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Events for Wednesday, March 16, 2011

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery

8:00 AM-2:00 AM Ingrid Ludt: "Forest becomes Ocean" LeMoyne College

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Winter Art Show Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College (Read a review!)

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Davidovich in Situ: A Video Art Project Point of Contact Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Marcel Breuer and Postwar America Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Amos Kennedy Prints! Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Implements of Mass Construction Erie Canal Museum

10:00 AM-6:00 PM No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Toys from the 1970s Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Fashionable Points of View Syracuse University School of Art and Design

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Full Circle Szozda Gallery

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Infinite Mirror: Images of American Identity Syracuse University Art Museum (Read a review!)

11:00 AM-4:30 PM The Prints of Seong Moy Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Casey Landerkin: Paintings and Illustrations Echo

12:00 PM Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-6:00 PM New Directions in Photography Syracuse University School of Art and Design

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)

12:30 PM John Spradling, piano Civic Morning Musicals

2:00 PM-7:00 PM 100 Years of Women Rockin' the World ArtRage Gallery

3:00 PM Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum

5:30 PM-11:00 PM Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project (Read a review!)

7:00 PM Bells & Motley Celtic Consort's Medieval Muse and Minstrelsy LeMoyne College

7:00 PM A Night of Irish Music and Dancing Drumcliffe School of Irish Dance

7:30 PM Lord of the Dance Broadway in Syracuse

Events for Thursday, March 17, 2011

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery

5:00 AM-8:00 PM Opening: Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show Redhouse

8:00 AM-2:00 AM Ingrid Ludt: "Forest becomes Ocean" LeMoyne College

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Winter Art Show Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College (Read a review!)

9:00 AM-1:00 AM Cinefest 2011 Syracuse Cinephile Society

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-7:00 PM Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Marcel Breuer and Postwar America Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:00 AM-8:00 PM Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Amos Kennedy Prints! Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Implements of Mass Construction Erie Canal Museum

10:00 AM-6:00 PM No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Toys from the 1970s Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Fashionable Points of View Syracuse University School of Art and Design

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Full Circle Szozda Gallery

11:00 AM-6:00 PM Forrest Lesch-Middelton: Recent Work Gandee Gallery

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Infinite Mirror: Images of American Identity Syracuse University Art Museum (Read a review!)

11:00 AM-8:00 PM The Prints of Seong Moy Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Casey Landerkin: Paintings and Illustrations Echo

12:00 PM Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum

12:00 PM-8:00 PM Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-8:00 PM Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-8:00 PM New Directions in Photography Syracuse University School of Art and Design

12:00 PM-8:00 PM Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)

2:00 PM-8:00 PM 100 Years of Women Rockin' the World ArtRage Gallery

3:00 PM Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum

5:00 PM-8:00 PM Artist in Attendance: Lauren Ritchie Eureka Crafts

5:00 PM-8:00 PM Davidovich in Situ: A Video Art Project Point of Contact Gallery

5:00 PM-8:00 PM Everything is Illustrated SUNY Oswego Metro Center at the Atrium

5:00 PM-8:00 PM Impressions of Central New York SparkyTown Restaurant

5:30 PM-11:00 PM Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project (Read a review!)

6:00 PM Artist Talk: Stephanie Rozene The Warehouse Gallery

6:30 PM-11:00 PM Demitrus Oliver: Mare, 2009 Urban Video Project

6:45 PM A Wee Bit O' Murder Acme Mystery Company

8:00 PM Corpus Christi Rarely Done Productions (Read a review!)

Events for Friday, March 18, 2011

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery

8:00 AM-8:00 PM Ingrid Ludt: "Forest becomes Ocean" LeMoyne College

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Winter Art Show Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College (Read a review!)

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Davidovich in Situ: A Video Art Project Point of Contact Gallery

9:00 AM-12:00 AM Cinefest 2011 Syracuse Cinephile Society

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Marcel Breuer and Postwar America Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Amos Kennedy Prints! Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Implements of Mass Construction Erie Canal Museum

10:00 AM-6:00 PM No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Toys from the 1970s Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show Redhouse

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Fashionable Points of View Syracuse University School of Art and Design

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Full Circle Szozda Gallery

11:00 AM-6:00 PM Forrest Lesch-Middelton: Recent Work Gandee Gallery

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Infinite Mirror: Images of American Identity Syracuse University Art Museum (Read a review!)

11:00 AM-4:30 PM The Prints of Seong Moy Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Casey Landerkin: Paintings and Illustrations Echo

12:00 PM Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-6:00 PM New Directions in Photography Syracuse University School of Art and Design

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)

2:00 PM-7:00 PM 100 Years of Women Rockin' the World ArtRage Gallery

3:00 PM Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum

5:30 PM-11:00 PM Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project (Read a review!)

6:30 PM-11:00 PM Demitrus Oliver: Mare, 2009 Urban Video Project

7:00 PM George Drew, poet; Kyle Bass, playwright Downtown Writer's Center

8:00 PM Tonight at 8:30: Three Plays by Noel Coward Appleseed Productions (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Urinetown: The Musical Baldwinsville Theatre Guild (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Corpus Christi Rarely Done Productions (Read a review!)

8:30 PM Dinosaur Society Salt City Improv Theater

9:00 PM Zoso: The Ultimate Led Zeppelin Experience Westcott Theater

Events for Saturday, March 19, 2011

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery

8:30 AM-5:00 PM Cinefest 2011 Syracuse Cinephile Society

9:00 AM-1:00 PM Winter Art Show Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

9:00 AM-8:00 PM Ingrid Ludt: "Forest becomes Ocean" LeMoyne College

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Casey Landerkin: Paintings and Illustrations Echo

10:00 AM-2:00 PM Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Implements of Mass Construction Erie Canal Museum

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Full Circle Szozda Gallery

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Amos Kennedy Prints! Community Folk Art Center

11:00 AM-6:00 PM Forrest Lesch-Middelton: Recent Work Gandee Gallery

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Toys from the 1970s Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Infinite Mirror: Images of American Identity Syracuse University Art Museum (Read a review!)

11:00 AM-4:30 PM The Prints of Seong Moy Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

12:00 PM-4:00 PM 100 Years of Women Rockin' the World ArtRage Gallery

12:00 PM-4:00 PM No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery

12:00 PM-6:00 PM New Directions in Photography Syracuse University School of Art and Design

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)

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

2:00 PM September Trio DCL Music Series

2:00 PM The World Begins at Home Syracuse Children's Chorus, featuring Nick Page, song-leader

5:30 PM-11:00 PM Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project (Read a review!)

6:30 PM-11:00 PM Demitrus Oliver: Mare, 2009 Urban Video Project

7:30 PM Urinetown: The Musical Baldwinsville Theatre Guild (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Tonight at 8:30: Three Plays by Noel Coward Appleseed Productions (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Women's Film Festival: Freeing Silvia Baraldini ArtRage Gallery

8:00 PM Pictures at an Exhibition CNY Jazz Arts Foundation, featuring Charles Pillow, guest composer

8:00 PM David Novak: The Divorce of Heaven & Earth Open Hand Theater

8:00 PM Corpus Christi Rarely Done Productions (Read a review!)

8:00 PM *SOLD OUT* Karen Savoca and Pete Heitzman Redhouse

8:00 PM Cubical Sunrise, with Desolation Angels Westcott Theater

8:10 PM-12:30 AM Cinefest 2011 Syracuse Cinephile Society

Events for Sunday, March 20, 2011

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery

9:00 AM-4:30 PM Cinefest 2011 Syracuse Cinephile Society

10:00 AM-3:00 PM Implements of Mass Construction Erie Canal Museum

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Full Circle Szozda Gallery

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Forrest Lesch-Middelton: Recent Work Gandee Gallery

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Toys from the 1970s Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:30 PM The Prints of Seong Moy Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Infinite Mirror: Images of American Identity Syracuse University Art Museum (Read a review!)

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-2:00 AM Ingrid Ludt: "Forest becomes Ocean" LeMoyne College

12:00 PM-6:00 PM New Directions in Photography Syracuse University School of Art and Design

2:00 PM-6:00 PM Women's Film Festival ArtRage Gallery

2:00 PM Live! at the Everson: Syracuse Opera Resident Artists Civic Morning Musicals

2:00 PM Folk Music Series: A History of 18th Century Women in Song with Linda Russell Liverpool Public Library

2:00 PM SUArt Kids: Infinite Mirror Syracuse University Art Museum

3:00 PM Urinetown: The Musical Baldwinsville Theatre Guild (Read a review!)

5:30 PM-11:00 PM Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project (Read a review!)

6:30 PM-11:00 PM Demitrus Oliver: Mare, 2009 Urban Video Project

8:00 PM Akuma Roots Westcott Theater

Events for Monday, March 21, 2011

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery

8:00 AM-2:00 AM Ingrid Ludt: "Forest becomes Ocean" LeMoyne College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College (Read a review!)

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Davidovich in Situ: A Video Art Project Point of Contact Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Marcel Breuer and Postwar America Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Implements of Mass Construction Erie Canal Museum

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show Redhouse

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Fashionable Points of View Syracuse University School of Art and Design

12:00 PM Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum

3:00 PM Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum

5:30 PM-11:00 PM Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Dangermuffin Westcott Theater

Events for Tuesday, March 22, 2011

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery

8:00 AM-2:00 AM Ingrid Ludt: "Forest becomes Ocean" LeMoyne College

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Winter Art Show Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College (Read a review!)

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-7:00 PM Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-7:30 PM Marcel Breuer and Postwar America Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Amos Kennedy Prints! Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Implements of Mass Construction Erie Canal Museum

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Thilde Jensen: Canaries Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show Redhouse

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Fashionable Points of View Syracuse University School of Art and Design

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Casey Landerkin: Paintings and Illustrations Echo

12:00 PM Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)

3:00 PM Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum

5:00 PM Pippo Ciorra Syracuse University School of Architecture

5:30 PM-11:00 PM Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project (Read a review!)

6:30 PM Visiting Artist Lecture: Paul Myoda Syracuse University School of Art and Design

7:30 PM Transformation and Liberation: Rising up from Fear to Hope University Lectures, featuring Karen Tse

Events for Wednesday, March 23, 2011

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery

8:00 AM-2:00 AM Ingrid Ludt: "Forest becomes Ocean" LeMoyne College

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Winter Art Show Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College (Read a review!)

