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Events for Sunday, May 13, 2007

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Photographs by Ben Gest Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Celebration of the Arts

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Women at Work: Members of the Art Students League of New York Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:00 PM The Collector's Gene: Passion, Devotion and Learning Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Defining Moments: American Masterworks from the Syracuse University Art Collection Syracuse University Art Museum

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

12:00 PM-5:00 PM The Lives They Left Behind: Suitcases From a State Hospital Attic Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Passionate Observer: Eudora Welty Among Artists of the Thirties Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Hey You with the Totally Awesome Face: Jeremy Bailey, 2006 Everson Biennial Winner Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Selections from Silvano Campeggi Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Survivor's Art: Images of Hope & Healing Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM The Little Mermaid and Aladdin Syracuse Children's Theatre

12:30 PM The Dragon Appleseed Productions (Read a review!)

1:00 PM-5:00 PM Seeing Red Associated Artists of Central New York

2:00 PM You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown Salt City Center for the Performing Arts (Read a review!)

4:00 PM Cruizin' thru the 50s, 60s and 70s

4:00 PM The Little Mermaid and Aladdin Syracuse Children's Theatre

4:30 PM Spring Concert Syracuse Youth Orchestras

7:30 PM The Little Mermaid and Aladdin Syracuse Children's Theatre

9:00 PM TK99 Soundcheck: Verno & Soul Risin' Redhouse

Events for Monday, May 14, 2007

8:30 AM-5:00 PM Visual Arts Showcase #59 CNY Arts

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Art from the CNY Region of the National League of American Pen Women

9:00 AM-2:00 PM Pennellate di Cinema: Classic film posters designed by Silvano Campeggi Point of Contact Gallery

10:00 AM-9:00 PM Seeing Red Associated Artists of Central New York

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Photographs by Ben Gest Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Diane Menzies/Jane Daroskikh: Painting and Sculpture Redhouse

Events for Tuesday, May 15, 2007

8:30 AM-5:00 PM Visual Arts Showcase #59 CNY Arts

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Art from the CNY Region of the National League of American Pen Women

9:00 AM-2:00 PM Pennellate di Cinema: Classic film posters designed by Silvano Campeggi Point of Contact Gallery

10:00 AM-9:00 PM Seeing Red Associated Artists of Central New York

10:00 AM-6:00 PM 35th Annual Teenage Competitive Art Exhibition Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Photographs by Ben Gest Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Diane Menzies/Jane Daroskikh: Painting and Sculpture Redhouse

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Networked Nature The Warehouse Gallery

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

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Defining Moments: American Masterworks from the Syracuse University Art Collection Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:00 PM The Collector's Gene: Passion, Devotion and Learning Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Women at Work: Members of the Art Students League of New York Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Hey You with the Totally Awesome Face: Jeremy Bailey, 2006 Everson Biennial Winner Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Passionate Observer: Eudora Welty Among Artists of the Thirties Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM The Lives They Left Behind: Suitcases From a State Hospital Attic Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Survivor's Art: Images of Hope & Healing Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Selections from Silvano Campeggi Everson Museum of Art

Events for Wednesday, May 16, 2007

8:30 AM-5:00 PM Visual Arts Showcase #59 CNY Arts

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Art from the CNY Region of the National League of American Pen Women

9:00 AM-2:00 PM Pennellate di Cinema: Classic film posters designed by Silvano Campeggi Point of Contact Gallery

10:00 AM-9:00 PM Seeing Red Associated Artists of Central New York

10:00 AM-6:00 PM 35th Annual Teenage Competitive Art Exhibition Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Photographs by Ben Gest Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Diane Menzies/Jane Daroskikh: Painting and Sculpture Redhouse

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Networked Nature The Warehouse Gallery

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Women at Work: Members of the Art Students League of New York Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:00 PM The Collector's Gene: Passion, Devotion and Learning Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Defining Moments: American Masterworks from the Syracuse University Art Collection Syracuse University Art Museum

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

12:00 PM-5:00 PM The Lives They Left Behind: Suitcases From a State Hospital Attic Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Passionate Observer: Eudora Welty Among Artists of the Thirties Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Hey You with the Totally Awesome Face: Jeremy Bailey, 2006 Everson Biennial Winner Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Selections from Silvano Campeggi Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Survivor's Art: Images of Hope & Healing Everson Museum of Art

12:30 PM Sar-Shalom Strong, piano Civic Morning Musicals

7:30 PM The Unexpected Guest Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

Events for Thursday, May 17, 2007

8:30 AM-5:00 PM Visual Arts Showcase #59 CNY Arts

9:00 AM-7:00 PM Art from the CNY Region of the National League of American Pen Women

9:00 AM-2:00 PM Pennellate di Cinema: Classic film posters designed by Silvano Campeggi Point of Contact Gallery

10:00 AM-9:00 PM Seeing Red Associated Artists of Central New York

10:00 AM-8:00 PM 35th Annual Teenage Competitive Art Exhibition Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Photographs by Ben Gest Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-7:00 PM Diane Menzies/Jane Daroskikh: Painting and Sculpture Redhouse

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Networked Nature The Warehouse Gallery

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

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Defining Moments: American Masterworks from the Syracuse University Art Collection Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-8:00 PM The Collector's Gene: Passion, Devotion and Learning Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Women at Work: Members of the Art Students League of New York Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-8:00 PM Art for the Soul Delavan Art Gallery

12:00 PM-8:00 PM The Lives They Left Behind: Suitcases From a State Hospital Attic Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-8:00 PM Hey You with the Totally Awesome Face: Jeremy Bailey, 2006 Everson Biennial Winner Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-8:00 PM Passionate Observer: Eudora Welty Among Artists of the Thirties Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Survivor's Art: Images of Hope & Healing Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-8:00 PM Selections from Silvano Campeggi Everson Museum of Art

5:00 PM-8:00 PM Pennellate di Cinema: Classic film posters designed by Silvano Campeggi Point of Contact Gallery

5:30 PM Art Across Borders Delavan Art Gallery

6:30 PM-8:00 PM Aldo Tambellini: A Cultural History of Syracuse ThINC

6:45 PM Die Another Death Acme Mystery Company

7:00 PM-10:00 PM Floating Galleries Launch

7:30 PM The Unexpected Guest Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

Events for Friday, May 18, 2007

8:30 AM-5:00 PM Visual Arts Showcase #59 CNY Arts

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Art from the CNY Region of the National League of American Pen Women

9:00 AM-2:00 PM Pennellate di Cinema: Classic film posters designed by Silvano Campeggi Point of Contact Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Seeing Red Associated Artists of Central New York

10:00 AM-6:00 PM 35th Annual Teenage Competitive Art Exhibition Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Photographs by Ben Gest Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Diane Menzies/Jane Daroskikh: Painting and Sculpture Redhouse

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Networked Nature The Warehouse Gallery

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Women at Work: Members of the Art Students League of New York Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:00 PM The Collector's Gene: Passion, Devotion and Learning Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Defining Moments: American Masterworks from the Syracuse University Art Collection Syracuse University Art Museum

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

11:00 AM-6:00 PM Aldo Tambellini: A Cultural History of Syracuse ThINC

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Art for the Soul Delavan Art Gallery

12:00 PM-5:00 PM The Lives They Left Behind: Suitcases From a State Hospital Attic Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Passionate Observer: Eudora Welty Among Artists of the Thirties Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Hey You with the Totally Awesome Face: Jeremy Bailey, 2006 Everson Biennial Winner Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Selections from Silvano Campeggi Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Survivor's Art: Images of Hope & Healing Everson Museum of Art

7:00 PM Poet Brian Turner Downtown Writer's Center

7:00 PM Cruizin' thru the 50s, 60s and 70s

8:00 PM The Dragon Appleseed Productions (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Lonesome Sisters Folkus Project

8:00 PM Love Letters Val Blok Productions (Read a review!)

8:00 PM The Unexpected Guest Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Pops Series: An American Tribute Syracuse Symphony Orchestra, featuring Holly Bingham, soprano (Read a review!)

8:15 PM You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown Salt City Center for the Performing Arts (Read a review!)

Events for Saturday, May 19, 2007

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Seeing Red Associated Artists of Central New York

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Art for the Soul Delavan Art Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM The Lives They Left Behind: Suitcases From a State Hospital Attic Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Hey You with the Totally Awesome Face: Jeremy Bailey, 2006 Everson Biennial Winner Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Passionate Observer: Eudora Welty Among Artists of the Thirties Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Survivor's Art: Images of Hope & Healing Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Selections from Silvano Campeggi Everson Museum of Art

10:30 AM Family Series: Beethoven Lives Upstairs Syracuse Symphony Orchestra

11:00 AM-5:00 PM 35th Annual Teenage Competitive Art Exhibition Community Folk Art Center

11:00 AM-6:00 PM Aldo Tambellini: A Cultural History of Syracuse ThINC

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Networked Nature The Warehouse Gallery

12:30 PM The Little Mermaid Magic Circle Children's Theatre

2:00 PM-3:00 PM Tamora Pierce

3:00 PM The Unexpected Guest Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

7:00 PM Cruizin' thru the 50s, 60s and 70s

7:00 PM Annual Pops concert Syracuse University Brass Ensemble

8:00 PM The Dragon Appleseed Productions (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Houston Person, tenor saxophone CNY Jazz Arts Foundation (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Love Letters Val Blok Productions (Read a review!)

8:00 PM The Unexpected Guest Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Pops Series: An American Tribute Syracuse Symphony Orchestra, featuring Holly Bingham, soprano (Read a review!)

8:15 PM You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown Salt City Center for the Performing Arts (Read a review!)

Events for Sunday, May 20, 2007

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Photographs by Ben Gest Light Work Gallery

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Selections from Silvano Campeggi Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Survivor's Art: Images of Hope & Healing Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Passionate Observer: Eudora Welty Among Artists of the Thirties Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Hey You with the Totally Awesome Face: Jeremy Bailey, 2006 Everson Biennial Winner Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM The Lives They Left Behind: Suitcases From a State Hospital Attic Everson Museum of Art

1:00 PM-5:00 PM Seeing Red Associated Artists of Central New York

2:00 PM In Recital: Melody and Imagination Civic Morning Musicals, featuring John Spradling, piano

2:00 PM Love Letters Val Blok Productions (Read a review!)

2:00 PM Cruizin' thru the 50s, 60s and 70s

2:00 PM You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown Salt City Center for the Performing Arts (Read a review!)

2:00 PM The Unexpected Guest Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

3:00 PM Music Fills the World: Syracuse Liederverein

4:00 PM Bach's Coffee Cantata and Orchestral Suite in B Minor NYS Baroque

7:00 PM Charley Orlando

Next week  >>>

Sunday, May 13, 2007


Art
 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, May 13



Photographs by Ben Gest
Light Work Gallery

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

Gest's photographs depict people in moments of deep private thought. The figures appear emotionally removed from their environment as if withdrawing from a public self. The work focuses on the way who we are can change when we are in a group. Although the subjects are alone in the photographs, the presence of others is implied. The images depict people in the last moments of being in their own world before seeing people, or going somewhere where others will be around. These are the last breaths and the last seconds of personal time before the subjects put on a public face and adopt the persona that they use while in a group of people.

To create these images, Gest combines numerous photographs into seamless final compositions using digital technology. Each image may consist of twenty or more separate photographs taken from various vantage points. The visually surprising images direct the viewer in the construction of everyday narratives.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, May 13



Celebration of the Arts

Price: Free
St. David's Episcopal Church
13 Jamar Dr., Dewitt


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 13



Women at Work: Members of the Art Students League of New York
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The exhibition of paintings, prints and drawings from the University's permanent collection examines how Modernism and the formation of the Art Students League impacted the influx of women into the field and their development as professional and influential artists.

The selection of work begins with artists who were directly influenced by the 1913 Amory Show such as Peggy Bacon, Maria Wickey, and Isabel Bishop. The exhibition concludes with the advent of Abstract Expressionism, showing works by Jan Gelb, Minna Citron, Terry Haass, and Helen Frankenthaler. These works illustrate American art's stylistic evolution during the period. Early drawings like Harriet Frishmuth's "Study, reclining nude," reveal a classical, academic structure. This type of work gave way in the 1920s to the gritty and modern "realism" of Isabel Bishop's "Sleeping Man." After World War II, Abstract Expressionism began to take over, as seen in Minna
Citron's "Men Seldom Make Passes...," and later in the work of Helen Frankenthaler.

