM-9:00 PM Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center

9:00 AM-6:00 PM The Eye of the FaithKeeper: The Haudenosaunee Art of Oren Lyons Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Tango Point of Contact Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-5:00 PM The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Four to the Fore Associated Artists of Central New York

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts

10:00 AM-5:00 PM The Art of George Mayocole Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Gullah Lifestyles: A Culture Under Attack and Confederate Currency: The Color of Money Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Newfoundland and Other Journeys Fayetteville Free Library

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Train of Thought: Serial Images from the Light Work Collection Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Angelika Rinnhofer: Sammelsurium Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Artist Showcase: Images by Brian Arnold Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-2:00 PM Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum

11:15 AM Recital by the Vocal Repertory Class of Professor McCullough Onondaga Community College

11:30 AM-4:30 PM Yves Saint Front Syracuse University Art Museum

11:30 AM-4:30 PM Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Maximum Color Delavan Art Gallery

12:00 PM-5:00 PM On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art

4:00 PM-7:00 PM Art Mart Syracuse Allied Arts

5:00 PM Parents' Weekend Concert Syracuse University Setnor School of Music

6:00 PM FuhgettAboutIt!

7:00 PM Poet Aimee Nezhukumatathil Downtown Writer's Center

7:30 PM Speak Gifford Family Theatre

8:00 PM Major Arcana LeMoyne College

8:00 PM Artist as Artist Redhouse

8:00 PM Big Bang Extravaganza Spark Contemporary Art Space

8:00 PM Misery Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Pops Series: Betty Buckley's Broadway Syracuse Symphony Orchestra, featuring Betty Buckley, vocalist (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Cat on a Hot Tin Roof Syracuse University Drama Department (Read a review!)

8:00 PM New Play Workshop: The Meaning of Life and Other Useless Pieces of Information Syracuse University Drama Department

8:00 PM Parents' Weekend Concert Syracuse University Setnor School of Music

8:00 PM Footloose The Talent Company (Read a review!)

Events for Saturday, November 10, 2007

Time TBD Syracuse Builds: After the Master Plan Syracuse University School of Architecture

Time TBD Million Dollar Blocks: Justice and the City ThINC

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Four to the Fore Associated Artists of Central New York

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Maximum Color Delavan Art Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Newfoundland and Other Journeys Fayetteville Free Library

10:30 AM Family Series: Polar Express and The Bear Syracuse Symphony Orchestra

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Gullah Lifestyles: A Culture Under Attack and Confederate Currency: The Color of Money Community Folk Art Center

11:00 AM-5:00 PM The Art of George Mayocole Community Folk Art Center

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Art Mart Syracuse Allied Arts

11:00 AM Tom Knight Puppets

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM The Secret of the Puppet's Book Open Hand Theater

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum

11:30 AM-4:30 PM Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum

11:30 AM-4:30 PM Yves Saint Front Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts

12:30 PM Sleeping Beauty Magic Circle Children's Theatre

12:30 PM Grease and 101 Dalmations Preview Syracuse Children's Theatre

2:00 PM New Play Workshop: The Meaning of Life and Other Useless Pieces of Information Syracuse University Drama Department

3:00 PM Misery Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

7:30 PM Speak Gifford Family Theatre

8:00 PM Black Celestial Choral Ensemble Hendricks Chapel

8:00 PM Major Arcana LeMoyne College

8:00 PM Well Aged Words: Spicy Latino Tales Open Hand Theater, featuring Leeny Del Seamonds

8:00 PM The Gonstermachers Redhouse

8:00 PM Misery Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Pops Series: Betty Buckley's Broadway Syracuse Symphony Orchestra, featuring Betty Buckley, vocalist (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Cat on a Hot Tin Roof Syracuse University Drama Department (Read a review!)

8:00 PM New Play Workshop: The Meaning of Life and Other Useless Pieces of Information Syracuse University Drama Department

8:00 PM Footloose The Talent Company (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Second Saturday Series: Pamela Goddard & Kitchen Chair Westcott Community Center

Events for Sunday, November 11, 2007

Time TBD Syracuse Builds: After the Master Plan Syracuse University School of Architecture

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Artist Showcase: Images by Brian Arnold Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Angelika Rinnhofer: Sammelsurium Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Train of Thought: Serial Images from the Light Work Collection Light Work Gallery

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum

11:30 AM-4:30 PM Yves Saint Front Syracuse University Art Museum

11:30 AM-4:30 PM Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art

1:00 PM-5:00 PM Four to the Fore Associated Artists of Central New York

1:00 PM-5:00 PM Newfoundland and Other Journeys Fayetteville Free Library

1:00 PM Young Playwrights in Progress Redhouse

1:30 PM Grease and 101 Dalmations Preview Syracuse Children's Theatre

2:00 PM Contemporary Film Series: The Yellow Wallpaper and Invocation: Maya Deren Everson Museum of Art

2:00 PM Misery Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

2:00 PM Savion Glover Syracuse University College of Arts and Sciences

2:00 PM Cat on a Hot Tin Roof Syracuse University Drama Department (Read a review!)

2:00 PM New Play Workshop: The Meaning of Life and Other Useless Pieces of Information Syracuse University Drama Department

2:00 PM Footloose The Talent Company (Read a review!)

4:30 PM SSYO Fall Concert Syracuse Youth Orchestras

8:00 PM Soundcheck Live from Redhouse Redhouse

Events for Monday, November 12, 2007

Time TBD Syracuse Builds: After the Master Plan Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:00 AM-9:00 PM Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center

9:00 AM-9:00 PM Newfoundland and Other Journeys Fayetteville Free Library

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: OCC Faculty Art Show Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-6:00 PM The Eye of the FaithKeeper: The Haudenosaunee Art of Oren Lyons Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Tango Point of Contact Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-5:00 PM The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

10:00 AM-9:00 PM Four to the Fore Associated Artists of Central New York

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Train of Thought: Serial Images from the Light Work Collection Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Angelika Rinnhofer: Sammelsurium Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Artist Showcase: Images by Brian Arnold Light Work Gallery

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Art Mart Syracuse Allied Arts

6:00 PM Anberlin

7:30 PM Six of a Kind Syracuse Cinephile Society

Events for Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Time TBD Syracuse Builds: After the Master Plan Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:00 AM-9:00 PM Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center

9:00 AM-9:00 PM Newfoundland and Other Journeys Fayetteville Free Library

9:00 AM-6:00 PM The Eye of the FaithKeeper: The Haudenosaunee Art of Oren Lyons Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: OCC Faculty Art Show Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Tango Point of Contact Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-5:00 PM The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

10:00 AM-9:00 PM Four to the Fore Associated Artists of Central New York

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts

10:00 AM-5:00 PM The Art of George Mayocole Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Gullah Lifestyles: A Culture Under Attack and Confederate Currency: The Color of Money Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Angelika Rinnhofer: Sammelsurium Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Train of Thought: Serial Images from the Light Work Collection Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Artist Showcase: Images by Brian Arnold Light Work Gallery

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Art Mart Syracuse Allied Arts

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum

11:30 AM-4:30 PM Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum

11:30 AM-4:30 PM Yves Saint Front Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Genetic Self-Portrait: Works by Gary Schneider The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)

2:00 PM-7:00 PM A Look of Portrait Spark Contemporary Art Space

7:30 PM 2008 Festival Prescreening Syracuse International Film Festival

8:00 PM The Shalants + Remote Islands Spark Contemporary Art Space

8:00 PM Syracuse University Singers Syracuse University Setnor School of Music

Next week  >>>

Tuesday, November 6, 2007


Art
 

Time TBD, November 6



Syracuse Builds: After the Master Plan
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
The Warehouse, Main Auditorium
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The exhibition presents 13 architectural and landscape projects currently in development for the Syracuse University campus and the city of Syracuse, including a new residence hall on the main campus by Mack Scogin and Merrill Elam, the Syracuse Center of Excellence in Environmental and Energy Systems headquarters designed by Toshiko Mori Architect, and a community InfoCenter for the Near Westside Initiative project in Syracuse designed by Syracuse Architecture professors Tim Stenson and Scott Ruff.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 6



Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls
Downtown Writer's Center

Price: Free
YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St., Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 6



Newfoundland and Other Journeys
Fayetteville Free Library

Price: Free
Fayetteville Free Library
300 Orchard St., Fayetteville

A showing of original pigment prints by Donal and Shel Little.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 6



The Eye of the FaithKeeper: The Haudenosaunee Art of Oren Lyons
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Storer Auditorium
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 6



Gallery Exhibit: Donalee Peden-Wesley
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse

Large scale charcoal drawings with watercolor washes that address issues and relationships between humans and animals.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 6



Tango
Point of Contact Gallery

Price: Free
Point of Contact Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Tango, a large format folio published by Iris Editions in New York (1991) with eight intaglio prints by Nancy Graves and 13 pages of text by Pedro Cuperman that gaze at the aesthetics of this Latin American dance.

Tango proposes an evening of music, dance, and food transposed into videoa sort of "performance" projected into the space of the gallery where audience and art become intertwined in the field of representation.

"Graves conceived of the prints in the folio as a continued exploration of pattern in nature and as a tonal study of black and white," writes Thomas Padon in his book, Nancy Graves, Excavations in Print A Catalogue Raisonné (1996). "More than once the artist has asserted, 'There is nothing more challenging and meaningful than to make prints in black and white.' For an admitted colorist, it is ironic that the nine prints Graves has made in black and white are among her most powerful." The cryptic titles of the prints in the folio were selected by Graves from Cuperman's text for Tango. The poet speaks of the dance as a gradually unfolding ritual, stating near the conclusion, "Tango helps you find your own levels of proximity."


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 6



Annual Exhibition
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

Price: Free
Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St., Syracuse

The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 6



The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

Price: Free
Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University, Syracuse

In commemoration of the 80th anniversary of the execution for murder of two Italian anarchist laborers, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, a selection of period ephemera issued by the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee together with a plethora of books associated with the trial that have been published in the intervening years by Paul Avrich, Felix Frankfurter, and Eugene Lyons, among others. The exhibit features artistic expressions (cartoons, illustrations, novels, plays, poems, songs and music) inspired by the trial, including the work of Maxwell Anderson, John Dos Passos, Fred Ellis, Howard Fast, Woodie Guthrie, William Gropper, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Rockwell Kent, Katherine Anne Porter, Pete Seeger, and Upton Sinclair. The story of the Sacco and Vanzetti mural by Ben Shahn on the east wall of H. B. Crouse will also be explored.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 6



Four to the Fore
Associated Artists of Central New York

Price: Free
Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr., Manlius

The exhibits highlights the varied work of four members, Barbara Emmons, Judith Jaquith, Elizabeth Pilbeam, and Clara Towell.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 6



Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal
CNY Arts

The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

A juried exhibit in which a dozen regional artists have individually interpreted the concept of "Tribal."


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 6



Gullah Lifestyles: A Culture Under Attack and Confederate Currency: The Color of Money
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Paintings by John W. Jones and Leroy Campbell


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 6



The Art of George Mayocole
Community Folk Art Center

Price: Suggested donation $5
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

This exhibition features vibrant, abstract, mixed media works on paper by this New York City-based artist.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 6



Angelika Rinnhofer: Sammelsurium
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition, featuring the work of German-born artist Angelika Rinnhofer, will feature her large-format color prints from three related series, Menschenkunde, Felsenfest, and Seelensucht. She describes her series Menschenkunde as portraits that combine facts, beauty, and irony in a Renaissance-style. Rinnhofer's series Felsenfest continues the same aesthetics in its re-interpretations of martyrs and saints into a modern context. Rinnhofer remembers being frightened as a child when viewing the horrific images of tortured saints commonly found in churches in her hometown Nürnberg, Germany. She now casts a critical eye, juxtaposing religious figures with modern-looking scientists. Seelensucht takes Rinnhofer back to the traditional single-figure portrait, also capturing the themes of martyrs.

Angelika lives in Beacon, NY. She is a commercial photographer and artist. She is the recipient of a Kodak European Gold Award and received a fellowship in photography from the Dutchess County Arts Council. She participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2005.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 6



Train of Thought: Serial Images from the Light Work Collection
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition features the work of five artists -- Hollis Frampton, Arnold Gassan, Peter Max Kandhola, Judy Natal, and Aaron Siskind -- all of whom generously donated either a series of prints or a portfolio of prints to the Light Work Collection. This exhibition provides us with an opportunity to investigate the artists' use of duplication and repetition to explore a single subject or idea. The images in this exhibition are produced using a variety of techniques, including photogravures, ektacolor, silver gelatin prints, and chromogenic prints.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 6



Artist Showcase: Images by Brian Arnold
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition is comprised of recent acquisitions to the Light Work Collection that come from multiple series that Ithaca-based photographer Brian Arnold has been working on. He utilizes traditional black-and-white processes, remaining committed to what he refers to as "the alchemy of photography." All of his photographs are unique silver gelatin prints, toned with a combination of selenium, sulfur, and gold chloride. Arnold also creates unique limited edition books, two of which are included in this exhibition. He teaches photography and electronic arts at the New York State College of Art and Engineering at Alfred University.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 6



Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city.

The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor.

Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, November 6



Goya: The Disasters of War
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death.

Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts.

This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War.

Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, November 6



Yves Saint Front
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The exhibition contains 31 images primarily of Tahiti and Chausey, France, created between the mid-1960s and the mid-1980s.

A descendant of mariners, St. Front preferred coastal scenes, often including boats at anchor, seaside villages and beaches. A number of his works include members of his family and the Tahitian natives, occasionally in an arrangement of small peripheral images around a central landscape. There are also a number of sensitively designed interiors; one that is particularly strong shows his wife Isabella standing at a telephone while their cat sleeps on a floor mat.