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Davidovich in Situ: A Video Art Project Point of Contact Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Marcel Breuer and Postwar America Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Amos Kennedy Prints! Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Implements of Mass Construction Erie Canal Museum

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Thilde Jensen: Canaries Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Toys from the 1970s Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show Redhouse

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Fashionable Points of View Syracuse University School of Art and Design

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Full Circle Szozda Gallery

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Casey Landerkin: Paintings and Illustrations Echo

12:00 PM Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-6:00 PM New Directions in Photography Syracuse University School of Art and Design

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)

12:30 PM Juan La Manna, piano; David Mastrangelo, violin Civic Morning Musicals

2:00 PM-7:00 PM 100 Years of Women Rockin' the World ArtRage Gallery

3:00 PM Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum

5:30 PM Briget Pegeen Kelly, poetry Raymond Carver Reading Series

5:30 PM-11:00 PM Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project (Read a review!)

7:30 PM Preview: The Miracle Worker Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Civil Twilight, with A Silent Film, Aunt Martha Westcott Theater

Next week  >>>

Wednesday, March 16, 2011


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, March 16



Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

This spring, both the main gallery and Window Projects feature emerging female artists and celebrate their artistic achievements at a time that coincides with International Women's Day (March 2011). Stephanie Rozene draws upon the fine line between design and the visual arts. Her work is the result of extensive research and gifted craftsmanship. Through the medium of ceramics (and with special attention to specific patterns, ornaments, and forms) she explores the politics of European ceramics and traces international developments in this medium back to the reigns of French kings Louis XV and Louis XVI. This is her first solo museum show.


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8:00 AM - 2:00 AM, March 16



Ingrid Ludt: "Forest becomes Ocean"
LeMoyne College

Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College, Syracuse


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 16



Winter Art Show
Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

Clayscapes Pottery Studio
1003 W. Fayette St., Suite L1, Syracuse

Come in from the cold and enjoy the warmth of friends and the glow of ceramic art made in The Studio at Clayscapes Pottery. Featuring ceramic artwork by Millie St. John, Tim See, Don Seymour, Shawn McGuire, Wes Weiss, and Sarah VanDerVoort as well as many others.


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



Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit
Onondaga Community College

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

Takafumi Ide is an interdisciplinary media artist specializing in installation with sound and light. He received his B.A. in graphic design from Tama Art University in Tokyo in 1989, and his M.F.A. in studio art from Stony Brook University in 2007. He has worked for more than 10 years as a graphic designer and an illustrator in Japan and now teaches at Stony Brook University as a lecturer, and Suffolk County Community College as an adjunct instructor.

He has received several honors, such as The Sculpture Space Fellowship and Residency (funded by both the Pollock-Krasner Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts), the Strategic Opportunity Stipend Program Grant through the New York Foundation for the Arts, and most recently the Nomura Cultural Foundation's Project Grant, Asahi Shimbun Foundation Project Grant, and the Vermont Studio Center's Partial-Grant and Residency. He has exhibited both nationally and internationally. More recent exhibitions include Sunroom Project Glynder Gallery, Wave Hill, NY, ISE Cultural Foundation in Soho, NY, and AC Institute in Chelsea, NY.

Read a review!


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



Davidovich in Situ: A Video Art Project
Point of Contact Gallery

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

Argentine video artist Jaime Davidovich returns to Syracuse University after an amazing year of grand-scale museum exhibitions worldwide, to work on site at The Point of Contact Gallery. Davidovich will present a series of his classic videos along with collage, photography, and a new series of paintings that he will produce on site.

Davidovich, on Painting and Video Art:

"My paintings are hybrids combining the tactile sensation of painting with the electronic pulse of video. The works are small in scale and intimate in nature. I want to do an art that speaks on a one-to-one basis with the viewer, no actors or story line, just a scale for human dialogue. In a time of video as spectacle, my work is indeed conflictive. I am interested in establishing a link (no pun intended) between Morandi and the Internet; the personal gesture and digital reproduction. These are the opposites that attract me. I use video because it is intimate, personal. I use the brush because is my gestural DNA."


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



Cortland County Art Exhibit
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

Artists include Fred Zimmerman, David Yaman, Kathy Williams, Carl Steckler, Laurie Seamans, Meg Richardson, Lyla Phillips, Allen Phillips, Joan Niswender, Richard Mitchell, Amy Hnatko, Emily Gibbons, Serry Dans, Kathie Beale, and David Beale.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 16



Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

On display will be pulp magazines, notably titles like Weird Tales and Amazing Stories; the typescript of Isaac Asimov's "Strange Playfellow," which introduced readers to one of science fiction's best known characters, Robbie the Robot; and correspondence with figures like Ray Bradbury.

Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 16



Marcel Breuer and Postwar America
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

Drawings from the Marcel Breuer Papers, curated by SU Architecture students, with Barry Bergdoll and Jonathan Massey. The exhibition is the outcome of their work in the extensive Breuer archive at the Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center. It features images of 120 drawings, as well as photographs, documenting thirteen of Breuer’s major postwar buildings and projects. Full-scale reproductions highlight themes that characterized some of Breuer’s lesser-known major work and document his responses to the needs and opportunities of postwar American society.

Breuer (1902-1981) was a leading figure among the second generation of modernist architects whose striking designs for furniture, houses, institutions, and commercial buildings helped to set the shape and style of modernity in Europe and the United States, leading “Time” magazine to characterize him as one of the “form givers of the 20th century.” His works include the UNESCO headquarters in Paris and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 16



Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day
Westcott Community Art Gallery

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

This group exhibit showcases both the artwork of local women artists, as well as artwork with women-focused subjects. Artists will be sharing their personal experiences in a number of areas. The artists from the CNY area and include Maria Rizzo (painting), Amanda Gormley (photography), Patricia Seitz (painting), Suzanne Masters (paint and collage), Sherry Gordon (painting), Kristie Hayes (painting and drawing), Carla Senecal (installation artwork), and Michael Moody (painting and prints).


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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 16



Tonal Gestures
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Diana Godfrey: mixed media pastels and acrylic paintings
Carmel Nicoletti: bronze reliefs and glass works


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



Amos Kennedy Prints!
Community Folk Art Center

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

Focusing on issues of race, violence and community, "Amos Kennedy Prints!" features the hand-printed works of Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr. and will include prints created at CFAC. By transforming the gallery into an active printmaking workshop, Kennedy will collaborate with students from the Syracuse area and Syracuse University to create images and broadsides that reflect issues of race, gender and politics and illustrate the impact of violence in the city on their lives and community. The public is invited to meet Kennedy and to observe and participate in the printmaking process.


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



No Boundaries: Color & Landscape
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery

Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr., Fayetteville

Works by Scott Bennett and Michael Matthews.

Note: Limestone Art is now in its new location next to Pascale's at 105 Brooklea Dr. in Fayetteville.

Scott Bennett's new series of vivid landscape paintings have found their inspiration close to home, or rather at his new home and studio in Jamesville, NY.  While continuing his characteristic impasto painting technique, Bennett shares his inspiration with us: "Our property has wonderful woods and views in all directions, and most of these paintings are inspired by the beauty I see everyday when I look out any window or walk out the door." His work has been exhibited in over 40 national exhibitions, and is included in numerous corporate and private collections. This is Bennett's second exhibition at Limestone.
 
Michael Matthews' landscapes are developed from sketchbook watercolors created on site during his travels, at times during below freezing temperatures as ice forms while he paints.  Back in the studio, Matthews creates large paintings from a singe sketch or an amalgamation of his watercolors. Michael Matthews lives in Syracuse, NY and in Harrogate, British Columbia.  His work is found in over 60 corporate art collections.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 16



Toys from the 1970s
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

This year's version will feature toys from the 1970s. Do you remember playing Pong on Atari, getting your first Luke Skywalker figure, or just wishing to have your own Malibu Barbie? Then you won't want to miss this journey into the decade of Charlie's Angels, Richard Nixon and a gallon of gasoline at fifty cents.


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



Fashionable Points of View
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

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

"Fashionable Points of View" marks the first time the SU fashion design faculty has presented its work as a group. The artwork in the exhibition includes beautifully crafted garments, accessories and fine art.

Among the faculty designers showcasing their expertise and interest within the field of fashion are Jeffrey Mayer, fashion design program coordinator; Karen Bakke; Todd Conover; Laurel Morton; Claudia Gervais; Joyce Backus; Elizabeth Shorrock; Megan Lawson Clark; and Jean Henry.

For more information, contact Mayer at jcmayer@syr.edu, or Lauren Tagliaferro at lktaglia@syr.edu.


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



Full Circle
Szozda Gallery

Szozda Gallery
Delavan Center, 501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Linda Esterley: mixed media collage
Lynette Blake: oil paintings
Elizabeth Moldenhauer: felted vessels


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 16



Infinite Mirror: Images of American Identity
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

Infinite Mirror: Images of American Identity is a rich, reflective exhibition of works by 40 artists representing the vast cultural blend of modern American society.

American artists of African, Arab, European, Asian, Latino, and Native American descent explore their heritage in this vivid and diverse exhibition using a wide variety of media. The artists examine patriotism, communication, struggle for acceptance, being an American in the 21st century, and more. Humor, heartache, anger, apprehension--all emotions are evoked by these works, raising questions about race, class, gender and age. Four main themes run through Infinite Mirror: Self-Selection, Pride, Assimilation, and Protest, providing audiences with the opportunity to re-examine both the story and storytellers of the quintessential "American dream."

The exhibition was curated by Blake Bradford, Curator and Director of Education at the Barnes Foundation; Benito Huerta, Curator and Director of The Gallery at the University of Texas at Arlington; and Robert Lee, Curator and Executive Director at Asian American Arts Centre in New York.

Paid parking is available for weekday visitors in any SU pay lot. Free parking for weekend and evening visitors is available in the Q4 lot, located on College Place. Patrons should notify the attendant that they are visiting the SUArt Galleries. Evening and weekend parking is on a space-available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome.

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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 16



The Prints of Seong Moy
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

A selection of 30 woodcuts and etchings by the internationally known and collected Chinese American artist and educator. This exhibition is a limited retrospective look at Seong Moy's career as printmaker.