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.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 13



The Collector's Gene: Passion, Devotion and Learning
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Collector's Gene: Passion, Devotion and Learning uses a diverse selection of nearly 100 objects from the permanent collection to illustrate the collecting interests of Cloud Wampler, Colonel John Fox, Dr. Henry and Nancy Rosin, and Ruth Reeves. Henry Rosin says, "My collecting began as a child when I'd gather up the bottle caps under the stands at semi-professional baseball games in Brooklyn." He later turned his interests towards Japan where, as an Air Force flight surgeon, he accumulated a large group of Japanese sword fittings and hand colored photographs. The three other individuals profiled in the exhibition share similar experiences. Cloud Wampler, best known locally as the past Chairman of Carrier Corporation, was passionate about master prints, John Fox, stationed in Korea with the Army, insisted that the best way to learn about Korean culture was to go out and visit shopkeepers and merchants. Ruth Reeves went to India in 1956 on a Fulbright fellowship to study local brass casting techniques. She collected a large number of brass objects and a rare group of clay ceremonial sculptures. The university saw the educational potential in the collection and agreed to purchase her collection in 1963.

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.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 13



Defining Moments: American Masterworks from the Syracuse University Art Collection
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

This exhibition illustrates the development of American Art from the middle of the 19th century and through the 20th century. The selection of paintings, prints and sculpture in this exhibit show how art in the U.S. progressed out of Eurocentric visual and cultural ideals to form a purely American aesthetic culture. Louis Comfort Tiffany married the French Art Nouveau style with the American ingenuity of the light bulb to design masterpieces such as the Murano Design Lamp (1893-95). During the 20th century, the U.S. became a major exponent of Modernism, with artists like Rico Lebrun and Yasuo Kuniyoshi leading the way. Lebrun's "Woman with Arms over Head" (1962-63) reflects his spontaneity and experimental philosophy, while the bright, acidic colors in Kuniyoshi's "Forbidden Fruit" (1950) exemplify the prevailing aesthetic current of the New York School shortly after World War II.

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.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 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.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 13



The Lives They Left Behind: Suitcases From a State Hospital Attic
Everson Museum of Art

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

"The Lives They Left Behind" is a traveling exhibition from the Exhibition Alliance. In 1995, during the closure of Willard Psychiatric Center in New York's Finger Lakes region, several hundred suitcases filled with the personal belongings of former patients were discovered. "The Lives They Left Behind" presents excerpts of personal and hospital history surrounding Willard through portraits and still lives and includes six of the original suitcases. These suitcases and their contents illuminate the rich complex lives the individual patients led before they were committed to Willard and speak to their aspirations, accomplishments, and community connections as well as their loss and isolation.

Sponsored in part by W. Carroll Coyne, Coordinated Care Services, Mental Health Association of Onondaga County, Onondaga Case Management Services, Inc., NAMI-PROMISE, INC., Transitional Living Services of Onondaga County, Inc., and Syracuse University Center on Human Policy, Law & Disability Studies. Community Collaborators include Hutchings Psychaitric Center, Syracuse University Consortium of Employment Services, Onondaga County Department of Mental Health, St. Joesph's Mental Health Services, Liberty Resources, ARISE, Onondaga County Department of Mental Health, NY Association of Physchiatric Rehabilitation, CONTACT Community Services.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 13



Passionate Observer: Eudora Welty Among Artists of the Thirties
Everson Museum of Art

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

Developed by the Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson, MS, and tour organized by International Arts & Artists, Washington, DC, this show highlights the Depression-era photography of author Eudora Welty. Welty's photographs capture with pictures the world that the author describes with words. The photographs and paintings which come from this period are visual interpretations, not only of the economic instability and often great personal despair, but of the optimism about the human spirit and pride of place.

At the center of the exhibit are Eudora Welty's dramatic photographs of Mississippi, Lousiana and New York during the Great Depression. Welty's photographs bear witness to America's courage in the face of adversity. Few American writers share both a gift for pictoral precision and words as does Welty: the craft of the metaphor, the gift for discovering the world and then transmitting the image clearly.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 13



Hey You with the Totally Awesome Face: Jeremy Bailey, 2006 Everson Biennial Winner
Everson Museum of Art

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

Jeremy Bailey uses his video art to deal with issues of identity and privacy. He described his exhibition as, "A complete solution for your identity toolbox that lets you be yourself while maintaining your personal freedoms."


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 13



Selections from Silvano Campeggi
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

This exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Point of Contact Gallery and the Redhouse. Each organization will be presenting works from a different period of renowned film poster artist, Silvano Campeggi.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 13



Survivor's Art: Images of Hope & Healing
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Free
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Survivor's Art is an exhibition initiated by Vera House, a community organization created to assist families in crises related to domestic and sexual violence. As part of their project, The Art of Caring, Vera House brings together gifted artists and a caring community. The exhibition offers hope and healing and celebrates the joy of the arts in our lives.


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1:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 13



Seeing Red
Associated Artists of Central New York

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


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Music
 

4:30 PM, May 13



Spring Concert
Syracuse Youth Orchestras

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


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9:00 PM, May 13



TK99 Soundcheck: Verno & Soul Risin'
Redhouse

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


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Theater
 

12:00 PM, May 13



The Little Mermaid and Aladdin
Syracuse Children's Theatre

Price: $20 regular, $18 students/seniors, $18 children 12 and under
Carrier Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse


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12:30 PM, May 13



The Dragon
Appleseed Productions
William Edward White, director

Price: $27 regular; $24 seniors/students (price includes dinner before the show)
Atonement Lutheran Church
116 W. Glen Ave., Syracuse

A town dominated by a three-headed dragon; a damsel in distress; a hero ready to right wrongs. Complete with talking cats, singing swords and magical headwear, The Dragon is a farcical love story dressed up as a faerie tale - but as an allegory, it is also one of the most penetrating and certainly funniest studies ever made of tyranny and the moral corruption of both tyrant and subjects. Banned for over 40 years, The Dragon is a faerie tale for the 21st Century, answering the question, "What happens after the dragon is slain?"

Written by Yevgeny Schwartz, translated by Max Hayward and Harrold Shukman.

Read a Review!


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2:00 PM, May 13



You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown
Salt City Center for the Performing Arts

St. Clare Auditorium
Lodi and Isabella Streets, Syracuse

Read a Review!


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4:00 PM, May 13



Cruizin' thru the 50s, 60s and 70s

Price: $20
Empire Theater
New York State Fairgrounds, Geddes

Written and directed by Tamaralee Shutt with musical direction by Rod Ward.

For more information and tickets, phone 315-445-4906.


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4:00 PM, May 13



The Little Mermaid and Aladdin
Syracuse Children's Theatre

Price: $20 regular, $18 students/seniors, $18 children 12 and under
Carrier Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse


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7:30 PM, May 13



The Little Mermaid and Aladdin
Syracuse Children's Theatre

Price: $20 regular, $18 students/seniors, $18 children 12 and under
Carrier Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse


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Monday, May 14, 2007


Art
 

8:30 AM - 5:00 PM, May 14



Visual Arts Showcase #59
CNY Arts

Price: Free
WCNY
415 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The Showcase features the work of area artists in a juried show. This season's work was selected
by Jennifer Pepper, Director of the Cazenovia College Gallery, and Wendy Harris, a working artist from Syracuse University.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 14



Art from the CNY Region of the National League of American Pen Women

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

Works by 15 award-winning artists will be on display.


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9:00 AM - 2:00 PM, May 14



Pennellate di Cinema: Classic film posters designed by Silvano Campeggi
Point of Contact Gallery

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

From 1945 to 1972, Silvano Campeggi worked for the major American cinematographic companies: Metro Goldwin Mayer, Universal, Paramount, RKO, Dear Film, creating over 3,000 posters for films that include Gone with the Wind, An American in Paris, Singing in the Rain and West Side Story, among countless other classics from Hollywood's Golden Era. A significant selection of the original hand made studies and sketches along with the definitive poster paintings will be on display at The Point of Contact Gallery for all Syracuse art and movie buffs to relish.

The partnership of Syracuse venues participating in this grand citywide retrospective materializes through the initiative of the Syracuse International Film Festival 2007, a Point of Contact production. Other galleries participating include the Everson Museum of Art, the Redhouse, and Company Gallery.

Each venue will cover a different era of Campeggi's prolific career. Many of the works to be presented in this citywide exhibit will later travel on to New York City's Lincoln Center for a show that opens in June.

Maestro Campeggi is the creator of the official poster for the 2007 Syracuse International Film Festival.


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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, May 14



Seeing Red
Associated Artists of Central New York

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


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, May 14



Photographs by Ben Gest
Light Work Gallery

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

Gest's photographs depict people in moments of deep private thought. The figures appear emotionally removed from their environment as if withdrawing from a public self. The work focuses on the way who we are can change when we are in a group. Although the subjects are alone in the photographs, the presence of others is implied. The images depict people in the last moments of being in their own world before seeing people, or going somewhere where others will be around. These are the last breaths and the last seconds of personal time before the subjects put on a public face and adopt the persona that they use while in a group of people.

To create these images, Gest combines numerous photographs into seamless final compositions using digital technology. Each image may consist of twenty or more separate photographs taken from various vantage points. The visually surprising images direct the viewer in the construction of everyday narratives.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, May 14



Diane Menzies/Jane Daroskikh: Painting and Sculpture
Redhouse

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

Local artist Janie Darovskikh, lives in Skaneateles and is a figurative artist working in traditional sculpting methods such as carving, clay and wax modeling, plaster and bronze casting. She is the recipient of two Fulbright grants, the Suomalainen Perustus Grant, support from the New York Foundation on the Arts and numerous other awards. She exhibits in the United States and internationally. Her art has taken her to Kulusuk, Greenland; the Ural Mountains of Russia; Yangshuo, China; and to Finland, Sweden, Lithuania and Latvia. Jane is passionate about Nordic mythology, cultural exchange and her belief in art as an international language. "The process I use involves a constantly evolving search to learn, grow, exchange, feel and create. May the work tell a story of an adventure, a feeling, a dream or a journey."

Diane Menzies, also a local artist, lives in Jamesville, NY. The drawings selected for this exhibition are from a series entitled "The Passing." These mystifying drawings served as a cathartic expression of the joys and sorrows Menzies experienced while a hospice attendant for those dying of AIDS. When the works were exhibited at the Jean Cocteau Gallery in Santa Fe, New Mexico, reviewer Diane Armitage wrote: "The gothic tension that Menzies creates might seem overwrought if not for the fact that her environmental concerns and melancholy response is right on target. Her psychological distress is not a bid for personal attention. It is, rather, a transpersonal sublimation of individual identity in favor of an emotional identification with torn bark, barren ground, and polluted air and water. Because of the careful way that Menzies limits her visual elements and establishes an air of stark abandonment, her mood of intense grieving appears as more than empty rhetoric."


Back to list
 


 

Tuesday, May 15, 2007


Art
 

8:30 AM - 5:00 PM, May 15



Visual Arts Showcase #59
CNY Arts

Price: Free
WCNY
415 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The Showcase features the work of area artists in a juried show. This season's work was selected
by Jennifer Pepper, Director of the Cazenovia College Gallery, and Wendy Harris, a working artist from Syracuse University.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 15



Art from the CNY Region of the National League of American Pen Women

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

Works by 15 award-winning artists will be on display.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 2:00 PM, May 15



Pennellate di Cinema: Classic film posters designed by Silvano Campeggi
Point of Contact Gallery

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

From 1945 to 1972, Silvano Campeggi worked for the major American cinematographic companies: Metro Goldwin Mayer, Universal, Paramount, RKO, Dear Film, creating over 3,000 posters for films that include Gone with the Wind, An American in Paris, Singing in the Rain and West Side Story, among countless other classics from Hollywood's Golden Era. A significant selection of the original hand made studies and sketches along with the definitive poster paintings will be on display at The Point of Contact Gallery for all Syracuse art and movie buffs to relish.

The partnership of Syracuse venues participating in this grand citywide retrospective materializes through the initiative of the Syracuse International Film Festival 2007, a Point of Contact production. Other galleries participating include the Everson Museum of Art, the Redhouse, and Company Gallery.

