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Events for Sunday, March 16, 2008
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Cinefest 28 Syracuse Cinephile Society
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement Light Work Gallery
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Beloved Daughters: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Pollock Matters Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800 Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
On the Move: Images of Travel from Everson Musuem of Art and Syracuse University Collections Everson Museum of Art
2:00 PM
The Threepenny Opera Manlius Pebble Hill School
2:00 PM
All in the Timing Rarely Done Productions (Read a review!)
2:00 PM
The Bomb-itty of Errors Syracuse Stage
2:00 PM
Side-By-Side Concert Syracuse Youth Orchestras
2:00 PM
Nunsensations! The Nunsense Vegas Revue The Talent Company (Read a review!)
2:30 PM
The Wiz Nottingham High School
3:00 PM
Silver Screen Spectacular Syracuse University Brass Ensemble
Events for Monday, March 17, 2008
Time TBD
17th Annual Matrilineage Symposium Community Art Show Spark Contemporary Art Space
9:00 AM-9:00 PM
TV Dinner Series: Monotypes by Mick Mather Downtown Writer's Center
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Paintings and Sculpture Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
The Small Press and the Black Arts Movement Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Karen Tashkovski: Mixed Media Paintings Westcott Community Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Works of Scott Bennett Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
8:00 PM
The Irish Tenors Syracuse Symphony Orchestra
Events for Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Time TBD
17th Annual Matrilineage Symposium Community Art Show Spark Contemporary Art Space
9:00 AM-9:00 PM
TV Dinner Series: Monotypes by Mick Mather Downtown Writer's Center
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Paintings and Sculpture Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
The Small Press and the Black Arts Movement Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Karen Tashkovski: Mixed Media Paintings Westcott Community Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Works of Scott Bennett Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Beloved Daughters: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
On the Move: Images of Travel from Everson Musuem of Art and Syracuse University Collections Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800 Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Pollock Matters Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Self, House, Self Redhouse
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
King and Courage The Warehouse Gallery
7:30 PM
Painting Music with Robert Black and Ige D'Aquino LeMoyne College
7:30 PM
The Arab-Israeli Peace Process University Lectures, featuring Robert Satloff, executive director of The Washington Institute
Events for Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Time TBD
17th Annual Matrilineage Symposium Community Art Show Spark Contemporary Art Space
9:00 AM-9:00 PM
TV Dinner Series: Monotypes by Mick Mather Downtown Writer's Center
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Paintings and Sculpture Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
The Small Press and the Black Arts Movement Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Karen Tashkovski: Mixed Media Paintings Westcott Community Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Works of Scott Bennett Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
10:00 AM-2:00 PM
Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Beloved Daughters: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Pollock Matters Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800 Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
On the Move: Images of Travel from Everson Musuem of Art and Syracuse University Collections Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Self, House, Self Redhouse
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
King and Courage The Warehouse Gallery
12:30 PM
Civic Morning Musicals, featuring Jonathan English, tenor; Nathan Sumrall, piano
5:30 PM
Nathan Englander, fiction Raymond Carver Reading Series
6:00 PM-8:00 PM
Family Films Syracuse International Film Festival
7:00 PM
The Young Filmmakers of Central New York Film Festival 2008 Alternative Movies and Events
7:30 PM
The Bomb-itty of Errors Syracuse Stage
Events for Thursday, March 20, 2008
9:00 AM-9:00 PM
TV Dinner Series: Monotypes by Mick Mather Downtown Writer's Center
9:00 AM-8:00 PM
Paintings and Sculpture Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-8:00 PM
The Small Press and the Black Arts Movement Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
9:00 AM-8:00 PM
Karen Tashkovski: Mixed Media Paintings Westcott Community Center
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Works of Scott Bennett Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
Beloved Daughters: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-8:00 PM
On the Move: Images of Travel from Everson Musuem of Art and Syracuse University Collections Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-8:00 PM
Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-8:00 PM
Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800 Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-8:00 PM
Pollock Matters Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-8:00 PM
Self, House, Self Redhouse
12:00 PM-8:00 PM
King and Courage The Warehouse Gallery
5:00 PM-8:00 PM
Fifth Annual Exhibition and Fundraiser for Art Students Delavan Art Gallery
5:00 PM-8:00 PM
17th Annual Matrilineage Symposium Community Art Show Spark Contemporary Art Space
6:30 PM
Kids of Survival: The Art and Life of Tim Rollins + K.O.S. The Warehouse Gallery
6:45 PM
Florence of Moravia Acme Mystery Company
7:00 PM
Artist Open Everson Museum of Art
7:30 PM
The Bomb-itty of Errors Syracuse Stage
8:00 PM
Poet Michael Burkard Redhouse
Events for Friday, March 21, 2008
Time TBD
17th Annual Matrilineage Symposium Community Art Show Spark Contemporary Art Space
9:00 AM-9:00 PM
TV Dinner Series: Monotypes by Mick Mather Downtown Writer's Center
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Paintings and Sculpture Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
The Small Press and the Black Arts Movement Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Karen Tashkovski: Mixed Media Paintings Westcott Community Center
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Works of Scott Bennett Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
10:00 AM-2:00 PM
Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Beloved Daughters: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
Fifth Annual Exhibition and Fundraiser for Art Students Delavan Art Gallery
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800 Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
On the Move: Images of Travel from Everson Musuem of Art and Syracuse University Collections Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Self, House, Self Redhouse
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
King and Courage The Warehouse Gallery
7:00 PM
The Sound Of Music Syracuse Civic Theatre
8:00 PM
Tim Harrison Folkus Project
8:00 PM
Michael Jerling Folkus Project
8:00 PM
All in the Timing Rarely Done Productions (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
Artists as Artists: Torment the Vein Redhouse
8:00 PM
The Bomb-itty of Errors Syracuse Stage
8:00 PM
Servant of Two Masters Syracuse University Drama Department (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
Nunsensations! The Nunsense Vegas Revue The Talent Company (Read a review!)
Events for Saturday, March 22, 2008
Time TBD
17th Annual Matrilineage Symposium Community Art Show Spark Contemporary Art Space
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
TV Dinner Series: Monotypes by Mick Mather Downtown Writer's Center
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
On the Move: Images of Travel from Everson Musuem of Art and Syracuse University Collections Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800 Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-2:00 PM
Works of Scott Bennett Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States Community Folk Art Center
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images Community Folk Art Center
11:00 AM-12:00 AM
CNY Pride Families Exhibition Light Work Gallery
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Beloved Daughters: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
King and Courage The Warehouse Gallery
12:30 PM
The Princess and the Pea Magic Circle Children's Theatre
3:00 PM
The Bomb-itty of Errors Syracuse Stage
7:00 PM-12:00 AM
Ty Marshal's Pink Clouds (R) Evolution Art Studio
7:00 PM
The Sound Of Music Syracuse Civic Theatre
7:00 PM-9:30 PM
Super Amigos; Screening Time Syracuse International Film Festival
8:00 PM
All in the Timing Rarely Done Productions (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
The Bomb-itty of Errors Syracuse Stage
8:00 PM
Servant of Two Masters Syracuse University Drama Department (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
Nunsensations! The Nunsense Vegas Revue The Talent Company (Read a review!)
Events for Sunday, March 23, 2008
11:00 AM-12:00 AM
CNY Pride Families Exhibition Light Work Gallery
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Beloved Daughters: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800 Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
On the Move: Images of Travel from Everson Musuem of Art and Syracuse University Collections Everson Museum of Art
2:00 PM
Servant of Two Masters Syracuse University Drama Department (Read a review!)
Sunday, March 16, 2008
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 16 |
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Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Photographer Don Gregorio Antón creates mystical retablos that look like sacred objects in themselves. They are intimately small and sit on little stands to be viewed individually. Each retablo is one of a kind. Retabols, or ex votos as they are sometimes called, have been part of Mexico's tradition since the 17th century. They were originally hung behind the altars of Catholic churches, and remain a tradition to this day.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 16 |
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Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition will feature artwork from the OHA collection that depicts various modes of local transportation and how artists interpreted it over the last two centuries. Local teachers and students will find subjects meeting their document-based questions social studies standards within the exhibit.
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 16 |
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Beloved Daughters: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
SUArt Galleries presents Beloved Daughters, an exhibition that unites the Moksha (Heaven) and Ladli (Beloved Daughter) series, two of photographer-activist Fazal Sheikh's most recent projects concerning the lives of women in India. The first of the two series, Moksha, completed in 2005, focuses on dispossessed widows who find refuge in the holy city of Vrindavan in northern India. They worship the god Krishna in hopes of being released from the cycle of reincarnation from past actions, samsara, into a higher state, moksha. The second, Ladli, reveals horrific stories of infanticide, feticide and other forms of abuse directed towards the women all over India. Fazal Sheikh creates sustained portraits of communities around the world through photography, addressing people's beliefs and traditions as well as their socio-economic problems. Both Moksha and Ladli are hardcover books and are available at the gallery store. Fazal Ilahi Sheikh was born in 1965 in New York City. Since graduating from Princeton University in 1987, he has worked with displaced communities across East Africa, in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Brazil, Cuba and India. In 2005 Sheikh was named a MacArthur Fellow. Additional fellowships include those from the J. William Fulbright Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, the Nederlands Fotomuseum, Mondriaan Foundation, and the Mother Jones International Documentary Fund. Sheikh is the recipient of the International Henri Cartier-Bresson Grand Prize, the Prix d'Arles, the Infinity Award, the Leica Medal of Excellence, the Ruttenberg Award, and the Ferguson Award.
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 16 |
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Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Since the turn of the century America and Europe have had a symbiotic relationship towards art. Movements that were born in Europe have been nurtured in the United States and those styles developed here have had a significant impact on artists abroad. In the years before World War I avant-garde movements in Europe seemed radical to many Americans but also extremely exciting to others. As the century progressed movements emerged that borrowed issues, techniques, devices, or other attributes from pre-existing styles. This led to a generic 'modernist' label for those art forms that did not seem to emerge from a traditional, academic manner. The artwork in this exhibition was created by important artists of the era including Vasily Kandinsky, Joan Miro, and S. W. Hayter from Europe, and the Americans Stuart Davis, Boris Margo, and Morris Blackburn. The prints have been chosen to illustrate the multiplicity of graphic art styles that became popular during the period.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 16 |
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Pollock Matters Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation: $5 adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Pollock Matters, curated by art historian Ellen G. Landau of Case-Western Reserve University, explores for the first time the personal and artistic relationship between famed American Abstract Expressionist painter Jackson Pollock and his close friend, noted Swiss-born photographer and graphic designer, Herbert Matter. Featuring compelling visual and documentary evidence, the exhibition demonstrates the impact of the artists' interaction on their respective work. Comprising paintings, drawings, works on paper and other documentation -- including previously unseen photographs and letters -- it compares Matter's experimental abstract photos with known works by Pollock, and highlights their significant stylistic, technical and thematic connections. Pollock Matters also showcases 24 small-scale works discovered by Herbert Matter's son, Alex Matter, in a storage facility in 2002. The paintings, although identified as "Jackson experimental works" by an inscription in Herbert Matter's hand and dated 1958 (2 years after the artist's death), have been the subject of much controversy, scientific study, scholarly analysis, and significant media attention. In the exhibition and accompanying catalog, Curator Ellen Landau thoroughly investigates questions raised by this unprecedented discovery of previously unknown works: "If Pollock did not paint a portion of the cache, who did? How many artists were involved? And, no less importantly, what was the purpose of these paintings?" The debate will, without doubt, continue beyond the exhibition and for decades to come.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 16 |
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Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800 Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The Low Countries, a region comprising present-day Holland and Belgium, was a site of truly spectacular art production during the so-called early modern period, ca. 1600 to ca. 1800. Indeed, some of the foremost artists in the history of European art practiced within this region, including Rembrandt van Rijn and Peter Paul Rubens. Although the art-loving public is quite familiar with paintings by Dutch (Holland) and Flemish (Belgium) masters their drawings and prints are less known, despite the many outstanding examples of such work that survive. Some of the most memorable and impressive art during this period was made with ink and paper, as opposed to oil paint and canvases and panels. Paper Arts in the Low Countries, 1600-1800 consists of 35 noteworthy examples of drawings and prints by prominent masters of the Low Countries (including Rembrandt and Rubens), drawn from a number of private collections and from the holdings of the Syracuse University Art Collection and the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University. Paper Arts in the Low Countries is curated by Dr. Wayne Franits, Professor and Department Chair, Department of Fine Arts, Syracuse University with the assistance of graduate students currently enrolled in the Fine Arts program.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 16 |
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Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Images of Vice and Virtue investigates how artists from different cultures and time periods visualized fundamental themes of good and evil. Early civilizations enacted codes of conduct believing that individual behavior benefited from these guidelines. The ancient Greeks developed a set of inspirational values that included prudence, justice, courage and temperance. Later, Christianity refined and enlarged these to the seven holy virtues against which were set seven deadly sins. Additionally, bible stories illustrated what would happen to individuals who either followed or violated church doctrine. Western society's growing secularization from the late 18th century onward gave artists greater freedom in interpreting biblical subjects and themes. Artists like Picasso strongly criticized the Spanish government in a pair of prints that depicted the ruler Francisco Franco as a biological polyp. Andy Warhol showed his support for the civil rights movement in a 1964 print of the Birmingham race riot. These examples further indicated the artist's growing role as an individual commenting on good and evil. Also included in the exhibition are several pieces by non-western cultures. Like their western counterparts, these pieces were inspired and informed by their culture's historical beliefs about good and evil and were often drawn from stories used to explain those beliefs. All of the objects in the exhibition have been drawn from Syracuse Universitys encyclopedic collection of over 45,000 objects. Images of Vice and Virtue is curated by David Prince, Associate Director of Syracuse University Art Collection.