Moy's early works, small but complicated woodcuts on soft luminous papers, were immediately accepted by artists, curators, and the public. A painterly quality, so important to his entire graphic output, is evident in much of this work and is all the more special because it is captured in color wood block prints that require great sophistication and skill from the artist.

As Moy's career continued to develop, his interest in capturing spatial relationships of shapes and forms in his compositions, was heightened by the role color plays in energizing these elements. This trend continued for a number a years and could also be found in his cardboard relief prints.

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


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 16



Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

A profile of pulp artist Norman Saunders (1907-1989), including 10 lush and dramatic Saunders paintings from the university collection.

Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 16



Casey Landerkin: Paintings and Illustrations
Echo

745 N. Salina St. (formerly Craft Chemistry)
Syracuse


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



Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School
Everson Museum of Art

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

In 2008, Ah Leon envisioned a monumental ceramic installation showcasing dozens of stoneware desks and chairs in neat rows like the classrooms of our youth. It began with a small grouping called Memories of Elementary School first exhibited in August 2008 at The Taipei Gallery Exposition and in 2009 at the Phoenix Art Museum in conjunction with the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) annual conference. Ah Leon continued to make more desks which were exhibited at the American Museum of Ceramic Art (AMOCA) in 2010. Another year has passed and Ah Leon has completed the 20 sets of desks and chairs which will be showcased in this exhibition.

His original idea was to create a classroom environment that would “lead audiences to remember their childhood stories.” Ah Leon studied elementary school desks, determined that his creations would be authentic, revealing memories through carved initials, scratches and drawings on their worn surfaces. His classroom would preserve the stories of our childhood as if they were “frozen in the museum space.”

The first two rows of tables and chairs appear new. They become progressively more dilapidated--some broken, some leaning--until the last rows where the furniture is falling over and ultimately only chips and severed parts remain on the floor. In one area the desks are arranged as if a teacher reads to a group of children. The impact of the scene is immediate: viewers are taken back to their own childhood classroom and long forgotten memories drift to the surface.

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



Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds
Everson Museum of Art

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

The 2011 exhibition program will continue to highlight the talented artists of New York State through a series of focused exhibitions. The season opens with Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds, an exhibition featuring more than 100 original works of art that are seriously hilarious. The small-scale drawings depicting the comedic daily lives of humans and animals alike are all rendered by hand in a variety of media, an approach that is becoming increasing rare in a world of computer-generated images.

Dan Reynolds began drawing cartoons in 1989, when he was 30. As a youth center instructor, Reynolds was surrounded by youthful energy and creative minds. He was an avid follower of popular cartoons of the time, such as Gary Larson's Far Side and Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes. A native of Brewerton, NY, Reynolds was inspired by his Central New York surroundings, a place where snow is abundant and cows can be found just minutes from anywhere. From the beginning, Reynolds has used farm animals as messengers of humor, particularly cows, pigs and chickens, a series that was immediately accepted by Reader's Digest in 1989. A new cartoon has appeared in every issue since then. Reynolds' cartoons have also appeared in thematic Reynolds Unwrapped book compilations featuring everything from sports to holiday special editions. American Greetings and Recycled Greeting Cards also feature Reynolds cartoons on greeting cards for every occasion.

In 2008, Reynolds was diagnosed with testicular cancer and subsequently received months of chemotherapy. While he was in treatment, he began drawing cartoons about cancer and his personal experience which he found was shared by his fellow patients. He shared the cartoons with the staff and patients at the facility and discovered the power of art to bring humor to an otherwise humorless situation.

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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 16



New Directions in Photography
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

XL Projects
307-313 S. Clinton St., Syracuse

What does it mean to be an art photographer today? In this exhibition, the third-year art photography graduate students prove that the photographic medium has outgrown its traditional function as singular-print-on-the-wall and is now an expanded practice that includes video, sculpture, installation and performance.

Although the four photographers -- Sarah Zamecnik, Shimpei Shirafuji, Jeffrey Einhorn and Colleen Woolpert -- push their work in different directions, one belief unites them: the image is paramount, whether it is static or in motion; surrounded by a frame or mounted to a sculptural form; printed on paper or projected onto surfaces; silent or accompanied by sound. It operates sometimes as documentation, other times as replication or appropriation. It is used variously to depict truths or to create fictions derived from truths or the realm of the artist's imagination.

For more information, contact Colleen Woolpert at cmwoolpe@syr.edu. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 16



Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud
The Warehouse Gallery

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

The young female Swiss designer duo, Sarah Kueng and Lovis Caputo, will install a hotel in the Warehouse Gallery. The main gallery will be transformed into small ephemeral rooms where the visitor is invited to take a break from reality and to take a mini-vacation complete with a number of very simple, inexpensive and joyful elements. When seated or lying down, the public's focus is drawn to the interior space and lighting. The idea for a temporary hotel goes back to Kueng's and Caputo's 72 Hours Hotel, which was initially developed in 2006 for the train station in Zurich, Switzerland. Both artists have been widely exhibited. This is their first museum solo show in the U.S.

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2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, March 16



100 Years of Women Rockin' the World
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

This exhibition features the art of 35 women artists -- nine local to Syracuse, and the rest from communities across the country. These women, in keeping with the mission of ArtRage, are also activists and their work expresses a whole range of issues important to both women and the community of concerned people worldwide: self-image, hunger, collective action, war, children, the status of women, immigration, environmental crisis, alternative lifestyles and self-discovery.

Participating artists include Arlene Abend, Amy Bartell, Ellen Blalock, Marlena Buczek, Elizabeth Carter, Jen Cartwright, the Chicago Women's Graphic Collective, Sue Coe, Erin Currier, Jane Evershed, Raina Gentry, Susan Grabel, Sharon Lee Hart, Robin Hewlett, Gail Hoffman, Nancy Hom, Katherine Hughes, Lahib Jaddo, Mollie Kellogg, Kate Luscher, Dierdre Luzwick, Sofia Perez, Ruth Putter, Favianna Rodriguez, Gazelle Samizay, Nicole Schulman, Sarah Walroth, Anita Welych and Oceans Unraveled project with artists: Aviva Alter, Mary Buczek, Mary Ellen Croteau.


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Film
 

5:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 16



Jenny Holzer installation
Urban Video Project

Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Internationally renowned artist Jenny Holzer created a site-specific installation that streams across the façade of Syracuse Stage on an LED curtain. The installation features 272 aphorisms from her celebrated series "Truisms" and "Survival" that challenge viewers' assumptions about the world we live in through the use of language as art. Whether questioning consumerist impulses or lamenting the struggles of daily living, Jenny Holzer always provokes a response. Her work crosses the boundary between poetry and visual art, and suggests both the limitations and power of technology and the information age.

For more than 30 years, this influential American conceptual artist has been creating subversive works that blend in among advertisements in public spaces questioning and confronting our passive consumption of information. Since the early 1970s, Holzer has been collecting and writing phrases and aphorisms found in literature, philosophy and contemporary culture. She calls these summaries her Truisms, and has printed them on bronze plaques, painted signs, stone benches, footstools, stickers, t-shirts, condoms, paintings, photographs, video, sound, light projection, and the Internet. In 1982, Holzer installed "Truisms" on one of Times Square's gigantic LED billboards. In the 1980s, for her "Survival" series, Holzer adopted more personal and urgent messages about the realities of everyday living. Power, vulnerability, violence, tenderness, moral struggles and motherhood are courageously chronicled in this series which continuously prods the viewer to question the role of individuals in society.

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History
 

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



Implements of Mass Construction
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

The Erie Canal was built by thousands of untrained men during the 19th century, before the United States had any civil engineering professionals. So how did they construct a canal across the entire state of New York? Come by the Erie Canal Museum and see the tools that made it possible. The 16 items on view were used for construction or industry along the Erie Canal in the 19th century. Visit the Museum's second floor gallery to try to guess what each instrument is. Tools similar to some of the implements on display are still used today, but others will require some guesswork. Come visit today to guess for yourself!


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12:00 PM, March 16



Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total)

Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.


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3:00 PM, March 16



Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total)

Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.


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Music
 

12:30 PM, March 16



John Spradling, piano
Civic Morning Musicals

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

Beethoven's Bagatelles, Op. 33 and Waldstein Sonata.


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7:00 PM, March 16



Bells & Motley Celtic Consort's Medieval Muse and Minstrelsy
LeMoyne College

Price: Free
James Commons
Le Moyne College, Syracuse

Explore the musical arts of Gaelic kings and commoners with harp, hurdy-gurdy, bagpipes and voices. Sondra and John Bromka’s versatile accomplishment in European historic music, dance and literary traditions have inspired audiences for over 25 years.

This program is a part of LeMoyne Irish Culture Week, co-sponsored by the Medieval Roundtable.


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7:00 PM, March 16



A Night of Irish Music and Dancing
Drumcliffe School of Irish Dance
Featuring Lunasa Irish Band

Price: $22
Palace Theater
2384 James St., Syracuse


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Theater
 

7:30 PM, March 16



Lord of the Dance
Broadway in Syracuse

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

Described by the New York Post as "fascinating, rewarding and above all, entertaining," and by the Los Angeles Times as "a showpiece extravaganza," Lord of the Dance is a mesmerizing blend of traditional and modern Celtic music and dance. The story is based upon mythical Irish folklore as Don Dorcha, Lord of Darkness, challenges the ethereal lord of light, the Lord of the Dance. Battle lines are drawn, passions ignite and a love story fueled by the dramatic leaps and turns of dancers bodies begins to build against a backdrop of Celtic rhythm. The action is played out over 21 scenes on a grand scale of precision dancing, dramatic music, colorful costumes and state-of-the-art staging and lighting.


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Thursday, March 17, 2011


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, March 17



Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

This spring, both the main gallery and Window Projects feature emerging female artists and celebrate their artistic achievements at a time that coincides with International Women's Day (March 2011). Stephanie Rozene draws upon the fine line between design and the visual arts. Her work is the result of extensive research and gifted craftsmanship. Through the medium of ceramics (and with special attention to specific patterns, ornaments, and forms) she explores the politics of European ceramics and traces international developments in this medium back to the reigns of French kings Louis XV and Louis XVI. This is her first solo museum show.