Each venue will cover a different era of Campeggi's prolific career. Many of the works to be presented in this citywide exhibit will later travel on to New York City's Lincoln Center for a show that opens in June.

Maestro Campeggi is the creator of the official poster for the 2007 Syracuse International Film Festival.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, May 15



Seeing Red
Associated Artists of Central New York

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


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, May 15



35th Annual Teenage Competitive Art Exhibition
Community Folk Art Center

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

Teen artists from local schools display works in many media. The work is judged by a panel of local artists. The exhibition is co-sponsored by the Syracuse Chapter of Links, Inc.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, May 15



Photographs by Ben Gest
Light Work Gallery

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

Gest's photographs depict people in moments of deep private thought. The figures appear emotionally removed from their environment as if withdrawing from a public self. The work focuses on the way who we are can change when we are in a group. Although the subjects are alone in the photographs, the presence of others is implied. The images depict people in the last moments of being in their own world before seeing people, or going somewhere where others will be around. These are the last breaths and the last seconds of personal time before the subjects put on a public face and adopt the persona that they use while in a group of people.

To create these images, Gest combines numerous photographs into seamless final compositions using digital technology. Each image may consist of twenty or more separate photographs taken from various vantage points. The visually surprising images direct the viewer in the construction of everyday narratives.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, May 15



Diane Menzies/Jane Daroskikh: Painting and Sculpture
Redhouse

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

Local artist Janie Darovskikh, lives in Skaneateles and is a figurative artist working in traditional sculpting methods such as carving, clay and wax modeling, plaster and bronze casting. She is the recipient of two Fulbright grants, the Suomalainen Perustus Grant, support from the New York Foundation on the Arts and numerous other awards. She exhibits in the United States and internationally. Her art has taken her to Kulusuk, Greenland; the Ural Mountains of Russia; Yangshuo, China; and to Finland, Sweden, Lithuania and Latvia. Jane is passionate about Nordic mythology, cultural exchange and her belief in art as an international language. "The process I use involves a constantly evolving search to learn, grow, exchange, feel and create. May the work tell a story of an adventure, a feeling, a dream or a journey."

Diane Menzies, also a local artist, lives in Jamesville, NY. The drawings selected for this exhibition are from a series entitled "The Passing." These mystifying drawings served as a cathartic expression of the joys and sorrows Menzies experienced while a hospice attendant for those dying of AIDS. When the works were exhibited at the Jean Cocteau Gallery in Santa Fe, New Mexico, reviewer Diane Armitage wrote: "The gothic tension that Menzies creates might seem overwrought if not for the fact that her environmental concerns and melancholy response is right on target. Her psychological distress is not a bid for personal attention. It is, rather, a transpersonal sublimation of individual identity in favor of an emotional identification with torn bark, barren ground, and polluted air and water. Because of the careful way that Menzies limits her visual elements and establishes an air of stark abandonment, her mood of intense grieving appears as more than empty rhetoric."


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, May 15



Networked Nature
The Warehouse Gallery

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

"Networked Nature" uses innovative technology to combine art, science and politics. The group exhibition inventively explores the meaning and representation of "nature," from the perspective of networked culture. The featured works employ various scientific processes and locative media, such as global positioning systems (GPS) and robotics, and take the form of installations, video and sound art. Together, they make new contributions to the discourses of extant genres, such as sculpture, earth works and landscape imagery, while also demonstrating the scientific beauty and complexity of electronic and digital art.

"Networked Nature" was organized by Marisa Olson, Editor and Curator for Rhizome, a leading new media organization affiliated with the New Museum of Contemporary Art. Their programs support the creation, presentation, discussion and preservation of contemporary art that uses new technologies in significant ways.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 15



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
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 15



Defining Moments: American Masterworks from the Syracuse University Art Collection
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

This exhibition illustrates the development of American Art from the middle of the 19th century and through the 20th century. The selection of paintings, prints and sculpture in this exhibit show how art in the U.S. progressed out of Eurocentric visual and cultural ideals to form a purely American aesthetic culture. Louis Comfort Tiffany married the French Art Nouveau style with the American ingenuity of the light bulb to design masterpieces such as the Murano Design Lamp (1893-95). During the 20th century, the U.S. became a major exponent of Modernism, with artists like Rico Lebrun and Yasuo Kuniyoshi leading the way. Lebrun's "Woman with Arms over Head" (1962-63) reflects his spontaneity and experimental philosophy, while the bright, acidic colors in Kuniyoshi's "Forbidden Fruit" (1950) exemplify the prevailing aesthetic current of the New York School shortly after World War II.

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
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 15



The Collector's Gene: Passion, Devotion and Learning
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Collector's Gene: Passion, Devotion and Learning uses a diverse selection of nearly 100 objects from the permanent collection to illustrate the collecting interests of Cloud Wampler, Colonel John Fox, Dr. Henry and Nancy Rosin, and Ruth Reeves. Henry Rosin says, "My collecting began as a child when I'd gather up the bottle caps under the stands at semi-professional baseball games in Brooklyn." He later turned his interests towards Japan where, as an Air Force flight surgeon, he accumulated a large group of Japanese sword fittings and hand colored photographs. The three other individuals profiled in the exhibition share similar experiences. Cloud Wampler, best known locally as the past Chairman of Carrier Corporation, was passionate about master prints, John Fox, stationed in Korea with the Army, insisted that the best way to learn about Korean culture was to go out and visit shopkeepers and merchants. Ruth Reeves went to India in 1956 on a Fulbright fellowship to study local brass casting techniques. She collected a large number of brass objects and a rare group of clay ceremonial sculptures. The university saw the educational potential in the collection and agreed to purchase her collection in 1963.

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
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 15



Women at Work: Members of the Art Students League of New York
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The exhibition of paintings, prints and drawings from the University's permanent collection examines how Modernism and the formation of the Art Students League impacted the influx of women into the field and their development as professional and influential artists.

The selection of work begins with artists who were directly influenced by the 1913 Amory Show such as Peggy Bacon, Maria Wickey, and Isabel Bishop. The exhibition concludes with the advent of Abstract Expressionism, showing works by Jan Gelb, Minna Citron, Terry Haass, and Helen Frankenthaler. These works illustrate American art's stylistic evolution during the period. Early drawings like Harriet Frishmuth's "Study, reclining nude," reveal a classical, academic structure. This type of work gave way in the 1920s to the gritty and modern "realism" of Isabel Bishop's "Sleeping Man." After World War II, Abstract Expressionism began to take over, as seen in Minna
Citron's "Men Seldom Make Passes...," and later in the work of Helen Frankenthaler.

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, May 15



Hey You with the Totally Awesome Face: Jeremy Bailey, 2006 Everson Biennial Winner
Everson Museum of Art

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

Jeremy Bailey uses his video art to deal with issues of identity and privacy. He described his exhibition as, "A complete solution for your identity toolbox that lets you be yourself while maintaining your personal freedoms."


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 15



Passionate Observer: Eudora Welty Among Artists of the Thirties
Everson Museum of Art

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

Developed by the Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson, MS, and tour organized by International Arts & Artists, Washington, DC, this show highlights the Depression-era photography of author Eudora Welty. Welty's photographs capture with pictures the world that the author describes with words. The photographs and paintings which come from this period are visual interpretations, not only of the economic instability and often great personal despair, but of the optimism about the human spirit and pride of place.

At the center of the exhibit are Eudora Welty's dramatic photographs of Mississippi, Lousiana and New York during the Great Depression. Welty's photographs bear witness to America's courage in the face of adversity. Few American writers share both a gift for pictoral precision and words as does Welty: the craft of the metaphor, the gift for discovering the world and then transmitting the image clearly.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 15



The Lives They Left Behind: Suitcases From a State Hospital Attic
Everson Museum of Art

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

"The Lives They Left Behind" is a traveling exhibition from the Exhibition Alliance. In 1995, during the closure of Willard Psychiatric Center in New York's Finger Lakes region, several hundred suitcases filled with the personal belongings of former patients were discovered. "The Lives They Left Behind" presents excerpts of personal and hospital history surrounding Willard through portraits and still lives and includes six of the original suitcases. These suitcases and their contents illuminate the rich complex lives the individual patients led before they were committed to Willard and speak to their aspirations, accomplishments, and community connections as well as their loss and isolation.

Sponsored in part by W. Carroll Coyne, Coordinated Care Services, Mental Health Association of Onondaga County, Onondaga Case Management Services, Inc., NAMI-PROMISE, INC., Transitional Living Services of Onondaga County, Inc., and Syracuse University Center on Human Policy, Law & Disability Studies. Community Collaborators include Hutchings Psychaitric Center, Syracuse University Consortium of Employment Services, Onondaga County Department of Mental Health, St. Joesph's Mental Health Services, Liberty Resources, ARISE, Onondaga County Department of Mental Health, NY Association of Physchiatric Rehabilitation, CONTACT Community Services.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 15



Survivor's Art: Images of Hope & Healing
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Free
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Survivor's Art is an exhibition initiated by Vera House, a community organization created to assist families in crises related to domestic and sexual violence. As part of their project, The Art of Caring, Vera House brings together gifted artists and a caring community. The exhibition offers hope and healing and celebrates the joy of the arts in our lives.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 15



Selections from Silvano Campeggi
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

This exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Point of Contact Gallery and the Redhouse. Each organization will be presenting works from a different period of renowned film poster artist, Silvano Campeggi.


Back to list
 


 

Wednesday, May 16, 2007


Art
 

8:30 AM - 5:00 PM, May 16



Visual Arts Showcase #59
CNY Arts

Price: Free
WCNY
415 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The Showcase features the work of area artists in a juried show. This season's work was selected
by Jennifer Pepper, Director of the Cazenovia College Gallery, and Wendy Harris, a working artist from Syracuse University.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 16



Art from the CNY Region of the National League of American Pen Women

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

Works by 15 award-winning artists will be on display.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 2:00 PM, May 16



Pennellate di Cinema: Classic film posters designed by Silvano Campeggi
Point of Contact Gallery

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

From 1945 to 1972, Silvano Campeggi worked for the major American cinematographic companies: Metro Goldwin Mayer, Universal, Paramount, RKO, Dear Film, creating over 3,000 posters for films that include Gone with the Wind, An American in Paris, Singing in the Rain and West Side Story, among countless other classics from Hollywood's Golden Era. A significant selection of the original hand made studies and sketches along with the definitive poster paintings will be on display at The Point of Contact Gallery for all Syracuse art and movie buffs to relish.

The partnership of Syracuse venues participating in this grand citywide retrospective materializes through the initiative of the Syracuse International Film Festival 2007, a Point of Contact production. Other galleries participating include the Everson Museum of Art, the Redhouse, and Company Gallery.

Each venue will cover a different era of Campeggi's prolific career. Many of the works to be presented in this citywide exhibit will later travel on to New York City's Lincoln Center for a show that opens in June.

Maestro Campeggi is the creator of the official poster for the 2007 Syracuse International Film Festival.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, May 16



Seeing Red
Associated Artists of Central New York

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


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, May 16



35th Annual Teenage Competitive Art Exhibition
Community Folk Art Center

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

Teen artists from local schools display works in many media. The work is judged by a panel of local artists. The exhibition is co-sponsored by the Syracuse Chapter of Links, Inc.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, May 16



Photographs by Ben Gest
Light Work Gallery

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

Gest's photographs depict people in moments of deep private thought. The figures appear emotionally removed from their environment as if withdrawing from a public self. The work focuses on the way who we are can change when we are in a group. Although the subjects are alone in the photographs, the presence of others is implied. The images depict people in the last moments of being in their own world before seeing people, or going somewhere where others will be around. These are the last breaths and the last seconds of personal time before the subjects put on a public face and adopt the persona that they use while in a group of people.

To create these images, Gest combines numerous photographs into seamless final compositions using digital technology. Each image may consist of twenty or more separate photographs taken from various vantage points. The visually surprising images direct the viewer in the construction of everyday narratives.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, May 16



Diane Menzies/Jane Daroskikh: Painting and Sculpture
Redhouse

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

Local artist Janie Darovskikh, lives in Skaneateles and is a figurative artist working in traditional sculpting methods such as carving, clay and wax modeling, plaster and bronze casting. She is the recipient of two Fulbright grants, the Suomalainen Perustus Grant, support from the New York Foundation on the Arts and numerous other awards. She exhibits in the United States and internationally. Her art has taken her to Kulusuk, Greenland; the Ural Mountains of Russia; Yangshuo, China; and to Finland, Sweden, Lithuania and Latvia. Jane is passionate about Nordic mythology, cultural exchange and her belief in art as an international language. "The process I use involves a constantly evolving search to learn, grow, exchange, feel and create. May the work tell a story of an adventure, a feeling, a dream or a journey."