Weekend and evening visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, November 6



Under One Roof Reprise
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Juxtapose artwork created by artists whose common thread is a shared studio/classroom space and expect the unexpected. This happened in 2004, when a group of women who work and teach at Syracuse University's ComArt building joined together for an exhibition entitled Under One Roof at SOHO20 Gallery in Chelsea, NY. This was the first time the artists - three generations of students/teachers - had shown together, yet their work spoke of seamless connections and closer ties than one might assume.

Nine artists have reunited for the current exhibition Under One Roof Reprise. Their situations have changed slightly but their work once again has come together in surprising and interesting ways. Abby Goodman and Kim Carr Valdez earned their MFA degrees and moved to Brooklyn, while Laura Ledbetter now lives in Philadelphia. Anne Beffel, Ann Clarke, Mary Giehl, Gail Hoffman, and Jude Lewis continue to teach in the College of Visual and Performing Arts at Syracuse University, while Claire Harootunian, although officially retired, continues to teach, travel, and explore the art of found objects.

The artists' processes are diverse, including large-scale installations, found object collaboration, casting, kinetics, video, and hand-tooled objects. Emphasis is placed on the creative use of materials such as fibers, metals, wood, plastics, resin, and everyday products. Each artist translates and illuminates human experience through her unique visual language and conceptual sensibility. These artists address common themes such as play, gender, identity, time, place, and most of all, memories. Mary Giehl's Ivory combines happy childhood memories of bathing with her siblings - recalling the "toys, the fun, the soap floating and the smell of Ivory" - with "those of sad and heartbreaking stories" not uncommon in today's headlines.

Gail Hoffman, a sculptor immersed in the concept of time, presents "visual metaphorical narratives, freeze-framed in a state of suspended animation" through a variety of media including bronze, plastic toys, and other found objects. Plasco Ranch (Possible Outcomes) is a minature assemblage designed in the small scale to "invite the viewer to psychologically inhabit the space." A collection of disparate objects including a bronze sheep, Santa Claus, and military vehicles has been arranged to suggest a story that is left to the viewer's imagination. A journal placed nearby offers visitors the opportunity to record their stories and suggest possible outcomes for the scene as they see it unfold. Based on viewers' comments, Hoffman will return periodically to rearrange, add, or remove objects, providing photographic documentation of the ever changing Plasco Ranch as part of the exhibit.

This group exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Syracuse University College of Visual and Performing Arts.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, November 6



On My Own Time
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Since 1974, the Cultural Resources Council, in cooperation with the Everson, has presented On My Own Time. A celebration of artwork created by employees of local businesses on their own time, the exhibition is meant to promote creativity and artistic endeavors by those who are not full-time artists.


Back to list
 


Lecture
 

7:30 PM, November 6



Mountains Beyond Mountains
University Lectures
Featuring Tracy Kidder, author

Price: Free
Hendricks Chapel
Syracuse University, Syracuse

This event is sponsored in cooperation with the Onondaga Public Library Gifford Series.


Back to list
 


Music
 

8:00 PM, November 6



Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
Windjammer Vocal Jazz
Bill DiCosimo, conductor

Price: Free
Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The program features repertoire from the Great American Songbook, including works by George and Ira Gershwin, Cole Porter, Harry Warren, Mack Gordon, and a Todd Buffa arrangement of the Stanley Turrentine classic "Sugar."

Parking is available in Irving Garage. For more information, contact DiCosimo at 315-443-6145 or wjdicosi@syr.edu.


Back to list
 


Theater
 

7:30 PM, November 6



Misery
Syracuse Stage
Emma Griffin, director

Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

The perfect Halloween treat from the "king of horror, Stephen King. A psychological thriller that serves up gasps and laughs aplenty. A must for King lovers.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 


 

Wednesday, November 7, 2007


Art
 

Time TBD, November 7



Syracuse Builds: After the Master Plan
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
The Warehouse, Main Auditorium
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The exhibition presents 13 architectural and landscape projects currently in development for the Syracuse University campus and the city of Syracuse, including a new residence hall on the main campus by Mack Scogin and Merrill Elam, the Syracuse Center of Excellence in Environmental and Energy Systems headquarters designed by Toshiko Mori Architect, and a community InfoCenter for the Near Westside Initiative project in Syracuse designed by Syracuse Architecture professors Tim Stenson and Scott Ruff.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 7



Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls
Downtown Writer's Center

Price: Free
YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St., Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 7



Newfoundland and Other Journeys
Fayetteville Free Library

Price: Free
Fayetteville Free Library
300 Orchard St., Fayetteville

A showing of original pigment prints by Donal and Shel Little.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 7



Gallery Exhibit: Donalee Peden-Wesley
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse

Large scale charcoal drawings with watercolor washes that address issues and relationships between humans and animals.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 7



The Eye of the FaithKeeper: The Haudenosaunee Art of Oren Lyons
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Storer Auditorium
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 7



Tango
Point of Contact Gallery

Price: Free
Point of Contact Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Tango, a large format folio published by Iris Editions in New York (1991) with eight intaglio prints by Nancy Graves and 13 pages of text by Pedro Cuperman that gaze at the aesthetics of this Latin American dance.

Tango proposes an evening of music, dance, and food transposed into videoa sort of "performance" projected into the space of the gallery where audience and art become intertwined in the field of representation.

"Graves conceived of the prints in the folio as a continued exploration of pattern in nature and as a tonal study of black and white," writes Thomas Padon in his book, Nancy Graves, Excavations in Print A Catalogue Raisonné (1996). "More than once the artist has asserted, 'There is nothing more challenging and meaningful than to make prints in black and white.' For an admitted colorist, it is ironic that the nine prints Graves has made in black and white are among her most powerful." The cryptic titles of the prints in the folio were selected by Graves from Cuperman's text for Tango. The poet speaks of the dance as a gradually unfolding ritual, stating near the conclusion, "Tango helps you find your own levels of proximity."


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 7



Annual Exhibition
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

Price: Free
Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St., Syracuse

The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 7



The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

Price: Free
Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University, Syracuse

In commemoration of the 80th anniversary of the execution for murder of two Italian anarchist laborers, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, a selection of period ephemera issued by the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee together with a plethora of books associated with the trial that have been published in the intervening years by Paul Avrich, Felix Frankfurter, and Eugene Lyons, among others. The exhibit features artistic expressions (cartoons, illustrations, novels, plays, poems, songs and music) inspired by the trial, including the work of Maxwell Anderson, John Dos Passos, Fred Ellis, Howard Fast, Woodie Guthrie, William Gropper, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Rockwell Kent, Katherine Anne Porter, Pete Seeger, and Upton Sinclair. The story of the Sacco and Vanzetti mural by Ben Shahn on the east wall of H. B. Crouse will also be explored.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 7



Four to the Fore
Associated Artists of Central New York

Price: Free
Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr., Manlius

The exhibits highlights the varied work of four members, Barbara Emmons, Judith Jaquith, Elizabeth Pilbeam, and Clara Towell.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 7



Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal
CNY Arts

The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

A juried exhibit in which a dozen regional artists have individually interpreted the concept of "Tribal."


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 7



The Art of George Mayocole
Community Folk Art Center

Price: Suggested donation $5
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

This exhibition features vibrant, abstract, mixed media works on paper by this New York City-based artist.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 7



Gullah Lifestyles: A Culture Under Attack and Confederate Currency: The Color of Money
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Paintings by John W. Jones and Leroy Campbell


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 7



Train of Thought: Serial Images from the Light Work Collection
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition features the work of five artists -- Hollis Frampton, Arnold Gassan, Peter Max Kandhola, Judy Natal, and Aaron Siskind -- all of whom generously donated either a series of prints or a portfolio of prints to the Light Work Collection. This exhibition provides us with an opportunity to investigate the artists' use of duplication and repetition to explore a single subject or idea. The images in this exhibition are produced using a variety of techniques, including photogravures, ektacolor, silver gelatin prints, and chromogenic prints.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 7



Angelika Rinnhofer: Sammelsurium
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition, featuring the work of German-born artist Angelika Rinnhofer, will feature her large-format color prints from three related series, Menschenkunde, Felsenfest, and Seelensucht. She describes her series Menschenkunde as portraits that combine facts, beauty, and irony in a Renaissance-style. Rinnhofer's series Felsenfest continues the same aesthetics in its re-interpretations of martyrs and saints into a modern context. Rinnhofer remembers being frightened as a child when viewing the horrific images of tortured saints commonly found in churches in her hometown Nürnberg, Germany. She now casts a critical eye, juxtaposing religious figures with modern-looking scientists. Seelensucht takes Rinnhofer back to the traditional single-figure portrait, also capturing the themes of martyrs.

Angelika lives in Beacon, NY. She is a commercial photographer and artist. She is the recipient of a Kodak European Gold Award and received a fellowship in photography from the Dutchess County Arts Council. She participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2005.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 7



Artist Showcase: Images by Brian Arnold
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition is comprised of recent acquisitions to the Light Work Collection that come from multiple series that Ithaca-based photographer Brian Arnold has been working on. He utilizes traditional black-and-white processes, remaining committed to what he refers to as "the alchemy of photography." All of his photographs are unique silver gelatin prints, toned with a combination of selenium, sulfur, and gold chloride. Arnold also creates unique limited edition books, two of which are included in this exhibition. He teaches photography and electronic arts at the New York State College of Art and Engineering at Alfred University.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, November 7



Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

The exhibition will feature artwork from the OHA collection that depicts various modes of local transportation and how artists interpreted it over the last two centuries. Local teachers and students will find subjects meeting their document-based questions social studies standards within the exhibit.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 7



Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city.

The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor.

Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, November 7



Yves Saint Front
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The exhibition contains 31 images primarily of Tahiti and Chausey, France, created between the mid-1960s and the mid-1980s.

A descendant of mariners, St. Front preferred coastal scenes, often including boats at anchor, seaside villages and beaches. A number of his works include members of his family and the Tahitian natives, occasionally in an arrangement of small peripheral images around a central landscape. There are also a number of sensitively designed interiors; one that is particularly strong shows his wife Isabella standing at a telephone while their cat sleeps on a floor mat.

Weekend and evening visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, November 7



Goya: The Disasters of War
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death.

Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts.

This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War.

Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, November 7



On My Own Time
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Since 1974, the Cultural Resources Council, in cooperation with the Everson, has presented On My Own Time. A celebration of artwork created by employees of local businesses on their own time, the exhibition is meant to promote creativity and artistic endeavors by those who are not full-time artists.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, November 7



Under One Roof Reprise
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Juxtapose artwork created by artists whose common thread is a shared studio/classroom space and expect the unexpected. This happened in 2004, when a group of women who work and teach at Syracuse University's ComArt building joined together for an exhibition entitled Under One Roof at SOHO20 Gallery in Chelsea, NY. This was the first time the artists - three generations of students/teachers - had shown together, yet their work spoke of seamless connections and closer ties than one might assume.

Nine artists have reunited for the current exhibition Under One Roof Reprise. Their situations have changed slightly but their work once again has come together in surprising and interesting ways. Abby Goodman and Kim Carr Valdez earned their MFA degrees and moved to Brooklyn, while Laura Ledbetter now lives in Philadelphia. Anne Beffel, Ann Clarke, Mary Giehl, Gail Hoffman, and Jude Lewis continue to teach in the College of Visual and Performing Arts at Syracuse University, while Claire Harootunian, although officially retired, continues to teach, travel, and explore the art of found objects.

The artists' processes are diverse, including large-scale installations, found object collaboration, casting, kinetics, video, and hand-tooled objects. Emphasis is placed on the creative use of materials such as fibers, metals, wood, plastics, resin, and everyday products. Each artist translates and illuminates human experience through her unique visual language and conceptual sensibility. These artists address common themes such as play, gender, identity, time, place, and most of all, memories. Mary Giehl's Ivory combines happy childhood memories of bathing with her siblings - recalling the "toys, the fun, the soap floating and the smell of Ivory" - with "those of sad and heartbreaking stories" not uncommon in today's headlines.

Gail Hoffman, a sculptor immersed in the concept of time, presents "visual metaphorical narratives, freeze-framed in a state of suspended animation" through a variety of media including bronze, plastic toys, and other found objects. Plasco Ranch (Possible Outcomes) is a minature assemblage designed in the small scale to "invite the viewer to psychologically inhabit the space." A collection of disparate objects including a bronze sheep, Santa Claus, and military vehicles has been arranged to suggest a story that is left to the viewer's imagination. A journal placed nearby offers visitors the opportunity to record their stories and suggest possible outcomes for the scene as they see it unfold. Based on viewers' comments, Hoffman will return periodically to rearrange, add, or remove objects, providing photographic documentation of the ever changing Plasco Ranch as part of the exhibit.

This group exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Syracuse University College of Visual and Performing Arts.


Back to list
 


Lecture
 

3:00 PM, November 7



The Great Flood of Florence
Syracuse University College of Visual and Performing Arts
Featuring Swietlan Nicholas Kraczyna

Price: Free
Bird Library, Peter Graham Scholarly Commons
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Swietlan Nicholas Kraczyna, an internationally known artist and faculty member for SU Florence, will present a slide show and talk about his photographic essay "The Great Flood of Florence." A book signing will follow.

Kraczyna's book, published by Syracuse University Press, features 85 black-and-white photographs taken on and in the days after Nov. 4, 1966, when Florence, Italy, experienced a devastating flood that crippled the city and destroyed many art treasures. Kraczyna was awarded the Fiorino d'Oro, the highest honor of the City of Florence, for 10 of the photographs.