Read a review!
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 16 |
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On the Move: Images of Travel from Everson Musuem of Art and Syracuse University Collections Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
As a result of technological advancement and the human desire to explore and secure resources, travel has become a primary force in shaping contemporary life and global history. In today's world, travel has become a normal part of everyday life. In fact, tourism and travel now drive several of the world's largest economic sectors. On the Move displays a wide range of objects focusing on travel as a universal experience from the Industrial Revolution to the present day. Featuring objects from the Everson Museum and the multiple collections of Syracuse University, the exhibition highlights dreams of idyllic travel as well as the harsher realities of getting from one place to another. On the Move has been organized by Syracuse University students in the Graduate Program in Museum Studies, in the Masters in Fine Arts program and the History of Art program who are under the curatorial guidance of Professors Edward Aiken and Judith Meighan in collaboration with the Everson. The exhibition includes works from the Everson Museum of Art, the Syracuse University Art Collections, Light Work, and the Special Collections Research Center of Syracuse University Library.
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Film |
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 16 |
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Cinefest 28 Syracuse Cinephile Society
Price: $25 for one day; $70 for all four days Holiday Inn
Electronics Parkway,
Liverpool
9:00 am: Jungle Princess (1936) with Dorothy Lamour and Ray Milland 10:30 am: Auction hosted by Leonard Maltin, George Read, and Gerry Orlando 12:00 pm: Extraordinary Adventures of Mr. West in the Land of the Bolsheviks (1923) with Boris Barnet and Vladimir Fogel 1:30 pm: Disappearing Enemies (1931) with Rex Bell and Edward McWade 1:50 pm: Only Saps Work (1930) with Leon Errol, Richard Arlen, and Mary Brian 3:05 pm: Jailbreak (1938) with Barton MacLaine and June Travis 4:10 pm: Gift of Gab (1934) with Edmund Lowe, Gloria Stuart, and Ruth Etting
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Music |
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2:00 PM, March 16 |
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Side-By-Side Concert Syracuse Youth Orchestras Kenneth Andrews, conductor
Price: $12 regular, $8 children Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
Winner of the CMM Concerto Competition, performing with the SSO.
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3:00 PM, March 16 |
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Silver Screen Spectacular Syracuse University Brass Ensemble James T. Spencer, conductor
Price: $5 regular; $3 seniors Palace Theater
2384 James St.,
Syracuse
The group will perform favorite movie themes and present a surprise viewing on the Palace's movie screen. The concert will include It's Showtime arranged by Goff Richards, Alford's Col. Bogey March, and music from Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, The Magnificent Seven, Pirates of the Caribbean, Wizard of Oz, and the Keystone Cops.
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Theater |
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2:00 PM, March 16 |
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The Threepenny Opera Manlius Pebble Hill School
Price: $10 Manlius Pebble Hill School
5300 Jamesville Rd.,
Dewitt
To reserve tickets, phone 315-446-2452 ext. 120.
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2:00 PM, March 16 |
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All in the Timing Rarely Done Productions Brian Hensley, director
Price: $20 Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St.,
Syracuse
Six playful one-acts combine the cerebral, the wordplay of modern romance, and thoughts on our closest relatives on this planet contemplating the Melancholy Dane.
Read a review!
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2:00 PM, March 16 |
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The Bomb-itty of Errors Syracuse Stage Andy Goldberg, director
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors has its origins in ancient Rome in Plautus's wild comedy The Menaechmi. Two sets of identical twins and multiple cases of mistaken identity make for a riotous comic event. This latest incarnation is a hip-hop, rap romp retelling of the famous comedy. Four gifted performers hit the street to launch an assault of non-stop, lightning-paced, side-splitting comedy. After all, the Bard was a master of "word."
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2:00 PM, March 16 |
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Nunsensations! The Nunsense Vegas Revue The Talent Company
Price: $25 regular, $23 students/seniors, $16 children 12 and under Empire Theater
New York State Fairgrounds,
Geddes
The CNY premiere of the new musical comedy by Danny Goggin, creator of the Nunsense shows. The worlds favorite nuns, The Little Sisters of Hoboken, are on a brand new adventure to Las Vegas. When a parishioner volunteers to donate $10,000 to the sisters' school if they will perform in a club in Vegas, Mother Superior is hesitant to accept. However, after being convinced by the other sisters that "what happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas," Reverend Mother agrees. Performing in The Pump Room "high atop the 3rd floor of the Mystique Motor Lodge in the soul of Sin City," the sisters experience "show-biz" like never before. There's more feathers, more fans, more hats and more hi-jinks. The show stars Christine Lightcap as Rev. Mother, Kate Huddleston as Sister Hubert, Jodie Baum as Sister Robert Anne, Erin Race as Sister Amnesia, and Sofia Coon as Sister Leo. It's produced by Executive Producer Christine Lightcap and directed and choreographed by Ken Prescott, two-time Los Angeles Drama Logue Winner and three-time Desert Theatre League Award winner. Music direction is by Josh Smith, SALT Award winner for Best Music Director of the Year.
Read a review!
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2:30 PM, March 16 |
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The Wiz Nottingham High School
Price: $10, $7 regular; $5 students/seniors Nottingham High School
3100 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
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Monday, March 17, 2008
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Art |
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Time TBD, March 17 |
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17th Annual Matrilineage Symposium Community Art Show Spark Contemporary Art Space
Spark Contemporary Art Space
1005 E. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
The art show and symposium celebrate the accomplishments of women in art and activism. We provide a unique educational setting in which the artists from all disciplines present their work and discuss it in an open forum outside of the classroom. Guest speakers this year include the Guerrilla Girls, Carolee Schneemann, Vienna Teng, Tina Takemoto, Katherine Slusher, and Nina Katchadourian. Viewing by appointment. Contact mkarmstr@syr.edu for more information.
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9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 17 |
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TV Dinner Series: Monotypes by Mick Mather Downtown Writer's Center
Price: Free YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 17 |
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Paintings and Sculpture Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Artists exhibiting include Rachael Baldanza, Amber Balding, Alex Betancourt, Anna, Cinquemani, Sally Dutko, Bob Rose, Helena Cooper, Jeanne Dupre, Peg Hewitt, Nicholas Ruth, Sylvia Steen, Joan Stier, Karen Tashkovski, Leigh Yardley, Louise Woodard, and members of the North Syracuse Art Guild. Includes digital photography, mixed-media collages, art quilts, fiber compositions, and landscapes.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 17 |
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The Small Press and the Black Arts Movement Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Spanning the years between 1960 and 1975, the initial period of the Black Arts Movement is variously associated with the passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964, the assassination of Malcolm X in 1965, and the subsequent rise of the Nation of Islam. Although the origin of the Black Arts Movement still generates debate among scholars, there is no doubt that it signaled the rise of a new cultural aesthetic marked by an extraordinary burst of creative energy in the literary, performing, and visual arts. Significantly, the Black Arts Movement opened the floodgates for a diversity of American voices, while offering an impressive model for the expression of minority points of view. Because no exhibit on the Black Arts Movement would be complete without mention of one of its founding fathers, Amiri Baraka, we take this opportunity to draw attention to the printed resources that have been gathered to enhance the manuscript collection acquired by the library in the mid-1960s related to the Beat periodical Yugen, which Baraka edited from 1958 to 1962. More recently, we acquired a cache of material pertaining to Barakas arrest in 1967 in Newark, New Jersey, his defense by the writing community, and the subsequent dismissal of the charges against him. Composed of artistic, cultural, political, and social dimensions, the Black Arts Movement was propelled by the simultaneous emergence of a number of small presses that promoted the work of black artists, dramatists, and poets. The exhibit focuses on two African American presses, the Broadside Press and the Third World Press, as well as a series of poetry pamphlets issued in London by the publisher Paul Breman. Together, these small independent presses brought to wider attention the work of Gwendolyn Brooks, Ed Bullins, Ben Caldwell, Sam Cornish, Ray Durem, Nikki Giovanni, David Henderson, Ted Jones, Etheridge Knight, Haki R. Madhubuti, Larry Neal, Sonia Sanchez, Lorenzo Thomas, Askia Touré, Marvin X, Al Young, and many others. The Black Power aesthetic of much of this literature is often reinforced by the cover art for these productions. This artwork documents the emergence of a distinctive, yet tremendously varied, graphic style.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 17 |
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Karen Tashkovski: Mixed Media Paintings Westcott Community Center
Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
The mixed-media paintings are from a series created in 2000. Titled "Dream Time," they depict the explosive dreams of the artist through the eyes of a cat. Tashkovski, a graduate of Syracuse University and an art teacher with the Chittenango Central School district, paints with oils and then attaches items to the canvas including more canvas, game pieces, playing cards, and sea-shells, which add texture to the work. The layers of texture represent the depth of a person's character.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 17 |
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Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Photographer Don Gregorio Antón creates mystical retablos that look like sacred objects in themselves. They are intimately small and sit on little stands to be viewed individually. Each retablo is one of a kind. Retabols, or ex votos as they are sometimes called, have been part of Mexico's tradition since the 17th century. They were originally hung behind the altars of Catholic churches, and remain a tradition to this day.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 17 |
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Works of Scott Bennett Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr.,
Fayetteville
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Music |
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8:00 PM, March 17 |
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The Irish Tenors Syracuse Symphony Orchestra
Landmark Theatre
362 S. Salina St.,
Syracuse
Celebrate with the Syracuse Symphony Orchestra as we welcome the return of The Irish Tenors. Anthony Kearns, Finbar Wright, and Karl Scully will take you on a breathtaking journey of the imagination across the ocean and, indeed, across time to the Emerald Isle for a St. Patrick's Day you'll long remember.
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Tuesday, March 18, 2008
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Art |
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Time TBD, March 18 |
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17th Annual Matrilineage Symposium Community Art Show Spark Contemporary Art Space
Spark Contemporary Art Space
1005 E. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
The art show and symposium celebrate the accomplishments of women in art and activism. We provide a unique educational setting in which the artists from all disciplines present their work and discuss it in an open forum outside of the classroom. Guest speakers this year include the Guerrilla Girls, Carolee Schneemann, Vienna Teng, Tina Takemoto, Katherine Slusher, and Nina Katchadourian. Viewing by appointment. Contact mkarmstr@syr.edu for more information.
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9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 18 |
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TV Dinner Series: Monotypes by Mick Mather Downtown Writer's Center
Price: Free YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 18 |
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Paintings and Sculpture Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Artists exhibiting include Rachael Baldanza, Amber Balding, Alex Betancourt, Anna, Cinquemani, Sally Dutko, Bob Rose, Helena Cooper, Jeanne Dupre, Peg Hewitt, Nicholas Ruth, Sylvia Steen, Joan Stier, Karen Tashkovski, Leigh Yardley, Louise Woodard, and members of the North Syracuse Art Guild. Includes digital photography, mixed-media collages, art quilts, fiber compositions, and landscapes.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 18 |
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The Small Press and the Black Arts Movement Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Spanning the years between 1960 and 1975, the initial period of the Black Arts Movement is variously associated with the passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964, the assassination of Malcolm X in 1965, and the subsequent rise of the Nation of Islam. Although the origin of the Black Arts Movement still generates debate among scholars, there is no doubt that it signaled the rise of a new cultural aesthetic marked by an extraordinary burst of creative energy in the literary, performing, and visual arts. Significantly, the Black Arts Movement opened the floodgates for a diversity of American voices, while offering an impressive model for the expression of minority points of view. Because no exhibit on the Black Arts Movement would be complete without mention of one of its founding fathers, Amiri Baraka, we take this opportunity to draw attention to the printed resources that have been gathered to enhance the manuscript collection acquired by the library in the mid-1960s related to the Beat periodical Yugen, which Baraka edited from 1958 to 1962. More recently, we acquired a cache of material pertaining to Barakas arrest in 1967 in Newark, New Jersey, his defense by the writing community, and the subsequent dismissal of the charges against him. Composed of artistic, cultural, political, and social dimensions, the Black Arts Movement was propelled by the simultaneous emergence of a number of small presses that promoted the work of black artists, dramatists, and poets. The exhibit focuses on two African American presses, the Broadside Press and the Third World Press, as well as a series of poetry pamphlets issued in London by the publisher Paul Breman. Together, these small independent presses brought to wider attention the work of Gwendolyn Brooks, Ed Bullins, Ben Caldwell, Sam Cornish, Ray Durem, Nikki Giovanni, David Henderson, Ted Jones, Etheridge Knight, Haki R. Madhubuti, Larry Neal, Sonia Sanchez, Lorenzo Thomas, Askia Touré, Marvin X, Al Young, and many others. The Black Power aesthetic of much of this literature is often reinforced by the cover art for these productions. This artwork documents the emergence of a distinctive, yet tremendously varied, graphic style.