Diane Menzies, also a local artist, lives in Jamesville, NY. The drawings selected for this exhibition are from a series entitled "The Passing." These mystifying drawings served as a cathartic expression of the joys and sorrows Menzies experienced while a hospice attendant for those dying of AIDS. When the works were exhibited at the Jean Cocteau Gallery in Santa Fe, New Mexico, reviewer Diane Armitage wrote: "The gothic tension that Menzies creates might seem overwrought if not for the fact that her environmental concerns and melancholy response is right on target. Her psychological distress is not a bid for personal attention. It is, rather, a transpersonal sublimation of individual identity in favor of an emotional identification with torn bark, barren ground, and polluted air and water. Because of the careful way that Menzies limits her visual elements and establishes an air of stark abandonment, her mood of intense grieving appears as more than empty rhetoric."


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, May 16



Networked Nature
The Warehouse Gallery

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

"Networked Nature" uses innovative technology to combine art, science and politics. The group exhibition inventively explores the meaning and representation of "nature," from the perspective of networked culture. The featured works employ various scientific processes and locative media, such as global positioning systems (GPS) and robotics, and take the form of installations, video and sound art. Together, they make new contributions to the discourses of extant genres, such as sculpture, earth works and landscape imagery, while also demonstrating the scientific beauty and complexity of electronic and digital art.

"Networked Nature" was organized by Marisa Olson, Editor and Curator for Rhizome, a leading new media organization affiliated with the New Museum of Contemporary Art. Their programs support the creation, presentation, discussion and preservation of contemporary art that uses new technologies in significant ways.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 16



Women at Work: Members of the Art Students League of New York
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The exhibition of paintings, prints and drawings from the University's permanent collection examines how Modernism and the formation of the Art Students League impacted the influx of women into the field and their development as professional and influential artists.

The selection of work begins with artists who were directly influenced by the 1913 Amory Show such as Peggy Bacon, Maria Wickey, and Isabel Bishop. The exhibition concludes with the advent of Abstract Expressionism, showing works by Jan Gelb, Minna Citron, Terry Haass, and Helen Frankenthaler. These works illustrate American art's stylistic evolution during the period. Early drawings like Harriet Frishmuth's "Study, reclining nude," reveal a classical, academic structure. This type of work gave way in the 1920s to the gritty and modern "realism" of Isabel Bishop's "Sleeping Man." After World War II, Abstract Expressionism began to take over, as seen in Minna
Citron's "Men Seldom Make Passes...," and later in the work of Helen Frankenthaler.

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
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 16



The Collector's Gene: Passion, Devotion and Learning
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Collector's Gene: Passion, Devotion and Learning uses a diverse selection of nearly 100 objects from the permanent collection to illustrate the collecting interests of Cloud Wampler, Colonel John Fox, Dr. Henry and Nancy Rosin, and Ruth Reeves. Henry Rosin says, "My collecting began as a child when I'd gather up the bottle caps under the stands at semi-professional baseball games in Brooklyn." He later turned his interests towards Japan where, as an Air Force flight surgeon, he accumulated a large group of Japanese sword fittings and hand colored photographs. The three other individuals profiled in the exhibition share similar experiences. Cloud Wampler, best known locally as the past Chairman of Carrier Corporation, was passionate about master prints, John Fox, stationed in Korea with the Army, insisted that the best way to learn about Korean culture was to go out and visit shopkeepers and merchants. Ruth Reeves went to India in 1956 on a Fulbright fellowship to study local brass casting techniques. She collected a large number of brass objects and a rare group of clay ceremonial sculptures. The university saw the educational potential in the collection and agreed to purchase her collection in 1963.

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
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 16



Defining Moments: American Masterworks from the Syracuse University Art Collection
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

This exhibition illustrates the development of American Art from the middle of the 19th century and through the 20th century. The selection of paintings, prints and sculpture in this exhibit show how art in the U.S. progressed out of Eurocentric visual and cultural ideals to form a purely American aesthetic culture. Louis Comfort Tiffany married the French Art Nouveau style with the American ingenuity of the light bulb to design masterpieces such as the Murano Design Lamp (1893-95). During the 20th century, the U.S. became a major exponent of Modernism, with artists like Rico Lebrun and Yasuo Kuniyoshi leading the way. Lebrun's "Woman with Arms over Head" (1962-63) reflects his spontaneity and experimental philosophy, while the bright, acidic colors in Kuniyoshi's "Forbidden Fruit" (1950) exemplify the prevailing aesthetic current of the New York School shortly after World War II.

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
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 16



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
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 16



The Lives They Left Behind: Suitcases From a State Hospital Attic
Everson Museum of Art

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

"The Lives They Left Behind" is a traveling exhibition from the Exhibition Alliance. In 1995, during the closure of Willard Psychiatric Center in New York's Finger Lakes region, several hundred suitcases filled with the personal belongings of former patients were discovered. "The Lives They Left Behind" presents excerpts of personal and hospital history surrounding Willard through portraits and still lives and includes six of the original suitcases. These suitcases and their contents illuminate the rich complex lives the individual patients led before they were committed to Willard and speak to their aspirations, accomplishments, and community connections as well as their loss and isolation.

Sponsored in part by W. Carroll Coyne, Coordinated Care Services, Mental Health Association of Onondaga County, Onondaga Case Management Services, Inc., NAMI-PROMISE, INC., Transitional Living Services of Onondaga County, Inc., and Syracuse University Center on Human Policy, Law & Disability Studies. Community Collaborators include Hutchings Psychaitric Center, Syracuse University Consortium of Employment Services, Onondaga County Department of Mental Health, St. Joesph's Mental Health Services, Liberty Resources, ARISE, Onondaga County Department of Mental Health, NY Association of Physchiatric Rehabilitation, CONTACT Community Services.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 16



Passionate Observer: Eudora Welty Among Artists of the Thirties
Everson Museum of Art

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

Developed by the Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson, MS, and tour organized by International Arts & Artists, Washington, DC, this show highlights the Depression-era photography of author Eudora Welty. Welty's photographs capture with pictures the world that the author describes with words. The photographs and paintings which come from this period are visual interpretations, not only of the economic instability and often great personal despair, but of the optimism about the human spirit and pride of place.

At the center of the exhibit are Eudora Welty's dramatic photographs of Mississippi, Lousiana and New York during the Great Depression. Welty's photographs bear witness to America's courage in the face of adversity. Few American writers share both a gift for pictoral precision and words as does Welty: the craft of the metaphor, the gift for discovering the world and then transmitting the image clearly.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 16



Hey You with the Totally Awesome Face: Jeremy Bailey, 2006 Everson Biennial Winner
Everson Museum of Art

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

Jeremy Bailey uses his video art to deal with issues of identity and privacy. He described his exhibition as, "A complete solution for your identity toolbox that lets you be yourself while maintaining your personal freedoms."


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 16



Selections from Silvano Campeggi
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

This exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Point of Contact Gallery and the Redhouse. Each organization will be presenting works from a different period of renowned film poster artist, Silvano Campeggi.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 16



Survivor's Art: Images of Hope & Healing
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Free
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Survivor's Art is an exhibition initiated by Vera House, a community organization created to assist families in crises related to domestic and sexual violence. As part of their project, The Art of Caring, Vera House brings together gifted artists and a caring community. The exhibition offers hope and healing and celebrates the joy of the arts in our lives.


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Music
 

12:30 PM, May 16



Civic Morning Musicals
Sar-Shalom Strong, piano

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

Music of Robert Ashford.


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Theater
 

7:30 PM, May 16



The Unexpected Guest
Syracuse Stage
Robert Moss, director

Price: $26, $24, $22 (adults); $18 (teens); $15 (children)
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A foggy night and a car runs off the road into a ditch. The driver gropes his way to a nearby house. He taps on the window. No answer. He enters the well-appointed study to find a man dead in a wheelchair. Nearby stands the dead man's wife, revolver in hand, and ready to confess to murder. Case open, but with Agatha Christie, it's far from shut. Great fun from the master of mystery herself.

Read a Review!


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Thursday, May 17, 2007


Art
 

8:30 AM - 5:00 PM, May 17



Visual Arts Showcase #59
CNY Arts

Price: Free
WCNY
415 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The Showcase features the work of area artists in a juried show. This season's work was selected
by Jennifer Pepper, Director of the Cazenovia College Gallery, and Wendy Harris, a working artist from Syracuse University.


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9:00 AM - 7:00 PM, May 17



Art from the CNY Region of the National League of American Pen Women

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

Works by 15 award-winning artists will be on display.


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9:00 AM - 2:00 PM, May 17



Pennellate di Cinema: Classic film posters designed by Silvano Campeggi
Point of Contact Gallery

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

From 1945 to 1972, Silvano Campeggi worked for the major American cinematographic companies: Metro Goldwin Mayer, Universal, Paramount, RKO, Dear Film, creating over 3,000 posters for films that include Gone with the Wind, An American in Paris, Singing in the Rain and West Side Story, among countless other classics from Hollywood's Golden Era. A significant selection of the original hand made studies and sketches along with the definitive poster paintings will be on display at The Point of Contact Gallery for all Syracuse art and movie buffs to relish.

The partnership of Syracuse venues participating in this grand citywide retrospective materializes through the initiative of the Syracuse International Film Festival 2007, a Point of Contact production. Other galleries participating include the Everson Museum of Art, the Redhouse, and Company Gallery.

Each venue will cover a different era of Campeggi's prolific career. Many of the works to be presented in this citywide exhibit will later travel on to New York City's Lincoln Center for a show that opens in June.

Maestro Campeggi is the creator of the official poster for the 2007 Syracuse International Film Festival.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, May 17



Seeing Red
Associated Artists of Central New York

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


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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, May 17



35th Annual Teenage Competitive Art Exhibition
Community Folk Art Center

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

Teen artists from local schools display works in many media. The work is judged by a panel of local artists. The exhibition is co-sponsored by the Syracuse Chapter of Links, Inc.


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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, May 17



Photographs by Ben Gest
Light Work Gallery

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

Gest's photographs depict people in moments of deep private thought. The figures appear emotionally removed from their environment as if withdrawing from a public self. The work focuses on the way who we are can change when we are in a group. Although the subjects are alone in the photographs, the presence of others is implied. The images depict people in the last moments of being in their own world before seeing people, or going somewhere where others will be around. These are the last breaths and the last seconds of personal time before the subjects put on a public face and adopt the persona that they use while in a group of people.

To create these images, Gest combines numerous photographs into seamless final compositions using digital technology. Each image may consist of twenty or more separate photographs taken from various vantage points. The visually surprising images direct the viewer in the construction of everyday narratives.


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10:00 AM - 7:00 PM, May 17



Diane Menzies/Jane Daroskikh: Painting and Sculpture
Redhouse

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

Local artist Janie Darovskikh, lives in Skaneateles and is a figurative artist working in traditional sculpting methods such as carving, clay and wax modeling, plaster and bronze casting. She is the recipient of two Fulbright grants, the Suomalainen Perustus Grant, support from the New York Foundation on the Arts and numerous other awards. She exhibits in the United States and internationally. Her art has taken her to Kulusuk, Greenland; the Ural Mountains of Russia; Yangshuo, China; and to Finland, Sweden, Lithuania and Latvia. Jane is passionate about Nordic mythology, cultural exchange and her belief in art as an international language. "The process I use involves a constantly evolving search to learn, grow, exchange, feel and create. May the work tell a story of an adventure, a feeling, a dream or a journey."

Diane Menzies, also a local artist, lives in Jamesville, NY. The drawings selected for this exhibition are from a series entitled "The Passing." These mystifying drawings served as a cathartic expression of the joys and sorrows Menzies experienced while a hospice attendant for those dying of AIDS. When the works were exhibited at the Jean Cocteau Gallery in Santa Fe, New Mexico, reviewer Diane Armitage wrote: "The gothic tension that Menzies creates might seem overwrought if not for the fact that her environmental concerns and melancholy response is right on target. Her psychological distress is not a bid for personal attention. It is, rather, a transpersonal sublimation of individual identity in favor of an emotional identification with torn bark, barren ground, and polluted air and water. Because of the careful way that Menzies limits her visual elements and establishes an air of stark abandonment, her mood of intense grieving appears as more than empty rhetoric."