Currently a visiting professor at SU's College of Visual and Performing Arts (VPA), Kraczyna has had 128 solo exhibitions spanning five continents. His work is also preserved in Florence's famous Uffizi Gallery. His talk is sponsored by SU Press and VPA.

For more information, contact Lisa Kuerbis, SU Press marketing coordinator, at 315-463-0756 or lkuerbis@syr.edu.


Back to list
 

 

7:30 PM, November 7



Tracy Kidder
Friends of the Central Library Author Series

Price: $25
Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse

A contributing editor of The Atlantic Monthly since 1981, Tracy Kidder has written about subjects as diverse as a mass murder trial, teaching, building a house, corporate technology, and living in a small town. He has won both the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize. His latest book, Mountains Beyond Mountains, describes the astonishing sacrifices and determination of Dr. Paul Farmer in fighting global health problems in Haiti and elsewhere.


Back to list
 


Music
 

12:30 PM, November 7



Civic Morning Musicals
Lavender Trio
Featuring The Hamilton College Dance Team

Price: Free
Hosmer Auditorium, Everson Museum
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

The Lavender Trio presensts a recital of ensemble music with a guest appearance of dancers from The Hamilton College Dance Team. Lavender Trio members Heather Johnsen, Beth Carville Evans, and Judy Marchione will perform a mixture of standard repertoire, original arrangements, as well as music and choreography pieces written for them by various composers.


Back to list
 


Poetry/Reading
 

5:30 PM, November 7



Jay McInerney, fiction
Raymond Carver Reading Series

Price: Free
Gifford Auditorium, Huntington Beard Crouse Hall
Syracuse University, Syracuse


Back to list
 


Theater
 

7:30 PM, November 7



Misery
Syracuse Stage
Emma Griffin, director

Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

The perfect Halloween treat from the "king of horror, Stephen King. A psychological thriller that serves up gasps and laughs aplenty. A must for King lovers.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 


 

Thursday, November 8, 2007


Art
 

Time TBD, November 8



Syracuse Builds: After the Master Plan
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
The Warehouse, Main Auditorium
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The exhibition presents 13 architectural and landscape projects currently in development for the Syracuse University campus and the city of Syracuse, including a new residence hall on the main campus by Mack Scogin and Merrill Elam, the Syracuse Center of Excellence in Environmental and Energy Systems headquarters designed by Toshiko Mori Architect, and a community InfoCenter for the Near Westside Initiative project in Syracuse designed by Syracuse Architecture professors Tim Stenson and Scott Ruff.


Back to list
 

 

Time TBD, November 8



Million Dollar Blocks: Justice and the City
ThINC

Company Gallery
110 W. Fayette St. (corner of Clinton), Syracuse

The United States currently has more than 2 million people locked up in jails and prisons. A disproportionate number of them come from a very few neighborhoods in the country's biggest cities. In many places, the concentration is so dense that states are spending in excess of a million dollars a year to incarcerate the residents of single census blocks. When these people are released and reenter their communities, roughly 40% do not stay more than three years before they are reincarcerated.

Using rarely accessible data from the criminal justice system, the Spatial Information Design Lab and the Justice Mapping Center have created maps of these "million dollar blocks" and of the city-prison-city-prison migration for of the nation's cities. The maps suggest that the criminal justice system has become the predominant government institution in these communities and that public investment in this system has resulted in significant costs to other elements of our civic infrastructure -- education, housing, health, and family.

The maps pose difficult ethical and political questions for policymakers and designers. When they are linked to other urban social and economic indicators of incarceration they also suggest new strategies for approaching urban design and criminal justice reform together.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 8



Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls
Downtown Writer's Center

Price: Free
YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St., Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 8



Newfoundland and Other Journeys
Fayetteville Free Library

Price: Free
Fayetteville Free Library
300 Orchard St., Fayetteville

A showing of original pigment prints by Donal and Shel Little.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 8



The Eye of the FaithKeeper: The Haudenosaunee Art of Oren Lyons
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Storer Auditorium
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 8



Tango
Point of Contact Gallery

Price: Free
Point of Contact Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Tango, a large format folio published by Iris Editions in New York (1991) with eight intaglio prints by Nancy Graves and 13 pages of text by Pedro Cuperman that gaze at the aesthetics of this Latin American dance.

Tango proposes an evening of music, dance, and food transposed into videoa sort of "performance" projected into the space of the gallery where audience and art become intertwined in the field of representation.

"Graves conceived of the prints in the folio as a continued exploration of pattern in nature and as a tonal study of black and white," writes Thomas Padon in his book, Nancy Graves, Excavations in Print A Catalogue Raisonné (1996). "More than once the artist has asserted, 'There is nothing more challenging and meaningful than to make prints in black and white.' For an admitted colorist, it is ironic that the nine prints Graves has made in black and white are among her most powerful." The cryptic titles of the prints in the folio were selected by Graves from Cuperman's text for Tango. The poet speaks of the dance as a gradually unfolding ritual, stating near the conclusion, "Tango helps you find your own levels of proximity."


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 8



Annual Exhibition
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

Price: Free
Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St., Syracuse

The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 8



The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

Price: Free
Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University, Syracuse

In commemoration of the 80th anniversary of the execution for murder of two Italian anarchist laborers, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, a selection of period ephemera issued by the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee together with a plethora of books associated with the trial that have been published in the intervening years by Paul Avrich, Felix Frankfurter, and Eugene Lyons, among others. The exhibit features artistic expressions (cartoons, illustrations, novels, plays, poems, songs and music) inspired by the trial, including the work of Maxwell Anderson, John Dos Passos, Fred Ellis, Howard Fast, Woodie Guthrie, William Gropper, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Rockwell Kent, Katherine Anne Porter, Pete Seeger, and Upton Sinclair. The story of the Sacco and Vanzetti mural by Ben Shahn on the east wall of H. B. Crouse will also be explored.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 8



Four to the Fore
Associated Artists of Central New York

Price: Free
Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr., Manlius

The exhibits highlights the varied work of four members, Barbara Emmons, Judith Jaquith, Elizabeth Pilbeam, and Clara Towell.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 8



Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal
CNY Arts

The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

A juried exhibit in which a dozen regional artists have individually interpreted the concept of "Tribal."


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 8



Gullah Lifestyles: A Culture Under Attack and Confederate Currency: The Color of Money
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Paintings by John W. Jones and Leroy Campbell


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 8



The Art of George Mayocole
Community Folk Art Center

Price: Suggested donation $5
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

This exhibition features vibrant, abstract, mixed media works on paper by this New York City-based artist.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, November 8



Angelika Rinnhofer: Sammelsurium
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition, featuring the work of German-born artist Angelika Rinnhofer, will feature her large-format color prints from three related series, Menschenkunde, Felsenfest, and Seelensucht. She describes her series Menschenkunde as portraits that combine facts, beauty, and irony in a Renaissance-style. Rinnhofer's series Felsenfest continues the same aesthetics in its re-interpretations of martyrs and saints into a modern context. Rinnhofer remembers being frightened as a child when viewing the horrific images of tortured saints commonly found in churches in her hometown Nürnberg, Germany. She now casts a critical eye, juxtaposing religious figures with modern-looking scientists. Seelensucht takes Rinnhofer back to the traditional single-figure portrait, also capturing the themes of martyrs.

Angelika lives in Beacon, NY. She is a commercial photographer and artist. She is the recipient of a Kodak European Gold Award and received a fellowship in photography from the Dutchess County Arts Council. She participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2005.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 8



Train of Thought: Serial Images from the Light Work Collection
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition features the work of five artists -- Hollis Frampton, Arnold Gassan, Peter Max Kandhola, Judy Natal, and Aaron Siskind -- all of whom generously donated either a series of prints or a portfolio of prints to the Light Work Collection. This exhibition provides us with an opportunity to investigate the artists' use of duplication and repetition to explore a single subject or idea. The images in this exhibition are produced using a variety of techniques, including photogravures, ektacolor, silver gelatin prints, and chromogenic prints.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 8



Artist Showcase: Images by Brian Arnold
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition is comprised of recent acquisitions to the Light Work Collection that come from multiple series that Ithaca-based photographer Brian Arnold has been working on. He utilizes traditional black-and-white processes, remaining committed to what he refers to as "the alchemy of photography." All of his photographs are unique silver gelatin prints, toned with a combination of selenium, sulfur, and gold chloride. Arnold also creates unique limited edition books, two of which are included in this exhibition. He teaches photography and electronic arts at the New York State College of Art and Engineering at Alfred University.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, November 8



Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

The exhibition will feature artwork from the OHA collection that depicts various modes of local transportation and how artists interpreted it over the last two centuries. Local teachers and students will find subjects meeting their document-based questions social studies standards within the exhibit.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, November 8



Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city.

The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor.

Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

11:30 AM - 8:00 PM, November 8



Goya: The Disasters of War
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death.

Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts.

This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War.

Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

11:30 AM - 8:00 PM, November 8



Yves Saint Front
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The exhibition contains 31 images primarily of Tahiti and Chausey, France, created between the mid-1960s and the mid-1980s.

A descendant of mariners, St. Front preferred coastal scenes, often including boats at anchor, seaside villages and beaches. A number of his works include members of his family and the Tahitian natives, occasionally in an arrangement of small peripheral images around a central landscape. There are also a number of sensitively designed interiors; one that is particularly strong shows his wife Isabella standing at a telephone while their cat sleeps on a floor mat.

Weekend and evening visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, November 8



Maximum Color
Delavan Art Gallery

Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Featuring glass by Phil Austin, paintings by Alison Fisher, landscapes and abstractions by Jim Loveless, non-representational paintings by Lutz Scherneck, and creative photography by Linda Spatuzzi.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, November 8



Under One Roof Reprise
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Juxtapose artwork created by artists whose common thread is a shared studio/classroom space and expect the unexpected. This happened in 2004, when a group of women who work and teach at Syracuse University's ComArt building joined together for an exhibition entitled Under One Roof at SOHO20 Gallery in Chelsea, NY. This was the first time the artists - three generations of students/teachers - had shown together, yet their work spoke of seamless connections and closer ties than one might assume.

Nine artists have reunited for the current exhibition Under One Roof Reprise. Their situations have changed slightly but their work once again has come together in surprising and interesting ways. Abby Goodman and Kim Carr Valdez earned their MFA degrees and moved to Brooklyn, while Laura Ledbetter now lives in Philadelphia. Anne Beffel, Ann Clarke, Mary Giehl, Gail Hoffman, and Jude Lewis continue to teach in the College of Visual and Performing Arts at Syracuse University, while Claire Harootunian, although officially retired, continues to teach, travel, and explore the art of found objects.

The artists' processes are diverse, including large-scale installations, found object collaboration, casting, kinetics, video, and hand-tooled objects. Emphasis is placed on the creative use of materials such as fibers, metals, wood, plastics, resin, and everyday products. Each artist translates and illuminates human experience through her unique visual language and conceptual sensibility. These artists address common themes such as play, gender, identity, time, place, and most of all, memories. Mary Giehl's Ivory combines happy childhood memories of bathing with her siblings - recalling the "toys, the fun, the soap floating and the smell of Ivory" - with "those of sad and heartbreaking stories" not uncommon in today's headlines.

Gail Hoffman, a sculptor immersed in the concept of time, presents "visual metaphorical narratives, freeze-framed in a state of suspended animation" through a variety of media including bronze, plastic toys, and other found objects. Plasco Ranch (Possible Outcomes) is a minature assemblage designed in the small scale to "invite the viewer to psychologically inhabit the space." A collection of disparate objects including a bronze sheep, Santa Claus, and military vehicles has been arranged to suggest a story that is left to the viewer's imagination. A journal placed nearby offers visitors the opportunity to record their stories and suggest possible outcomes for the scene as they see it unfold. Based on viewers' comments, Hoffman will return periodically to rearrange, add, or remove objects, providing photographic documentation of the ever changing Plasco Ranch as part of the exhibit.

This group exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Syracuse University College of Visual and Performing Arts.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, November 8



On My Own Time
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Since 1974, the Cultural Resources Council, in cooperation with the Everson, has presented On My Own Time. A celebration of artwork created by employees of local businesses on their own time, the exhibition is meant to promote creativity and artistic endeavors by those who are not full-time artists.


Back to list
 

 

5:00 PM - 8:00 PM, November 8



Cosmology: Works by Alan Singer
Redhouse

Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

Alan Singer utilizes traditional painting and drawing techniques combined with high-tech digital tools and printmaking techniques to create his abstract environments. William Zimmer, New York Times' art critic, commented that "Singer's art has the refreshing jauntiness found in the pioneering American abstractionists."

Alan Singer says: "My subjects are derived from visual and physical phenomena related to space (in the geometric sense), and our human interactions with nature. I think about how our environment interweaves things we can see and things which we can only feel, like the wind. I am very conscious of the elements in our natural world and the forces that are exerted on us, and how we adapt. I try to open my art to representations of physical and social forces that may draw upon literary, scientific or mathematical resources. Patterns in my painting find correlations to the textures and rhythms of music, dance, textile arts and more."