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Back to list |
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 18 |
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Karen Tashkovski: Mixed Media Paintings Westcott Community Center
Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
The mixed-media paintings are from a series created in 2000. Titled "Dream Time," they depict the explosive dreams of the artist through the eyes of a cat. Tashkovski, a graduate of Syracuse University and an art teacher with the Chittenango Central School district, paints with oils and then attaches items to the canvas including more canvas, game pieces, playing cards, and sea-shells, which add texture to the work. The layers of texture represent the depth of a person's character.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 18 |
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AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images Community Folk Art Center
Price: Free Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
New exhibition celebrating 40 years of the AfriCOBRA Artist Collective. AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images will feature works by 10 members of the collective. AfriCOBRA ("African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists") began in Chicago in 1968 as a group of artists who sought to capture the vibrancy and spirit of African American urban life through elements found in traditional African art. Through the years, the group has continued to add new members. AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images features recent works in a variety of two-and-three-dimensional media. Exhibiting artists include Akili Ron Anderson, Kevin Cole, Adger Cowans, Murry DePillars, Jeff Donaldson (1932-2004), Michael D. Harris, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, James Phillips, Frank Smith and Nelson Stevens. Jones-Henderson, who is a founding member of the group, serves as exhibition administrator for AfriCOBRA.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 18 |
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Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States Community Folk Art Center
Price: Free Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States is a traveling exhibition curated by Rickie Solinger of WAKEUP/Arts which contains eight linked installations that chronicle the experiences of incarceration. Through the use of artwork, stories and letters shared by incarcerated women and their children, alongside alarming facts and statistics, the exhibition provides an experience that will make the viewer aware of the multitude of issues faced by families involved in the prison system.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 18 |
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Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Photographer Don Gregorio Antón creates mystical retablos that look like sacred objects in themselves. They are intimately small and sit on little stands to be viewed individually. Each retablo is one of a kind. Retabols, or ex votos as they are sometimes called, have been part of Mexico's tradition since the 17th century. They were originally hung behind the altars of Catholic churches, and remain a tradition to this day.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 18 |
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Works of Scott Bennett Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr.,
Fayetteville
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 18 |
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Beloved Daughters: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
SUArt Galleries presents Beloved Daughters, an exhibition that unites the Moksha (Heaven) and Ladli (Beloved Daughter) series, two of photographer-activist Fazal Sheikh's most recent projects concerning the lives of women in India. The first of the two series, Moksha, completed in 2005, focuses on dispossessed widows who find refuge in the holy city of Vrindavan in northern India. They worship the god Krishna in hopes of being released from the cycle of reincarnation from past actions, samsara, into a higher state, moksha. The second, Ladli, reveals horrific stories of infanticide, feticide and other forms of abuse directed towards the women all over India. Fazal Sheikh creates sustained portraits of communities around the world through photography, addressing people's beliefs and traditions as well as their socio-economic problems. Both Moksha and Ladli are hardcover books and are available at the gallery store. Fazal Ilahi Sheikh was born in 1965 in New York City. Since graduating from Princeton University in 1987, he has worked with displaced communities across East Africa, in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Brazil, Cuba and India. In 2005 Sheikh was named a MacArthur Fellow. Additional fellowships include those from the J. William Fulbright Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, the Nederlands Fotomuseum, Mondriaan Foundation, and the Mother Jones International Documentary Fund. Sheikh is the recipient of the International Henri Cartier-Bresson Grand Prize, the Prix d'Arles, the Infinity Award, the Leica Medal of Excellence, the Ruttenberg Award, and the Ferguson Award.
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 18 |
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Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Since the turn of the century America and Europe have had a symbiotic relationship towards art. Movements that were born in Europe have been nurtured in the United States and those styles developed here have had a significant impact on artists abroad. In the years before World War I avant-garde movements in Europe seemed radical to many Americans but also extremely exciting to others. As the century progressed movements emerged that borrowed issues, techniques, devices, or other attributes from pre-existing styles. This led to a generic 'modernist' label for those art forms that did not seem to emerge from a traditional, academic manner. The artwork in this exhibition was created by important artists of the era including Vasily Kandinsky, Joan Miro, and S. W. Hayter from Europe, and the Americans Stuart Davis, Boris Margo, and Morris Blackburn. The prints have been chosen to illustrate the multiplicity of graphic art styles that became popular during the period.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 18 |
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On the Move: Images of Travel from Everson Musuem of Art and Syracuse University Collections Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
As a result of technological advancement and the human desire to explore and secure resources, travel has become a primary force in shaping contemporary life and global history. In today's world, travel has become a normal part of everyday life. In fact, tourism and travel now drive several of the world's largest economic sectors. On the Move displays a wide range of objects focusing on travel as a universal experience from the Industrial Revolution to the present day. Featuring objects from the Everson Museum and the multiple collections of Syracuse University, the exhibition highlights dreams of idyllic travel as well as the harsher realities of getting from one place to another. On the Move has been organized by Syracuse University students in the Graduate Program in Museum Studies, in the Masters in Fine Arts program and the History of Art program who are under the curatorial guidance of Professors Edward Aiken and Judith Meighan in collaboration with the Everson. The exhibition includes works from the Everson Museum of Art, the Syracuse University Art Collections, Light Work, and the Special Collections Research Center of Syracuse University Library.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 18 |
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Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Images of Vice and Virtue investigates how artists from different cultures and time periods visualized fundamental themes of good and evil. Early civilizations enacted codes of conduct believing that individual behavior benefited from these guidelines. The ancient Greeks developed a set of inspirational values that included prudence, justice, courage and temperance. Later, Christianity refined and enlarged these to the seven holy virtues against which were set seven deadly sins. Additionally, bible stories illustrated what would happen to individuals who either followed or violated church doctrine. Western society's growing secularization from the late 18th century onward gave artists greater freedom in interpreting biblical subjects and themes. Artists like Picasso strongly criticized the Spanish government in a pair of prints that depicted the ruler Francisco Franco as a biological polyp. Andy Warhol showed his support for the civil rights movement in a 1964 print of the Birmingham race riot. These examples further indicated the artist's growing role as an individual commenting on good and evil. Also included in the exhibition are several pieces by non-western cultures. Like their western counterparts, these pieces were inspired and informed by their culture's historical beliefs about good and evil and were often drawn from stories used to explain those beliefs. All of the objects in the exhibition have been drawn from Syracuse Universitys encyclopedic collection of over 45,000 objects. Images of Vice and Virtue is curated by David Prince, Associate Director of Syracuse University Art Collection.
Read a review!
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 18 |
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Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800 Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The Low Countries, a region comprising present-day Holland and Belgium, was a site of truly spectacular art production during the so-called early modern period, ca. 1600 to ca. 1800. Indeed, some of the foremost artists in the history of European art practiced within this region, including Rembrandt van Rijn and Peter Paul Rubens. Although the art-loving public is quite familiar with paintings by Dutch (Holland) and Flemish (Belgium) masters their drawings and prints are less known, despite the many outstanding examples of such work that survive. Some of the most memorable and impressive art during this period was made with ink and paper, as opposed to oil paint and canvases and panels. Paper Arts in the Low Countries, 1600-1800 consists of 35 noteworthy examples of drawings and prints by prominent masters of the Low Countries (including Rembrandt and Rubens), drawn from a number of private collections and from the holdings of the Syracuse University Art Collection and the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University. Paper Arts in the Low Countries is curated by Dr. Wayne Franits, Professor and Department Chair, Department of Fine Arts, Syracuse University with the assistance of graduate students currently enrolled in the Fine Arts program.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 18 |
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Pollock Matters Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation: $5 adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Pollock Matters, curated by art historian Ellen G. Landau of Case-Western Reserve University, explores for the first time the personal and artistic relationship between famed American Abstract Expressionist painter Jackson Pollock and his close friend, noted Swiss-born photographer and graphic designer, Herbert Matter. Featuring compelling visual and documentary evidence, the exhibition demonstrates the impact of the artists' interaction on their respective work. Comprising paintings, drawings, works on paper and other documentation -- including previously unseen photographs and letters -- it compares Matter's experimental abstract photos with known works by Pollock, and highlights their significant stylistic, technical and thematic connections. Pollock Matters also showcases 24 small-scale works discovered by Herbert Matter's son, Alex Matter, in a storage facility in 2002. The paintings, although identified as "Jackson experimental works" by an inscription in Herbert Matter's hand and dated 1958 (2 years after the artist's death), have been the subject of much controversy, scientific study, scholarly analysis, and significant media attention. In the exhibition and accompanying catalog, Curator Ellen Landau thoroughly investigates questions raised by this unprecedented discovery of previously unknown works: "If Pollock did not paint a portion of the cache, who did? How many artists were involved? And, no less importantly, what was the purpose of these paintings?" The debate will, without doubt, continue beyond the exhibition and for decades to come.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 18 |
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Self, House, Self Redhouse
Price: Free Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
An exhibition of drawings and sculptures by Marion Wilson and Michael Burkard. Both Wilson and Burkard utilize the metaphor of "house" and "home" in the artwork. Marion Wilson is the Director of Community Initiatives in the Visual Arts at Syracuse University's College of Visual & Performing Arts and teaches in the Sculpture Department. Wilson started MLAB, a collaborative design team of art and architecture students throughout Syracuse University, as part of her belief in the revitalization of urban life through the arts. Wilson regularly exhibits artwork both nationally and internationally including Art Basel: Miami, Exit Art, and New Museum of Contemporary Art. Michael Burkard is an Associate Professor of English in the MFA Creative Writing Program at Syracuse University. He has published ten poetry collections. His poems have appeared in American Poetry Review, The Paris Review, Ploughshares, and many other magazines.
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 18 |
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King and Courage The Warehouse Gallery
The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
A selection of paintings, drawings, and a video projection by Tim Rollins + K.O.S. Working in their trademark collaborative style Rollins and K.O.S present previous work along with new pieces produced specifically for the exhibition in a master class with students from Nottingham and Fowler High Schools in Syracuse. The work in the exhibition is inspired by the speeches of Martin Luther King and the Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane. By bringing Syracuse high school students into the project along with the work of Stephen Crane, who attended Syracuse University, Rollins and K.O.S. continue their long-standing exploration of how a community can be brought together to explore difference in order to find common ground under the umbrella of the arts.
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Lecture |
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7:30 PM, March 18 |
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The Arab-Israeli Peace Process University Lectures Featuring Robert Satloff, executive director of The Washington Institute
Price: Free Hendricks Chapel
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
An expert on Arab and Islamic politics as well as U.S. Middle East policy, Dr. Satloff has written and spoken widely on the Arab-Israeli peace process, the Islamist challenge to the growth of democracy in the region, and the need for bold and innovative public diplomacy to Arabs and Muslims. Soon after September 11, Dr. Satloff and his family moved to Rabat, capital of Morocco, where he telecommuted to Washington as the Institute's director for policy and strategic planning, overseeing the organization's major programs and research projects. In addition, he traveled throughout the Middle East and Europe and wrote extensively on ways to inject urgency and ideas into the ideological campaign against radical Islamism, the topic of his collection of essays, The Battle of Ideas in the War on Terror: Essays on U.S. Public Diplomacy in the Middle East (The Washington Institute, 2004). During his two years abroad, Dr. Satloff's personal research also focused on unearthing stories of Arab "heroes" and "villains" of the Holocaust, drawing on archives, interviews, and site visits in 11 countries. His discoveries, which helped convince the German government to award compensation to Jewish survivors of labor camps in North Africa, are the subject of a new book, Among the Righteous: Lost Stories of the Holocaust's Long Reach into Arab Lands (Public Affairs, 2006). Dr. Satloff is the creator and host of Dakhil Washington (Inside Washington), a weekly news and interview program on al-Hurra, the U.S. government-supported Arabic satellite television channel that beams throughout the Middle East and Europe. In that capacity, he is the only non-Arab to host a program on an Arab satellite channel.
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Music |
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7:30 PM, March 18 |
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Painting Music with Robert Black and Ige D'Aquino LeMoyne College
Price: $15 regular; $10 seniors; students free Coyne Center for the Performing Arts
LeMoyne College,
Syracuse
Bass player Robert Black improvises music that inspires Ige DAquino to paint vibrant, abstract images. The catch is that DAquino creates these images in real time, moving to the music, which Black invents. A visual choreography of the music LIVE! Dont miss this once-in-a-lifetime experience.
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Wednesday, March 19, 2008
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Art |
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Time TBD, March 19 |
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17th Annual Matrilineage Symposium Community Art Show Spark Contemporary Art Space
Spark Contemporary Art Space
1005 E. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
The art show and symposium celebrate the accomplishments of women in art and activism. We provide a unique educational setting in which the artists from all disciplines present their work and discuss it in an open forum outside of the classroom. Guest speakers this year include the Guerrilla Girls, Carolee Schneemann, Vienna Teng, Tina Takemoto, Katherine Slusher, and Nina Katchadourian. Viewing by appointment. Contact mkarmstr@syr.edu for more information.