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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, May 17



Networked Nature
The Warehouse Gallery

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

"Networked Nature" uses innovative technology to combine art, science and politics. The group exhibition inventively explores the meaning and representation of "nature," from the perspective of networked culture. The featured works employ various scientific processes and locative media, such as global positioning systems (GPS) and robotics, and take the form of installations, video and sound art. Together, they make new contributions to the discourses of extant genres, such as sculpture, earth works and landscape imagery, while also demonstrating the scientific beauty and complexity of electronic and digital art.

"Networked Nature" was organized by Marisa Olson, Editor and Curator for Rhizome, a leading new media organization affiliated with the New Museum of Contemporary Art. Their programs support the creation, presentation, discussion and preservation of contemporary art that uses new technologies in significant ways.


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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, May 17



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.


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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, May 17



Defining Moments: American Masterworks from the Syracuse University Art Collection
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

This exhibition illustrates the development of American Art from the middle of the 19th century and through the 20th century. The selection of paintings, prints and sculpture in this exhibit show how art in the U.S. progressed out of Eurocentric visual and cultural ideals to form a purely American aesthetic culture. Louis Comfort Tiffany married the French Art Nouveau style with the American ingenuity of the light bulb to design masterpieces such as the Murano Design Lamp (1893-95). During the 20th century, the U.S. became a major exponent of Modernism, with artists like Rico Lebrun and Yasuo Kuniyoshi leading the way. Lebrun's "Woman with Arms over Head" (1962-63) reflects his spontaneity and experimental philosophy, while the bright, acidic colors in Kuniyoshi's "Forbidden Fruit" (1950) exemplify the prevailing aesthetic current of the New York School shortly after World War II.

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.


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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, May 17



The Collector's Gene: Passion, Devotion and Learning
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Collector's Gene: Passion, Devotion and Learning uses a diverse selection of nearly 100 objects from the permanent collection to illustrate the collecting interests of Cloud Wampler, Colonel John Fox, Dr. Henry and Nancy Rosin, and Ruth Reeves. Henry Rosin says, "My collecting began as a child when I'd gather up the bottle caps under the stands at semi-professional baseball games in Brooklyn." He later turned his interests towards Japan where, as an Air Force flight surgeon, he accumulated a large group of Japanese sword fittings and hand colored photographs. The three other individuals profiled in the exhibition share similar experiences. Cloud Wampler, best known locally as the past Chairman of Carrier Corporation, was passionate about master prints, John Fox, stationed in Korea with the Army, insisted that the best way to learn about Korean culture was to go out and visit shopkeepers and merchants. Ruth Reeves went to India in 1956 on a Fulbright fellowship to study local brass casting techniques. She collected a large number of brass objects and a rare group of clay ceremonial sculptures. The university saw the educational potential in the collection and agreed to purchase her collection in 1963.

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.


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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, May 17



Women at Work: Members of the Art Students League of New York
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The exhibition of paintings, prints and drawings from the University's permanent collection examines how Modernism and the formation of the Art Students League impacted the influx of women into the field and their development as professional and influential artists.

The selection of work begins with artists who were directly influenced by the 1913 Amory Show such as Peggy Bacon, Maria Wickey, and Isabel Bishop. The exhibition concludes with the advent of Abstract Expressionism, showing works by Jan Gelb, Minna Citron, Terry Haass, and Helen Frankenthaler. These works illustrate American art's stylistic evolution during the period. Early drawings like Harriet Frishmuth's "Study, reclining nude," reveal a classical, academic structure. This type of work gave way in the 1920s to the gritty and modern "realism" of Isabel Bishop's "Sleeping Man." After World War II, Abstract Expressionism began to take over, as seen in Minna
Citron's "Men Seldom Make Passes...," and later in the work of Helen Frankenthaler.

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 - 8:00 PM, May 17



Art for the Soul
Delavan Art Gallery

Price: Free
Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The exhibit features acrylic paintings by Hope Irvine, photography by Richard Schultz, and watercolor paintings by members of the Art and Soul Watercolor Group.

Over the years, Hope Irvine, Ph.D. has become an accomplished painter as well as an innovative educator and community leader. Delavan Art Gallery is pleased to exhibit Dr. Irvine's sedimentary landscape acrylic paintings. "My paintings result from confrontations with vistas, especially in the American Southwest, Alaska and Iceland," Dr. Irvine explains in her artist statement. Since 1982, Dr. Irvine has held the position of Chair of the Department of Art Education while maintaining dual tenure and full professorships in both the College of Visual & Performing Arts and the School of Education at Syracuse University. Her commitment to the arts and education of others was rewarded by the Manhattan Borough President on June 22, 1982 when he declared the date "Hope Irvine Day."

Richard Schultz's photography ranges in subject from the commonplace to the absurd. Schultz writes in his artist statement, "It's a wild and wacky world that we encounter every day. Photography has been one way for me to express my reactions to the visceral stimuli of daily life." The photographer is Vice President of the David B. Schultz Insurance Agency and a proud native of Syracuse, NY. The majority of the photographs in this exhibit were shot between 2004 and 2007 and are shown exactly as they were when the artist came across the scene.

Also in this exhibition are watercolor paintings by 12 members of the Art and Soul Watercolor Group of Onondaga County: Sharon Daniels-Duerr, Pam Dischinger, Sharon H. Gibbons, Bonnie Goetzke, Rita Keller, Loie Mechetti, Geraldine Meday, Joanne Neff, Virginia Raner, Nancy Shampine, Jan Waters and Kathryn Wehrung. The Art and Soul Watercolor Group is a collective of artists who meet weekly to discuss, share and study art together, using each other as inspiration and encouragement in the arts. The group supports Vera House, the Crisis Pregnancy Center in Mexico and Ophelia's Place along with other notable causes.


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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, May 17



The Lives They Left Behind: Suitcases From a State Hospital Attic
Everson Museum of Art

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

"The Lives They Left Behind" is a traveling exhibition from the Exhibition Alliance. In 1995, during the closure of Willard Psychiatric Center in New York's Finger Lakes region, several hundred suitcases filled with the personal belongings of former patients were discovered. "The Lives They Left Behind" presents excerpts of personal and hospital history surrounding Willard through portraits and still lives and includes six of the original suitcases. These suitcases and their contents illuminate the rich complex lives the individual patients led before they were committed to Willard and speak to their aspirations, accomplishments, and community connections as well as their loss and isolation.

Sponsored in part by W. Carroll Coyne, Coordinated Care Services, Mental Health Association of Onondaga County, Onondaga Case Management Services, Inc., NAMI-PROMISE, INC., Transitional Living Services of Onondaga County, Inc., and Syracuse University Center on Human Policy, Law & Disability Studies. Community Collaborators include Hutchings Psychaitric Center, Syracuse University Consortium of Employment Services, Onondaga County Department of Mental Health, St. Joesph's Mental Health Services, Liberty Resources, ARISE, Onondaga County Department of Mental Health, NY Association of Physchiatric Rehabilitation, CONTACT Community Services.


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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, May 17



Hey You with the Totally Awesome Face: Jeremy Bailey, 2006 Everson Biennial Winner
Everson Museum of Art

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

Jeremy Bailey uses his video art to deal with issues of identity and privacy. He described his exhibition as, "A complete solution for your identity toolbox that lets you be yourself while maintaining your personal freedoms."


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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, May 17



Passionate Observer: Eudora Welty Among Artists of the Thirties
Everson Museum of Art

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

Developed by the Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson, MS, and tour organized by International Arts & Artists, Washington, DC, this show highlights the Depression-era photography of author Eudora Welty. Welty's photographs capture with pictures the world that the author describes with words. The photographs and paintings which come from this period are visual interpretations, not only of the economic instability and often great personal despair, but of the optimism about the human spirit and pride of place.

At the center of the exhibit are Eudora Welty's dramatic photographs of Mississippi, Lousiana and New York during the Great Depression. Welty's photographs bear witness to America's courage in the face of adversity. Few American writers share both a gift for pictoral precision and words as does Welty: the craft of the metaphor, the gift for discovering the world and then transmitting the image clearly.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 17



Survivor's Art: Images of Hope & Healing
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Free
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Survivor's Art is an exhibition initiated by Vera House, a community organization created to assist families in crises related to domestic and sexual violence. As part of their project, The Art of Caring, Vera House brings together gifted artists and a caring community. The exhibition offers hope and healing and celebrates the joy of the arts in our lives.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, May 17



Selections from Silvano Campeggi
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

This exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Point of Contact Gallery and the Redhouse. Each organization will be presenting works from a different period of renowned film poster artist, Silvano Campeggi.


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5:00 PM - 8:00 PM, May 17



Pennellate di Cinema: Classic film posters designed by Silvano Campeggi
Point of Contact Gallery

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

From 1945 to 1972, Silvano Campeggi worked for the major American cinematographic companies: Metro Goldwin Mayer, Universal, Paramount, RKO, Dear Film, creating over 3,000 posters for films that include Gone with the Wind, An American in Paris, Singing in the Rain and West Side Story, among countless other classics from Hollywood's Golden Era. A significant selection of the original hand made studies and sketches along with the definitive poster paintings will be on display at The Point of Contact Gallery for all Syracuse art and movie buffs to relish.

The partnership of Syracuse venues participating in this grand citywide retrospective materializes through the initiative of the Syracuse International Film Festival 2007, a Point of Contact production. Other galleries participating include the Everson Museum of Art, the Redhouse, and Company Gallery.

Each venue will cover a different era of Campeggi's prolific career. Many of the works to be presented in this citywide exhibit will later travel on to New York City's Lincoln Center for a show that opens in June.

Maestro Campeggi is the creator of the official poster for the 2007 Syracuse International Film Festival.


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6:30 PM - 8:00 PM, May 17



Aldo Tambellini: A Cultural History of Syracuse
ThINC

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

An exhibition of photographs taken by artist, avant-garde filmmaker and video pioneer, Aldo Tambellini. These photographs, taken in 1948 with a Kodak Box Camera, are among the first images he shot, when he was 18 years old. Tambellini documented the people and places of his early life in Syracuse, around Pine Street and East Genesee. These images depict the life and surroundings of the residents of the 15th Ward, a section of Syracuse of important historical significance. The 15th ward was originally a Jewish settlement. As the Jewish community started to establish itself in Syracuse, it moved up towards the South of East Genesee Street and many African Americans moved into the 15th ward.

In an effort to articulate the historical and contemporary relevance of these images, Lori Convington, a Syracuse based artist/activist and historian, will re-visit some of the locations in Tambellini's photographs to capture the contemporary locations and individuals. Along with engaging and informing text about about the individuals who once lived there and the area itself, Ms. Covington will connect a contemporary meaning for the viewer of Mr. Tambellini's historical photographs.


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7:00 PM - 10:00 PM, May 17



Floating Galleries Launch

Price: Free
Former Merchant Bank Building
220 S. Warren St. (corner of Fayette), Syracuse

Showcasing works of 20 local artists, featuring Joel Capolongo, Heather Spoor, Cayetano Valenzeula, Emily Bender, Tara Hogan, Esperanza Teilbaard, and including street artists, two video artists, and music by Syracuse's own "The Sister Lovers" at 9:30 pm.

Floating Galleries of Syracuse transforms vacant storefronts into 24/7 exhibits. The aim of this project is to give local artists and agencies and opportunity to display their work, while fostering economic development by drawing attention to available retail properties. Floating Galleries is volunteer organization, which emerged from The Syracuse Public Art Task Force in 2007.

For more information, email floatinggalleriessyracuse@gmail.com.


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Lecture
 

5:30 PM, May 17



Art Across Borders
Delavan Art Gallery

Price: Free
Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Women's Voices Radio's Mary Stanley will explore sustainable development through the arts in a special visual presentation and discussion. The project focuses on what's being done in Paraty, Brazil around a major annual literary festival called FLIP and why people come from around the world to this tiny city on the beautiful green coast of Brazil south of Rio.