Back to list
 


Film
 

2:00 PM, November 8



Film Series: Just an American Boy
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Storer Auditorium
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse

This fascinating documentary follows Steve Earle, a politically conscious performer of roots rock, alternative country and many musical points in between, during his tour and promotional appearances in 2002 and 2003. (95 minutes)


Back to list
 

 

7:00 PM, November 8



Film Series: Just an American Boy
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Storer Auditorium
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse

This fascinating documentary follows Steve Earle, a politically conscious performer of roots rock, alternative country and many musical points in between, during his tour and promotional appearances in 2002 and 2003. (95 minutes)


Back to list
 

 

7:30 PM, November 8



Cinema Thursday: The Gullah Connection
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

7:30 PM, November 8



2008 Festival Prescreening
Syracuse International Film Festival

Price: Free, but reservations recommended
Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse

The Syracuse International Film Festival hosts a prescreening evening. A team of local writers, actors, producers and film critics will make up a professional prescreening team who will watch a handful of the hundreds of entries received by the festival organizers. The general public is invited to join the prescreening sessions and give their impressions of the films.

The space is limited, so please call 315-442-8700 to reserve a spot.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 PM, November 8



Rocky Horror Picture Show
Redhouse

Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse


Back to list
 


Music
 

8:00 PM, November 8



The Paul Carlon Octet with Special Guest Christelle Durandy

Price: $15 adults, $10 students
Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St., Syracuse

Paul Carlon brings his Octet plus vocalist Christelle Durandy to Syracuse for a set of gritty Ellington/Mingus-influenced swing, Afro-Cuban timba and rumba, and hardcore NYC jazz. The debut CD of this fast-rising and hard-hitting group of some of New York City's top young jazz musicians, Other Tongues, has been achieving critical and popular success since its 2006 release. New York City-based saxophonist, flautist, and composer Paul Carlon, a veteran of the bands of bassist Harvie S, late great trombonist Juan Pablo Torres, tresero Ben Lapidus (Sonido Isleño), Rumbatap pioneer Max Pollak, and Ileana Santamaría, has established impressive credentials as a bandleader in his own right with the release of Other Tongues.

For this concert, the group will be performing material from Other Tongues as well as newly-penned originals and fresh arrangements ranging from a Delta Blues classic (Skip James' "Hard Times Killin' Floor Blues") to Brazilian Afro-Samba (Baden Powell's "Canto de Xangô"). The group is in the process of working up new material for their second CD, to be recorded in the Spring of 2008.


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 8



Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
Excelsior Cornet Band

Price: Free
Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The Excelsior Cornet Band will perform original Civil War music on period instruments in a concert presented as part of the 2007 Syracuse Symposium.

Special guest Ralph Dudgeon will join the band to perform on the E-flat cornet and the E-flat keyed bugle.

The Excelsior Cornet Band is New York state's only authentic Civil War brass band. Founded in 2001, the band consists of a group of upstate New York musicians (including SU faculty and staff members) who are dedicated to the performance of original Civil War music on actual antique brass band instruments of the 1860s period, such as cornets, horns, bugles, trombones, basses and percussion instruments. Band members wear uniforms that represent those of a typical early-war New York state militia band.

The band performs the most popular melodies of the 1850-70 period, as well as patriotic airs, operatic medleys, marches and dance music by the era's most renowned composers and bandmasters. All of the band's musical arrangements come from the band books of Civil War-era bands, or are arranged from original Civil War sheet music.

The band has presented concerts, educational programs and living history portrayals for a wide variety of organizations and municipalities across New York state. The band received a Syracuse Area Music Award for "Best Recording, Other Styles" in 2006 for its debut CD, Cheer, Boys, Cheer!

Parking will be available in the Irving Garage for $3.50.


Back to list
 


Theater
 

6:45 PM, November 8



Death Joins the Club
Acme Mystery Company

Price: $25.95 plus tax and gratuities (includes meal and show)
Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St., Syracuse

Interactive dinner theater murder mystery.


Back to list
 

 

7:30 PM, November 8



Misery
Syracuse Stage
Emma Griffin, director

Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

The perfect Halloween treat from the "king of horror, Stephen King. A psychological thriller that serves up gasps and laughs aplenty. A must for King lovers.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 8



LeMoyne College
Major Arcana

Coyne Center for the Performing Arts
LeMoyne College, Syracuse

The student-run theatre club presents one-acts that are directed, designed and performed by Le Moyne College students.


Back to list
 


 

Friday, November 9, 2007


Art
 

Time TBD, November 9



Syracuse Builds: After the Master Plan
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
The Warehouse, Main Auditorium
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The exhibition presents 13 architectural and landscape projects currently in development for the Syracuse University campus and the city of Syracuse, including a new residence hall on the main campus by Mack Scogin and Merrill Elam, the Syracuse Center of Excellence in Environmental and Energy Systems headquarters designed by Toshiko Mori Architect, and a community InfoCenter for the Near Westside Initiative project in Syracuse designed by Syracuse Architecture professors Tim Stenson and Scott Ruff.


Back to list
 

 

Time TBD, November 9



Million Dollar Blocks: Justice and the City
ThINC

Company Gallery
110 W. Fayette St. (corner of Clinton), Syracuse

The United States currently has more than 2 million people locked up in jails and prisons. A disproportionate number of them come from a very few neighborhoods in the country's biggest cities. In many places, the concentration is so dense that states are spending in excess of a million dollars a year to incarcerate the residents of single census blocks. When these people are released and reenter their communities, roughly 40% do not stay more than three years before they are reincarcerated.

Using rarely accessible data from the criminal justice system, the Spatial Information Design Lab and the Justice Mapping Center have created maps of these "million dollar blocks" and of the city-prison-city-prison migration for of the nation's cities. The maps suggest that the criminal justice system has become the predominant government institution in these communities and that public investment in this system has resulted in significant costs to other elements of our civic infrastructure -- education, housing, health, and family.

The maps pose difficult ethical and political questions for policymakers and designers. When they are linked to other urban social and economic indicators of incarceration they also suggest new strategies for approaching urban design and criminal justice reform together.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 9



Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls
Downtown Writer's Center

Price: Free
YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St., Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 9



The Eye of the FaithKeeper: The Haudenosaunee Art of Oren Lyons
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Storer Auditorium
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 9



Tango
Point of Contact Gallery

Price: Free
Point of Contact Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Tango, a large format folio published by Iris Editions in New York (1991) with eight intaglio prints by Nancy Graves and 13 pages of text by Pedro Cuperman that gaze at the aesthetics of this Latin American dance.

Tango proposes an evening of music, dance, and food transposed into videoa sort of "performance" projected into the space of the gallery where audience and art become intertwined in the field of representation.

"Graves conceived of the prints in the folio as a continued exploration of pattern in nature and as a tonal study of black and white," writes Thomas Padon in his book, Nancy Graves, Excavations in Print A Catalogue Raisonné (1996). "More than once the artist has asserted, 'There is nothing more challenging and meaningful than to make prints in black and white.' For an admitted colorist, it is ironic that the nine prints Graves has made in black and white are among her most powerful." The cryptic titles of the prints in the folio were selected by Graves from Cuperman's text for Tango. The poet speaks of the dance as a gradually unfolding ritual, stating near the conclusion, "Tango helps you find your own levels of proximity."


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 9



Annual Exhibition
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

Price: Free
Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St., Syracuse

The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 9



The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

Price: Free
Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University, Syracuse

In commemoration of the 80th anniversary of the execution for murder of two Italian anarchist laborers, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, a selection of period ephemera issued by the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee together with a plethora of books associated with the trial that have been published in the intervening years by Paul Avrich, Felix Frankfurter, and Eugene Lyons, among others. The exhibit features artistic expressions (cartoons, illustrations, novels, plays, poems, songs and music) inspired by the trial, including the work of Maxwell Anderson, John Dos Passos, Fred Ellis, Howard Fast, Woodie Guthrie, William Gropper, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Rockwell Kent, Katherine Anne Porter, Pete Seeger, and Upton Sinclair. The story of the Sacco and Vanzetti mural by Ben Shahn on the east wall of H. B. Crouse will also be explored.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 9



Four to the Fore
Associated Artists of Central New York

Price: Free
Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr., Manlius

The exhibits highlights the varied work of four members, Barbara Emmons, Judith Jaquith, Elizabeth Pilbeam, and Clara Towell.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 9



Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal
CNY Arts

The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

A juried exhibit in which a dozen regional artists have individually interpreted the concept of "Tribal."


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 9



The Art of George Mayocole
Community Folk Art Center

Price: Suggested donation $5
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

This exhibition features vibrant, abstract, mixed media works on paper by this New York City-based artist.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 9



Gullah Lifestyles: A Culture Under Attack and Confederate Currency: The Color of Money
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Paintings by John W. Jones and Leroy Campbell


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 9



Newfoundland and Other Journeys
Fayetteville Free Library

Price: Free
Fayetteville Free Library
300 Orchard St., Fayetteville

A showing of original pigment prints by Donal and Shel Little.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 9



Train of Thought: Serial Images from the Light Work Collection
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition features the work of five artists -- Hollis Frampton, Arnold Gassan, Peter Max Kandhola, Judy Natal, and Aaron Siskind -- all of whom generously donated either a series of prints or a portfolio of prints to the Light Work Collection. This exhibition provides us with an opportunity to investigate the artists' use of duplication and repetition to explore a single subject or idea. The images in this exhibition are produced using a variety of techniques, including photogravures, ektacolor, silver gelatin prints, and chromogenic prints.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 9



Angelika Rinnhofer: Sammelsurium
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition, featuring the work of German-born artist Angelika Rinnhofer, will feature her large-format color prints from three related series, Menschenkunde, Felsenfest, and Seelensucht. She describes her series Menschenkunde as portraits that combine facts, beauty, and irony in a Renaissance-style. Rinnhofer's series Felsenfest continues the same aesthetics in its re-interpretations of martyrs and saints into a modern context. Rinnhofer remembers being frightened as a child when viewing the horrific images of tortured saints commonly found in churches in her hometown Nürnberg, Germany. She now casts a critical eye, juxtaposing religious figures with modern-looking scientists. Seelensucht takes Rinnhofer back to the traditional single-figure portrait, also capturing the themes of martyrs.

Angelika lives in Beacon, NY. She is a commercial photographer and artist. She is the recipient of a Kodak European Gold Award and received a fellowship in photography from the Dutchess County Arts Council. She participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2005.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 9



Artist Showcase: Images by Brian Arnold
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition is comprised of recent acquisitions to the Light Work Collection that come from multiple series that Ithaca-based photographer Brian Arnold has been working on. He utilizes traditional black-and-white processes, remaining committed to what he refers to as "the alchemy of photography." All of his photographs are unique silver gelatin prints, toned with a combination of selenium, sulfur, and gold chloride. Arnold also creates unique limited edition books, two of which are included in this exhibition. He teaches photography and electronic arts at the New York State College of Art and Engineering at Alfred University.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, November 9



Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

The exhibition will feature artwork from the OHA collection that depicts various modes of local transportation and how artists interpreted it over the last two centuries. Local teachers and students will find subjects meeting their document-based questions social studies standards within the exhibit.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 9



Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city.

The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor.

Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, November 9



Yves Saint Front
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The exhibition contains 31 images primarily of Tahiti and Chausey, France, created between the mid-1960s and the mid-1980s.

A descendant of mariners, St. Front preferred coastal scenes, often including boats at anchor, seaside villages and beaches. A number of his works include members of his family and the Tahitian natives, occasionally in an arrangement of small peripheral images around a central landscape. There are also a number of sensitively designed interiors; one that is particularly strong shows his wife Isabella standing at a telephone while their cat sleeps on a floor mat.

Weekend and evening visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, November 9



Goya: The Disasters of War
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death.

Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts.

This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War.

Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, November 9



Maximum Color
Delavan Art Gallery

Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Featuring glass by Phil Austin, paintings by Alison Fisher, landscapes and abstractions by Jim Loveless, non-representational paintings by Lutz Scherneck, and creative photography by Linda Spatuzzi.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, November 9



On My Own Time
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Since 1974, the Cultural Resources Council, in cooperation with the Everson, has presented On My Own Time. A celebration of artwork created by employees of local businesses on their own time, the exhibition is meant to promote creativity and artistic endeavors by those who are not full-time artists.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, November 9



Under One Roof Reprise
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Juxtapose artwork created by artists whose common thread is a shared studio/classroom space and expect the unexpected. This happened in 2004, when a group of women who work and teach at Syracuse University's ComArt building joined together for an exhibition entitled Under One Roof at SOHO20 Gallery in Chelsea, NY. This was the first time the artists - three generations of students/teachers - had shown together, yet their work spoke of seamless connections and closer ties than one might assume.

Nine artists have reunited for the current exhibition Under One Roof Reprise. Their situations have changed slightly but their work once again has come together in surprising and interesting ways. Abby Goodman and Kim Carr Valdez earned their MFA degrees and moved to Brooklyn, while Laura Ledbetter now lives in Philadelphia. Anne Beffel, Ann Clarke, Mary Giehl, Gail Hoffman, and Jude Lewis continue to teach in the College of Visual and Performing Arts at Syracuse University, while Claire Harootunian, although officially retired, continues to teach, travel, and explore the art of found objects.

The artists' processes are diverse, including large-scale installations, found object collaboration, casting, kinetics, video, and hand-tooled objects. Emphasis is placed on the creative use of materials such as fibers, metals, wood, plastics, resin, and everyday products. Each artist translates and illuminates human experience through her unique visual language and conceptual sensibility. These artists address common themes such as play, gender, identity, time, place, and most of all, memories. Mary Giehl's Ivory combines happy childhood memories of bathing with her siblings - recalling the "toys, the fun, the soap floating and the smell of Ivory" - with "those of sad and heartbreaking stories" not uncommon in today's headlines.