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9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 19 |
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TV Dinner Series: Monotypes by Mick Mather Downtown Writer's Center
Price: Free YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 19 |
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Paintings and Sculpture Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Artists exhibiting include Rachael Baldanza, Amber Balding, Alex Betancourt, Anna, Cinquemani, Sally Dutko, Bob Rose, Helena Cooper, Jeanne Dupre, Peg Hewitt, Nicholas Ruth, Sylvia Steen, Joan Stier, Karen Tashkovski, Leigh Yardley, Louise Woodard, and members of the North Syracuse Art Guild. Includes digital photography, mixed-media collages, art quilts, fiber compositions, and landscapes.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 19 |
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The Small Press and the Black Arts Movement Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Spanning the years between 1960 and 1975, the initial period of the Black Arts Movement is variously associated with the passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964, the assassination of Malcolm X in 1965, and the subsequent rise of the Nation of Islam. Although the origin of the Black Arts Movement still generates debate among scholars, there is no doubt that it signaled the rise of a new cultural aesthetic marked by an extraordinary burst of creative energy in the literary, performing, and visual arts. Significantly, the Black Arts Movement opened the floodgates for a diversity of American voices, while offering an impressive model for the expression of minority points of view. Because no exhibit on the Black Arts Movement would be complete without mention of one of its founding fathers, Amiri Baraka, we take this opportunity to draw attention to the printed resources that have been gathered to enhance the manuscript collection acquired by the library in the mid-1960s related to the Beat periodical Yugen, which Baraka edited from 1958 to 1962. More recently, we acquired a cache of material pertaining to Barakas arrest in 1967 in Newark, New Jersey, his defense by the writing community, and the subsequent dismissal of the charges against him. Composed of artistic, cultural, political, and social dimensions, the Black Arts Movement was propelled by the simultaneous emergence of a number of small presses that promoted the work of black artists, dramatists, and poets. The exhibit focuses on two African American presses, the Broadside Press and the Third World Press, as well as a series of poetry pamphlets issued in London by the publisher Paul Breman. Together, these small independent presses brought to wider attention the work of Gwendolyn Brooks, Ed Bullins, Ben Caldwell, Sam Cornish, Ray Durem, Nikki Giovanni, David Henderson, Ted Jones, Etheridge Knight, Haki R. Madhubuti, Larry Neal, Sonia Sanchez, Lorenzo Thomas, Askia Touré, Marvin X, Al Young, and many others. The Black Power aesthetic of much of this literature is often reinforced by the cover art for these productions. This artwork documents the emergence of a distinctive, yet tremendously varied, graphic style.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 19 |
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Karen Tashkovski: Mixed Media Paintings Westcott Community Center
Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
The mixed-media paintings are from a series created in 2000. Titled "Dream Time," they depict the explosive dreams of the artist through the eyes of a cat. Tashkovski, a graduate of Syracuse University and an art teacher with the Chittenango Central School district, paints with oils and then attaches items to the canvas including more canvas, game pieces, playing cards, and sea-shells, which add texture to the work. The layers of texture represent the depth of a person's character.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 19 |
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AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images Community Folk Art Center
Price: Free Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
New exhibition celebrating 40 years of the AfriCOBRA Artist Collective. AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images will feature works by 10 members of the collective. AfriCOBRA ("African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists") began in Chicago in 1968 as a group of artists who sought to capture the vibrancy and spirit of African American urban life through elements found in traditional African art. Through the years, the group has continued to add new members. AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images features recent works in a variety of two-and-three-dimensional media. Exhibiting artists include Akili Ron Anderson, Kevin Cole, Adger Cowans, Murry DePillars, Jeff Donaldson (1932-2004), Michael D. Harris, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, James Phillips, Frank Smith and Nelson Stevens. Jones-Henderson, who is a founding member of the group, serves as exhibition administrator for AfriCOBRA.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 19 |
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Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States Community Folk Art Center
Price: Free Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States is a traveling exhibition curated by Rickie Solinger of WAKEUP/Arts which contains eight linked installations that chronicle the experiences of incarceration. Through the use of artwork, stories and letters shared by incarcerated women and their children, alongside alarming facts and statistics, the exhibition provides an experience that will make the viewer aware of the multitude of issues faced by families involved in the prison system.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 19 |
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Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Photographer Don Gregorio Antón creates mystical retablos that look like sacred objects in themselves. They are intimately small and sit on little stands to be viewed individually. Each retablo is one of a kind. Retabols, or ex votos as they are sometimes called, have been part of Mexico's tradition since the 17th century. They were originally hung behind the altars of Catholic churches, and remain a tradition to this day.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 19 |
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Works of Scott Bennett Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr.,
Fayetteville
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10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, March 19 |
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Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition will feature artwork from the OHA collection that depicts various modes of local transportation and how artists interpreted it over the last two centuries. Local teachers and students will find subjects meeting their document-based questions social studies standards within the exhibit.
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 19 |
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Beloved Daughters: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
SUArt Galleries presents Beloved Daughters, an exhibition that unites the Moksha (Heaven) and Ladli (Beloved Daughter) series, two of photographer-activist Fazal Sheikh's most recent projects concerning the lives of women in India. The first of the two series, Moksha, completed in 2005, focuses on dispossessed widows who find refuge in the holy city of Vrindavan in northern India. They worship the god Krishna in hopes of being released from the cycle of reincarnation from past actions, samsara, into a higher state, moksha. The second, Ladli, reveals horrific stories of infanticide, feticide and other forms of abuse directed towards the women all over India. Fazal Sheikh creates sustained portraits of communities around the world through photography, addressing people's beliefs and traditions as well as their socio-economic problems. Both Moksha and Ladli are hardcover books and are available at the gallery store. Fazal Ilahi Sheikh was born in 1965 in New York City. Since graduating from Princeton University in 1987, he has worked with displaced communities across East Africa, in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Brazil, Cuba and India. In 2005 Sheikh was named a MacArthur Fellow. Additional fellowships include those from the J. William Fulbright Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, the Nederlands Fotomuseum, Mondriaan Foundation, and the Mother Jones International Documentary Fund. Sheikh is the recipient of the International Henri Cartier-Bresson Grand Prize, the Prix d'Arles, the Infinity Award, the Leica Medal of Excellence, the Ruttenberg Award, and the Ferguson Award.
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 19 |
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Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Since the turn of the century America and Europe have had a symbiotic relationship towards art. Movements that were born in Europe have been nurtured in the United States and those styles developed here have had a significant impact on artists abroad. In the years before World War I avant-garde movements in Europe seemed radical to many Americans but also extremely exciting to others. As the century progressed movements emerged that borrowed issues, techniques, devices, or other attributes from pre-existing styles. This led to a generic 'modernist' label for those art forms that did not seem to emerge from a traditional, academic manner. The artwork in this exhibition was created by important artists of the era including Vasily Kandinsky, Joan Miro, and S. W. Hayter from Europe, and the Americans Stuart Davis, Boris Margo, and Morris Blackburn. The prints have been chosen to illustrate the multiplicity of graphic art styles that became popular during the period.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 19 |
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Pollock Matters Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation: $5 adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Pollock Matters, curated by art historian Ellen G. Landau of Case-Western Reserve University, explores for the first time the personal and artistic relationship between famed American Abstract Expressionist painter Jackson Pollock and his close friend, noted Swiss-born photographer and graphic designer, Herbert Matter. Featuring compelling visual and documentary evidence, the exhibition demonstrates the impact of the artists' interaction on their respective work. Comprising paintings, drawings, works on paper and other documentation -- including previously unseen photographs and letters -- it compares Matter's experimental abstract photos with known works by Pollock, and highlights their significant stylistic, technical and thematic connections. Pollock Matters also showcases 24 small-scale works discovered by Herbert Matter's son, Alex Matter, in a storage facility in 2002. The paintings, although identified as "Jackson experimental works" by an inscription in Herbert Matter's hand and dated 1958 (2 years after the artist's death), have been the subject of much controversy, scientific study, scholarly analysis, and significant media attention. In the exhibition and accompanying catalog, Curator Ellen Landau thoroughly investigates questions raised by this unprecedented discovery of previously unknown works: "If Pollock did not paint a portion of the cache, who did? How many artists were involved? And, no less importantly, what was the purpose of these paintings?" The debate will, without doubt, continue beyond the exhibition and for decades to come.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 19 |
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Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800 Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The Low Countries, a region comprising present-day Holland and Belgium, was a site of truly spectacular art production during the so-called early modern period, ca. 1600 to ca. 1800. Indeed, some of the foremost artists in the history of European art practiced within this region, including Rembrandt van Rijn and Peter Paul Rubens. Although the art-loving public is quite familiar with paintings by Dutch (Holland) and Flemish (Belgium) masters their drawings and prints are less known, despite the many outstanding examples of such work that survive. Some of the most memorable and impressive art during this period was made with ink and paper, as opposed to oil paint and canvases and panels. Paper Arts in the Low Countries, 1600-1800 consists of 35 noteworthy examples of drawings and prints by prominent masters of the Low Countries (including Rembrandt and Rubens), drawn from a number of private collections and from the holdings of the Syracuse University Art Collection and the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University. Paper Arts in the Low Countries is curated by Dr. Wayne Franits, Professor and Department Chair, Department of Fine Arts, Syracuse University with the assistance of graduate students currently enrolled in the Fine Arts program.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 19 |
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Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Images of Vice and Virtue investigates how artists from different cultures and time periods visualized fundamental themes of good and evil. Early civilizations enacted codes of conduct believing that individual behavior benefited from these guidelines. The ancient Greeks developed a set of inspirational values that included prudence, justice, courage and temperance. Later, Christianity refined and enlarged these to the seven holy virtues against which were set seven deadly sins. Additionally, bible stories illustrated what would happen to individuals who either followed or violated church doctrine. Western society's growing secularization from the late 18th century onward gave artists greater freedom in interpreting biblical subjects and themes. Artists like Picasso strongly criticized the Spanish government in a pair of prints that depicted the ruler Francisco Franco as a biological polyp. Andy Warhol showed his support for the civil rights movement in a 1964 print of the Birmingham race riot. These examples further indicated the artist's growing role as an individual commenting on good and evil. Also included in the exhibition are several pieces by non-western cultures. Like their western counterparts, these pieces were inspired and informed by their culture's historical beliefs about good and evil and were often drawn from stories used to explain those beliefs. All of the objects in the exhibition have been drawn from Syracuse Universitys encyclopedic collection of over 45,000 objects. Images of Vice and Virtue is curated by David Prince, Associate Director of Syracuse University Art Collection.
Read a review!
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 19 |
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On the Move: Images of Travel from Everson Musuem of Art and Syracuse University Collections Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
As a result of technological advancement and the human desire to explore and secure resources, travel has become a primary force in shaping contemporary life and global history. In today's world, travel has become a normal part of everyday life. In fact, tourism and travel now drive several of the world's largest economic sectors. On the Move displays a wide range of objects focusing on travel as a universal experience from the Industrial Revolution to the present day. Featuring objects from the Everson Museum and the multiple collections of Syracuse University, the exhibition highlights dreams of idyllic travel as well as the harsher realities of getting from one place to another. On the Move has been organized by Syracuse University students in the Graduate Program in Museum Studies, in the Masters in Fine Arts program and the History of Art program who are under the curatorial guidance of Professors Edward Aiken and Judith Meighan in collaboration with the Everson. The exhibition includes works from the Everson Museum of Art, the Syracuse University Art Collections, Light Work, and the Special Collections Research Center of Syracuse University Library.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 19 |
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Self, House, Self Redhouse
Price: Free Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
An exhibition of drawings and sculptures by Marion Wilson and Michael Burkard. Both Wilson and Burkard utilize the metaphor of "house" and "home" in the artwork. Marion Wilson is the Director of Community Initiatives in the Visual Arts at Syracuse University's College of Visual & Performing Arts and teaches in the Sculpture Department. Wilson started MLAB, a collaborative design team of art and architecture students throughout Syracuse University, as part of her belief in the revitalization of urban life through the arts. Wilson regularly exhibits artwork both nationally and internationally including Art Basel: Miami, Exit Art, and New Museum of Contemporary Art. Michael Burkard is an Associate Professor of English in the MFA Creative Writing Program at Syracuse University. He has published ten poetry collections. His poems have appeared in American Poetry Review, The Paris Review, Ploughshares, and many other magazines.
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 19 |
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King and Courage The Warehouse Gallery
The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
A selection of paintings, drawings, and a video projection by Tim Rollins + K.O.S. Working in their trademark collaborative style Rollins and K.O.S present previous work along with new pieces produced specifically for the exhibition in a master class with students from Nottingham and Fowler High Schools in Syracuse. The work in the exhibition is inspired by the speeches of Martin Luther King and the Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane. By bringing Syracuse high school students into the project along with the work of Stephen Crane, who attended Syracuse University, Rollins and K.O.S. continue their long-standing exploration of how a community can be brought together to explore difference in order to find common ground under the umbrella of the arts.
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Film |
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6:00 PM - 8:00 PM, March 19 |
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Family Films Syracuse International Film Festival
Soule Branch Library
101 Springfield Rd.,
Syracuse
Ride of the Mergansers; Moongirl; Flyaway; Psi Cho; The Legend of Black Tom. All films suitable for children 8 and up.
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7:00 PM, March 19 |
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The Young Filmmakers of Central New York Film Festival 2008 Alternative Movies and Events
Price: $5 Palace Theater
2384 James St.,
Syracuse
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Music |
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12:30 PM, March 19 |
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Civic Morning Musicals Featuring Jonathan English, tenor; Nathan Sumrall, piano
Price: Free Hosmer Auditorium, Everson Museum
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Schumann's Dichterliebe and other music by Schumann
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Poetry/Reading |
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5:30 PM, March 19 |
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Nathan Englander, fiction Raymond Carver Reading Series
Price: Free Gifford Auditorium, Huntington Beard Crouse Hall
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
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Theater |
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7:30 PM, March 19 |
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The Bomb-itty of Errors Syracuse Stage Andy Goldberg, director
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors has its origins in ancient Rome in Plautus's wild comedy The Menaechmi. Two sets of identical twins and multiple cases of mistaken identity make for a riotous comic event. This latest incarnation is a hip-hop, rap romp retelling of the famous comedy. Four gifted performers hit the street to launch an assault of non-stop, lightning-paced, side-splitting comedy. After all, the Bard was a master of "word."