Then over four Wednesday mornings, beginning on May 23rd, Mary will host a four-part radio series on WAER's Morning Edition exploring parallels between CNY and Paraty, Brazil in making the arts a significant part of economic development.


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Theater
 

6:45 PM, May 17



Die Another Death
Acme Mystery Company

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

Interactive mystery/comedy dinner theater.


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7:30 PM, May 17



The Unexpected Guest
Syracuse Stage
Robert Moss, director

Price: $28, $26, $22 (adults); $18 (teens); $15 (children)
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A foggy night and a car runs off the road into a ditch. The driver gropes his way to a nearby house. He taps on the window. No answer. He enters the well-appointed study to find a man dead in a wheelchair. Nearby stands the dead man's wife, revolver in hand, and ready to confess to murder. Case open, but with Agatha Christie, it's far from shut. Great fun from the master of mystery herself.

Read a Review!


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Friday, May 18, 2007


Art
 

8:30 AM - 5:00 PM, May 18



Visual Arts Showcase #59
CNY Arts

Price: Free
WCNY
415 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The Showcase features the work of area artists in a juried show. This season's work was selected
by Jennifer Pepper, Director of the Cazenovia College Gallery, and Wendy Harris, a working artist from Syracuse University.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 18



Art from the CNY Region of the National League of American Pen Women

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

Works by 15 award-winning artists will be on display.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 2:00 PM, May 18



Pennellate di Cinema: Classic film posters designed by Silvano Campeggi
Point of Contact Gallery

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

From 1945 to 1972, Silvano Campeggi worked for the major American cinematographic companies: Metro Goldwin Mayer, Universal, Paramount, RKO, Dear Film, creating over 3,000 posters for films that include Gone with the Wind, An American in Paris, Singing in the Rain and West Side Story, among countless other classics from Hollywood's Golden Era. A significant selection of the original hand made studies and sketches along with the definitive poster paintings will be on display at The Point of Contact Gallery for all Syracuse art and movie buffs to relish.

The partnership of Syracuse venues participating in this grand citywide retrospective materializes through the initiative of the Syracuse International Film Festival 2007, a Point of Contact production. Other galleries participating include the Everson Museum of Art, the Redhouse, and Company Gallery.

Each venue will cover a different era of Campeggi's prolific career. Many of the works to be presented in this citywide exhibit will later travel on to New York City's Lincoln Center for a show that opens in June.

Maestro Campeggi is the creator of the official poster for the 2007 Syracuse International Film Festival.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, May 18



Seeing Red
Associated Artists of Central New York

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


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, May 18



35th Annual Teenage Competitive Art Exhibition
Community Folk Art Center

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

Teen artists from local schools display works in many media. The work is judged by a panel of local artists. The exhibition is co-sponsored by the Syracuse Chapter of Links, Inc.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, May 18



Photographs by Ben Gest
Light Work Gallery

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

Gest's photographs depict people in moments of deep private thought. The figures appear emotionally removed from their environment as if withdrawing from a public self. The work focuses on the way who we are can change when we are in a group. Although the subjects are alone in the photographs, the presence of others is implied. The images depict people in the last moments of being in their own world before seeing people, or going somewhere where others will be around. These are the last breaths and the last seconds of personal time before the subjects put on a public face and adopt the persona that they use while in a group of people.

To create these images, Gest combines numerous photographs into seamless final compositions using digital technology. Each image may consist of twenty or more separate photographs taken from various vantage points. The visually surprising images direct the viewer in the construction of everyday narratives.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, May 18



Diane Menzies/Jane Daroskikh: Painting and Sculpture
Redhouse

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

Local artist Janie Darovskikh, lives in Skaneateles and is a figurative artist working in traditional sculpting methods such as carving, clay and wax modeling, plaster and bronze casting. She is the recipient of two Fulbright grants, the Suomalainen Perustus Grant, support from the New York Foundation on the Arts and numerous other awards. She exhibits in the United States and internationally. Her art has taken her to Kulusuk, Greenland; the Ural Mountains of Russia; Yangshuo, China; and to Finland, Sweden, Lithuania and Latvia. Jane is passionate about Nordic mythology, cultural exchange and her belief in art as an international language. "The process I use involves a constantly evolving search to learn, grow, exchange, feel and create. May the work tell a story of an adventure, a feeling, a dream or a journey."

Diane Menzies, also a local artist, lives in Jamesville, NY. The drawings selected for this exhibition are from a series entitled "The Passing." These mystifying drawings served as a cathartic expression of the joys and sorrows Menzies experienced while a hospice attendant for those dying of AIDS. When the works were exhibited at the Jean Cocteau Gallery in Santa Fe, New Mexico, reviewer Diane Armitage wrote: "The gothic tension that Menzies creates might seem overwrought if not for the fact that her environmental concerns and melancholy response is right on target. Her psychological distress is not a bid for personal attention. It is, rather, a transpersonal sublimation of individual identity in favor of an emotional identification with torn bark, barren ground, and polluted air and water. Because of the careful way that Menzies limits her visual elements and establishes an air of stark abandonment, her mood of intense grieving appears as more than empty rhetoric."


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, May 18



Networked Nature
The Warehouse Gallery

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

"Networked Nature" uses innovative technology to combine art, science and politics. The group exhibition inventively explores the meaning and representation of "nature," from the perspective of networked culture. The featured works employ various scientific processes and locative media, such as global positioning systems (GPS) and robotics, and take the form of installations, video and sound art. Together, they make new contributions to the discourses of extant genres, such as sculpture, earth works and landscape imagery, while also demonstrating the scientific beauty and complexity of electronic and digital art.

"Networked Nature" was organized by Marisa Olson, Editor and Curator for Rhizome, a leading new media organization affiliated with the New Museum of Contemporary Art. Their programs support the creation, presentation, discussion and preservation of contemporary art that uses new technologies in significant ways.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 18



Women at Work: Members of the Art Students League of New York
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The exhibition of paintings, prints and drawings from the University's permanent collection examines how Modernism and the formation of the Art Students League impacted the influx of women into the field and their development as professional and influential artists.

The selection of work begins with artists who were directly influenced by the 1913 Amory Show such as Peggy Bacon, Maria Wickey, and Isabel Bishop. The exhibition concludes with the advent of Abstract Expressionism, showing works by Jan Gelb, Minna Citron, Terry Haass, and Helen Frankenthaler. These works illustrate American art's stylistic evolution during the period. Early drawings like Harriet Frishmuth's "Study, reclining nude," reveal a classical, academic structure. This type of work gave way in the 1920s to the gritty and modern "realism" of Isabel Bishop's "Sleeping Man." After World War II, Abstract Expressionism began to take over, as seen in Minna
Citron's "Men Seldom Make Passes...," and later in the work of Helen Frankenthaler.

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.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 18



The Collector's Gene: Passion, Devotion and Learning
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Collector's Gene: Passion, Devotion and Learning uses a diverse selection of nearly 100 objects from the permanent collection to illustrate the collecting interests of Cloud Wampler, Colonel John Fox, Dr. Henry and Nancy Rosin, and Ruth Reeves. Henry Rosin says, "My collecting began as a child when I'd gather up the bottle caps under the stands at semi-professional baseball games in Brooklyn." He later turned his interests towards Japan where, as an Air Force flight surgeon, he accumulated a large group of Japanese sword fittings and hand colored photographs. The three other individuals profiled in the exhibition share similar experiences. Cloud Wampler, best known locally as the past Chairman of Carrier Corporation, was passionate about master prints, John Fox, stationed in Korea with the Army, insisted that the best way to learn about Korean culture was to go out and visit shopkeepers and merchants. Ruth Reeves went to India in 1956 on a Fulbright fellowship to study local brass casting techniques. She collected a large number of brass objects and a rare group of clay ceremonial sculptures. The university saw the educational potential in the collection and agreed to purchase her collection in 1963.

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.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 18



Defining Moments: American Masterworks from the Syracuse University Art Collection
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

This exhibition illustrates the development of American Art from the middle of the 19th century and through the 20th century. The selection of paintings, prints and sculpture in this exhibit show how art in the U.S. progressed out of Eurocentric visual and cultural ideals to form a purely American aesthetic culture. Louis Comfort Tiffany married the French Art Nouveau style with the American ingenuity of the light bulb to design masterpieces such as the Murano Design Lamp (1893-95). During the 20th century, the U.S. became a major exponent of Modernism, with artists like Rico Lebrun and Yasuo Kuniyoshi leading the way. Lebrun's "Woman with Arms over Head" (1962-63) reflects his spontaneity and experimental philosophy, while the bright, acidic colors in Kuniyoshi's "Forbidden Fruit" (1950) exemplify the prevailing aesthetic current of the New York School shortly after World War II.

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.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 18



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.


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11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, May 18



Aldo Tambellini: A Cultural History of Syracuse
ThINC

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

An exhibition of photographs taken by artist, avant-garde filmmaker and video pioneer, Aldo Tambellini. These photographs, taken in 1948 with a Kodak Box Camera, are among the first images he shot, when he was 18 years old. Tambellini documented the people and places of his early life in Syracuse, around Pine Street and East Genesee. These images depict the life and surroundings of the residents of the 15th Ward, a section of Syracuse of important historical significance. The 15th ward was originally a Jewish settlement. As the Jewish community started to establish itself in Syracuse, it moved up towards the South of East Genesee Street and many African Americans moved into the 15th ward.

In an effort to articulate the historical and contemporary relevance of these images, Lori Convington, a Syracuse based artist/activist and historian, will re-visit some of the locations in Tambellini's photographs to capture the contemporary locations and individuals. Along with engaging and informing text about about the individuals who once lived there and the area itself, Ms. Covington will connect a contemporary meaning for the viewer of Mr. Tambellini's historical photographs.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, May 18



Art for the Soul
Delavan Art Gallery

Price: Free
Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The exhibit features acrylic paintings by Hope Irvine, photography by Richard Schultz, and watercolor paintings by members of the Art and Soul Watercolor Group.

Over the years, Hope Irvine, Ph.D. has become an accomplished painter as well as an innovative educator and community leader. Delavan Art Gallery is pleased to exhibit Dr. Irvine's sedimentary landscape acrylic paintings. "My paintings result from confrontations with vistas, especially in the American Southwest, Alaska and Iceland," Dr. Irvine explains in her artist statement. Since 1982, Dr. Irvine has held the position of Chair of the Department of Art Education while maintaining dual tenure and full professorships in both the College of Visual & Performing Arts and the School of Education at Syracuse University. Her commitment to the arts and education of others was rewarded by the Manhattan Borough President on June 22, 1982 when he declared the date "Hope Irvine Day."

Richard Schultz's photography ranges in subject from the commonplace to the absurd. Schultz writes in his artist statement, "It's a wild and wacky world that we encounter every day. Photography has been one way for me to express my reactions to the visceral stimuli of daily life." The photographer is Vice President of the David B. Schultz Insurance Agency and a proud native of Syracuse, NY. The majority of the photographs in this exhibit were shot between 2004 and 2007 and are shown exactly as they were when the artist came across the scene.

Also in this exhibition are watercolor paintings by 12 members of the Art and Soul Watercolor Group of Onondaga County: Sharon Daniels-Duerr, Pam Dischinger, Sharon H. Gibbons, Bonnie Goetzke, Rita Keller, Loie Mechetti, Geraldine Meday, Joanne Neff, Virginia Raner, Nancy Shampine, Jan Waters and Kathryn Wehrung. The Art and Soul Watercolor Group is a collective of artists who meet weekly to discuss, share and study art together, using each other as inspiration and encouragement in the arts. The group supports Vera House, the Crisis Pregnancy Center in Mexico and Ophelia's Place along with other notable causes.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 18



The Lives They Left Behind: Suitcases From a State Hospital Attic
Everson Museum of Art

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

"The Lives They Left Behind" is a traveling exhibition from the Exhibition Alliance. In 1995, during the closure of Willard Psychiatric Center in New York's Finger Lakes region, several hundred suitcases filled with the personal belongings of former patients were discovered. "The Lives They Left Behind" presents excerpts of personal and hospital history surrounding Willard through portraits and still lives and includes six of the original suitcases. These suitcases and their contents illuminate the rich complex lives the individual patients led before they were committed to Willard and speak to their aspirations, accomplishments, and community connections as well as their loss and isolation.