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5:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 17



Opening: Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show
Redhouse

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

There will be an opening reception this evening 5:00-8:00 pm as part of Th3, with an Awards Presentation at 7:00 pm.

A selection of work from young women at Fowler, Nottingham and IT high schools.


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8:00 AM - 2:00 AM, March 17



Ingrid Ludt: "Forest becomes Ocean"
LeMoyne College

Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College, Syracuse


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 17



Winter Art Show
Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

Clayscapes Pottery Studio
1003 W. Fayette St., Suite L1, Syracuse

Come in from the cold and enjoy the warmth of friends and the glow of ceramic art made in The Studio at Clayscapes Pottery. Featuring ceramic artwork by Millie St. John, Tim See, Don Seymour, Shawn McGuire, Wes Weiss, and Sarah VanDerVoort as well as many others.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 17



Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit
Onondaga Community College

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

Takafumi Ide is an interdisciplinary media artist specializing in installation with sound and light. He received his B.A. in graphic design from Tama Art University in Tokyo in 1989, and his M.F.A. in studio art from Stony Brook University in 2007. He has worked for more than 10 years as a graphic designer and an illustrator in Japan and now teaches at Stony Brook University as a lecturer, and Suffolk County Community College as an adjunct instructor.

He has received several honors, such as The Sculpture Space Fellowship and Residency (funded by both the Pollock-Krasner Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts), the Strategic Opportunity Stipend Program Grant through the New York Foundation for the Arts, and most recently the Nomura Cultural Foundation's Project Grant, Asahi Shimbun Foundation Project Grant, and the Vermont Studio Center's Partial-Grant and Residency. He has exhibited both nationally and internationally. More recent exhibitions include Sunroom Project Glynder Gallery, Wave Hill, NY, ISE Cultural Foundation in Soho, NY, and AC Institute in Chelsea, NY.

Read a review!


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 17



Cortland County Art Exhibit
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

Artists include Fred Zimmerman, David Yaman, Kathy Williams, Carl Steckler, Laurie Seamans, Meg Richardson, Lyla Phillips, Allen Phillips, Joan Niswender, Richard Mitchell, Amy Hnatko, Emily Gibbons, Serry Dans, Kathie Beale, and David Beale.


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



Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

On display will be pulp magazines, notably titles like Weird Tales and Amazing Stories; the typescript of Isaac Asimov's "Strange Playfellow," which introduced readers to one of science fiction's best known characters, Robbie the Robot; and correspondence with figures like Ray Bradbury.

Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 17



Marcel Breuer and Postwar America
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

Drawings from the Marcel Breuer Papers, curated by SU Architecture students, with Barry Bergdoll and Jonathan Massey. The exhibition is the outcome of their work in the extensive Breuer archive at the Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center. It features images of 120 drawings, as well as photographs, documenting thirteen of Breuer’s major postwar buildings and projects. Full-scale reproductions highlight themes that characterized some of Breuer’s lesser-known major work and document his responses to the needs and opportunities of postwar American society.

Breuer (1902-1981) was a leading figure among the second generation of modernist architects whose striking designs for furniture, houses, institutions, and commercial buildings helped to set the shape and style of modernity in Europe and the United States, leading “Time” magazine to characterize him as one of the “form givers of the 20th century.” His works include the UNESCO headquarters in Paris and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York.


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9:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 17



Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day
Westcott Community Art Gallery

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

Artists will be on hand this evening 5:00-8:00 PM to discuss their work, as part of Th3, the Third Thursday citywide art open.

This group exhibit showcases both the artwork of local women artists, as well as artwork with women-focused subjects. Artists will be sharing their personal experiences in a number of areas. The artists from the CNY area and include Maria Rizzo (painting), Amanda Gormley (photography), Patricia Seitz (painting), Suzanne Masters (paint and collage), Sherry Gordon (painting), Kristie Hayes (painting and drawing), Carla Senecal (installation artwork), and Michael Moody (painting and prints).


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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 17



Tonal Gestures
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Diana Godfrey: mixed media pastels and acrylic paintings
Carmel Nicoletti: bronze reliefs and glass works


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



Amos Kennedy Prints!
Community Folk Art Center

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

Focusing on issues of race, violence and community, "Amos Kennedy Prints!" features the hand-printed works of Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr. and will include prints created at CFAC. By transforming the gallery into an active printmaking workshop, Kennedy will collaborate with students from the Syracuse area and Syracuse University to create images and broadsides that reflect issues of race, gender and politics and illustrate the impact of violence in the city on their lives and community. The public is invited to meet Kennedy and to observe and participate in the printmaking process.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 17



No Boundaries: Color & Landscape
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery

Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr., Fayetteville

Works by Scott Bennett and Michael Matthews.

Note: Limestone Art is now in its new location next to Pascale's at 105 Brooklea Dr. in Fayetteville.

Scott Bennett's new series of vivid landscape paintings have found their inspiration close to home, or rather at his new home and studio in Jamesville, NY.  While continuing his characteristic impasto painting technique, Bennett shares his inspiration with us: "Our property has wonderful woods and views in all directions, and most of these paintings are inspired by the beauty I see everyday when I look out any window or walk out the door." His work has been exhibited in over 40 national exhibitions, and is included in numerous corporate and private collections. This is Bennett's second exhibition at Limestone.
 
Michael Matthews' landscapes are developed from sketchbook watercolors created on site during his travels, at times during below freezing temperatures as ice forms while he paints.  Back in the studio, Matthews creates large paintings from a singe sketch or an amalgamation of his watercolors. Michael Matthews lives in Syracuse, NY and in Harrogate, British Columbia.  His work is found in over 60 corporate art collections.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 17



Toys from the 1970s
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

This year's version will feature toys from the 1970s. Do you remember playing Pong on Atari, getting your first Luke Skywalker figure, or just wishing to have your own Malibu Barbie? Then you won't want to miss this journey into the decade of Charlie's Angels, Richard Nixon and a gallon of gasoline at fifty cents.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 17



Fashionable Points of View
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

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

"Fashionable Points of View" marks the first time the SU fashion design faculty has presented its work as a group. The artwork in the exhibition includes beautifully crafted garments, accessories and fine art.

Among the faculty designers showcasing their expertise and interest within the field of fashion are Jeffrey Mayer, fashion design program coordinator; Karen Bakke; Todd Conover; Laurel Morton; Claudia Gervais; Joyce Backus; Elizabeth Shorrock; Megan Lawson Clark; and Jean Henry.

For more information, contact Mayer at jcmayer@syr.edu, or Lauren Tagliaferro at lktaglia@syr.edu.


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



Full Circle
Szozda Gallery

Szozda Gallery
Delavan Center, 501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Linda Esterley: mixed media collage
Lynette Blake: oil paintings
Elizabeth Moldenhauer: felted vessels


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11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 17



Forrest Lesch-Middelton: Recent Work
Gandee Gallery

Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St., Fabius

Forrest Lesch-Middelton's pottery combines historic patterns with modern-day technology. The resulting work creates a subtle narrative that references the cross-cultural influences that impact every facet of daily life. Pottery is used as a metaphor to illustrate this phenomenon. To achieve the intricate patterns, Lesch-Middelton uses silkscreen and embossment transfer techniques. He says of his artwork, "By blending form, pattern, and surface, my goal is to create an object that simultaneously elicits a visceral and intellectual response, followed by a contemplation of my work as a whole."

Lesch-Middelton received his MFA in Ceramics from Utah State University in 2006 and a BFA in Ceramics from New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University in 1998. He is currently the Ceramics Program Coordinator at the Sonoma Community Center in Sonoma, California and teaches at Santa Rosa Jr. College and Solano College in the San Francisco Bay area. His artwork has been shown in many venues nationally, including the Baltimore Clayworks (MD), Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts (TN), and Santa Fe Clay Center (NM). He currently lives with his wife and two daughters in Northern California.


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



Infinite Mirror: Images of American Identity
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

Infinite Mirror: Images of American Identity is a rich, reflective exhibition of works by 40 artists representing the vast cultural blend of modern American society.

American artists of African, Arab, European, Asian, Latino, and Native American descent explore their heritage in this vivid and diverse exhibition using a wide variety of media. The artists examine patriotism, communication, struggle for acceptance, being an American in the 21st century, and more. Humor, heartache, anger, apprehension--all emotions are evoked by these works, raising questions about race, class, gender and age. Four main themes run through Infinite Mirror: Self-Selection, Pride, Assimilation, and Protest, providing audiences with the opportunity to re-examine both the story and storytellers of the quintessential "American dream."

The exhibition was curated by Blake Bradford, Curator and Director of Education at the Barnes Foundation; Benito Huerta, Curator and Director of The Gallery at the University of Texas at Arlington; and Robert Lee, Curator and Executive Director at Asian American Arts Centre in New York.

Paid parking is available for weekday visitors in any SU pay lot. Free parking for weekend and evening visitors is available in the Q4 lot, located on College Place. Patrons should notify the attendant that they are visiting the SUArt Galleries. Evening and weekend parking is on a space-available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome.

Read a review!


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



The Prints of Seong Moy
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

A selection of 30 woodcuts and etchings by the internationally known and collected Chinese American artist and educator. This exhibition is a limited retrospective look at Seong Moy's career as printmaker.

Moy's early works, small but complicated woodcuts on soft luminous papers, were immediately accepted by artists, curators, and the public. A painterly quality, so important to his entire graphic output, is evident in much of this work and is all the more special because it is captured in color wood block prints that require great sophistication and skill from the artist.

As Moy's career continued to develop, his interest in capturing spatial relationships of shapes and forms in his compositions, was heightened by the role color plays in energizing these elements. This trend continued for a number a years and could also be found in his cardboard relief prints.

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


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



Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

A profile of pulp artist Norman Saunders (1907-1989), including 10 lush and dramatic Saunders paintings from the university collection.

Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 17



Casey Landerkin: Paintings and Illustrations
Echo

745 N. Salina St. (formerly Craft Chemistry)
Syracuse


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



Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School
Everson Museum of Art

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

In 2008, Ah Leon envisioned a monumental ceramic installation showcasing dozens of stoneware desks and chairs in neat rows like the classrooms of our youth. It began with a small grouping called Memories of Elementary School first exhibited in August 2008 at The Taipei Gallery Exposition and in 2009 at the Phoenix Art Museum in conjunction with the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) annual conference. Ah Leon continued to make more desks which were exhibited at the American Museum of Ceramic Art (AMOCA) in 2010. Another year has passed and Ah Leon has completed the 20 sets of desks and chairs which will be showcased in this exhibition.

His original idea was to create a classroom environment that would “lead audiences to remember their childhood stories.” Ah Leon studied elementary school desks, determined that his creations would be authentic, revealing memories through carved initials, scratches and drawings on their worn surfaces. His classroom would preserve the stories of our childhood as if they were “frozen in the museum space.”

The first two rows of tables and chairs appear new. They become progressively more dilapidated--some broken, some leaning--until the last rows where the furniture is falling over and ultimately only chips and severed parts remain on the floor. In one area the desks are arranged as if a teacher reads to a group of children. The impact of the scene is immediate: viewers are taken back to their own childhood classroom and long forgotten memories drift to the surface.

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



Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds
Everson Museum of Art

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

The 2011 exhibition program will continue to highlight the talented artists of New York State through a series of focused exhibitions. The season opens with Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds, an exhibition featuring more than 100 original works of art that are seriously hilarious. The small-scale drawings depicting the comedic daily lives of humans and animals alike are all rendered by hand in a variety of media, an approach that is becoming increasing rare in a world of computer-generated images.

Dan Reynolds began drawing cartoons in 1989, when he was 30. As a youth center instructor, Reynolds was surrounded by youthful energy and creative minds. He was an avid follower of popular cartoons of the time, such as Gary Larson's Far Side and Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes. A native of Brewerton, NY, Reynolds was inspired by his Central New York surroundings, a place where snow is abundant and cows can be found just minutes from anywhere. From the beginning, Reynolds has used farm animals as messengers of humor, particularly cows, pigs and chickens, a series that was immediately accepted by Reader's Digest in 1989. A new cartoon has appeared in every issue since then. Reynolds' cartoons have also appeared in thematic Reynolds Unwrapped book compilations featuring everything from sports to holiday special editions. American Greetings and Recycled Greeting Cards also feature Reynolds cartoons on greeting cards for every occasion.

In 2008, Reynolds was diagnosed with testicular cancer and subsequently received months of chemotherapy. While he was in treatment, he began drawing cartoons about cancer and his personal experience which he found was shared by his fellow patients. He shared the cartoons with the staff and patients at the facility and discovered the power of art to bring humor to an otherwise humorless situation.

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



New Directions in Photography
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

XL Projects
307-313 S. Clinton St., Syracuse

What does it mean to be an art photographer today? In this exhibition, the third-year art photography graduate students prove that the photographic medium has outgrown its traditional function as singular-print-on-the-wall and is now an expanded practice that includes video, sculpture, installation and performance.

Although the four photographers -- Sarah Zamecnik, Shimpei Shirafuji, Jeffrey Einhorn and Colleen Woolpert -- push their work in different directions, one belief unites them: the image is paramount, whether it is static or in motion; surrounded by a frame or mounted to a sculptural form; printed on paper or projected onto surfaces; silent or accompanied by sound. It operates sometimes as documentation, other times as replication or appropriation. It is used variously to depict truths or to create fictions derived from truths or the realm of the artist's imagination.

For more information, contact Colleen Woolpert at cmwoolpe@syr.edu. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours.


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



Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud
The Warehouse Gallery

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

The young female Swiss designer duo, Sarah Kueng and Lovis Caputo, will install a hotel in the Warehouse Gallery. The main gallery will be transformed into small ephemeral rooms where the visitor is invited to take a break from reality and to take a mini-vacation complete with a number of very simple, inexpensive and joyful elements. When seated or lying down, the public's focus is drawn to the interior space and lighting. The idea for a temporary hotel goes back to Kueng's and Caputo's 72 Hours Hotel, which was initially developed in 2006 for the train station in Zurich, Switzerland. Both artists have been widely exhibited. This is their first museum solo show in the U.S.

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2:00 PM - 8:00 PM, March 17



100 Years of Women Rockin' the World
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

This exhibition features the art of 35 women artists -- nine local to Syracuse, and the rest from communities across the country. These women, in keeping with the mission of ArtRage, are also activists and their work expresses a whole range of issues important to both women and the community of concerned people worldwide: self-image, hunger, collective action, war, children, the status of women, immigration, environmental crisis, alternative lifestyles and self-discovery.

Participating artists include Arlene Abend, Amy Bartell, Ellen Blalock, Marlena Buczek, Elizabeth Carter, Jen Cartwright, the Chicago Women's Graphic Collective, Sue Coe, Erin Currier, Jane Evershed, Raina Gentry, Susan Grabel, Sharon Lee Hart, Robin Hewlett, Gail Hoffman, Nancy Hom, Katherine Hughes, Lahib Jaddo, Mollie Kellogg, Kate Luscher, Dierdre Luzwick, Sofia Perez, Ruth Putter, Favianna Rodriguez, Gazelle Samizay, Nicole Schulman, Sarah Walroth, Anita Welych and Oceans Unraveled project with artists: Aviva Alter, Mary Buczek, Mary Ellen Croteau.


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



Artist in Attendance: Lauren Ritchie
Eureka Crafts

Eureka Crafts
210 Walton St., Syracuse


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



Davidovich in Situ: A Video Art Project
Point of Contact Gallery

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

Argentine video artist Jaime Davidovich returns to Syracuse University after an amazing year of grand-scale museum exhibitions worldwide, to work on site at The Point of Contact Gallery. Davidovich will present a series of his classic videos along with collage, photography, and a new series of paintings that he will produce on site.

Davidovich, on Painting and Video Art:

"My paintings are hybrids combining the tactile sensation of painting with the electronic pulse of video. The works are small in scale and intimate in nature. I want to do an art that speaks on a one-to-one basis with the viewer, no actors or story line, just a scale for human dialogue. In a time of video as spectacle, my work is indeed conflictive. I am interested in establishing a link (no pun intended) between Morandi and the Internet; the personal gesture and digital reproduction. These are the opposites that attract me. I use video because it is intimate, personal. I use the brush because is my gestural DNA."


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



Impressions of Central New York
SparkyTown Restaurant

Price: Free
SparkyTown Restaurant
324 Burnet Ave., Syracuse

Luminous landscapes done in oil pastel, by Adriana Meiss.


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



Everything is Illustrated
SUNY Oswego Metro Center at the Atrium

SUNY Oswego Metro Center at the Atrium
2 Clinton Square, Syracuse

Recent work by emerging illustrators Ben Petrie, Ian McCullough, Bradford Waterman, Aaron White, and Lach Kaddick.


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6:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 17



Demitrus Oliver: Mare, 2009
Urban Video Project

Everson Museum of Art Plaza
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Mare, 2009, projects a circular image of a wave crashing against an unnamed shore. As the image rotates, the lines of the waves begin to resemble the layered surface of a Jovian planet such as Jupiter. Connecting the sea with heavenly phenomena, the installation recreates the sense of wonderment felt when looking at the night sky and the fundamental human desire to understand one's place in the universe. Mare, which is Latin for "seas", suggests movement and journeys both physical and metaphysical, as well as metaphors of darkness and illumination, looking and discovery.


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Film
 

9:00 AM - 1:00 AM, March 17



Cinefest 2011
Syracuse Cinephile Society

Price: $25/day; $75/all four days
Holiday Inn
Electronics Parkway, Liverpool

9:00 am: The Idol of Seville (1932) with Rene Denny
9:25 am: Forgotten Commandments (1932) with Gene Raymond
10:50 am: Glorious Betsy (1928) with Dolores Costello
LUNCH BREAK
1:00 pm: Trailer Mania 3: "Through the Years With Columbia," hosted by Ray Faiola
2:00 pm: Happiness (1917) with Enid Bennett
3:10 pm: Denny from Ireland (1918) with Shorty Hamilton
3:55 pm: What Price Glory? (1927) with Victor McLaglen
DINNER BREAK
8:00 pm: Panama, the Peculiar Prodigy (1920s): Sunshine Cruises series.
8:10 pm: America's Little Lamb (1928): The World We Live In series
8:25 pm: Music in the Air (1934) with Gloria Swanson
9:50 pm: The Newlyweds' Pest (1929) with Sunny Jim McKeen as "Snookums", Jack Egan, Derelys Perdue
??:?? pm: Mannequin (1926) with Alice Joyce, Warner Baxter, Zazu Pitts, Delores Costello
11:20 pm: Hellzapoppin' (1941) with Olsen and Johnson, Martha Raye


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5:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 17



Jenny Holzer installation
Urban Video Project

Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Internationally renowned artist Jenny Holzer created a site-specific installation that streams across the façade of Syracuse Stage on an LED curtain. The installation features 272 aphorisms from her celebrated series "Truisms" and "Survival" that challenge viewers' assumptions about the world we live in through the use of language as art. Whether questioning consumerist impulses or lamenting the struggles of daily living, Jenny Holzer always provokes a response. Her work crosses the boundary between poetry and visual art, and suggests both the limitations and power of technology and the information age.

For more than 30 years, this influential American conceptual artist has been creating subversive works that blend in among advertisements in public spaces questioning and confronting our passive consumption of information. Since the early 1970s, Holzer has been collecting and writing phrases and aphorisms found in literature, philosophy and contemporary culture. She calls these summaries her Truisms, and has printed them on bronze plaques, painted signs, stone benches, footstools, stickers, t-shirts, condoms, paintings, photographs, video, sound, light projection, and the Internet. In 1982, Holzer installed "Truisms" on one of Times Square's gigantic LED billboards. In the 1980s, for her "Survival" series, Holzer adopted more personal and urgent messages about the realities of everyday living. Power, vulnerability, violence, tenderness, moral struggles and motherhood are courageously chronicled in this series which continuously prods the viewer to question the role of individuals in society.