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Thursday, March 20, 2008
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Art |
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9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 20 |
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TV Dinner Series: Monotypes by Mick Mather Downtown Writer's Center
Price: Free YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
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9:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 20 |
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Paintings and Sculpture Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Artists exhibiting include Rachael Baldanza, Amber Balding, Alex Betancourt, Anna, Cinquemani, Sally Dutko, Bob Rose, Helena Cooper, Jeanne Dupre, Peg Hewitt, Nicholas Ruth, Sylvia Steen, Joan Stier, Karen Tashkovski, Leigh Yardley, Louise Woodard, and members of the North Syracuse Art Guild. Includes digital photography, mixed-media collages, art quilts, fiber compositions, and landscapes.
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9:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 20 |
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The Small Press and the Black Arts Movement Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Spanning the years between 1960 and 1975, the initial period of the Black Arts Movement is variously associated with the passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964, the assassination of Malcolm X in 1965, and the subsequent rise of the Nation of Islam. Although the origin of the Black Arts Movement still generates debate among scholars, there is no doubt that it signaled the rise of a new cultural aesthetic marked by an extraordinary burst of creative energy in the literary, performing, and visual arts. Significantly, the Black Arts Movement opened the floodgates for a diversity of American voices, while offering an impressive model for the expression of minority points of view. Because no exhibit on the Black Arts Movement would be complete without mention of one of its founding fathers, Amiri Baraka, we take this opportunity to draw attention to the printed resources that have been gathered to enhance the manuscript collection acquired by the library in the mid-1960s related to the Beat periodical Yugen, which Baraka edited from 1958 to 1962. More recently, we acquired a cache of material pertaining to Barakas arrest in 1967 in Newark, New Jersey, his defense by the writing community, and the subsequent dismissal of the charges against him. Composed of artistic, cultural, political, and social dimensions, the Black Arts Movement was propelled by the simultaneous emergence of a number of small presses that promoted the work of black artists, dramatists, and poets. The exhibit focuses on two African American presses, the Broadside Press and the Third World Press, as well as a series of poetry pamphlets issued in London by the publisher Paul Breman. Together, these small independent presses brought to wider attention the work of Gwendolyn Brooks, Ed Bullins, Ben Caldwell, Sam Cornish, Ray Durem, Nikki Giovanni, David Henderson, Ted Jones, Etheridge Knight, Haki R. Madhubuti, Larry Neal, Sonia Sanchez, Lorenzo Thomas, Askia Touré, Marvin X, Al Young, and many others. The Black Power aesthetic of much of this literature is often reinforced by the cover art for these productions. This artwork documents the emergence of a distinctive, yet tremendously varied, graphic style.
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9:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 20 |
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Karen Tashkovski: Mixed Media Paintings Westcott Community Center
Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
The mixed-media paintings are from a series created in 2000. Titled "Dream Time," they depict the explosive dreams of the artist through the eyes of a cat. Tashkovski, a graduate of Syracuse University and an art teacher with the Chittenango Central School district, paints with oils and then attaches items to the canvas including more canvas, game pieces, playing cards, and sea-shells, which add texture to the work. The layers of texture represent the depth of a person's character. An artist reception will be held from 5:00-8:00 pm.
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 20 |
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AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images Community Folk Art Center
Price: Free Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
New exhibition celebrating 40 years of the AfriCOBRA Artist Collective. AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images will feature works by 10 members of the collective. AfriCOBRA ("African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists") began in Chicago in 1968 as a group of artists who sought to capture the vibrancy and spirit of African American urban life through elements found in traditional African art. Through the years, the group has continued to add new members. AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images features recent works in a variety of two-and-three-dimensional media. Exhibiting artists include Akili Ron Anderson, Kevin Cole, Adger Cowans, Murry DePillars, Jeff Donaldson (1932-2004), Michael D. Harris, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, James Phillips, Frank Smith and Nelson Stevens. Jones-Henderson, who is a founding member of the group, serves as exhibition administrator for AfriCOBRA.
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 20 |
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Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States Community Folk Art Center
Price: Free Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States is a traveling exhibition curated by Rickie Solinger of WAKEUP/Arts which contains eight linked installations that chronicle the experiences of incarceration. Through the use of artwork, stories and letters shared by incarcerated women and their children, alongside alarming facts and statistics, the exhibition provides an experience that will make the viewer aware of the multitude of issues faced by families involved in the prison system.
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 20 |
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Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Photographer Don Gregorio Antón creates mystical retablos that look like sacred objects in themselves. They are intimately small and sit on little stands to be viewed individually. Each retablo is one of a kind. Retabols, or ex votos as they are sometimes called, have been part of Mexico's tradition since the 17th century. They were originally hung behind the altars of Catholic churches, and remain a tradition to this day.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 20 |
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Works of Scott Bennett Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr.,
Fayetteville
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 20 |
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Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition will feature artwork from the OHA collection that depicts various modes of local transportation and how artists interpreted it over the last two centuries. Local teachers and students will find subjects meeting their document-based questions social studies standards within the exhibit.
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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 20 |
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Beloved Daughters: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
SUArt Galleries presents Beloved Daughters, an exhibition that unites the Moksha (Heaven) and Ladli (Beloved Daughter) series, two of photographer-activist Fazal Sheikh's most recent projects concerning the lives of women in India. The first of the two series, Moksha, completed in 2005, focuses on dispossessed widows who find refuge in the holy city of Vrindavan in northern India. They worship the god Krishna in hopes of being released from the cycle of reincarnation from past actions, samsara, into a higher state, moksha. The second, Ladli, reveals horrific stories of infanticide, feticide and other forms of abuse directed towards the women all over India. Fazal Sheikh creates sustained portraits of communities around the world through photography, addressing people's beliefs and traditions as well as their socio-economic problems. Both Moksha and Ladli are hardcover books and are available at the gallery store. Fazal Ilahi Sheikh was born in 1965 in New York City. Since graduating from Princeton University in 1987, he has worked with displaced communities across East Africa, in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Brazil, Cuba and India. In 2005 Sheikh was named a MacArthur Fellow. Additional fellowships include those from the J. William Fulbright Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, the Nederlands Fotomuseum, Mondriaan Foundation, and the Mother Jones International Documentary Fund. Sheikh is the recipient of the International Henri Cartier-Bresson Grand Prize, the Prix d'Arles, the Infinity Award, the Leica Medal of Excellence, the Ruttenberg Award, and the Ferguson Award.
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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 20 |
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Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Since the turn of the century America and Europe have had a symbiotic relationship towards art. Movements that were born in Europe have been nurtured in the United States and those styles developed here have had a significant impact on artists abroad. In the years before World War I avant-garde movements in Europe seemed radical to many Americans but also extremely exciting to others. As the century progressed movements emerged that borrowed issues, techniques, devices, or other attributes from pre-existing styles. This led to a generic 'modernist' label for those art forms that did not seem to emerge from a traditional, academic manner. The artwork in this exhibition was created by important artists of the era including Vasily Kandinsky, Joan Miro, and S. W. Hayter from Europe, and the Americans Stuart Davis, Boris Margo, and Morris Blackburn. The prints have been chosen to illustrate the multiplicity of graphic art styles that became popular during the period.
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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, March 20 |
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On the Move: Images of Travel from Everson Musuem of Art and Syracuse University Collections Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
As a result of technological advancement and the human desire to explore and secure resources, travel has become a primary force in shaping contemporary life and global history. In today's world, travel has become a normal part of everyday life. In fact, tourism and travel now drive several of the world's largest economic sectors. On the Move displays a wide range of objects focusing on travel as a universal experience from the Industrial Revolution to the present day. Featuring objects from the Everson Museum and the multiple collections of Syracuse University, the exhibition highlights dreams of idyllic travel as well as the harsher realities of getting from one place to another. On the Move has been organized by Syracuse University students in the Graduate Program in Museum Studies, in the Masters in Fine Arts program and the History of Art program who are under the curatorial guidance of Professors Edward Aiken and Judith Meighan in collaboration with the Everson. The exhibition includes works from the Everson Museum of Art, the Syracuse University Art Collections, Light Work, and the Special Collections Research Center of Syracuse University Library.
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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, March 20 |
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Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Images of Vice and Virtue investigates how artists from different cultures and time periods visualized fundamental themes of good and evil. Early civilizations enacted codes of conduct believing that individual behavior benefited from these guidelines. The ancient Greeks developed a set of inspirational values that included prudence, justice, courage and temperance. Later, Christianity refined and enlarged these to the seven holy virtues against which were set seven deadly sins. Additionally, bible stories illustrated what would happen to individuals who either followed or violated church doctrine. Western society's growing secularization from the late 18th century onward gave artists greater freedom in interpreting biblical subjects and themes. Artists like Picasso strongly criticized the Spanish government in a pair of prints that depicted the ruler Francisco Franco as a biological polyp. Andy Warhol showed his support for the civil rights movement in a 1964 print of the Birmingham race riot. These examples further indicated the artist's growing role as an individual commenting on good and evil. Also included in the exhibition are several pieces by non-western cultures. Like their western counterparts, these pieces were inspired and informed by their culture's historical beliefs about good and evil and were often drawn from stories used to explain those beliefs. All of the objects in the exhibition have been drawn from Syracuse Universitys encyclopedic collection of over 45,000 objects. Images of Vice and Virtue is curated by David Prince, Associate Director of Syracuse University Art Collection.
Read a review!
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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, March 20 |
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Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800 Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The Low Countries, a region comprising present-day Holland and Belgium, was a site of truly spectacular art production during the so-called early modern period, ca. 1600 to ca. 1800. Indeed, some of the foremost artists in the history of European art practiced within this region, including Rembrandt van Rijn and Peter Paul Rubens. Although the art-loving public is quite familiar with paintings by Dutch (Holland) and Flemish (Belgium) masters their drawings and prints are less known, despite the many outstanding examples of such work that survive. Some of the most memorable and impressive art during this period was made with ink and paper, as opposed to oil paint and canvases and panels. Paper Arts in the Low Countries, 1600-1800 consists of 35 noteworthy examples of drawings and prints by prominent masters of the Low Countries (including Rembrandt and Rubens), drawn from a number of private collections and from the holdings of the Syracuse University Art Collection and the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University. Paper Arts in the Low Countries is curated by Dr. Wayne Franits, Professor and Department Chair, Department of Fine Arts, Syracuse University with the assistance of graduate students currently enrolled in the Fine Arts program.
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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, March 20 |
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Pollock Matters Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation: $5 adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Pollock Matters, curated by art historian Ellen G. Landau of Case-Western Reserve University, explores for the first time the personal and artistic relationship between famed American Abstract Expressionist painter Jackson Pollock and his close friend, noted Swiss-born photographer and graphic designer, Herbert Matter. Featuring compelling visual and documentary evidence, the exhibition demonstrates the impact of the artists' interaction on their respective work. Comprising paintings, drawings, works on paper and other documentation -- including previously unseen photographs and letters -- it compares Matter's experimental abstract photos with known works by Pollock, and highlights their significant stylistic, technical and thematic connections. Pollock Matters also showcases 24 small-scale works discovered by Herbert Matter's son, Alex Matter, in a storage facility in 2002. The paintings, although identified as "Jackson experimental works" by an inscription in Herbert Matter's hand and dated 1958 (2 years after the artist's death), have been the subject of much controversy, scientific study, scholarly analysis, and significant media attention. In the exhibition and accompanying catalog, Curator Ellen Landau thoroughly investigates questions raised by this unprecedented discovery of previously unknown works: "If Pollock did not paint a portion of the cache, who did? How many artists were involved? And, no less importantly, what was the purpose of these paintings?" The debate will, without doubt, continue beyond the exhibition and for decades to come.
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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, March 20 |
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Self, House, Self Redhouse
Price: Free Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
An exhibition of drawings and sculptures by Marion Wilson and Michael Burkard. Both Wilson and Burkard utilize the metaphor of "house" and "home" in the artwork. Marion Wilson is the Director of Community Initiatives in the Visual Arts at Syracuse University's College of Visual & Performing Arts and teaches in the Sculpture Department. Wilson started MLAB, a collaborative design team of art and architecture students throughout Syracuse University, as part of her belief in the revitalization of urban life through the arts. Wilson regularly exhibits artwork both nationally and internationally including Art Basel: Miami, Exit Art, and New Museum of Contemporary Art. Michael Burkard is an Associate Professor of English in the MFA Creative Writing Program at Syracuse University. He has published ten poetry collections. His poems have appeared in American Poetry Review, The Paris Review, Ploughshares, and many other magazines.
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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, March 20 |
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King and Courage The Warehouse Gallery
The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
A selection of paintings, drawings, and a video projection by Tim Rollins + K.O.S. Working in their trademark collaborative style Rollins and K.O.S present previous work along with new pieces produced specifically for the exhibition in a master class with students from Nottingham and Fowler High Schools in Syracuse. The work in the exhibition is inspired by the speeches of Martin Luther King and the Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane. By bringing Syracuse high school students into the project along with the work of Stephen Crane, who attended Syracuse University, Rollins and K.O.S. continue their long-standing exploration of how a community can be brought together to explore difference in order to find common ground under the umbrella of the arts.