Sponsored in part by W. Carroll Coyne, Coordinated Care Services, Mental Health Association of Onondaga County, Onondaga Case Management Services, Inc., NAMI-PROMISE, INC., Transitional Living Services of Onondaga County, Inc., and Syracuse University Center on Human Policy, Law & Disability Studies. Community Collaborators include Hutchings Psychaitric Center, Syracuse University Consortium of Employment Services, Onondaga County Department of Mental Health, St. Joesph's Mental Health Services, Liberty Resources, ARISE, Onondaga County Department of Mental Health, NY Association of Physchiatric Rehabilitation, CONTACT Community Services.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 18



Passionate Observer: Eudora Welty Among Artists of the Thirties
Everson Museum of Art

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

Developed by the Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson, MS, and tour organized by International Arts & Artists, Washington, DC, this show highlights the Depression-era photography of author Eudora Welty. Welty's photographs capture with pictures the world that the author describes with words. The photographs and paintings which come from this period are visual interpretations, not only of the economic instability and often great personal despair, but of the optimism about the human spirit and pride of place.

At the center of the exhibit are Eudora Welty's dramatic photographs of Mississippi, Lousiana and New York during the Great Depression. Welty's photographs bear witness to America's courage in the face of adversity. Few American writers share both a gift for pictoral precision and words as does Welty: the craft of the metaphor, the gift for discovering the world and then transmitting the image clearly.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 18



Hey You with the Totally Awesome Face: Jeremy Bailey, 2006 Everson Biennial Winner
Everson Museum of Art

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

Jeremy Bailey uses his video art to deal with issues of identity and privacy. He described his exhibition as, "A complete solution for your identity toolbox that lets you be yourself while maintaining your personal freedoms."


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 18



Selections from Silvano Campeggi
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

This exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Point of Contact Gallery and the Redhouse. Each organization will be presenting works from a different period of renowned film poster artist, Silvano Campeggi.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 18



Survivor's Art: Images of Hope & Healing
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Free
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Survivor's Art is an exhibition initiated by Vera House, a community organization created to assist families in crises related to domestic and sexual violence. As part of their project, The Art of Caring, Vera House brings together gifted artists and a caring community. The exhibition offers hope and healing and celebrates the joy of the arts in our lives.


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Music
 

8:00 PM, May 18



Lonesome Sisters
Folkus Project

Price: $15
May Memorial Unitarian Society
3800 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Drawing inspiration from Appalachian fiddlers, old time music, bluegrass ballads, and early southern gospel, the Lonesome Sisters match their powerful harmonies with well-chosen classics and homespun originals into a performance of sincere tenderness and beauty.

Sarah Hawker and Debra Clifford are known for their hard-hitting country and mountain harmonies and their love of singing about tragedy and heartache in all its forms. Hawker (lead vocals) and Clifford (harmony vocals, acoustic guitar, and mandolin) mix traditional standards and original material, but their own compositions are indistinguishable in spirit and quality from the old time tunes. The song writing is powerful and the performances are heartfelt. The Sisters keep it simple, employing only soulful vocals, rhythm guitar, and an occasional fiddle or banjo. The austere arrangements in a classic country style serve to highlight the astonishing harmonies and emphasize their introspective themes of tragedy, loss, and heartache. The overall musical effect will put you in mind of Gillian Welch, but with an even firmer stranglehold on the merits of a sincere melody.


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8:00 PM, May 18



Pops Series: An American Tribute
Syracuse Symphony Orchestra
Daniel Hege, conductor
Featuring Holly Bingham, soprano

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

Celebrate Memorial Day weekend with the music of America as Daniel Hege leads the Syracuse Symphony, soprano Holly Bingham from the U.S. Army Band, the Syracuse Symphony Pops Chorus and the Syracuse University Ancient Fife and Drum Corps in music of George M. Cohan, John Phillip Sousa, George Gershwin and many more.

Read a review!


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Poetry/Reading
 

7:00 PM, May 18



Poet Brian Turner
Downtown Writer's Center

Price: Free
YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Brian Turner is a soldier-poet whose debut collection, Here, Bullet, won the 2005 Beatrice Hawley Award, the 2006 PEN USA Best in the West award, the 2006 Northern California Book Award in Poetry, and the New York Times "Editor's Choice" selection. Turner served seven years in the US Army, including one year as an infantry team leader in Iraq with the 3rd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division. Prior to that, he was deployed to Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1999-2000 with the 10th Mountain Division. Brian Turner's many awards include recent fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Lannan Foundation.

Turner's Here, Bullet is a harrowing, beautiful first-person account of the Iraq war. The poems in this remarkable collection reflect Turner's experiences as a soldier with penetrating lyric power, compassion, sensitivity, and eloquence, while deploring the violence and acknowledging the grief and terror of war. One poem, "Eulogy," was written to memorialize a soldier in his platoon who took his own life. Adding his voice to the current debate about the US occupation of Iraq, in poems written in the tradition of such poets as Wilfred Owen, Yusef Komunyakaa (Dien Cai Dau), Bruce Weigl (Song of Napalm) and Doug Anderson (The Moon Reflected Fire), veteran Brian Turner's affecting poetry of witness is exceptional for its beauty, honesty and skill. These gracefully-rendered, unflinching poems make Here, Bullet a must-read for anyone who cares about the war, regardless of political affiliation.


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Theater
 

7:00 PM, May 18



Cruizin' thru the 50s, 60s and 70s

Price: $20
Empire Theater
New York State Fairgrounds, Geddes

Written and directed by Tamaralee Shutt with musical direction by Rod Ward.

For more information and tickets, phone 315-445-4906.


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8:00 PM, May 18



The Dragon
Appleseed Productions
William Edward White, director

Price: $15 regular; $12 seniors/students
Atonement Lutheran Church
116 W. Glen Ave., Syracuse

A town dominated by a three-headed dragon; a damsel in distress; a hero ready to right wrongs. Complete with talking cats, singing swords and magical headwear, The Dragon is a farcical love story dressed up as a faerie tale - but as an allegory, it is also one of the most penetrating and certainly funniest studies ever made of tyranny and the moral corruption of both tyrant and subjects. Banned for over 40 years, The Dragon is a faerie tale for the 21st Century, answering the question, "What happens after the dragon is slain?"

Written by Yevgeny Schwartz, translated by Max Hayward and Harrold Shukman.

Read a Review!


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8:00 PM, May 18



Love Letters
Val Blok Productions
Featuring Barbara Blok and Bill Molesky

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

Read a review!


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8:00 PM, May 18



The Unexpected Guest
Syracuse Stage
Robert Moss, director

Price: $45, $40, $22 (adults); $18 (teens); $15 (children)
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A foggy night and a car runs off the road into a ditch. The driver gropes his way to a nearby house. He taps on the window. No answer. He enters the well-appointed study to find a man dead in a wheelchair. Nearby stands the dead man's wife, revolver in hand, and ready to confess to murder. Case open, but with Agatha Christie, it's far from shut. Great fun from the master of mystery herself.

Read a Review!


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8:15 PM, May 18



You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown
Salt City Center for the Performing Arts

St. Clare Auditorium
Lodi and Isabella Streets, Syracuse

Read a Review!


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Saturday, May 19, 2007


Art
 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, May 19



Seeing Red
Associated Artists of Central New York

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


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, May 19



Art for the Soul
Delavan Art Gallery

Price: Free
Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The exhibit features acrylic paintings by Hope Irvine, photography by Richard Schultz, and watercolor paintings by members of the Art and Soul Watercolor Group.

Over the years, Hope Irvine, Ph.D. has become an accomplished painter as well as an innovative educator and community leader. Delavan Art Gallery is pleased to exhibit Dr. Irvine's sedimentary landscape acrylic paintings. "My paintings result from confrontations with vistas, especially in the American Southwest, Alaska and Iceland," Dr. Irvine explains in her artist statement. Since 1982, Dr. Irvine has held the position of Chair of the Department of Art Education while maintaining dual tenure and full professorships in both the College of Visual & Performing Arts and the School of Education at Syracuse University. Her commitment to the arts and education of others was rewarded by the Manhattan Borough President on June 22, 1982 when he declared the date "Hope Irvine Day."

Richard Schultz's photography ranges in subject from the commonplace to the absurd. Schultz writes in his artist statement, "It's a wild and wacky world that we encounter every day. Photography has been one way for me to express my reactions to the visceral stimuli of daily life." The photographer is Vice President of the David B. Schultz Insurance Agency and a proud native of Syracuse, NY. The majority of the photographs in this exhibit were shot between 2004 and 2007 and are shown exactly as they were when the artist came across the scene.

Also in this exhibition are watercolor paintings by 12 members of the Art and Soul Watercolor Group of Onondaga County: Sharon Daniels-Duerr, Pam Dischinger, Sharon H. Gibbons, Bonnie Goetzke, Rita Keller, Loie Mechetti, Geraldine Meday, Joanne Neff, Virginia Raner, Nancy Shampine, Jan Waters and Kathryn Wehrung. The Art and Soul Watercolor Group is a collective of artists who meet weekly to discuss, share and study art together, using each other as inspiration and encouragement in the arts. The group supports Vera House, the Crisis Pregnancy Center in Mexico and Ophelia's Place along with other notable causes.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, May 19



The Lives They Left Behind: Suitcases From a State Hospital Attic
Everson Museum of Art

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

"The Lives They Left Behind" is a traveling exhibition from the Exhibition Alliance. In 1995, during the closure of Willard Psychiatric Center in New York's Finger Lakes region, several hundred suitcases filled with the personal belongings of former patients were discovered. "The Lives They Left Behind" presents excerpts of personal and hospital history surrounding Willard through portraits and still lives and includes six of the original suitcases. These suitcases and their contents illuminate the rich complex lives the individual patients led before they were committed to Willard and speak to their aspirations, accomplishments, and community connections as well as their loss and isolation.

Sponsored in part by W. Carroll Coyne, Coordinated Care Services, Mental Health Association of Onondaga County, Onondaga Case Management Services, Inc., NAMI-PROMISE, INC., Transitional Living Services of Onondaga County, Inc., and Syracuse University Center on Human Policy, Law & Disability Studies. Community Collaborators include Hutchings Psychaitric Center, Syracuse University Consortium of Employment Services, Onondaga County Department of Mental Health, St. Joesph's Mental Health Services, Liberty Resources, ARISE, Onondaga County Department of Mental Health, NY Association of Physchiatric Rehabilitation, CONTACT Community Services.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, May 19



Hey You with the Totally Awesome Face: Jeremy Bailey, 2006 Everson Biennial Winner
Everson Museum of Art

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

Jeremy Bailey uses his video art to deal with issues of identity and privacy. He described his exhibition as, "A complete solution for your identity toolbox that lets you be yourself while maintaining your personal freedoms."


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, May 19



Passionate Observer: Eudora Welty Among Artists of the Thirties
Everson Museum of Art

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

Developed by the Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson, MS, and tour organized by International Arts & Artists, Washington, DC, this show highlights the Depression-era photography of author Eudora Welty. Welty's photographs capture with pictures the world that the author describes with words. The photographs and paintings which come from this period are visual interpretations, not only of the economic instability and often great personal despair, but of the optimism about the human spirit and pride of place.

At the center of the exhibit are Eudora Welty's dramatic photographs of Mississippi, Lousiana and New York during the Great Depression. Welty's photographs bear witness to America's courage in the face of adversity. Few American writers share both a gift for pictoral precision and words as does Welty: the craft of the metaphor, the gift for discovering the world and then transmitting the image clearly.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, May 19



Survivor's Art: Images of Hope & Healing
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Free
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Survivor's Art is an exhibition initiated by Vera House, a community organization created to assist families in crises related to domestic and sexual violence. As part of their project, The Art of Caring, Vera House brings together gifted artists and a caring community. The exhibition offers hope and healing and celebrates the joy of the arts in our lives.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, May 19



Selections from Silvano Campeggi
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

This exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Point of Contact Gallery and the Redhouse. Each organization will be presenting works from a different period of renowned film poster artist, Silvano Campeggi.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, May 19



35th Annual Teenage Competitive Art Exhibition
Community Folk Art Center

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

Teen artists from local schools display works in many media. The work is judged by a panel of local artists. The exhibition is co-sponsored by the Syracuse Chapter of Links, Inc.