Gail Hoffman, a sculptor immersed in the concept of time, presents "visual metaphorical narratives, freeze-framed in a state of suspended animation" through a variety of media including bronze, plastic toys, and other found objects. Plasco Ranch (Possible Outcomes) is a minature assemblage designed in the small scale to "invite the viewer to psychologically inhabit the space." A collection of disparate objects including a bronze sheep, Santa Claus, and military vehicles has been arranged to suggest a story that is left to the viewer's imagination. A journal placed nearby offers visitors the opportunity to record their stories and suggest possible outcomes for the scene as they see it unfold. Based on viewers' comments, Hoffman will return periodically to rearrange, add, or remove objects, providing photographic documentation of the ever changing Plasco Ranch as part of the exhibit.

This group exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Syracuse University College of Visual and Performing Arts.


Back to list
 

 

4:00 PM - 7:00 PM, November 9



Art Mart
Syracuse Allied Arts

Price: Free
City Hall Commons Atrium
201 East Washington St., Syracuse

Show and sale of original fine art and crafts.

For more information, phone 315-468-2616.


Back to list
 


Music
 

11:15 AM, November 9



Recital by the Vocal Repertory Class of Professor McCullough
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Storer Auditorium
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

5:00 PM, November 9



Parents' Weekend Concert
Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
Syracuse University Women's Choir, Wind Ensemble, and Orchestra

Price: Free
Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College
Syracuse University, Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 9



Artist as Artist
Redhouse

Price: $6
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

A concert and art opening featuring bands who have members that are also artists showing their work.
Featuring the music and art of Merit, and music of Mike Watson from Anorexic Beauty Queen

8:45 pm -- Artist Talk
9:00 pm -- Music: Mike Watson (9:009:30), Merit (9:40-11:00)


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 9



Big Bang Extravaganza
Spark Contemporary Art Space

Price: $8, $10
Spark Contemporary Art Space
1005 E. Fayette St., Syracuse

Also featuring The Sister Lovers + The XYZ Affair + Fire Flies + DJ A-Ko on turntables.


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 9



Pops Series: Betty Buckley's Broadway
Syracuse Symphony Orchestra
Featuring Betty Buckley, vocalist

Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Please join us for a most memorable concert featuring "the voice of Broadway," Tony Award winner Betty Buckley. Known for her show-stopping voice, Ms. Buckley will sing her signature tune, "Memory," from Cats, wow you with songs from Sunset Boulevard and other hit Broadway shows, and perform favorites from the Great American Songbook.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 9



Parents' Weekend Concert
Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
Syracuse University Jazz Ensemble, Singers, and Symphony Band

Price: Free
Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College
Syracuse University, Syracuse


Back to list
 


Poetry/Reading
 

7:00 PM, November 9



Poet Aimee Nezhukumatathil
Downtown Writer's Center

Price: Free
YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Aimee Nezhukumatathil is the acclaimed author of the poetry collections Miracle Fruit (2003) and At the Volcano Drive-In (2007), both published by Tupelo Press. Miracle Fruit was a particularly astonishing debut collection. It won the Tupelo Poetry Prize, was named ForeWord Magazine's Book of the Year in poetry, was co-winner of the Global Filipino Literary Award, a finalist for the Asian American Literary Award and the Glasgow Prize from Shenandoah magazine. She teaches at SUNY Fredonia.


Back to list
 


Theater
 

6:00 PM, November 9



FuhgettAboutIt!

Price: $30, dinner and show
Casa di Amore
7608 Oswego Rd., Liverpool

Help solve the murder at the Ameteo family's Thanksgiving dinner.

Information: 315-622-9402.


Back to list
 

 

7:30 PM, November 9



Speak
Gifford Family Theatre

Price: $8
Fayetteville-Manlius High School
8201 E. Seneca Tpke., Manlius

Adaptation of Laurie Halse Anderson's 1999 National Book Award finalist. (Not for children younger than 13.)


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 9



LeMoyne College
Major Arcana

Coyne Center for the Performing Arts
LeMoyne College, Syracuse

The student-run theatre club presents one-acts that are directed, designed and performed by Le Moyne College students.


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 9



Misery
Syracuse Stage
Emma Griffin, director

Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

The perfect Halloween treat from the "king of horror, Stephen King. A psychological thriller that serves up gasps and laughs aplenty. A must for King lovers.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 9



Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
Syracuse University Drama Department
Gerardine Clark, director

Price: $15 regular, $13 students/seniors
Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Tennessee Williams' Cat on a Hot Tin Roof is a drama about a Southern family in crisis and the turbulent relationship between husband and wife Brick Pollitt and Maggie "The Cat" Pollitt. The childless Pollitts arrive at a gathering of the family on their Mississippi Delta estate unaware that patriarch Big Daddy has cancer, which revelation puts them in competition with their relatives for a substantial serving from Big Daddy's will. Originating on Broadway in 1955, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof was revived four times, and has been adapted for both film and television.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 9



New Play Workshop: The Meaning of Life and Other Useless Pieces of Information
Syracuse University Drama Department

Price: Free
Loft Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Questions like "Who am I?" and "What is the meaning of life?" can catch us when we're least expecting them, stifling us with their scope and depth. We can be staring peacefully at the night sky or stumbling through our morning routine and suddenly realize how small our lives -- and even planet -- are. "What is the meaning of life?" we wonder. "Why am I here? And why do I force myself out of bed and through the day? What's the point?"

In his new play, The Meaning of Life and Other Useless Pieces of Information, 2004 SU Drama grad Matte O'Brien begs a slightly different, but profound question: If life does have meaning beyond the immediate and discernible -- does it even matter? Or is the meaning of life actually just a useless piece of information?

Workshopping is a crucial, but seldom-seen-by-the-public part of the playwriting process. Plays are three-dimensional works of art meant to be seen and heard. In order to truly understand how a moment or character or scene will work, playwrights often need to physically see the play. A group of student actors will actually stage The Meaning of Life and O'Brien will attend rehearsals and performances, reworking and rewriting parts based on what he sees and hears.

The performances are intended to be sketches to give the author a feel of the whole work. The performances will have only a minimal set, no lights or costumes; actors will only use rough props. Audiences will have the rare and fascinating opportunity to watch not just a cast of characters grow and change, but a new work of drama itself as well.

All matinee performances are followed by talk-back sessions with the cast and director.

For seating availability, phone 315-443-2102 or e-mail meaningoflifesu@hotmail.com.


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 9



Footloose
The Talent Company
Bob Durkin, director

Price: $25 regular; $22 seniors/students; $16 children 12 and under
Empire Theater
New York State Fairgrounds, Geddes

Based on the motion picture hit about a young man who comes to town and changes the lives of everyone there, Footloose is propelled by the rockin' rhythm of its Oscar-nominated Top 40 score, with music by Tom Snow and lyrics by Dean Pitchford. The soundtrack album spent 10 weeks at #1 on the Billboard charts featuring such popular '80s tunes as "Let's Hear It For The Boy," "Almost Paradise," "The Girl Gets Around," "Holding Out For A Hero," and the title song, "Footloose." When the film was released in 1984, there were at least 65 communities in the United States that had some sort of law on the books outlawing dancing. One such town was Elmore City, OK, the original inspiration for the unbelievable story of Footloose. Ever since the town's inception in 1861, dancing had been illegal. In 1980, when Elmore City teens protested the ordinance at City Hall, a firestorm of controversy followed; when it was all over, the town saw its first dance in over 100 years.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 


 

Saturday, November 10, 2007


Art
 

Time TBD, November 10



Syracuse Builds: After the Master Plan
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
The Warehouse, Main Auditorium
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The exhibition presents 13 architectural and landscape projects currently in development for the Syracuse University campus and the city of Syracuse, including a new residence hall on the main campus by Mack Scogin and Merrill Elam, the Syracuse Center of Excellence in Environmental and Energy Systems headquarters designed by Toshiko Mori Architect, and a community InfoCenter for the Near Westside Initiative project in Syracuse designed by Syracuse Architecture professors Tim Stenson and Scott Ruff.


Back to list
 

 

Time TBD, November 10



Million Dollar Blocks: Justice and the City
ThINC

Company Gallery
110 W. Fayette St. (corner of Clinton), Syracuse

The United States currently has more than 2 million people locked up in jails and prisons. A disproportionate number of them come from a very few neighborhoods in the country's biggest cities. In many places, the concentration is so dense that states are spending in excess of a million dollars a year to incarcerate the residents of single census blocks. When these people are released and reenter their communities, roughly 40% do not stay more than three years before they are reincarcerated.

Using rarely accessible data from the criminal justice system, the Spatial Information Design Lab and the Justice Mapping Center have created maps of these "million dollar blocks" and of the city-prison-city-prison migration for of the nation's cities. The maps suggest that the criminal justice system has become the predominant government institution in these communities and that public investment in this system has resulted in significant costs to other elements of our civic infrastructure -- education, housing, health, and family.

The maps pose difficult ethical and political questions for policymakers and designers. When they are linked to other urban social and economic indicators of incarceration they also suggest new strategies for approaching urban design and criminal justice reform together.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 10



Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls
Downtown Writer's Center

Price: Free
YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St., Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 10



Four to the Fore
Associated Artists of Central New York

Price: Free
Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr., Manlius

The exhibits highlights the varied work of four members, Barbara Emmons, Judith Jaquith, Elizabeth Pilbeam, and Clara Towell.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 10



Maximum Color
Delavan Art Gallery

Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Featuring glass by Phil Austin, paintings by Alison Fisher, landscapes and abstractions by Jim Loveless, non-representational paintings by Lutz Scherneck, and creative photography by Linda Spatuzzi.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 10



Under One Roof Reprise
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Juxtapose artwork created by artists whose common thread is a shared studio/classroom space and expect the unexpected. This happened in 2004, when a group of women who work and teach at Syracuse University's ComArt building joined together for an exhibition entitled Under One Roof at SOHO20 Gallery in Chelsea, NY. This was the first time the artists - three generations of students/teachers - had shown together, yet their work spoke of seamless connections and closer ties than one might assume.

Nine artists have reunited for the current exhibition Under One Roof Reprise. Their situations have changed slightly but their work once again has come together in surprising and interesting ways. Abby Goodman and Kim Carr Valdez earned their MFA degrees and moved to Brooklyn, while Laura Ledbetter now lives in Philadelphia. Anne Beffel, Ann Clarke, Mary Giehl, Gail Hoffman, and Jude Lewis continue to teach in the College of Visual and Performing Arts at Syracuse University, while Claire Harootunian, although officially retired, continues to teach, travel, and explore the art of found objects.

The artists' processes are diverse, including large-scale installations, found object collaboration, casting, kinetics, video, and hand-tooled objects. Emphasis is placed on the creative use of materials such as fibers, metals, wood, plastics, resin, and everyday products. Each artist translates and illuminates human experience through her unique visual language and conceptual sensibility. These artists address common themes such as play, gender, identity, time, place, and most of all, memories. Mary Giehl's Ivory combines happy childhood memories of bathing with her siblings - recalling the "toys, the fun, the soap floating and the smell of Ivory" - with "those of sad and heartbreaking stories" not uncommon in today's headlines.

Gail Hoffman, a sculptor immersed in the concept of time, presents "visual metaphorical narratives, freeze-framed in a state of suspended animation" through a variety of media including bronze, plastic toys, and other found objects. Plasco Ranch (Possible Outcomes) is a minature assemblage designed in the small scale to "invite the viewer to psychologically inhabit the space." A collection of disparate objects including a bronze sheep, Santa Claus, and military vehicles has been arranged to suggest a story that is left to the viewer's imagination. A journal placed nearby offers visitors the opportunity to record their stories and suggest possible outcomes for the scene as they see it unfold. Based on viewers' comments, Hoffman will return periodically to rearrange, add, or remove objects, providing photographic documentation of the ever changing Plasco Ranch as part of the exhibit.

This group exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Syracuse University College of Visual and Performing Arts.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 10



On My Own Time
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Since 1974, the Cultural Resources Council, in cooperation with the Everson, has presented On My Own Time. A celebration of artwork created by employees of local businesses on their own time, the exhibition is meant to promote creativity and artistic endeavors by those who are not full-time artists.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 10



Newfoundland and Other Journeys
Fayetteville Free Library

Price: Free
Fayetteville Free Library
300 Orchard St., Fayetteville

A showing of original pigment prints by Donal and Shel Little.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 10



Gullah Lifestyles: A Culture Under Attack and Confederate Currency: The Color of Money
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Paintings by John W. Jones and Leroy Campbell


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 10



The Art of George Mayocole
Community Folk Art Center

Price: Suggested donation $5
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

This exhibition features vibrant, abstract, mixed media works on paper by this New York City-based artist.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 10



Art Mart
Syracuse Allied Arts

Price: Free
City Hall Commons Atrium
201 East Washington St., Syracuse

Show and sale of original fine art and crafts.

For more information, phone 315-468-2616.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 10



Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

The exhibition will feature artwork from the OHA collection that depicts various modes of local transportation and how artists interpreted it over the last two centuries. Local teachers and students will find subjects meeting their document-based questions social studies standards within the exhibit.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 10



Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city.

The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor.

Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, November 10



Goya: The Disasters of War
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death.

Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts.

This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War.

Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, November 10



Yves Saint Front
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The exhibition contains 31 images primarily of Tahiti and Chausey, France, created between the mid-1960s and the mid-1980s.

A descendant of mariners, St. Front preferred coastal scenes, often including boats at anchor, seaside villages and beaches. A number of his works include members of his family and the Tahitian natives, occasionally in an arrangement of small peripheral images around a central landscape. There are also a number of sensitively designed interiors; one that is particularly strong shows his wife Isabella standing at a telephone while their cat sleeps on a floor mat.