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5:00 PM - 8:00 PM, March 20 |
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Fifth Annual Exhibition and Fundraiser for Art Students Delavan Art Gallery
Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Delavan Art Gallery is pleased to present the fifth annual exhibition and fundraiser of art by students in three Syracuse School District Elementary Schools: Blodgett, Seymour Magnet and Solace. Each year, students from the classes of Stacy Griffin, Kristin Dugger, Kelly Moser-Vogler, Paul Bova and Simone Montgomery have the chance to see their work displayed and sold in a professional setting to raise money for themselves as burgeoning artists and for school art supplies. Donations of art supplies are also encouraged and can be dropped off at the gallery at any point during the exhibition. This exhibition will also be open by appointment only during business hours from March 25 - March 28. To make an appointment, please call the gallery at 315-425-7500.
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5:00 PM - 8:00 PM, March 20 |
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17th Annual Matrilineage Symposium Community Art Show Spark Contemporary Art Space
Spark Contemporary Art Space
1005 E. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
The art show and symposium celebrate the accomplishments of women in art and activism. We provide a unique educational setting in which the artists from all disciplines present their work and discuss it in an open forum outside of the classroom. Guest speakers this year include the Guerrilla Girls, Carolee Schneemann, Vienna Teng, Tina Takemoto, Katherine Slusher, and Nina Katchadourian.
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Film |
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6:30 PM, March 20 |
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Kids of Survival: The Art and Life of Tim Rollins + K.O.S. The Warehouse Gallery
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Kids of Survival, which follows artist Tim Rollins and his South Bronx after-school art program for troubled teens, is a powerful film about the importance and necessity of artistic creation. Equal parts priest, pied piper, drill sergeant, and substitute for absent fathers, Rollins has spent the last 20 years making critically-acclaimed mixed-media paintings in collaboration with K.O.S., a hand picked group of South Bronx teens virtually abandoned by the school system. Dan Geller and Dayna Goldfine's generous "fly on the wall" technique allows the audience to witness the creative process while intimately getting to know the boys over the course of three years; the kids as well as the art will develop before your eyes. Work by Tim Rollins + K.O.S. hangs in major museums and collections around the world, including New York's Museum of Modern Art. Bring comfortable seating such as a bean-bag or lawn chair. Refreshments will be provided.
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7:00 PM, March 20 |
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Artist Open Everson Museum of Art
Price: Free Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Join us for an evening of video screenings by renowned local, national and international video artists. Among artists included in this provocative and diverse line-up are Esther Probst, Pedestrian Lullaby; Shee, Fullness; Torry Mendoza, Reservation(s) and Kemosabe version 1.0, as well as other artists exploring culture, travel and escape.
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Poetry/Reading |
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8:00 PM, March 20 |
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Poet Michael Burkard Redhouse
Price: Free Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
A poetry reading by Michael Burkard to celebrate the release of his tenth book, Envelope Of Night.
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Theater |
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6:45 PM, March 20 |
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Florence of Moravia 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, March 20 |
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The Bomb-itty of Errors Syracuse Stage Andy Goldberg, director
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors has its origins in ancient Rome in Plautus's wild comedy The Menaechmi. Two sets of identical twins and multiple cases of mistaken identity make for a riotous comic event. This latest incarnation is a hip-hop, rap romp retelling of the famous comedy. Four gifted performers hit the street to launch an assault of non-stop, lightning-paced, side-splitting comedy. After all, the Bard was a master of "word."
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Friday, March 21, 2008
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Art |
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Time TBD, March 21 |
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17th Annual Matrilineage Symposium Community Art Show Spark Contemporary Art Space
Spark Contemporary Art Space
1005 E. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
The art show and symposium celebrate the accomplishments of women in art and activism. We provide a unique educational setting in which the artists from all disciplines present their work and discuss it in an open forum outside of the classroom. Guest speakers this year include the Guerrilla Girls, Carolee Schneemann, Vienna Teng, Tina Takemoto, Katherine Slusher, and Nina Katchadourian. Viewing by appointment. Contact mkarmstr@syr.edu for more information.
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9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 21 |
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TV Dinner Series: Monotypes by Mick Mather Downtown Writer's Center
Price: Free YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 21 |
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Paintings and Sculpture Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Artists exhibiting include Rachael Baldanza, Amber Balding, Alex Betancourt, Anna, Cinquemani, Sally Dutko, Bob Rose, Helena Cooper, Jeanne Dupre, Peg Hewitt, Nicholas Ruth, Sylvia Steen, Joan Stier, Karen Tashkovski, Leigh Yardley, Louise Woodard, and members of the North Syracuse Art Guild. Includes digital photography, mixed-media collages, art quilts, fiber compositions, and landscapes.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 21 |
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The Small Press and the Black Arts Movement Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Spanning the years between 1960 and 1975, the initial period of the Black Arts Movement is variously associated with the passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964, the assassination of Malcolm X in 1965, and the subsequent rise of the Nation of Islam. Although the origin of the Black Arts Movement still generates debate among scholars, there is no doubt that it signaled the rise of a new cultural aesthetic marked by an extraordinary burst of creative energy in the literary, performing, and visual arts. Significantly, the Black Arts Movement opened the floodgates for a diversity of American voices, while offering an impressive model for the expression of minority points of view. Because no exhibit on the Black Arts Movement would be complete without mention of one of its founding fathers, Amiri Baraka, we take this opportunity to draw attention to the printed resources that have been gathered to enhance the manuscript collection acquired by the library in the mid-1960s related to the Beat periodical Yugen, which Baraka edited from 1958 to 1962. More recently, we acquired a cache of material pertaining to Barakas arrest in 1967 in Newark, New Jersey, his defense by the writing community, and the subsequent dismissal of the charges against him. Composed of artistic, cultural, political, and social dimensions, the Black Arts Movement was propelled by the simultaneous emergence of a number of small presses that promoted the work of black artists, dramatists, and poets. The exhibit focuses on two African American presses, the Broadside Press and the Third World Press, as well as a series of poetry pamphlets issued in London by the publisher Paul Breman. Together, these small independent presses brought to wider attention the work of Gwendolyn Brooks, Ed Bullins, Ben Caldwell, Sam Cornish, Ray Durem, Nikki Giovanni, David Henderson, Ted Jones, Etheridge Knight, Haki R. Madhubuti, Larry Neal, Sonia Sanchez, Lorenzo Thomas, Askia Touré, Marvin X, Al Young, and many others. The Black Power aesthetic of much of this literature is often reinforced by the cover art for these productions. This artwork documents the emergence of a distinctive, yet tremendously varied, graphic style.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 21 |
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Karen Tashkovski: Mixed Media Paintings Westcott Community Center
Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
The mixed-media paintings are from a series created in 2000. Titled "Dream Time," they depict the explosive dreams of the artist through the eyes of a cat. Tashkovski, a graduate of Syracuse University and an art teacher with the Chittenango Central School district, paints with oils and then attaches items to the canvas including more canvas, game pieces, playing cards, and sea-shells, which add texture to the work. The layers of texture represent the depth of a person's character.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 21 |
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AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images Community Folk Art Center
Price: Free Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
New exhibition celebrating 40 years of the AfriCOBRA Artist Collective. AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images will feature works by 10 members of the collective. AfriCOBRA ("African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists") began in Chicago in 1968 as a group of artists who sought to capture the vibrancy and spirit of African American urban life through elements found in traditional African art. Through the years, the group has continued to add new members. AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images features recent works in a variety of two-and-three-dimensional media. Exhibiting artists include Akili Ron Anderson, Kevin Cole, Adger Cowans, Murry DePillars, Jeff Donaldson (1932-2004), Michael D. Harris, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, James Phillips, Frank Smith and Nelson Stevens. Jones-Henderson, who is a founding member of the group, serves as exhibition administrator for AfriCOBRA.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 21 |
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Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States Community Folk Art Center
Price: Free Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States is a traveling exhibition curated by Rickie Solinger of WAKEUP/Arts which contains eight linked installations that chronicle the experiences of incarceration. Through the use of artwork, stories and letters shared by incarcerated women and their children, alongside alarming facts and statistics, the exhibition provides an experience that will make the viewer aware of the multitude of issues faced by families involved in the prison system.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 21 |
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Works of Scott Bennett Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr.,
Fayetteville
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10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, March 21 |
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Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition will feature artwork from the OHA collection that depicts various modes of local transportation and how artists interpreted it over the last two centuries. Local teachers and students will find subjects meeting their document-based questions social studies standards within the exhibit.
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 21 |
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Beloved Daughters: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
SUArt Galleries presents Beloved Daughters, an exhibition that unites the Moksha (Heaven) and Ladli (Beloved Daughter) series, two of photographer-activist Fazal Sheikh's most recent projects concerning the lives of women in India. The first of the two series, Moksha, completed in 2005, focuses on dispossessed widows who find refuge in the holy city of Vrindavan in northern India. They worship the god Krishna in hopes of being released from the cycle of reincarnation from past actions, samsara, into a higher state, moksha. The second, Ladli, reveals horrific stories of infanticide, feticide and other forms of abuse directed towards the women all over India. Fazal Sheikh creates sustained portraits of communities around the world through photography, addressing people's beliefs and traditions as well as their socio-economic problems. Both Moksha and Ladli are hardcover books and are available at the gallery store. Fazal Ilahi Sheikh was born in 1965 in New York City. Since graduating from Princeton University in 1987, he has worked with displaced communities across East Africa, in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Brazil, Cuba and India. In 2005 Sheikh was named a MacArthur Fellow. Additional fellowships include those from the J. William Fulbright Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, the Nederlands Fotomuseum, Mondriaan Foundation, and the Mother Jones International Documentary Fund. Sheikh is the recipient of the International Henri Cartier-Bresson Grand Prize, the Prix d'Arles, the Infinity Award, the Leica Medal of Excellence, the Ruttenberg Award, and the Ferguson Award.
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 21 |
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Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Since the turn of the century America and Europe have had a symbiotic relationship towards art. Movements that were born in Europe have been nurtured in the United States and those styles developed here have had a significant impact on artists abroad. In the years before World War I avant-garde movements in Europe seemed radical to many Americans but also extremely exciting to others. As the century progressed movements emerged that borrowed issues, techniques, devices, or other attributes from pre-existing styles. This led to a generic 'modernist' label for those art forms that did not seem to emerge from a traditional, academic manner. The artwork in this exhibition was created by important artists of the era including Vasily Kandinsky, Joan Miro, and S. W. Hayter from Europe, and the Americans Stuart Davis, Boris Margo, and Morris Blackburn. The prints have been chosen to illustrate the multiplicity of graphic art styles that became popular during the period.
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 21 |
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Fifth Annual Exhibition and Fundraiser for Art Students Delavan Art Gallery
Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Delavan Art Gallery is pleased to present the fifth annual exhibition and fundraiser of art by students in three Syracuse School District Elementary Schools: Blodgett, Seymour Magnet and Solace. Each year, students from the classes of Stacy Griffin, Kristin Dugger, Kelly Moser-Vogler, Paul Bova and Simone Montgomery have the chance to see their work displayed and sold in a professional setting to raise money for themselves as burgeoning artists and for school art supplies. Donations of art supplies are also encouraged and can be dropped off at the gallery at any point during the exhibition. This exhibition will also be open by appointment only during business hours from March 25 - March 28. To make an appointment, please call the gallery at 315-425-7500.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 21 |
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Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800 Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The Low Countries, a region comprising present-day Holland and Belgium, was a site of truly spectacular art production during the so-called early modern period, ca. 1600 to ca. 1800. Indeed, some of the foremost artists in the history of European art practiced within this region, including Rembrandt van Rijn and Peter Paul Rubens. Although the art-loving public is quite familiar with paintings by Dutch (Holland) and Flemish (Belgium) masters their drawings and prints are less known, despite the many outstanding examples of such work that survive. Some of the most memorable and impressive art during this period was made with ink and paper, as opposed to oil paint and canvases and panels. Paper Arts in the Low Countries, 1600-1800 consists of 35 noteworthy examples of drawings and prints by prominent masters of the Low Countries (including Rembrandt and Rubens), drawn from a number of private collections and from the holdings of the Syracuse University Art Collection and the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University. Paper Arts in the Low Countries is curated by Dr. Wayne Franits, Professor and Department Chair, Department of Fine Arts, Syracuse University with the assistance of graduate students currently enrolled in the Fine Arts program.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 21 |
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Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Images of Vice and Virtue investigates how artists from different cultures and time periods visualized fundamental themes of good and evil. Early civilizations enacted codes of conduct believing that individual behavior benefited from these guidelines. The ancient Greeks developed a set of inspirational values that included prudence, justice, courage and temperance. Later, Christianity refined and enlarged these to the seven holy virtues against which were set seven deadly sins. Additionally, bible stories illustrated what would happen to individuals who either followed or violated church doctrine. Western society's growing secularization from the late 18th century onward gave artists greater freedom in interpreting biblical subjects and themes. Artists like Picasso strongly criticized the Spanish government in a pair of prints that depicted the ruler Francisco Franco as a biological polyp. Andy Warhol showed his support for the civil rights movement in a 1964 print of the Birmingham race riot. These examples further indicated the artist's growing role as an individual commenting on good and evil. Also included in the exhibition are several pieces by non-western cultures. Like their western counterparts, these pieces were inspired and informed by their culture's historical beliefs about good and evil and were often drawn from stories used to explain those beliefs. All of the objects in the exhibition have been drawn from Syracuse Universitys encyclopedic collection of over 45,000 objects. Images of Vice and Virtue is curated by David Prince, Associate Director of Syracuse University Art Collection.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 21 |
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On the Move: Images of Travel from Everson Musuem of Art and Syracuse University Collections Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
As a result of technological advancement and the human desire to explore and secure resources, travel has become a primary force in shaping contemporary life and global history. In today's world, travel has become a normal part of everyday life. In fact, tourism and travel now drive several of the world's largest economic sectors. On the Move displays a wide range of objects focusing on travel as a universal experience from the Industrial Revolution to the present day. Featuring objects from the Everson Museum and the multiple collections of Syracuse University, the exhibition highlights dreams of idyllic travel as well as the harsher realities of getting from one place to another. On the Move has been organized by Syracuse University students in the Graduate Program in Museum Studies, in the Masters in Fine Arts program and the History of Art program who are under the curatorial guidance of Professors Edward Aiken and Judith Meighan in collaboration with the Everson. The exhibition includes works from the Everson Museum of Art, the Syracuse University Art Collections, Light Work, and the Special Collections Research Center of Syracuse University Library.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 21 |
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Self, House, Self Redhouse
Price: Free Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
An exhibition of drawings and sculptures by Marion Wilson and Michael Burkard. Both Wilson and Burkard utilize the metaphor of "house" and "home" in the artwork. Marion Wilson is the Director of Community Initiatives in the Visual Arts at Syracuse University's College of Visual & Performing Arts and teaches in the Sculpture Department. Wilson started MLAB, a collaborative design team of art and architecture students throughout Syracuse University, as part of her belief in the revitalization of urban life through the arts. Wilson regularly exhibits artwork both nationally and internationally including Art Basel: Miami, Exit Art, and New Museum of Contemporary Art. Michael Burkard is an Associate Professor of English in the MFA Creative Writing Program at Syracuse University. He has published ten poetry collections. His poems have appeared in American Poetry Review, The Paris Review, Ploughshares, and many other magazines.