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11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, May 19



Aldo Tambellini: A Cultural History of Syracuse
ThINC

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

An exhibition of photographs taken by artist, avant-garde filmmaker and video pioneer, Aldo Tambellini. These photographs, taken in 1948 with a Kodak Box Camera, are among the first images he shot, when he was 18 years old. Tambellini documented the people and places of his early life in Syracuse, around Pine Street and East Genesee. These images depict the life and surroundings of the residents of the 15th Ward, a section of Syracuse of important historical significance. The 15th ward was originally a Jewish settlement. As the Jewish community started to establish itself in Syracuse, it moved up towards the South of East Genesee Street and many African Americans moved into the 15th ward.

In an effort to articulate the historical and contemporary relevance of these images, Lori Convington, a Syracuse based artist/activist and historian, will re-visit some of the locations in Tambellini's photographs to capture the contemporary locations and individuals. Along with engaging and informing text about about the individuals who once lived there and the area itself, Ms. Covington will connect a contemporary meaning for the viewer of Mr. Tambellini's historical photographs.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, May 19



Networked Nature
The Warehouse Gallery

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

"Networked Nature" uses innovative technology to combine art, science and politics. The group exhibition inventively explores the meaning and representation of "nature," from the perspective of networked culture. The featured works employ various scientific processes and locative media, such as global positioning systems (GPS) and robotics, and take the form of installations, video and sound art. Together, they make new contributions to the discourses of extant genres, such as sculpture, earth works and landscape imagery, while also demonstrating the scientific beauty and complexity of electronic and digital art.

"Networked Nature" was organized by Marisa Olson, Editor and Curator for Rhizome, a leading new media organization affiliated with the New Museum of Contemporary Art. Their programs support the creation, presentation, discussion and preservation of contemporary art that uses new technologies in significant ways.


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Music
 

10:30 AM, May 19



Family Series: Beethoven Lives Upstairs
Syracuse Symphony Orchestra
Daniel Hege, conductor

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

Travel back to 19th-century Vienna and follow the adventures of the young ten-year-old Christoph as he watches an eccentric "madman" turn his home upside down. At first the boy resents their new tenant, but slowly Christoph comes to understand the genius of the man...Ludwig van Beethoven.


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7:00 PM, May 19



Annual Pops concert
Syracuse University Brass Ensemble
James T. Spencer, conductor

Price: $8
Fayetteville United Church
310 E. Genesee St., Fayetteville


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8:00 PM, May 19



Houston Person, tenor saxophone
CNY Jazz Arts Foundation

Price: $19.50, $23.50, $26.50
Carrier Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Houston Person, the working class hero of jazz, is most well known for his soulful recordings for Prestige Records in the 1960s. Houston enjoyed a 30+ year partnership with the late great blues singer Etta Jones until her recent passing. At the age of 73, he is finally getting the recognition he deserves for his prodigious talent and thousands of recordings, club dates and concerts worldwide. Alternately tough and tender, his bluesy approach to the horn in the manner of Stanley Turrentine and Gene Ammons makes him the reigning Dean of the Soul Tenor Sax. He will bring a tribute to Buffalo composer Harold Arlen to town as part of his set with the CNYJO.

Read a review!


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8:00 PM, May 19



Pops Series: An American Tribute
Syracuse Symphony Orchestra
Daniel Hege, conductor
Featuring Holly Bingham, soprano

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

Celebrate Memorial Day weekend with the music of America as Daniel Hege leads the Syracuse Symphony, soprano Holly Bingham from the U.S. Army Band, the Syracuse Symphony Pops Chorus and the Syracuse University Ancient Fife and Drum Corps in music of George M. Cohan, John Phillip Sousa, George Gershwin and many more.

Read a review!


Back to list
 


Poetry/Reading
 

2:00 PM - 3:00 PM, May 19



Tamora Pierce

Price: Free
Dewitt Community Library
Shoppingtown Mall, Dewitt

Tamora Pierce, a New York Times bestselling author of 24 books, will talk about writing, and her most recent teen fantasy book BEKA COOPER #1: Terrier will be available for sale and signing.

For more information, call the library at 315-446-3578.


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Theater
 

12:30 PM, May 19



The Little Mermaid
Magic Circle Children's Theatre

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

Interactive adaption of the children's favorite.


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3:00 PM, May 19



The Unexpected Guest
Syracuse Stage
Robert Moss, director

Price: $40, $36, $22 (adults); $18 (teens); $15 (children)
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A foggy night and a car runs off the road into a ditch. The driver gropes his way to a nearby house. He taps on the window. No answer. He enters the well-appointed study to find a man dead in a wheelchair. Nearby stands the dead man's wife, revolver in hand, and ready to confess to murder. Case open, but with Agatha Christie, it's far from shut. Great fun from the master of mystery herself.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

7:00 PM, May 19



Cruizin' thru the 50s, 60s and 70s

Price: $20
Empire Theater
New York State Fairgrounds, Geddes

Written and directed by Tamaralee Shutt with musical direction by Rod Ward.

For more information and tickets, phone 315-445-4906.


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, May 19



The Dragon
Appleseed Productions
William Edward White, director

Price: $15 regular; $12 seniors/students
Atonement Lutheran Church
116 W. Glen Ave., Syracuse

A town dominated by a three-headed dragon; a damsel in distress; a hero ready to right wrongs. Complete with talking cats, singing swords and magical headwear, The Dragon is a farcical love story dressed up as a faerie tale - but as an allegory, it is also one of the most penetrating and certainly funniest studies ever made of tyranny and the moral corruption of both tyrant and subjects. Banned for over 40 years, The Dragon is a faerie tale for the 21st Century, answering the question, "What happens after the dragon is slain?"

Written by Yevgeny Schwartz, translated by Max Hayward and Harrold Shukman.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, May 19



Love Letters
Val Blok Productions
Featuring Barbara Blok and Bill Molesky

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

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, May 19



The Unexpected Guest
Syracuse Stage
Robert Moss, director

Price: $44, $39, $22 (adults); $18 (teens); $15 (children)
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A foggy night and a car runs off the road into a ditch. The driver gropes his way to a nearby house. He taps on the window. No answer. He enters the well-appointed study to find a man dead in a wheelchair. Nearby stands the dead man's wife, revolver in hand, and ready to confess to murder. Case open, but with Agatha Christie, it's far from shut. Great fun from the master of mystery herself.

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8:15 PM, May 19



You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown
Salt City Center for the Performing Arts

St. Clare Auditorium
Lodi and Isabella Streets, Syracuse

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Sunday, May 20, 2007


Art
 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, May 20



Photographs by Ben Gest
Light Work Gallery

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

Gest's photographs depict people in moments of deep private thought. The figures appear emotionally removed from their environment as if withdrawing from a public self. The work focuses on the way who we are can change when we are in a group. Although the subjects are alone in the photographs, the presence of others is implied. The images depict people in the last moments of being in their own world before seeing people, or going somewhere where others will be around. These are the last breaths and the last seconds of personal time before the subjects put on a public face and adopt the persona that they use while in a group of people.

To create these images, Gest combines numerous photographs into seamless final compositions using digital technology. Each image may consist of twenty or more separate photographs taken from various vantage points. The visually surprising images direct the viewer in the construction of everyday narratives.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 20



Selections from Silvano Campeggi
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

This exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Point of Contact Gallery and the Redhouse. Each organization will be presenting works from a different period of renowned film poster artist, Silvano Campeggi.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 20



Survivor's Art: Images of Hope & Healing
Everson Museum of Art

Price: Free
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Survivor's Art is an exhibition initiated by Vera House, a community organization created to assist families in crises related to domestic and sexual violence. As part of their project, The Art of Caring, Vera House brings together gifted artists and a caring community. The exhibition offers hope and healing and celebrates the joy of the arts in our lives.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 20



Passionate Observer: Eudora Welty Among Artists of the Thirties
Everson Museum of Art

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

Developed by the Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson, MS, and tour organized by International Arts & Artists, Washington, DC, this show highlights the Depression-era photography of author Eudora Welty. Welty's photographs capture with pictures the world that the author describes with words. The photographs and paintings which come from this period are visual interpretations, not only of the economic instability and often great personal despair, but of the optimism about the human spirit and pride of place.

At the center of the exhibit are Eudora Welty's dramatic photographs of Mississippi, Lousiana and New York during the Great Depression. Welty's photographs bear witness to America's courage in the face of adversity. Few American writers share both a gift for pictoral precision and words as does Welty: the craft of the metaphor, the gift for discovering the world and then transmitting the image clearly.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 20



Hey You with the Totally Awesome Face: Jeremy Bailey, 2006 Everson Biennial Winner
Everson Museum of Art

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

Jeremy Bailey uses his video art to deal with issues of identity and privacy. He described his exhibition as, "A complete solution for your identity toolbox that lets you be yourself while maintaining your personal freedoms."


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 20



The Lives They Left Behind: Suitcases From a State Hospital Attic
Everson Museum of Art

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

"The Lives They Left Behind" is a traveling exhibition from the Exhibition Alliance. In 1995, during the closure of Willard Psychiatric Center in New York's Finger Lakes region, several hundred suitcases filled with the personal belongings of former patients were discovered. "The Lives They Left Behind" presents excerpts of personal and hospital history surrounding Willard through portraits and still lives and includes six of the original suitcases. These suitcases and their contents illuminate the rich complex lives the individual patients led before they were committed to Willard and speak to their aspirations, accomplishments, and community connections as well as their loss and isolation.

Sponsored in part by W. Carroll Coyne, Coordinated Care Services, Mental Health Association of Onondaga County, Onondaga Case Management Services, Inc., NAMI-PROMISE, INC., Transitional Living Services of Onondaga County, Inc., and Syracuse University Center on Human Policy, Law & Disability Studies. Community Collaborators include Hutchings Psychaitric Center, Syracuse University Consortium of Employment Services, Onondaga County Department of Mental Health, St. Joesph's Mental Health Services, Liberty Resources, ARISE, Onondaga County Department of Mental Health, NY Association of Physchiatric Rehabilitation, CONTACT Community Services.


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1:00 PM - 5:00 PM, May 20



Seeing Red
Associated Artists of Central New York

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


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Music
 

2:00 PM, May 20



In Recital: Melody and Imagination
Civic Morning Musicals
Featuring John Spradling, piano

Price: $15
Hosmer Auditorium, Everson Museum
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Mussorgsky Pictures at an Exhibition
Bortkiewicz Second Sonata, op. 60
and works of Ernst Bacon and Anthony Crain


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3:00 PM, May 20



Music Fills the World: Syracuse Liederverein

Price: $6
Trinity Lutheran Church
140 Swansea Dr., Syracuse

German and English choral music.

Information: 315-622-2658.


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4:00 PM, May 20



Bach's Coffee Cantata and Orchestral Suite in B Minor
NYS Baroque
Laura Heimes, Peter Becker, Thom Baker, soloists

Price: $20 regular, $15 student/senior
Church of the Saviour
437 James St., Syracuse


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7:00 PM, May 20



Charley Orlando

Price: $10
Unity Church and Spiritual Center
300 W. Seneca Tpke., Syracuse

Grass-roots musician.

Information: 315-492-0330.


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Theater
 

2:00 PM, May 20



Love Letters
Val Blok Productions
Featuring Barbara Blok and Bill Molesky

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

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2:00 PM, May 20



Cruizin' thru the 50s, 60s and 70s

Price: $20
Empire Theater
New York State Fairgrounds, Geddes

Written and directed by Tamaralee Shutt with musical direction by Rod Ward.

For more information and tickets, phone 315-445-4906.


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2:00 PM, May 20



You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown
Salt City Center for the Performing Arts

St. Clare Auditorium
Lodi and Isabella Streets, Syracuse

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2:00 PM, May 20



The Unexpected Guest
Syracuse Stage
Robert Moss, director

Price: $40, $36, $22 (adults); $18 (teens); $15 (children)
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A foggy night and a car runs off the road into a ditch. The driver gropes his way to a nearby house. He taps on the window. No answer. He enters the well-appointed study to find a man dead in a wheelchair. Nearby stands the dead man's wife, revolver in hand, and ready to confess to murder. Case open, but with Agatha Christie, it's far from shut. Great fun from the master of mystery herself.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 


 
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