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History
 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 17



Implements of Mass Construction
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

The Erie Canal was built by thousands of untrained men during the 19th century, before the United States had any civil engineering professionals. So how did they construct a canal across the entire state of New York? Come by the Erie Canal Museum and see the tools that made it possible. The 16 items on view were used for construction or industry along the Erie Canal in the 19th century. Visit the Museum's second floor gallery to try to guess what each instrument is. Tools similar to some of the implements on display are still used today, but others will require some guesswork. Come visit today to guess for yourself!


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12:00 PM, March 17



Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total)

Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.


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3:00 PM, March 17



Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total)

Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.


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Lecture
 

6:00 PM, March 17



Artist Talk: Stephanie Rozene
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Artist talk in conjunction with the Windows Project exhibit "The Politics of Porcelain."


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Theater
 

6:45 PM, March 17



A Wee Bit O' Murder
Acme Mystery Company

Price: $32.50 plus tax and gratuities (includes meal and show)
Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St., Syracuse

Holy St. Patrick on a stick! Someone has stolen the pot of gold and now you and all the other leprechauns of Clover Union Local Number 7 have your little tails in a spin. The president of your local, Jimmy Jack Daniels O'Toole is demanding that you get your wee bottoms over to the pub as fast as your little feet can go. If the International Fellowship of Little Knickers finds out about this, you'll all be turned into garden gnomes!

For reservations, phone 315-475-1807, or email syracuse@meatballs.com.


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8:00 PM, March 17



Corpus Christi
Rarely Done Productions
Dan Tursi, director

Price: $20
Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St., Syracuse

The most controversial and talked-about play of 1998. An old and familiar story, but from that point on, nothing feels quite familiar again. What follows is a story that parallels the New Testament, and its subject is nothing less than the birth, death, and resurrection of Jesus. But author Terrence McNally's Christ figure is a character named Joshua, a young man born and raised in Corpus Christi, Texas, in the early 1950s.

This play is intended for mature audiences only.

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Friday, March 18, 2011


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, March 18



Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

This spring, both the main gallery and Window Projects feature emerging female artists and celebrate their artistic achievements at a time that coincides with International Women's Day (March 2011). Stephanie Rozene draws upon the fine line between design and the visual arts. Her work is the result of extensive research and gifted craftsmanship. Through the medium of ceramics (and with special attention to specific patterns, ornaments, and forms) she explores the politics of European ceramics and traces international developments in this medium back to the reigns of French kings Louis XV and Louis XVI. This is her first solo museum show.


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8:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 18



Ingrid Ludt: "Forest becomes Ocean"
LeMoyne College

Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College, Syracuse


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 18



Winter Art Show
Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

Clayscapes Pottery Studio
1003 W. Fayette St., Suite L1, Syracuse

Come in from the cold and enjoy the warmth of friends and the glow of ceramic art made in The Studio at Clayscapes Pottery. Featuring ceramic artwork by Millie St. John, Tim See, Don Seymour, Shawn McGuire, Wes Weiss, and Sarah VanDerVoort as well as many others.


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



Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit
Onondaga Community College

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

Takafumi Ide is an interdisciplinary media artist specializing in installation with sound and light. He received his B.A. in graphic design from Tama Art University in Tokyo in 1989, and his M.F.A. in studio art from Stony Brook University in 2007. He has worked for more than 10 years as a graphic designer and an illustrator in Japan and now teaches at Stony Brook University as a lecturer, and Suffolk County Community College as an adjunct instructor.

He has received several honors, such as The Sculpture Space Fellowship and Residency (funded by both the Pollock-Krasner Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts), the Strategic Opportunity Stipend Program Grant through the New York Foundation for the Arts, and most recently the Nomura Cultural Foundation's Project Grant, Asahi Shimbun Foundation Project Grant, and the Vermont Studio Center's Partial-Grant and Residency. He has exhibited both nationally and internationally. More recent exhibitions include Sunroom Project Glynder Gallery, Wave Hill, NY, ISE Cultural Foundation in Soho, NY, and AC Institute in Chelsea, NY.

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



Davidovich in Situ: A Video Art Project
Point of Contact Gallery

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

Argentine video artist Jaime Davidovich returns to Syracuse University after an amazing year of grand-scale museum exhibitions worldwide, to work on site at The Point of Contact Gallery. Davidovich will present a series of his classic videos along with collage, photography, and a new series of paintings that he will produce on site.

Davidovich, on Painting and Video Art:

"My paintings are hybrids combining the tactile sensation of painting with the electronic pulse of video. The works are small in scale and intimate in nature. I want to do an art that speaks on a one-to-one basis with the viewer, no actors or story line, just a scale for human dialogue. In a time of video as spectacle, my work is indeed conflictive. I am interested in establishing a link (no pun intended) between Morandi and the Internet; the personal gesture and digital reproduction. These are the opposites that attract me. I use video because it is intimate, personal. I use the brush because is my gestural DNA."


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



Cortland County Art Exhibit
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

Artists include Fred Zimmerman, David Yaman, Kathy Williams, Carl Steckler, Laurie Seamans, Meg Richardson, Lyla Phillips, Allen Phillips, Joan Niswender, Richard Mitchell, Amy Hnatko, Emily Gibbons, Serry Dans, Kathie Beale, and David Beale.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 18



Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

On display will be pulp magazines, notably titles like Weird Tales and Amazing Stories; the typescript of Isaac Asimov's "Strange Playfellow," which introduced readers to one of science fiction's best known characters, Robbie the Robot; and correspondence with figures like Ray Bradbury.

Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 18



Marcel Breuer and Postwar America
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

Drawings from the Marcel Breuer Papers, curated by SU Architecture students, with Barry Bergdoll and Jonathan Massey. The exhibition is the outcome of their work in the extensive Breuer archive at the Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center. It features images of 120 drawings, as well as photographs, documenting thirteen of Breuer’s major postwar buildings and projects. Full-scale reproductions highlight themes that characterized some of Breuer’s lesser-known major work and document his responses to the needs and opportunities of postwar American society.

Breuer (1902-1981) was a leading figure among the second generation of modernist architects whose striking designs for furniture, houses, institutions, and commercial buildings helped to set the shape and style of modernity in Europe and the United States, leading “Time” magazine to characterize him as one of the “form givers of the 20th century.” His works include the UNESCO headquarters in Paris and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 18



Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day
Westcott Community Art Gallery

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

This group exhibit showcases both the artwork of local women artists, as well as artwork with women-focused subjects. Artists will be sharing their personal experiences in a number of areas. The artists from the CNY area and include Maria Rizzo (painting), Amanda Gormley (photography), Patricia Seitz (painting), Suzanne Masters (paint and collage), Sherry Gordon (painting), Kristie Hayes (painting and drawing), Carla Senecal (installation artwork), and Michael Moody (painting and prints).


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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 18



Tonal Gestures
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Diana Godfrey: mixed media pastels and acrylic paintings
Carmel Nicoletti: bronze reliefs and glass works


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



Amos Kennedy Prints!
Community Folk Art Center

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

Focusing on issues of race, violence and community, "Amos Kennedy Prints!" features the hand-printed works of Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr. and will include prints created at CFAC. By transforming the gallery into an active printmaking workshop, Kennedy will collaborate with students from the Syracuse area and Syracuse University to create images and broadsides that reflect issues of race, gender and politics and illustrate the impact of violence in the city on their lives and community. The public is invited to meet Kennedy and to observe and participate in the printmaking process.


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



No Boundaries: Color & Landscape
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery

Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr., Fayetteville

Works by Scott Bennett and Michael Matthews.

Note: Limestone Art is now in its new location next to Pascale's at 105 Brooklea Dr. in Fayetteville.

Scott Bennett's new series of vivid landscape paintings have found their inspiration close to home, or rather at his new home and studio in Jamesville, NY.  While continuing his characteristic impasto painting technique, Bennett shares his inspiration with us: "Our property has wonderful woods and views in all directions, and most of these paintings are inspired by the beauty I see everyday when I look out any window or walk out the door." His work has been exhibited in over 40 national exhibitions, and is included in numerous corporate and private collections. This is Bennett's second exhibition at Limestone.
 
Michael Matthews' landscapes are developed from sketchbook watercolors created on site during his travels, at times during below freezing temperatures as ice forms while he paints.  Back in the studio, Matthews creates large paintings from a singe sketch or an amalgamation of his watercolors. Michael Matthews lives in Syracuse, NY and in Harrogate, British Columbia.  His work is found in over 60 corporate art collections.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 18



Toys from the 1970s
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

This year's version will feature toys from the 1970s. Do you remember playing Pong on Atari, getting your first Luke Skywalker figure, or just wishing to have your own Malibu Barbie? Then you won't want to miss this journey into the decade of Charlie's Angels, Richard Nixon and a gallon of gasoline at fifty cents.


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



Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show
Redhouse

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

A selection of work from young women at Fowler, Nottingham and IT high schools.


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



Fashionable Points of View
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

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

"Fashionable Points of View" marks the first time the SU fashion design faculty has presented its work as a group. The artwork in the exhibition includes beautifully crafted garments, accessories and fine art.

Among the faculty designers showcasing their expertise and interest within the field of fashion are Jeffrey Mayer, fashion design program coordinator; Karen Bakke; Todd Conover; Laurel Morton; Claudia Gervais; Joyce Backus; Elizabeth Shorrock; Megan Lawson Clark; and Jean Henry.

For more information, contact Mayer at jcmayer@syr.edu, or Lauren Tagliaferro at lktaglia@syr.edu.


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



Full Circle
Szozda Gallery

Szozda Gallery
Delavan Center, 501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Linda Esterley: mixed media collage
Lynette Blake: oil paintings
Elizabeth Moldenhauer: felted vessels


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



Forrest Lesch-Middelton: Recent Work
Gandee Gallery

Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St., Fabius

Forrest Lesch-Middelton's pottery combines historic patterns with modern-day technology. The resulting work creates a subtle narrative that references the cross-cultural influences that impact every facet of daily life. Pottery is used as a metaphor to illustrate this phenomenon. To achieve the intricate patterns, Lesch-Middelton uses silkscreen and embossment transfer techniques. He says of his artwork, "By blending form, pattern, and surface, my goal is to create an object that simultaneously elicits a visceral and intellectual response, followed by a contemplation of my work as a whole."