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 21 |
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King and Courage The Warehouse Gallery
The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
A selection of paintings, drawings, and a video projection by Tim Rollins + K.O.S. Working in their trademark collaborative style Rollins and K.O.S present previous work along with new pieces produced specifically for the exhibition in a master class with students from Nottingham and Fowler High Schools in Syracuse. The work in the exhibition is inspired by the speeches of Martin Luther King and the Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane. By bringing Syracuse high school students into the project along with the work of Stephen Crane, who attended Syracuse University, Rollins and K.O.S. continue their long-standing exploration of how a community can be brought together to explore difference in order to find common ground under the umbrella of the arts.
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Music |
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8:00 PM, March 21 |
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Tim Harrison Folkus Project
Price: $12 May Memorial Unitarian Society
3800 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Beautiful, moving songs, well-written stories, powerfully sung.
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8:00 PM, March 21 |
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Michael Jerling Folkus Project
Price: $12 May Memorial Unitarian Society
3800 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
This quirky, clever, and always surprising songwriter Michael Jerling plays an artful mix of blues, traditional and contemporary folk songs, jazz-flavored folk and country-folk. A keen student of the good and ghastly in American life, Jerling weaves themes like a novelist -- sort of like a musical version of Richard Russo (Empire Falls, Nobody's Fool). He evokes our shortcomings and dreams without yielding to cynicism or sentimentality. His live shows are buoyed by his sharp sense of humor, his first-rate lyrical sense, and impressive musicianship. His smooth baritone voice is backed up with consummate skill on six and twelve string guitars, harmonica and mandolin. To reserve tickets, phone 315-440-7444.
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Theater |
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7:00 PM, March 21 |
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The Sound Of Music Syracuse Civic Theatre
Price: $33 regular, $29 students/seniors, $25 children 12 and under Carrier Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
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8:00 PM, March 21 |
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All in the Timing Rarely Done Productions Brian Hensley, director
Price: $20 Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St.,
Syracuse
Six playful one-acts combine the cerebral, the wordplay of modern romance, and thoughts on our closest relatives on this planet contemplating the Melancholy Dane.
Read a review!
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8:00 PM, March 21 |
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Artists as Artists: Torment the Vein Redhouse
Price: $6 Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
This event features the music and art of Torment the Vein as well as two acoustic opening acts. Artists As Artists occupies the space where music and art meet. The featured performers are both musicians and artists...or artists and musicians. Each event is designed to give the listener and viewer a taste of being an artist in two different mediums.
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8:00 PM, March 21 |
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The Bomb-itty of Errors Syracuse Stage Andy Goldberg, director
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors has its origins in ancient Rome in Plautus's wild comedy The Menaechmi. Two sets of identical twins and multiple cases of mistaken identity make for a riotous comic event. This latest incarnation is a hip-hop, rap romp retelling of the famous comedy. Four gifted performers hit the street to launch an assault of non-stop, lightning-paced, side-splitting comedy. After all, the Bard was a master of "word."
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8:00 PM, March 21 |
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Servant of Two Masters Syracuse University Drama Department Leslie Noble, director
Price: $15 regular, $13 students/seniors Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Carlo Goldoni's classic farce, adapted by Tom Cone, tells the story of a man who tries to make his way in life by hiring himself simultaneously to two employers, keeping each unaware of the other. His attempts at keeping this secret leads him into a life of disguises, broken marriage contracts, duels, and incorrectly delivered letters. Originally written in 1745 and revised in 1753, the "man-versus-society" conflict at the core of this play is just as valid as it was more than two centuries ago.
Read a Review!
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8:00 PM, March 21 |
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Nunsensations! The Nunsense Vegas Revue The Talent Company
Price: $25 regular, $23 students/seniors, $16 children 12 and under Empire Theater
New York State Fairgrounds,
Geddes
The CNY premiere of the new musical comedy by Danny Goggin, creator of the Nunsense shows. The worlds favorite nuns, The Little Sisters of Hoboken, are on a brand new adventure to Las Vegas. When a parishioner volunteers to donate $10,000 to the sisters' school if they will perform in a club in Vegas, Mother Superior is hesitant to accept. However, after being convinced by the other sisters that "what happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas," Reverend Mother agrees. Performing in The Pump Room "high atop the 3rd floor of the Mystique Motor Lodge in the soul of Sin City," the sisters experience "show-biz" like never before. There's more feathers, more fans, more hats and more hi-jinks. The show stars Christine Lightcap as Rev. Mother, Kate Huddleston as Sister Hubert, Jodie Baum as Sister Robert Anne, Erin Race as Sister Amnesia, and Sofia Coon as Sister Leo. It's produced by Executive Producer Christine Lightcap and directed and choreographed by Ken Prescott, two-time Los Angeles Drama Logue Winner and three-time Desert Theatre League Award winner. Music direction is by Josh Smith, SALT Award winner for Best Music Director of the Year.
Read a review!
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Saturday, March 22, 2008
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Art |
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Time TBD, March 22 |
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17th Annual Matrilineage Symposium Community Art Show Spark Contemporary Art Space
Spark Contemporary Art Space
1005 E. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
The art show and symposium celebrate the accomplishments of women in art and activism. We provide a unique educational setting in which the artists from all disciplines present their work and discuss it in an open forum outside of the classroom. Guest speakers this year include the Guerrilla Girls, Carolee Schneemann, Vienna Teng, Tina Takemoto, Katherine Slusher, and Nina Katchadourian. Viewing by appointment. Contact mkarmstr@syr.edu for more information.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 22 |
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TV Dinner Series: Monotypes by Mick Mather Downtown Writer's Center
Price: Free YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 22 |
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On the Move: Images of Travel from Everson Musuem of Art and Syracuse University Collections Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
As a result of technological advancement and the human desire to explore and secure resources, travel has become a primary force in shaping contemporary life and global history. In today's world, travel has become a normal part of everyday life. In fact, tourism and travel now drive several of the world's largest economic sectors. On the Move displays a wide range of objects focusing on travel as a universal experience from the Industrial Revolution to the present day. Featuring objects from the Everson Museum and the multiple collections of Syracuse University, the exhibition highlights dreams of idyllic travel as well as the harsher realities of getting from one place to another. On the Move has been organized by Syracuse University students in the Graduate Program in Museum Studies, in the Masters in Fine Arts program and the History of Art program who are under the curatorial guidance of Professors Edward Aiken and Judith Meighan in collaboration with the Everson. The exhibition includes works from the Everson Museum of Art, the Syracuse University Art Collections, Light Work, and the Special Collections Research Center of Syracuse University Library.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 22 |
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Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Images of Vice and Virtue investigates how artists from different cultures and time periods visualized fundamental themes of good and evil. Early civilizations enacted codes of conduct believing that individual behavior benefited from these guidelines. The ancient Greeks developed a set of inspirational values that included prudence, justice, courage and temperance. Later, Christianity refined and enlarged these to the seven holy virtues against which were set seven deadly sins. Additionally, bible stories illustrated what would happen to individuals who either followed or violated church doctrine. Western society's growing secularization from the late 18th century onward gave artists greater freedom in interpreting biblical subjects and themes. Artists like Picasso strongly criticized the Spanish government in a pair of prints that depicted the ruler Francisco Franco as a biological polyp. Andy Warhol showed his support for the civil rights movement in a 1964 print of the Birmingham race riot. These examples further indicated the artist's growing role as an individual commenting on good and evil. Also included in the exhibition are several pieces by non-western cultures. Like their western counterparts, these pieces were inspired and informed by their culture's historical beliefs about good and evil and were often drawn from stories used to explain those beliefs. All of the objects in the exhibition have been drawn from Syracuse Universitys encyclopedic collection of over 45,000 objects. Images of Vice and Virtue is curated by David Prince, Associate Director of Syracuse University Art Collection.
Read a review!
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 22 |
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Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800 Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The Low Countries, a region comprising present-day Holland and Belgium, was a site of truly spectacular art production during the so-called early modern period, ca. 1600 to ca. 1800. Indeed, some of the foremost artists in the history of European art practiced within this region, including Rembrandt van Rijn and Peter Paul Rubens. Although the art-loving public is quite familiar with paintings by Dutch (Holland) and Flemish (Belgium) masters their drawings and prints are less known, despite the many outstanding examples of such work that survive. Some of the most memorable and impressive art during this period was made with ink and paper, as opposed to oil paint and canvases and panels. Paper Arts in the Low Countries, 1600-1800 consists of 35 noteworthy examples of drawings and prints by prominent masters of the Low Countries (including Rembrandt and Rubens), drawn from a number of private collections and from the holdings of the Syracuse University Art Collection and the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University. Paper Arts in the Low Countries is curated by Dr. Wayne Franits, Professor and Department Chair, Department of Fine Arts, Syracuse University with the assistance of graduate students currently enrolled in the Fine Arts program.
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10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, March 22 |
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Works of Scott Bennett Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr.,
Fayetteville
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 22 |
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Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States Community Folk Art Center
Price: Free Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States is a traveling exhibition curated by Rickie Solinger of WAKEUP/Arts which contains eight linked installations that chronicle the experiences of incarceration. Through the use of artwork, stories and letters shared by incarcerated women and their children, alongside alarming facts and statistics, the exhibition provides an experience that will make the viewer aware of the multitude of issues faced by families involved in the prison system.
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 22 |
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AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images Community Folk Art Center
Price: Free Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
New exhibition celebrating 40 years of the AfriCOBRA Artist Collective. AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images will feature works by 10 members of the collective. AfriCOBRA ("African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists") began in Chicago in 1968 as a group of artists who sought to capture the vibrancy and spirit of African American urban life through elements found in traditional African art. Through the years, the group has continued to add new members. AfriCOBRA: Liberated Images features recent works in a variety of two-and-three-dimensional media. Exhibiting artists include Akili Ron Anderson, Kevin Cole, Adger Cowans, Murry DePillars, Jeff Donaldson (1932-2004), Michael D. Harris, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, James Phillips, Frank Smith and Nelson Stevens. Jones-Henderson, who is a founding member of the group, serves as exhibition administrator for AfriCOBRA.
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11:00 AM - 12:00 AM, March 22 |
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CNY Pride Families Exhibition Light Work Gallery
Panasci Lounge, Schine Student Center
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The exhibition features portraits of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) people and their families in the Central New York region. The exhibit aims to provide true-to-life representation of LGBT families that are often missing from the mainstream media. The exhibit welcomes members of the campus and the Central New York community to come and learn about these families and their experiences through the visual photographs and the print stories that accompany them.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 22 |
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Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition will feature artwork from the OHA collection that depicts various modes of local transportation and how artists interpreted it over the last two centuries. Local teachers and students will find subjects meeting their document-based questions social studies standards within the exhibit.