Weekend and evening visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, November 10



Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal
CNY Arts

The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

A juried exhibit in which a dozen regional artists have individually interpreted the concept of "Tribal."


Back to list
 


Music
 

10:30 AM, November 10



Family Series: Polar Express and The Bear
Syracuse Symphony Orchestra
Ron Spigelman, conductor

Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Settle in for a magical ride on The Polar Express. Based on Chris Van Allsburg's book of the same name, The Polar Express takes a boy to the North Pole, where he receives a very special gift from Santa. Then, join the SSO for a presentation of The Bear, an animated film set to live music, based on Raymond Briggs' book about a young girl's friendship with a giant polar bear.


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 10



Black Celestial Choral Ensemble
Hendricks Chapel

Price: $10
Hendricks Chapel
Syracuse University, Syracuse

For more information, phone 315-443-4517.


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 10



Redhouse
The Gonstermachers

Price: $10
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

The group will perform music in development for their second CD and music from the first release.


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 10



Pops Series: Betty Buckley's Broadway
Syracuse Symphony Orchestra
Featuring Betty Buckley, vocalist

Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Please join us for a most memorable concert featuring "the voice of Broadway," Tony Award winner Betty Buckley. Known for her show-stopping voice, Ms. Buckley will sing her signature tune, "Memory," from Cats, wow you with songs from Sunset Boulevard and other hit Broadway shows, and perform favorites from the Great American Songbook.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 10



Second Saturday Series: Pamela Goddard & Kitchen Chair
Westcott Community Center

Price: $10
Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St., Syracuse

Kitchen Chair, Jennifer Dotson on fiddle and Gail Blake on guitar, hails from the rich musical ground of Ithaca. They offer a wonderful repertoire of exquisitely interpreted tunes from New England, Quebec, Ireland, Scotland, and Scandinavia, as well as inspired originals, rooted in the contradance tradition.


Back to list
 


Theater
 

11:00 AM, November 10



Tom Knight Puppets

Price: $6 regular; infants younger than 1, free
United Church of Fayetteville
310 E. Genesee St., Fayetteville

Collection of original songs and skits.

For more information, phone 315-329-0267.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM, November 10



The Secret of the Puppet's Book
Open Hand Theater

Price: $8 adults; $6 children
International Mask and Puppet Museum
518 Prospect Ave., Syracuse

"Once there was a most unusual puppet who lived with a grumpy old man." Celebrate the magic of books with Lewis the break dancing puppet and his friends.


Back to list
 

 

12:30 PM, November 10



Sleeping Beauty
Magic Circle Children's Theatre

Price: $5
Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St., Syracuse

Interactive version of the children's classic.


Back to list
 

 

12:30 PM, November 10



Grease and 101 Dalmations Preview
Syracuse Children's Theatre

Price: Free
Barnes & Noble
3454 Erie Blvd. E., Dewitt


Back to list
 

 

2:00 PM, November 10



New Play Workshop: The Meaning of Life and Other Useless Pieces of Information
Syracuse University Drama Department

Price: Free
Loft Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Questions like "Who am I?" and "What is the meaning of life?" can catch us when we're least expecting them, stifling us with their scope and depth. We can be staring peacefully at the night sky or stumbling through our morning routine and suddenly realize how small our lives -- and even planet -- are. "What is the meaning of life?" we wonder. "Why am I here? And why do I force myself out of bed and through the day? What's the point?"

In his new play, The Meaning of Life and Other Useless Pieces of Information, 2004 SU Drama grad Matte O'Brien begs a slightly different, but profound question: If life does have meaning beyond the immediate and discernible -- does it even matter? Or is the meaning of life actually just a useless piece of information?

Workshopping is a crucial, but seldom-seen-by-the-public part of the playwriting process. Plays are three-dimensional works of art meant to be seen and heard. In order to truly understand how a moment or character or scene will work, playwrights often need to physically see the play. A group of student actors will actually stage The Meaning of Life and O'Brien will attend rehearsals and performances, reworking and rewriting parts based on what he sees and hears.

The performances are intended to be sketches to give the author a feel of the whole work. The performances will have only a minimal set, no lights or costumes; actors will only use rough props. Audiences will have the rare and fascinating opportunity to watch not just a cast of characters grow and change, but a new work of drama itself as well.

All matinee performances are followed by talk-back sessions with the cast and director.

For seating availability, phone 315-443-2102 or e-mail meaningoflifesu@hotmail.com.


Back to list
 

 

3:00 PM, November 10



Misery
Syracuse Stage
Emma Griffin, director

Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

The perfect Halloween treat from the "king of horror, Stephen King. A psychological thriller that serves up gasps and laughs aplenty. A must for King lovers.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

7:30 PM, November 10



Speak
Gifford Family Theatre

Price: $8
Fayetteville-Manlius High School
8201 E. Seneca Tpke., Manlius

Adaptation of Laurie Halse Anderson's 1999 National Book Award finalist. (Not for children younger than 13.)


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 10



LeMoyne College
Major Arcana

Coyne Center for the Performing Arts
LeMoyne College, Syracuse

The student-run theatre club presents one-acts that are directed, designed and performed by Le Moyne College students.


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 10



Well Aged Words: Spicy Latino Tales
Open Hand Theater
Featuring Leeny Del Seamonds

Price: $18 advance sale, $20 at the door; artist's reception $5
International Mask and Puppet Museum
518 Prospect Ave., Syracuse

Master Story Performer Leeny Del Seamonds is a multi award-winning internationally acclaimed performer of Latino, multicultural and original stories. With a twinkle in her eye and fire in her heart Leeny breathes life into her stories, masterfully and effortlessly springing from one character to another, inviting audiences to share her Cuban-American sense of humor and love of performing.


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 10



Misery
Syracuse Stage
Emma Griffin, director

Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

The perfect Halloween treat from the "king of horror, Stephen King. A psychological thriller that serves up gasps and laughs aplenty. A must for King lovers.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 10



Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
Syracuse University Drama Department
Gerardine Clark, director

Price: $15 regular, $13 students/seniors
Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Tennessee Williams' Cat on a Hot Tin Roof is a drama about a Southern family in crisis and the turbulent relationship between husband and wife Brick Pollitt and Maggie "The Cat" Pollitt. The childless Pollitts arrive at a gathering of the family on their Mississippi Delta estate unaware that patriarch Big Daddy has cancer, which revelation puts them in competition with their relatives for a substantial serving from Big Daddy's will. Originating on Broadway in 1955, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof was revived four times, and has been adapted for both film and television.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 10



New Play Workshop: The Meaning of Life and Other Useless Pieces of Information
Syracuse University Drama Department

Price: Free
Loft Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Questions like "Who am I?" and "What is the meaning of life?" can catch us when we're least expecting them, stifling us with their scope and depth. We can be staring peacefully at the night sky or stumbling through our morning routine and suddenly realize how small our lives -- and even planet -- are. "What is the meaning of life?" we wonder. "Why am I here? And why do I force myself out of bed and through the day? What's the point?"

In his new play, The Meaning of Life and Other Useless Pieces of Information, 2004 SU Drama grad Matte O'Brien begs a slightly different, but profound question: If life does have meaning beyond the immediate and discernible -- does it even matter? Or is the meaning of life actually just a useless piece of information?

Workshopping is a crucial, but seldom-seen-by-the-public part of the playwriting process. Plays are three-dimensional works of art meant to be seen and heard. In order to truly understand how a moment or character or scene will work, playwrights often need to physically see the play. A group of student actors will actually stage The Meaning of Life and O'Brien will attend rehearsals and performances, reworking and rewriting parts based on what he sees and hears.

The performances are intended to be sketches to give the author a feel of the whole work. The performances will have only a minimal set, no lights or costumes; actors will only use rough props. Audiences will have the rare and fascinating opportunity to watch not just a cast of characters grow and change, but a new work of drama itself as well.

All matinee performances are followed by talk-back sessions with the cast and director.

For seating availability, phone 315-443-2102 or e-mail meaningoflifesu@hotmail.com.


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 10



Footloose
The Talent Company
Bob Durkin, director

Price: $25 regular; $22 seniors/students; $16 children 12 and under
Empire Theater
New York State Fairgrounds, Geddes

Based on the motion picture hit about a young man who comes to town and changes the lives of everyone there, Footloose is propelled by the rockin' rhythm of its Oscar-nominated Top 40 score, with music by Tom Snow and lyrics by Dean Pitchford. The soundtrack album spent 10 weeks at #1 on the Billboard charts featuring such popular '80s tunes as "Let's Hear It For The Boy," "Almost Paradise," "The Girl Gets Around," "Holding Out For A Hero," and the title song, "Footloose." When the film was released in 1984, there were at least 65 communities in the United States that had some sort of law on the books outlawing dancing. One such town was Elmore City, OK, the original inspiration for the unbelievable story of Footloose. Ever since the town's inception in 1861, dancing had been illegal. In 1980, when Elmore City teens protested the ordinance at City Hall, a firestorm of controversy followed; when it was all over, the town saw its first dance in over 100 years.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 


 

Sunday, November 11, 2007


Art
 

Time TBD, November 11



Syracuse Builds: After the Master Plan
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
The Warehouse, Main Auditorium
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The exhibition presents 13 architectural and landscape projects currently in development for the Syracuse University campus and the city of Syracuse, including a new residence hall on the main campus by Mack Scogin and Merrill Elam, the Syracuse Center of Excellence in Environmental and Energy Systems headquarters designed by Toshiko Mori Architect, and a community InfoCenter for the Near Westside Initiative project in Syracuse designed by Syracuse Architecture professors Tim Stenson and Scott Ruff.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 11



Artist Showcase: Images by Brian Arnold
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition is comprised of recent acquisitions to the Light Work Collection that come from multiple series that Ithaca-based photographer Brian Arnold has been working on. He utilizes traditional black-and-white processes, remaining committed to what he refers to as "the alchemy of photography." All of his photographs are unique silver gelatin prints, toned with a combination of selenium, sulfur, and gold chloride. Arnold also creates unique limited edition books, two of which are included in this exhibition. He teaches photography and electronic arts at the New York State College of Art and Engineering at Alfred University.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 11



Angelika Rinnhofer: Sammelsurium
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition, featuring the work of German-born artist Angelika Rinnhofer, will feature her large-format color prints from three related series, Menschenkunde, Felsenfest, and Seelensucht. She describes her series Menschenkunde as portraits that combine facts, beauty, and irony in a Renaissance-style. Rinnhofer's series Felsenfest continues the same aesthetics in its re-interpretations of martyrs and saints into a modern context. Rinnhofer remembers being frightened as a child when viewing the horrific images of tortured saints commonly found in churches in her hometown Nürnberg, Germany. She now casts a critical eye, juxtaposing religious figures with modern-looking scientists. Seelensucht takes Rinnhofer back to the traditional single-figure portrait, also capturing the themes of martyrs.

Angelika lives in Beacon, NY. She is a commercial photographer and artist. She is the recipient of a Kodak European Gold Award and received a fellowship in photography from the Dutchess County Arts Council. She participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2005.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 11



Train of Thought: Serial Images from the Light Work Collection
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition features the work of five artists -- Hollis Frampton, Arnold Gassan, Peter Max Kandhola, Judy Natal, and Aaron Siskind -- all of whom generously donated either a series of prints or a portfolio of prints to the Light Work Collection. This exhibition provides us with an opportunity to investigate the artists' use of duplication and repetition to explore a single subject or idea. The images in this exhibition are produced using a variety of techniques, including photogravures, ektacolor, silver gelatin prints, and chromogenic prints.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 11



Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

The exhibition will feature artwork from the OHA collection that depicts various modes of local transportation and how artists interpreted it over the last two centuries. Local teachers and students will find subjects meeting their document-based questions social studies standards within the exhibit.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 11



Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city.

The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor.

Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, November 11



Yves Saint Front
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The exhibition contains 31 images primarily of Tahiti and Chausey, France, created between the mid-1960s and the mid-1980s.

A descendant of mariners, St. Front preferred coastal scenes, often including boats at anchor, seaside villages and beaches. A number of his works include members of his family and the Tahitian natives, occasionally in an arrangement of small peripheral images around a central landscape. There are also a number of sensitively designed interiors; one that is particularly strong shows his wife Isabella standing at a telephone while their cat sleeps on a floor mat.

Weekend and evening visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, November 11



Goya: The Disasters of War
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death.

Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts.

This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War.

Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, November 11



On My Own Time
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Since 1974, the Cultural Resources Council, in cooperation with the Everson, has presented On My Own Time. A celebration of artwork created by employees of local businesses on their own time, the exhibition is meant to promote creativity and artistic endeavors by those who are not full-time artists.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, November 11



Under One Roof Reprise
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Juxtapose artwork created by artists whose common thread is a shared studio/classroom space and expect the unexpected. This happened in 2004, when a group of women who work and teach at Syracuse University's ComArt building joined together for an exhibition entitled Under One Roof at SOHO20 Gallery in Chelsea, NY. This was the first time the artists - three generations of students/teachers - had shown together, yet their work spoke of seamless connections and closer ties than one might assume.

Nine artists have reunited for the current exhibition Under One Roof Reprise. Their situations have changed slightly but their work once again has come together in surprising and interesting ways. Abby Goodman and Kim Carr Valdez earned their MFA degrees and moved to Brooklyn, while Laura Ledbetter now lives in Philadelphia. Anne Beffel, Ann Clarke, Mary Giehl, Gail Hoffman, and Jude Lewis continue to teach in the College of Visual and Performing Arts at Syracuse University, while Claire Harootunian, although officially retired, continues to teach, travel, and explore the art of found objects.