Lesch-Middelton received his MFA in Ceramics from Utah State University in 2006 and a BFA in Ceramics from New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University in 1998. He is currently the Ceramics Program Coordinator at the Sonoma Community Center in Sonoma, California and teaches at Santa Rosa Jr. College and Solano College in the San Francisco Bay area. His artwork has been shown in many venues nationally, including the Baltimore Clayworks (MD), Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts (TN), and Santa Fe Clay Center (NM). He currently lives with his wife and two daughters in Northern California.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 18



Infinite Mirror: Images of American Identity
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

Infinite Mirror: Images of American Identity is a rich, reflective exhibition of works by 40 artists representing the vast cultural blend of modern American society.

American artists of African, Arab, European, Asian, Latino, and Native American descent explore their heritage in this vivid and diverse exhibition using a wide variety of media. The artists examine patriotism, communication, struggle for acceptance, being an American in the 21st century, and more. Humor, heartache, anger, apprehension--all emotions are evoked by these works, raising questions about race, class, gender and age. Four main themes run through Infinite Mirror: Self-Selection, Pride, Assimilation, and Protest, providing audiences with the opportunity to re-examine both the story and storytellers of the quintessential "American dream."

The exhibition was curated by Blake Bradford, Curator and Director of Education at the Barnes Foundation; Benito Huerta, Curator and Director of The Gallery at the University of Texas at Arlington; and Robert Lee, Curator and Executive Director at Asian American Arts Centre in New York.

Paid parking is available for weekday visitors in any SU pay lot. Free parking for weekend and evening visitors is available in the Q4 lot, located on College Place. Patrons should notify the attendant that they are visiting the SUArt Galleries. Evening and weekend parking is on a space-available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome.

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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 18



The Prints of Seong Moy
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

A selection of 30 woodcuts and etchings by the internationally known and collected Chinese American artist and educator. This exhibition is a limited retrospective look at Seong Moy's career as printmaker.

Moy's early works, small but complicated woodcuts on soft luminous papers, were immediately accepted by artists, curators, and the public. A painterly quality, so important to his entire graphic output, is evident in much of this work and is all the more special because it is captured in color wood block prints that require great sophistication and skill from the artist.

As Moy's career continued to develop, his interest in capturing spatial relationships of shapes and forms in his compositions, was heightened by the role color plays in energizing these elements. This trend continued for a number a years and could also be found in his cardboard relief prints.

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


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 18



Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

A profile of pulp artist Norman Saunders (1907-1989), including 10 lush and dramatic Saunders paintings from the university collection.

Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."


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



Casey Landerkin: Paintings and Illustrations
Echo

745 N. Salina St. (formerly Craft Chemistry)
Syracuse


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



Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School
Everson Museum of Art

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

In 2008, Ah Leon envisioned a monumental ceramic installation showcasing dozens of stoneware desks and chairs in neat rows like the classrooms of our youth. It began with a small grouping called Memories of Elementary School first exhibited in August 2008 at The Taipei Gallery Exposition and in 2009 at the Phoenix Art Museum in conjunction with the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) annual conference. Ah Leon continued to make more desks which were exhibited at the American Museum of Ceramic Art (AMOCA) in 2010. Another year has passed and Ah Leon has completed the 20 sets of desks and chairs which will be showcased in this exhibition.

His original idea was to create a classroom environment that would “lead audiences to remember their childhood stories.” Ah Leon studied elementary school desks, determined that his creations would be authentic, revealing memories through carved initials, scratches and drawings on their worn surfaces. His classroom would preserve the stories of our childhood as if they were “frozen in the museum space.”

The first two rows of tables and chairs appear new. They become progressively more dilapidated--some broken, some leaning--until the last rows where the furniture is falling over and ultimately only chips and severed parts remain on the floor. In one area the desks are arranged as if a teacher reads to a group of children. The impact of the scene is immediate: viewers are taken back to their own childhood classroom and long forgotten memories drift to the surface.

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



Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds
Everson Museum of Art

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

The 2011 exhibition program will continue to highlight the talented artists of New York State through a series of focused exhibitions. The season opens with Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds, an exhibition featuring more than 100 original works of art that are seriously hilarious. The small-scale drawings depicting the comedic daily lives of humans and animals alike are all rendered by hand in a variety of media, an approach that is becoming increasing rare in a world of computer-generated images.

Dan Reynolds began drawing cartoons in 1989, when he was 30. As a youth center instructor, Reynolds was surrounded by youthful energy and creative minds. He was an avid follower of popular cartoons of the time, such as Gary Larson's Far Side and Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes. A native of Brewerton, NY, Reynolds was inspired by his Central New York surroundings, a place where snow is abundant and cows can be found just minutes from anywhere. From the beginning, Reynolds has used farm animals as messengers of humor, particularly cows, pigs and chickens, a series that was immediately accepted by Reader's Digest in 1989. A new cartoon has appeared in every issue since then. Reynolds' cartoons have also appeared in thematic Reynolds Unwrapped book compilations featuring everything from sports to holiday special editions. American Greetings and Recycled Greeting Cards also feature Reynolds cartoons on greeting cards for every occasion.

In 2008, Reynolds was diagnosed with testicular cancer and subsequently received months of chemotherapy. While he was in treatment, he began drawing cartoons about cancer and his personal experience which he found was shared by his fellow patients. He shared the cartoons with the staff and patients at the facility and discovered the power of art to bring humor to an otherwise humorless situation.

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



New Directions in Photography
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

XL Projects
307-313 S. Clinton St., Syracuse

What does it mean to be an art photographer today? In this exhibition, the third-year art photography graduate students prove that the photographic medium has outgrown its traditional function as singular-print-on-the-wall and is now an expanded practice that includes video, sculpture, installation and performance.

Although the four photographers -- Sarah Zamecnik, Shimpei Shirafuji, Jeffrey Einhorn and Colleen Woolpert -- push their work in different directions, one belief unites them: the image is paramount, whether it is static or in motion; surrounded by a frame or mounted to a sculptural form; printed on paper or projected onto surfaces; silent or accompanied by sound. It operates sometimes as documentation, other times as replication or appropriation. It is used variously to depict truths or to create fictions derived from truths or the realm of the artist's imagination.

For more information, contact Colleen Woolpert at cmwoolpe@syr.edu. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours.


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



Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud
The Warehouse Gallery

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

The young female Swiss designer duo, Sarah Kueng and Lovis Caputo, will install a hotel in the Warehouse Gallery. The main gallery will be transformed into small ephemeral rooms where the visitor is invited to take a break from reality and to take a mini-vacation complete with a number of very simple, inexpensive and joyful elements. When seated or lying down, the public's focus is drawn to the interior space and lighting. The idea for a temporary hotel goes back to Kueng's and Caputo's 72 Hours Hotel, which was initially developed in 2006 for the train station in Zurich, Switzerland. Both artists have been widely exhibited. This is their first museum solo show in the U.S.

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2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, March 18



100 Years of Women Rockin' the World
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

This exhibition features the art of 35 women artists -- nine local to Syracuse, and the rest from communities across the country. These women, in keeping with the mission of ArtRage, are also activists and their work expresses a whole range of issues important to both women and the community of concerned people worldwide: self-image, hunger, collective action, war, children, the status of women, immigration, environmental crisis, alternative lifestyles and self-discovery.

Participating artists include Arlene Abend, Amy Bartell, Ellen Blalock, Marlena Buczek, Elizabeth Carter, Jen Cartwright, the Chicago Women's Graphic Collective, Sue Coe, Erin Currier, Jane Evershed, Raina Gentry, Susan Grabel, Sharon Lee Hart, Robin Hewlett, Gail Hoffman, Nancy Hom, Katherine Hughes, Lahib Jaddo, Mollie Kellogg, Kate Luscher, Dierdre Luzwick, Sofia Perez, Ruth Putter, Favianna Rodriguez, Gazelle Samizay, Nicole Schulman, Sarah Walroth, Anita Welych and Oceans Unraveled project with artists: Aviva Alter, Mary Buczek, Mary Ellen Croteau.


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6:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 18



Demitrus Oliver: Mare, 2009
Urban Video Project

Everson Museum of Art Plaza
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Mare, 2009, projects a circular image of a wave crashing against an unnamed shore. As the image rotates, the lines of the waves begin to resemble the layered surface of a Jovian planet such as Jupiter. Connecting the sea with heavenly phenomena, the installation recreates the sense of wonderment felt when looking at the night sky and the fundamental human desire to understand one's place in the universe. Mare, which is Latin for "seas", suggests movement and journeys both physical and metaphysical, as well as metaphors of darkness and illumination, looking and discovery.


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Comedy
 

8:30 PM, March 18



Dinosaur Society
Salt City Improv Theater

Price: $8 regular, $6 students
Salt City Improv Theatre
Shoppingtown Mall, Sears Wing, Dewitt

An evening of comedy improv.


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Film
 

9:00 AM - 12:00 AM, March 18



Cinefest 2011
Syracuse Cinephile Society

Price: $25/day; $75/all four days
Holiday Inn
Electronics Parkway, Liverpool

9:00 am: Information Please (1941) with Boris Karloff
9:10 am: He Was Her Man (1931) with Gilda Gray
9:35 am: The Biscuit Eater (1940) with Billy Lee, and Fred "Snowflake" Toones in a rare dramatic role
10:50 am: Stolen Heaven (1931) Nancy Carroll, Phillips Holmes, Louis Calhern
LUNCH BREAK
1:00 pm: Silent Trailers
1:15 pm: Westward Whoa! (1922) Bert Roach
1:25 pm: The Hushed Hour (1919) with Milton Sills, Blanche Sweet
2:30 pm: The Devil's Lottery (1932) with Victor McLaglen
3:40 pm: The Wolf Song (1929) with Gary Cooper, Lupe Velez
5:00 pm: Alice in Wonderland (1931) with Ruth Gilbert
DINNER BREAK
8:00 pm: Foiled (1931) with William J. Burns. Read the program notes HERE
8:10 pm: A Song in the Dark (2nd edition): "Songs and Stars of the Early Movie Musical," hosted by Richard Barrios
9:45 pm: Sunshine Dad (1916) with DeWolf Hopper, Fay Tincher, Max Davidson
11:00 pm: Love Comes Along (1930) with Bebe Daniels


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5:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 18



Jenny Holzer installation
Urban Video Project

Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Internationally renowned artist Jenny Holzer created a site-specific installation that streams across the façade of Syracuse Stage on an LED curtain. The installation features 272 aphorisms from her celebrated series "Truisms" and "Survival" that challenge viewers' assumptions about the world we live in through the use of language as art. Whether questioning consumerist impulses or lamenting the struggles of daily living, Jenny Holzer always provokes a response. Her work crosses the boundary between poetry and visual art, and suggests both the limitations and power of technology and the information age.