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 22 |
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Beloved Daughters: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
SUArt Galleries presents Beloved Daughters, an exhibition that unites the Moksha (Heaven) and Ladli (Beloved Daughter) series, two of photographer-activist Fazal Sheikh's most recent projects concerning the lives of women in India. The first of the two series, Moksha, completed in 2005, focuses on dispossessed widows who find refuge in the holy city of Vrindavan in northern India. They worship the god Krishna in hopes of being released from the cycle of reincarnation from past actions, samsara, into a higher state, moksha. The second, Ladli, reveals horrific stories of infanticide, feticide and other forms of abuse directed towards the women all over India. Fazal Sheikh creates sustained portraits of communities around the world through photography, addressing people's beliefs and traditions as well as their socio-economic problems. Both Moksha and Ladli are hardcover books and are available at the gallery store. Fazal Ilahi Sheikh was born in 1965 in New York City. Since graduating from Princeton University in 1987, he has worked with displaced communities across East Africa, in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Brazil, Cuba and India. In 2005 Sheikh was named a MacArthur Fellow. Additional fellowships include those from the J. William Fulbright Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, the Nederlands Fotomuseum, Mondriaan Foundation, and the Mother Jones International Documentary Fund. Sheikh is the recipient of the International Henri Cartier-Bresson Grand Prize, the Prix d'Arles, the Infinity Award, the Leica Medal of Excellence, the Ruttenberg Award, and the Ferguson Award.
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 22 |
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Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Since the turn of the century America and Europe have had a symbiotic relationship towards art. Movements that were born in Europe have been nurtured in the United States and those styles developed here have had a significant impact on artists abroad. In the years before World War I avant-garde movements in Europe seemed radical to many Americans but also extremely exciting to others. As the century progressed movements emerged that borrowed issues, techniques, devices, or other attributes from pre-existing styles. This led to a generic 'modernist' label for those art forms that did not seem to emerge from a traditional, academic manner. The artwork in this exhibition was created by important artists of the era including Vasily Kandinsky, Joan Miro, and S. W. Hayter from Europe, and the Americans Stuart Davis, Boris Margo, and Morris Blackburn. The prints have been chosen to illustrate the multiplicity of graphic art styles that became popular during the period.
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 22 |
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King and Courage The Warehouse Gallery
The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
A selection of paintings, drawings, and a video projection by Tim Rollins + K.O.S. Working in their trademark collaborative style Rollins and K.O.S present previous work along with new pieces produced specifically for the exhibition in a master class with students from Nottingham and Fowler High Schools in Syracuse. The work in the exhibition is inspired by the speeches of Martin Luther King and the Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane. By bringing Syracuse high school students into the project along with the work of Stephen Crane, who attended Syracuse University, Rollins and K.O.S. continue their long-standing exploration of how a community can be brought together to explore difference in order to find common ground under the umbrella of the arts.
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7:00 PM - 12:00 AM, March 22 |
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Ty Marshal's Pink Clouds (R) Evolution Art Studio
Price: Free Recess Coffeehouse
110 Harvard Pl.,
Syracuse
Opening reception for Ty Marshal's Pink Clouds -- illustrations, paintings, sculptures, and objects. Part of an ongoing, statewide tour. With special guest performance by ErikIno at 8:00.
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Film |
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7:00 PM - 9:30 PM, March 22 |
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Super Amigos; Screening Time Syracuse International Film Festival
Price: Donations accepted Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
Super Amigos (71 minutes, documentary, Mexico) These five comic-book superheroes champion the causes of Mexico's oppressed in a vivid and realistic. Five heart-warmingand truestories of activism, shot with gorgeous cinematography in and around Mexico City, lead you to believe that super powers are within the grasp of us all. Screening Time (7 minute short, Czech Republic)
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Theater |
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12:30 PM, March 22 |
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The Princess and the Pea Magic Circle Children's Theatre
Price: $5 Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St.,
Syracuse
Interactive comedy.
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3:00 PM, March 22 |
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The Bomb-itty of Errors Syracuse Stage Andy Goldberg, director
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors has its origins in ancient Rome in Plautus's wild comedy The Menaechmi. Two sets of identical twins and multiple cases of mistaken identity make for a riotous comic event. This latest incarnation is a hip-hop, rap romp retelling of the famous comedy. Four gifted performers hit the street to launch an assault of non-stop, lightning-paced, side-splitting comedy. After all, the Bard was a master of "word."
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7:00 PM, March 22 |
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The Sound Of Music Syracuse Civic Theatre
Price: $33 regular, $29 students/seniors, $25 children 12 and under Carrier Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
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8:00 PM, March 22 |
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All in the Timing Rarely Done Productions Brian Hensley, director
Price: $20 Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St.,
Syracuse
Six playful one-acts combine the cerebral, the wordplay of modern romance, and thoughts on our closest relatives on this planet contemplating the Melancholy Dane.
Read a review!
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8:00 PM, March 22 |
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The Bomb-itty of Errors Syracuse Stage Andy Goldberg, director
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors has its origins in ancient Rome in Plautus's wild comedy The Menaechmi. Two sets of identical twins and multiple cases of mistaken identity make for a riotous comic event. This latest incarnation is a hip-hop, rap romp retelling of the famous comedy. Four gifted performers hit the street to launch an assault of non-stop, lightning-paced, side-splitting comedy. After all, the Bard was a master of "word."
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8:00 PM, March 22 |
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Servant of Two Masters Syracuse University Drama Department Leslie Noble, director
Price: $15 regular, $13 students/seniors Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Carlo Goldoni's classic farce, adapted by Tom Cone, tells the story of a man who tries to make his way in life by hiring himself simultaneously to two employers, keeping each unaware of the other. His attempts at keeping this secret leads him into a life of disguises, broken marriage contracts, duels, and incorrectly delivered letters. Originally written in 1745 and revised in 1753, the "man-versus-society" conflict at the core of this play is just as valid as it was more than two centuries ago.
Read a Review!
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8:00 PM, March 22 |
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Nunsensations! The Nunsense Vegas Revue The Talent Company
Price: $25 regular, $23 students/seniors, $16 children 12 and under Empire Theater
New York State Fairgrounds,
Geddes
The CNY premiere of the new musical comedy by Danny Goggin, creator of the Nunsense shows. The worlds favorite nuns, The Little Sisters of Hoboken, are on a brand new adventure to Las Vegas. When a parishioner volunteers to donate $10,000 to the sisters' school if they will perform in a club in Vegas, Mother Superior is hesitant to accept. However, after being convinced by the other sisters that "what happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas," Reverend Mother agrees. Performing in The Pump Room "high atop the 3rd floor of the Mystique Motor Lodge in the soul of Sin City," the sisters experience "show-biz" like never before. There's more feathers, more fans, more hats and more hi-jinks. The show stars Christine Lightcap as Rev. Mother, Kate Huddleston as Sister Hubert, Jodie Baum as Sister Robert Anne, Erin Race as Sister Amnesia, and Sofia Coon as Sister Leo. It's produced by Executive Producer Christine Lightcap and directed and choreographed by Ken Prescott, two-time Los Angeles Drama Logue Winner and three-time Desert Theatre League Award winner. Music direction is by Josh Smith, SALT Award winner for Best Music Director of the Year.
Read a review!
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Sunday, March 23, 2008
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Art |
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11:00 AM - 12:00 AM, March 23 |
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CNY Pride Families Exhibition Light Work Gallery
Panasci Lounge, Schine Student Center
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The exhibition features portraits of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) people and their families in the Central New York region. The exhibit aims to provide true-to-life representation of LGBT families that are often missing from the mainstream media. The exhibit welcomes members of the campus and the Central New York community to come and learn about these families and their experiences through the visual photographs and the print stories that accompany them.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 23 |
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Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition will feature artwork from the OHA collection that depicts various modes of local transportation and how artists interpreted it over the last two centuries. Local teachers and students will find subjects meeting their document-based questions social studies standards within the exhibit.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 23 |
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Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Since the turn of the century America and Europe have had a symbiotic relationship towards art. Movements that were born in Europe have been nurtured in the United States and those styles developed here have had a significant impact on artists abroad. In the years before World War I avant-garde movements in Europe seemed radical to many Americans but also extremely exciting to others. As the century progressed movements emerged that borrowed issues, techniques, devices, or other attributes from pre-existing styles. This led to a generic 'modernist' label for those art forms that did not seem to emerge from a traditional, academic manner. The artwork in this exhibition was created by important artists of the era including Vasily Kandinsky, Joan Miro, and S. W. Hayter from Europe, and the Americans Stuart Davis, Boris Margo, and Morris Blackburn. The prints have been chosen to illustrate the multiplicity of graphic art styles that became popular during the period.
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 23 |
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Beloved Daughters: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
SUArt Galleries presents Beloved Daughters, an exhibition that unites the Moksha (Heaven) and Ladli (Beloved Daughter) series, two of photographer-activist Fazal Sheikh's most recent projects concerning the lives of women in India. The first of the two series, Moksha, completed in 2005, focuses on dispossessed widows who find refuge in the holy city of Vrindavan in northern India. They worship the god Krishna in hopes of being released from the cycle of reincarnation from past actions, samsara, into a higher state, moksha. The second, Ladli, reveals horrific stories of infanticide, feticide and other forms of abuse directed towards the women all over India. Fazal Sheikh creates sustained portraits of communities around the world through photography, addressing people's beliefs and traditions as well as their socio-economic problems. Both Moksha and Ladli are hardcover books and are available at the gallery store. Fazal Ilahi Sheikh was born in 1965 in New York City. Since graduating from Princeton University in 1987, he has worked with displaced communities across East Africa, in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Brazil, Cuba and India. In 2005 Sheikh was named a MacArthur Fellow. Additional fellowships include those from the J. William Fulbright Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, the Nederlands Fotomuseum, Mondriaan Foundation, and the Mother Jones International Documentary Fund. Sheikh is the recipient of the International Henri Cartier-Bresson Grand Prize, the Prix d'Arles, the Infinity Award, the Leica Medal of Excellence, the Ruttenberg Award, and the Ferguson Award.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 23 |
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Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800 Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The Low Countries, a region comprising present-day Holland and Belgium, was a site of truly spectacular art production during the so-called early modern period, ca. 1600 to ca. 1800. Indeed, some of the foremost artists in the history of European art practiced within this region, including Rembrandt van Rijn and Peter Paul Rubens. Although the art-loving public is quite familiar with paintings by Dutch (Holland) and Flemish (Belgium) masters their drawings and prints are less known, despite the many outstanding examples of such work that survive. Some of the most memorable and impressive art during this period was made with ink and paper, as opposed to oil paint and canvases and panels. Paper Arts in the Low Countries, 1600-1800 consists of 35 noteworthy examples of drawings and prints by prominent masters of the Low Countries (including Rembrandt and Rubens), drawn from a number of private collections and from the holdings of the Syracuse University Art Collection and the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University. Paper Arts in the Low Countries is curated by Dr. Wayne Franits, Professor and Department Chair, Department of Fine Arts, Syracuse University with the assistance of graduate students currently enrolled in the Fine Arts program.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 23 |
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Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Images of Vice and Virtue investigates how artists from different cultures and time periods visualized fundamental themes of good and evil. Early civilizations enacted codes of conduct believing that individual behavior benefited from these guidelines. The ancient Greeks developed a set of inspirational values that included prudence, justice, courage and temperance. Later, Christianity refined and enlarged these to the seven holy virtues against which were set seven deadly sins. Additionally, bible stories illustrated what would happen to individuals who either followed or violated church doctrine. Western society's growing secularization from the late 18th century onward gave artists greater freedom in interpreting biblical subjects and themes. Artists like Picasso strongly criticized the Spanish government in a pair of prints that depicted the ruler Francisco Franco as a biological polyp. Andy Warhol showed his support for the civil rights movement in a 1964 print of the Birmingham race riot. These examples further indicated the artist's growing role as an individual commenting on good and evil. Also included in the exhibition are several pieces by non-western cultures. Like their western counterparts, these pieces were inspired and informed by their culture's historical beliefs about good and evil and were often drawn from stories used to explain those beliefs. All of the objects in the exhibition have been drawn from Syracuse Universitys encyclopedic collection of over 45,000 objects. Images of Vice and Virtue is curated by David Prince, Associate Director of Syracuse University Art Collection.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 23 |
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On the Move: Images of Travel from Everson Musuem of Art and Syracuse University Collections Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
As a result of technological advancement and the human desire to explore and secure resources, travel has become a primary force in shaping contemporary life and global history. In today's world, travel has become a normal part of everyday life. In fact, tourism and travel now drive several of the world's largest economic sectors. On the Move displays a wide range of objects focusing on travel as a universal experience from the Industrial Revolution to the present day. Featuring objects from the Everson Museum and the multiple collections of Syracuse University, the exhibition highlights dreams of idyllic travel as well as the harsher realities of getting from one place to another. On the Move has been organized by Syracuse University students in the Graduate Program in Museum Studies, in the Masters in Fine Arts program and the History of Art program who are under the curatorial guidance of Professors Edward Aiken and Judith Meighan in collaboration with the Everson. The exhibition includes works from the Everson Museum of Art, the Syracuse University Art Collections, Light Work, and the Special Collections Research Center of Syracuse University Library.
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Theater |
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2:00 PM, March 23 |
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Servant of Two Masters Syracuse University Drama Department Leslie Noble, director
Price: $15 regular, $13 students/seniors Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Carlo Goldoni's classic farce, adapted by Tom Cone, tells the story of a man who tries to make his way in life by hiring himself simultaneously to two employers, keeping each unaware of the other. His attempts at keeping this secret leads him into a life of disguises, broken marriage contracts, duels, and incorrectly delivered letters. Originally written in 1745 and revised in 1753, the "man-versus-society" conflict at the core of this play is just as valid as it was more than two centuries ago.
Read a Review!
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Next week >>>
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