The artists' processes are diverse, including large-scale installations, found object collaboration, casting, kinetics, video, and hand-tooled objects. Emphasis is placed on the creative use of materials such as fibers, metals, wood, plastics, resin, and everyday products. Each artist translates and illuminates human experience through her unique visual language and conceptual sensibility. These artists address common themes such as play, gender, identity, time, place, and most of all, memories. Mary Giehl's Ivory combines happy childhood memories of bathing with her siblings - recalling the "toys, the fun, the soap floating and the smell of Ivory" - with "those of sad and heartbreaking stories" not uncommon in today's headlines.

Gail Hoffman, a sculptor immersed in the concept of time, presents "visual metaphorical narratives, freeze-framed in a state of suspended animation" through a variety of media including bronze, plastic toys, and other found objects. Plasco Ranch (Possible Outcomes) is a minature assemblage designed in the small scale to "invite the viewer to psychologically inhabit the space." A collection of disparate objects including a bronze sheep, Santa Claus, and military vehicles has been arranged to suggest a story that is left to the viewer's imagination. A journal placed nearby offers visitors the opportunity to record their stories and suggest possible outcomes for the scene as they see it unfold. Based on viewers' comments, Hoffman will return periodically to rearrange, add, or remove objects, providing photographic documentation of the ever changing Plasco Ranch as part of the exhibit.

This group exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Syracuse University College of Visual and Performing Arts.


Back to list
 

 

1:00 PM - 5:00 PM, November 11



Four to the Fore
Associated Artists of Central New York

Price: Free
Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr., Manlius

The exhibits highlights the varied work of four members, Barbara Emmons, Judith Jaquith, Elizabeth Pilbeam, and Clara Towell.


Back to list
 

 

1:00 PM - 5:00 PM, November 11



Newfoundland and Other Journeys
Fayetteville Free Library

Price: Free
Fayetteville Free Library
300 Orchard St., Fayetteville

A showing of original pigment prints by Donal and Shel Little.


Back to list
 


Dance
 

2:00 PM, November 11



Savion Glover
Syracuse University College of Arts and Sciences

Price: $20 general public; $15 SU faculty, staff and alumni; $8 SU students with valid SU ID; $15 registered SU family members and guests
Goldstein Auditorium, Schine Student Center
Syracuse University, Syracuse

During SU Family Weekend, the Tony Award-winning choreographer (“Bring in ‘Da Noise, Bring in ‘Da Funk”) and tap dancer Savion Glover will perform. Glover made his Broadway debut at age 10. In addition to Broadway credits, he has appeared in and choreographed feature films, music videos and television commercials and specials; was a series regular on “Sesame Street;” created two dance companies, NYOTs (Not Your Ordinary Tappers) and Ti Dii; and most recently tap danced in a motion-capture suit that transformed his hoofing into the animation that became the moves of lead character Mumble in the animated film “Happy Feet.


Back to list
 


Film
 

2:00 PM, November 11



Contemporary Film Series: The Yellow Wallpaper and Invocation: Maya Deren
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Free
Hosmer Auditorium, Everson Museum
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

The Yellow Wallpaper

This short dramatic film brings to life the classic Charlotte Perkins Gilman story of the same name, which has become an important addition to American literature. Set in the late 1800s, the story features Elizabeth, an aspiring writer who becomes ill and is forced by her doctor and husband to take a "rest cure." Completely isolated, her mind creates a word inside the wallpaper in her room - a world in which a woman is trapped and unable to escape. (Directed by Marie Ashton, 14 minutes, 1977)


Invocation: Maya Deren

Maya Deren is a legend of avant-garde cinema. This authoritative biography of the charismatic filmmaker, poet and anthropologist features excerpts from her pioneering Meshes of the Afternoon and her unfinished documentary on Haiti, interviews with Stan Brakhage and Jonas Mekas, and recordings of her lectures. Narrated by actress Helen Mirren, this definitive documentary offers startling insights into one of the most intriguing, accomplished figures in cinema history. (Directed by Jo Ann Kaplan, 53 minutes, 1987)


Back to list
 


Music
 

4:30 PM, November 11



SSYO Fall Concert
Syracuse Youth Orchestras
Kenneth Andrews and Ronald Hebert, conductor

Price: $12 adults, $8 students
Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse

John Rutter A-Roving from Suite for Strings
Ralph Vaughan-Williams Prelude: 49th Parallel
A Cole Porter Salute
Carl Maria von Weber's Der Freischutz overture
Michael Daugherty Sundown on South Street from Philadelphia Stories
Aaron Copland Four Dance Episodes from Rodeo


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 11



Soundcheck Live from Redhouse
Redhouse

Price: $5
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

Geek Romeo and Dave Snediker will be performing live at Redhouse.

Starting this weekend, with our once-a-month 'live' broadcast from the Redhouse Theatre, Soundcheck will now be heard on 96.9 WOUR Utica/Rome, as well as on TK99/TK105.


Back to list
 


Theater
 

1:00 PM, November 11



Young Playwrights in Progress
Redhouse

Price: Free
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

Young Playwrights in Progress will present a reading of their work. The short plays are written by Manlius Pebble Hill School seniors Carina Sposato, Mohammad Seraji, and Katie Yates. They are playwriting students of Armory Square Playhouse member Donna Stuccio.

This performance is a script-in-hand presentation of plays in progress. A talkback discussion with the playwrights will follow the reading.

Please contact stucciod@sunyocc.edu with any questions.


Back to list
 

 

1:30 PM, November 11



Grease and 101 Dalmations Preview
Syracuse Children's Theatre

Price: Free
Barnes & Noble
3454 Erie Blvd. E., Dewitt


Back to list
 

 

2:00 PM, November 11



Misery
Syracuse Stage
Emma Griffin, director

Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

The perfect Halloween treat from the "king of horror, Stephen King. A psychological thriller that serves up gasps and laughs aplenty. A must for King lovers.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

2:00 PM, November 11



Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
Syracuse University Drama Department
Gerardine Clark, director

Price: $15 regular, $13 students/seniors
Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Tennessee Williams' Cat on a Hot Tin Roof is a drama about a Southern family in crisis and the turbulent relationship between husband and wife Brick Pollitt and Maggie "The Cat" Pollitt. The childless Pollitts arrive at a gathering of the family on their Mississippi Delta estate unaware that patriarch Big Daddy has cancer, which revelation puts them in competition with their relatives for a substantial serving from Big Daddy's will. Originating on Broadway in 1955, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof was revived four times, and has been adapted for both film and television.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

2:00 PM, November 11



New Play Workshop: The Meaning of Life and Other Useless Pieces of Information
Syracuse University Drama Department

Price: Free
Loft Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Questions like "Who am I?" and "What is the meaning of life?" can catch us when we're least expecting them, stifling us with their scope and depth. We can be staring peacefully at the night sky or stumbling through our morning routine and suddenly realize how small our lives -- and even planet -- are. "What is the meaning of life?" we wonder. "Why am I here? And why do I force myself out of bed and through the day? What's the point?"

In his new play, The Meaning of Life and Other Useless Pieces of Information, 2004 SU Drama grad Matte O'Brien begs a slightly different, but profound question: If life does have meaning beyond the immediate and discernible -- does it even matter? Or is the meaning of life actually just a useless piece of information?

Workshopping is a crucial, but seldom-seen-by-the-public part of the playwriting process. Plays are three-dimensional works of art meant to be seen and heard. In order to truly understand how a moment or character or scene will work, playwrights often need to physically see the play. A group of student actors will actually stage The Meaning of Life and O'Brien will attend rehearsals and performances, reworking and rewriting parts based on what he sees and hears.

The performances are intended to be sketches to give the author a feel of the whole work. The performances will have only a minimal set, no lights or costumes; actors will only use rough props. Audiences will have the rare and fascinating opportunity to watch not just a cast of characters grow and change, but a new work of drama itself as well.

All matinee performances are followed by talk-back sessions with the cast and director.

For seating availability, phone 315-443-2102 or e-mail meaningoflifesu@hotmail.com.


Back to list
 

 

2:00 PM, November 11



Footloose
The Talent Company
Bob Durkin, director

Price: $25 regular; $22 seniors/students; $16 children 12 and under
Empire Theater
New York State Fairgrounds, Geddes

Based on the motion picture hit about a young man who comes to town and changes the lives of everyone there, Footloose is propelled by the rockin' rhythm of its Oscar-nominated Top 40 score, with music by Tom Snow and lyrics by Dean Pitchford. The soundtrack album spent 10 weeks at #1 on the Billboard charts featuring such popular '80s tunes as "Let's Hear It For The Boy," "Almost Paradise," "The Girl Gets Around," "Holding Out For A Hero," and the title song, "Footloose." When the film was released in 1984, there were at least 65 communities in the United States that had some sort of law on the books outlawing dancing. One such town was Elmore City, OK, the original inspiration for the unbelievable story of Footloose. Ever since the town's inception in 1861, dancing had been illegal. In 1980, when Elmore City teens protested the ordinance at City Hall, a firestorm of controversy followed; when it was all over, the town saw its first dance in over 100 years.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 


 

Monday, November 12, 2007


Art
 

Time TBD, November 12



Syracuse Builds: After the Master Plan
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
The Warehouse, Main Auditorium
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The exhibition presents 13 architectural and landscape projects currently in development for the Syracuse University campus and the city of Syracuse, including a new residence hall on the main campus by Mack Scogin and Merrill Elam, the Syracuse Center of Excellence in Environmental and Energy Systems headquarters designed by Toshiko Mori Architect, and a community InfoCenter for the Near Westside Initiative project in Syracuse designed by Syracuse Architecture professors Tim Stenson and Scott Ruff.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 12



Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls
Downtown Writer's Center

Price: Free
YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St., Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 12



Newfoundland and Other Journeys
Fayetteville Free Library

Price: Free
Fayetteville Free Library
300 Orchard St., Fayetteville

A showing of original pigment prints by Donal and Shel Little.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 12



Gallery Exhibit: OCC Faculty Art Show
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse

A mixed media show with works from OCC's own faculty members.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 12



The Eye of the FaithKeeper: The Haudenosaunee Art of Oren Lyons
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Storer Auditorium
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 12



Tango
Point of Contact Gallery

Price: Free
Point of Contact Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Tango, a large format folio published by Iris Editions in New York (1991) with eight intaglio prints by Nancy Graves and 13 pages of text by Pedro Cuperman that gaze at the aesthetics of this Latin American dance.

Tango proposes an evening of music, dance, and food transposed into videoa sort of "performance" projected into the space of the gallery where audience and art become intertwined in the field of representation.

"Graves conceived of the prints in the folio as a continued exploration of pattern in nature and as a tonal study of black and white," writes Thomas Padon in his book, Nancy Graves, Excavations in Print A Catalogue Raisonné (1996). "More than once the artist has asserted, 'There is nothing more challenging and meaningful than to make prints in black and white.' For an admitted colorist, it is ironic that the nine prints Graves has made in black and white are among her most powerful." The cryptic titles of the prints in the folio were selected by Graves from Cuperman's text for Tango. The poet speaks of the dance as a gradually unfolding ritual, stating near the conclusion, "Tango helps you find your own levels of proximity."


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 12



Annual Exhibition
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

Price: Free
Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St., Syracuse

The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 12



The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

Price: Free
Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University, Syracuse

In commemoration of the 80th anniversary of the execution for murder of two Italian anarchist laborers, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, a selection of period ephemera issued by the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee together with a plethora of books associated with the trial that have been published in the intervening years by Paul Avrich, Felix Frankfurter, and Eugene Lyons, among others. The exhibit features artistic expressions (cartoons, illustrations, novels, plays, poems, songs and music) inspired by the trial, including the work of Maxwell Anderson, John Dos Passos, Fred Ellis, Howard Fast, Woodie Guthrie, William Gropper, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Rockwell Kent, Katherine Anne Porter, Pete Seeger, and Upton Sinclair. The story of the Sacco and Vanzetti mural by Ben Shahn on the east wall of H. B. Crouse will also be explored.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 12



Four to the Fore
Associated Artists of Central New York

Price: Free
Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr., Manlius

The exhibits highlights the varied work of four members, Barbara Emmons, Judith Jaquith, Elizabeth Pilbeam, and Clara Towell.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 12



Train of Thought: Serial Images from the Light Work Collection
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition features the work of five artists -- Hollis Frampton, Arnold Gassan, Peter Max Kandhola, Judy Natal, and Aaron Siskind -- all of whom generously donated either a series of prints or a portfolio of prints to the Light Work Collection. This exhibition provides us with an opportunity to investigate the artists' use of duplication and repetition to explore a single subject or idea. The images in this exhibition are produced using a variety of techniques, including photogravures, ektacolor, silver gelatin prints, and chromogenic prints.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 12



Angelika Rinnhofer: Sammelsurium
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition, featuring the work of German-born artist Angelika Rinnhofer, will feature her large-format color prints from three related series, Menschenkunde, Felsenfest, and Seelensucht. She describes her series Menschenkunde as portraits that combine facts, beauty, and irony in a Renaissance-style. Rinnhofer's series Felsenfest continues the same aesthetics in its re-interpretations of martyrs and saints into a modern context. Rinnhofer remembers being frightened as a child when viewing the horrific images of tortured saints commonly found in churches in her hometown Nürnberg, Germany. She now casts a critical eye, juxtaposing religious figures with modern-looking scientists. Seelensucht takes Rinnhofer back to the traditional single-figure portrait, also capturing the themes of martyrs.

Angelika lives in Beacon, NY. She is a commercial photographer and artist. She is the recipient of a Kodak European Gold Award and received a fellowship in photography from the Dutchess County Arts Council. She participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2005.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 12



Artist Showcase: Images by Brian Arnold
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition is comprised of recent acquisitions to the Light Work Collection that come from multiple series that Ithaca-based photographer Brian Arnold has been working on. He utilizes traditional black-and-white processes, remaining committed to what he refers to as "the alchemy of photography." All of his photographs are unique silver gelatin prints, toned with a combination of selenium, sulfur, and gold chloride. Arnold also creates unique limited edition books, two of which are included in this exhibition. He teaches photography and electronic arts at the New York State College of Art and Engineering at Alfred University.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 12



Art Mart
Syracuse Allied Arts

Price: Free
City Hall Commons Atrium
201 East Washington St., Syracuse

Show and sale of original fine art and crafts.

For more information, phone 315-468-2616.


Back to list
 


Film
 

7:30 PM, November 12



Six of a Kind
Syracuse Cinephile Society

Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St., Syracuse

This vintage silliness from Paramount teams W.C. Fields, Charlie Ruggles, Mary Boland, Alison Skipworth, George Burns and Gracie Allen in a 1934 free-for-all.


Back to list
 


Music
 

6:00 PM, November 12



Anberlin

Price: $13
New Renaissance Theater
1119 Townsend St. (in Little Italy), Syracuse

Information: 315-473-0952 ext. 311.


Back to list
 


 

Tuesday, November 13, 2007


Art
 

Time TBD, November 13



Syracuse Builds: After the Master Plan
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
The Warehouse, Main Auditorium
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The exhibition presents 13 architectural and landscape projects currently in development for the Syracuse University campus and the city of Syracuse, including a new residence hall on the main campus by Mack Scogin and Merrill Elam, the Syracuse Center of Excellence in Environmental and Energy Systems headquarters designed by Toshiko Mori Architect, and a community InfoCenter for the Near Westside Initiative project in Syracuse designed by Syracuse Architecture professors Tim Stenson and Scott Ruff.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 13



Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls
Downtown Writer's Center

Price: Free
YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St., Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 13



Newfoundland and Other Journeys
Fayetteville Free Library

Price: Free
Fayetteville Free Library
300 Orchard St., Fayetteville

A showing of original pigment prints by Donal and Shel Little.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 13



The Eye of the FaithKeeper: The Haudenosaunee Art of Oren Lyons
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Storer Auditorium
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 13



Gallery Exhibit: OCC Faculty Art Show
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse

A mixed media show with works from OCC's own faculty members.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 13



Tango
Point of Contact Gallery

Price: Free
Point of Contact Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Tango, a large format folio published by Iris Editions in New York (1991) with eight intaglio prints by Nancy Graves and 13 pages of text by Pedro Cuperman that gaze at the aesthetics of this Latin American dance.

Tango proposes an evening of music, dance, and food transposed into videoa sort of "performance" projected into the space of the gallery where audience and art become intertwined in the field of representation.

"Graves conceived of the prints in the folio as a continued exploration of pattern in nature and as a tonal study of black and white," writes Thomas Padon in his book, Nancy Graves, Excavations in Print A Catalogue Raisonné (1996). "More than once the artist has asserted, 'There is nothing more challenging and meaningful than to make prints in black and white.' For an admitted colorist, it is ironic that the nine prints Graves has made in black and white are among her most powerful." The cryptic titles of the prints in the folio were selected by Graves from Cuperman's text for Tango. The poet speaks of the dance as a gradually unfolding ritual, stating near the conclusion, "Tango helps you find your own levels of proximity."


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 13



Annual Exhibition
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

Price: Free
Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St., Syracuse

The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 13



The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

Price: Free
Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University, Syracuse

In commemoration of the 80th anniversary of the execution for murder of two Italian anarchist laborers, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, a selection of period ephemera issued by the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee together with a plethora of books associated with the trial that have been published in the intervening years by Paul Avrich, Felix Frankfurter, and Eugene Lyons, among others. The exhibit features artistic expressions (cartoons, illustrations, novels, plays, poems, songs and music) inspired by the trial, including the work of Maxwell Anderson, John Dos Passos, Fred Ellis, Howard Fast, Woodie Guthrie, William Gropper, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Rockwell Kent, Katherine Anne Porter, Pete Seeger, and Upton Sinclair. The story of the Sacco and Vanzetti mural by Ben Shahn on the east wall of H. B. Crouse will also be explored.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 13



Four to the Fore
Associated Artists of Central New York

Price: Free
Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr., Manlius

The exhibits highlights the varied work of four members, Barbara Emmons, Judith Jaquith, Elizabeth Pilbeam, and Clara Towell.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 13



Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal
CNY Arts

The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

A juried exhibit in which a dozen regional artists have individually interpreted the concept of "Tribal."


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 13



The Art of George Mayocole
Community Folk Art Center

Price: Suggested donation $5
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

This exhibition features vibrant, abstract, mixed media works on paper by this New York City-based artist.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 13



Gullah Lifestyles: A Culture Under Attack and Confederate Currency: The Color of Money
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Paintings by John W. Jones and Leroy Campbell


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 13



Angelika Rinnhofer: Sammelsurium
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition, featuring the work of German-born artist Angelika Rinnhofer, will feature her large-format color prints from three related series, Menschenkunde, Felsenfest, and Seelensucht. She describes her series Menschenkunde as portraits that combine facts, beauty, and irony in a Renaissance-style. Rinnhofer's series Felsenfest continues the same aesthetics in its re-interpretations of martyrs and saints into a modern context. Rinnhofer remembers being frightened as a child when viewing the horrific images of tortured saints commonly found in churches in her hometown Nürnberg, Germany. She now casts a critical eye, juxtaposing religious figures with modern-looking scientists. Seelensucht takes Rinnhofer back to the traditional single-figure portrait, also capturing the themes of martyrs.

Angelika lives in Beacon, NY. She is a commercial photographer and artist. She is the recipient of a Kodak European Gold Award and received a fellowship in photography from the Dutchess County Arts Council. She participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2005.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 13



Train of Thought: Serial Images from the Light Work Collection
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition features the work of five artists -- Hollis Frampton, Arnold Gassan, Peter Max Kandhola, Judy Natal, and Aaron Siskind -- all of whom generously donated either a series of prints or a portfolio of prints to the Light Work Collection. This exhibition provides us with an opportunity to investigate the artists' use of duplication and repetition to explore a single subject or idea. The images in this exhibition are produced using a variety of techniques, including photogravures, ektacolor, silver gelatin prints, and chromogenic prints.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 13



Artist Showcase: Images by Brian Arnold
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition is comprised of recent acquisitions to the Light Work Collection that come from multiple series that Ithaca-based photographer Brian Arnold has been working on. He utilizes traditional black-and-white processes, remaining committed to what he refers to as "the alchemy of photography." All of his photographs are unique silver gelatin prints, toned with a combination of selenium, sulfur, and gold chloride. Arnold also creates unique limited edition books, two of which are included in this exhibition. He teaches photography and electronic arts at the New York State College of Art and Engineering at Alfred University.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 13



Art Mart
Syracuse Allied Arts

Price: Free
City Hall Commons Atrium
201 East Washington St., Syracuse

Show and sale of original fine art and crafts.

For more information, phone 315-468-2616.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 13



Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city.

The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor.

Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, November 13



Goya: The Disasters of War
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death.

Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts.

This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War.

Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, November 13



Yves Saint Front
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The exhibition contains 31 images primarily of Tahiti and Chausey, France, created between the mid-1960s and the mid-1980s.

A descendant of mariners, St. Front preferred coastal scenes, often including boats at anchor, seaside villages and beaches. A number of his works include members of his family and the Tahitian natives, occasionally in an arrangement of small peripheral images around a central landscape. There are also a number of sensitively designed interiors; one that is particularly strong shows his wife Isabella standing at a telephone while their cat sleeps on a floor mat.

Weekend and evening visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, November 13



Under One Roof Reprise
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Juxtapose artwork created by artists whose common thread is a shared studio/classroom space and expect the unexpected. This happened in 2004, when a group of women who work and teach at Syracuse University's ComArt building joined together for an exhibition entitled Under One Roof at SOHO20 Gallery in Chelsea, NY. This was the first time the artists - three generations of students/teachers - had shown together, yet their work spoke of seamless connections and closer ties than one might assume.

Nine artists have reunited for the current exhibition Under One Roof Reprise. Their situations have changed slightly but their work once again has come together in surprising and interesting ways. Abby Goodman and Kim Carr Valdez earned their MFA degrees and moved to Brooklyn, while Laura Ledbetter now lives in Philadelphia. Anne Beffel, Ann Clarke, Mary Giehl, Gail Hoffman, and Jude Lewis continue to teach in the College of Visual and Performing Arts at Syracuse University, while Claire Harootunian, although officially retired, continues to teach, travel, and explore the art of found objects.

The artists' processes are diverse, including large-scale installations, found object collaboration, casting, kinetics, video, and hand-tooled objects. Emphasis is placed on the creative use of materials such as fibers, metals, wood, plastics, resin, and everyday products. Each artist translates and illuminates human experience through her unique visual language and conceptual sensibility. These artists address common themes such as play, gender, identity, time, place, and most of all, memories. Mary Giehl's Ivory combines happy childhood memories of bathing with her siblings - recalling the "toys, the fun, the soap floating and the smell of Ivory" - with "those of sad and heartbreaking stories" not uncommon in today's headlines.

Gail Hoffman, a sculptor immersed in the concept of time, presents "visual metaphorical narratives, freeze-framed in a state of suspended animation" through a variety of media including bronze, plastic toys, and other found objects. Plasco Ranch (Possible Outcomes) is a minature assemblage designed in the small scale to "invite the viewer to psychologically inhabit the space." A collection of disparate objects including a bronze sheep, Santa Claus, and military vehicles has been arranged to suggest a story that is left to the viewer's imagination. A journal placed nearby offers visitors the opportunity to record their stories and suggest possible outcomes for the scene as they see it unfold. Based on viewers' comments, Hoffman will return periodically to rearrange, add, or remove objects, providing photographic documentation of the ever changing Plasco Ranch as part of the exhibit.

This group exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Syracuse University College of Visual and Performing Arts.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, November 13



Genetic Self-Portrait: Works by Gary Schneider
The Warehouse Gallery

Price: Free
The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The show includes 55 photo-based works that South African-born, NYC-based artist Gary Schneider produced when he was offered a chance to create a new body of work inspired by the Human Genome Project (HGP). The HGP, a scientific race to uncover the mysteries of DNA, began formally in the 1990s and was completed in 2003. During that period, Schneider was able to collaborate with a number of scientists and was given access to advanced imaging systems from electron microscopes to x-ray machines.

The work in the exhibition ranges from images of his individual chromosomes made by a light microscope to panoramic dental x-rays. Schneider is known as a master photographic printer, and by combining his skill as a craftsman and selecting specimens for their aesthetic qualities, he moved beyond scientific descriptions to produce a personal portrait that asks us to consider how we are unique and where we stand on common ground.

Schneider had always been interested in alternative imaging techniques, and previous to this project he had been making images by imprinting his hands onto film emulsions. When he decided to include these prints along with the images he had been making with scientists, he realized that what he had been creating was a new kind of portrait. Ann Thomas, curator of photographs at the National Gallery of Canada, described it as a new approach that "challenges the traditional definition of the portrait, and revises our understanding of what it means to be revealed before the camera's lens."

By merging scientific accuracy with poetic resonance, Schneider has created a very personal illumination of how our individual identity is so closely linked to our broader understanding and use of the information contained in the human building blocks of our DNA. Through the personal exploration that went into creating genetic self-portrait, Schneider reveals that while we may always want to think of ourselves as more than the sum of our parts, our real promise might be found in looking at the 99 percent of ourselves we have in common with everyone else.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, November 13



A Look of Portrait
Spark Contemporary Art Space

Price: Free
Spark Contemporary Art Space
1005 E. Fayette St., Syracuse

Image installations by Jinwoo Lee. Master of Fine Arts thesis exhibition


Back to list
 


Film
 

7:30 PM, November 13



2008 Festival Prescreening
Syracuse International Film Festival

Price: Free, but reservations recommended
Coyne Center for the Performing Arts
LeMoyne College, Syracuse

The Syracuse International Film Festival hosts a prescreening evening. A team of local writers, actors, producers and film critics will make up a professional prescreening team who will watch a handful of the hundreds of entries received by the festival organizers. The general public is invited to join the prescreening sessions and give their impressions of the films.

The space is limited, so please call 315-442-8700 to reserve a spot.


Other prescreening events are already scheduled LeMoyne College (November 13).


Back to list
 


Music
 

8:00 PM, November 13



The Shalants + Remote Islands
Spark Contemporary Art Space

Price: $5
Spark Contemporary Art Space
1005 E. Fayette St., Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, November 13



Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
Syracuse University Singers
John Warren, conductor

Price: Free
Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College
Syracuse University, Syracuse

With Bridget Moriarty, assistant conductor. Performing works of Ola Gjeilo, Thomas Tomkins, W.A. Mozart, Charles Wood, Edward Elgar, Paul Hindemith, Eric Whitacre, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Robert Sund, and Moses Hogan.

Free parking is available in the Irving Garage and University Ave. Garage on a limited space-available basis. You must mention the University Singers concert in order to obtain free parking.


Back to list
 


 
Next week >>>
 

 



Home · Calendar · Search · Directory ·

 

 

Submit your events to web@syracusearts.net.
© 2001-2025 SyracuseArts.net