For more than 30 years, this influential American conceptual artist has been creating subversive works that blend in among advertisements in public spaces questioning and confronting our passive consumption of information. Since the early 1970s, Holzer has been collecting and writing phrases and aphorisms found in literature, philosophy and contemporary culture. She calls these summaries her Truisms, and has printed them on bronze plaques, painted signs, stone benches, footstools, stickers, t-shirts, condoms, paintings, photographs, video, sound, light projection, and the Internet. In 1982, Holzer installed "Truisms" on one of Times Square's gigantic LED billboards. In the 1980s, for her "Survival" series, Holzer adopted more personal and urgent messages about the realities of everyday living. Power, vulnerability, violence, tenderness, moral struggles and motherhood are courageously chronicled in this series which continuously prods the viewer to question the role of individuals in society.

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History
 

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



Implements of Mass Construction
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

The Erie Canal was built by thousands of untrained men during the 19th century, before the United States had any civil engineering professionals. So how did they construct a canal across the entire state of New York? Come by the Erie Canal Museum and see the tools that made it possible. The 16 items on view were used for construction or industry along the Erie Canal in the 19th century. Visit the Museum's second floor gallery to try to guess what each instrument is. Tools similar to some of the implements on display are still used today, but others will require some guesswork. Come visit today to guess for yourself!


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12:00 PM, March 18



Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total)

Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.


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3:00 PM, March 18



Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total)

Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.


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Music
 

9:00 PM, March 18



Zoso: The Ultimate Led Zeppelin Experience
Westcott Theater

Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse


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Poetry/Reading
 

7:00 PM, March 18



George Drew, poet; Kyle Bass, playwright
Downtown Writer's Center

Price: Free
YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St., Syracuse

George Drew was born in Mississippi and raised there and in upstate New York, where he currently resides. He is the author of four collections of poetry: Toads in a Poisoned Tank (Tamarack Editions); The Horse's Name was Physics (Turning Point); American Cool (Tamarack Editions); and The Hand that Rounded Peter's Dome (Turning Point). Drew has been nominated twice for a Pushcart Prize, and has won several magazine poetry awards. American Cool won the 2009 Adirondack Literary Award for best poetry book that year. A fifth collection, The View from Jackass Hill, won the 2010 X. J. Kennedy Poetry Prize and will be published by Texas Review Press in 2011.

Kyle Bass is a two-time New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) Fellow (fiction in 1998, playwriting in 2010) and a finalist for the Princess Grace Playwriting Award. His plays have been produced by The Kitchen Theatre, Appleseed Productions, Armory Square Playhouse, and the Syracuse Stage Backstory! program. A Pushcart Prize nominee, Kyle's work has appeared in the journals Stone Canoe, Folio, and Callaloo, among other publications. Kyle is on the faculty at Goddard College where he teaches in the M.F.A. Creative Writing program. He also teaches playwriting at Syracuse University and is Resident Dramaturg at Syracuse Stage. He also serves as Drama Editor for Stone Canoe. He holds an M.F.A. in Creative Writing from Goddard College.


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Theater
 

8:00 PM, March 18



Tonight at 8:30: Three Plays by Noel Coward
Appleseed Productions
Dan Stevens, director

Price: $18 regular; $15 students/seniors
Atonement Lutheran Church
116 W. Glen Ave., Syracuse

The Red Peppers: Doing a song and dance act in a vaudeville theatre are George Pepper and his wife, Lily. They also have a genius for picking quarrels and insulting co workers. When the house musical director, Bert, comes to the dressing room to bum a cigarette and a beer, they chide him for accompanying them in the wrong tempo, call him a drunk, and oust him. Mr. Edwards, house manager, comes to defend Bert, and he is insulted. At the following show Bert had his revenge when he plays the accompaniment so fast the Peppers get frantic and finally fall down. Lily stalks off the stage after heaving her hat at Bert.

Ways and Means: In a bedroom in Mrs. Lloyd Ransome's fabulous villa on the Cote d'Azur are heiress Stella Cartwright and her husband, a gambler. They are plagued by debts and their prolonged stay at the villa is becoming embarrassing when a scandalous chauffeur attempts to rob them and ends up saving their honor.

Hands Across the Sea: Lady Gilpin (Piggie) is so busy with social duties and gossip that she has no time for coherent thinking. She is set aflutter when her drawing room is suddenly filled with her husband's naval conferees, blueprint delivery boys and dumpy Mr. and Mrs. Wadhurst from the Far East, who flighty Piggie mistakes for the Rawlingsons. The Wadhursts overhear intimate phone conversations, are stumbled over, spilled upon and completely ignored before Piggie finally gets it straight.

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8:00 PM, March 18



Urinetown: The Musical
Baldwinsville Theatre Guild
Deborah Taylor and Heather Jensen, director

Price: $20 adults, $17 students
First Presbyterian Church of Baldwinsville
64 Oswego St., Baldwinsville

The satirical comedy musical features music and lyrics by Mark Hollman and book and lyrics by Greg Kotis. Urinetown lampoons the legal system, capitalism, social responsibility, bureaucracy, corporate mismanagement, and local politics. In addition the musical ridicules Broadway itself poking fun at shows such as Les Miserables and Annie, to name a few. The production won three Tony Awards in 2002.

A terrible water shortage, due to a 20-year drought, has hamstrung the Gotham-like town that is the setting for Urinetown: The Musical. In an attempt to regulate water consumption, the government has outlawed the use of private toilets. The citizenry must use public, designated pay-per-flush amenities owned and operated by Urine Good Company, a vindictive corporation run by the corrupt Caldwell B. Cladwell. Urinetown provides a story that centers on the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of a free flush.

Music directed by Dan Williams, choreographed by Stephfond Brunson.

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8:00 PM, March 18



Corpus Christi
Rarely Done Productions
Dan Tursi, director

Price: $20
Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St., Syracuse

The most controversial and talked-about play of 1998. An old and familiar story, but from that point on, nothing feels quite familiar again. What follows is a story that parallels the New Testament, and its subject is nothing less than the birth, death, and resurrection of Jesus. But author Terrence McNally's Christ figure is a character named Joshua, a young man born and raised in Corpus Christi, Texas, in the early 1950s.

This play is intended for mature audiences only.

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Saturday, March 19, 2011


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, March 19



Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

This spring, both the main gallery and Window Projects feature emerging female artists and celebrate their artistic achievements at a time that coincides with International Women's Day (March 2011). Stephanie Rozene draws upon the fine line between design and the visual arts. Her work is the result of extensive research and gifted craftsmanship. Through the medium of ceramics (and with special attention to specific patterns, ornaments, and forms) she explores the politics of European ceramics and traces international developments in this medium back to the reigns of French kings Louis XV and Louis XVI. This is her first solo museum show.


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9:00 AM - 1:00 PM, March 19



Winter Art Show
Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

Clayscapes Pottery Studio
1003 W. Fayette St., Suite L1, Syracuse

Come in from the cold and enjoy the warmth of friends and the glow of ceramic art made in The Studio at Clayscapes Pottery. Featuring ceramic artwork by Millie St. John, Tim See, Don Seymour, Shawn McGuire, Wes Weiss, and Sarah VanDerVoort as well as many others.


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9:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 19



Ingrid Ludt: "Forest becomes Ocean"
LeMoyne College

Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College, Syracuse


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



Casey Landerkin: Paintings and Illustrations
Echo

745 N. Salina St. (formerly Craft Chemistry)
Syracuse


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10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, March 19



Tonal Gestures
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Diana Godfrey: mixed media pastels and acrylic paintings
Carmel Nicoletti: bronze reliefs and glass works


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



Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds
Everson Museum of Art

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

The 2011 exhibition program will continue to highlight the talented artists of New York State through a series of focused exhibitions. The season opens with Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds, an exhibition featuring more than 100 original works of art that are seriously hilarious. The small-scale drawings depicting the comedic daily lives of humans and animals alike are all rendered by hand in a variety of media, an approach that is becoming increasing rare in a world of computer-generated images.

Dan Reynolds began drawing cartoons in 1989, when he was 30. As a youth center instructor, Reynolds was surrounded by youthful energy and creative minds. He was an avid follower of popular cartoons of the time, such as Gary Larson's Far Side and Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes. A native of Brewerton, NY, Reynolds was inspired by his Central New York surroundings, a place where snow is abundant and cows can be found just minutes from anywhere. From the beginning, Reynolds has used farm animals as messengers of humor, particularly cows, pigs and chickens, a series that was immediately accepted by Reader's Digest in 1989. A new cartoon has appeared in every issue since then. Reynolds' cartoons have also appeared in thematic Reynolds Unwrapped book compilations featuring everything from sports to holiday special editions. American Greetings and Recycled Greeting Cards also feature Reynolds cartoons on greeting cards for every occasion.

In 2008, Reynolds was diagnosed with testicular cancer and subsequently received months of chemotherapy. While he was in treatment, he began drawing cartoons about cancer and his personal experience which he found was shared by his fellow patients. He shared the cartoons with the staff and patients at the facility and discovered the power of art to bring humor to an otherwise humorless situation.

Read a review!


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



Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School
Everson Museum of Art

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

In 2008, Ah Leon envisioned a monumental ceramic installation showcasing dozens of stoneware desks and chairs in neat rows like the classrooms of our youth. It began with a small grouping called Memories of Elementary School first exhibited in August 2008 at The Taipei Gallery Exposition and in 2009 at the Phoenix Art Museum in conjunction with the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) annual conference. Ah Leon continued to make more desks which were exhibited at the American Museum of Ceramic Art (AMOCA) in 2010. Another year has passed and Ah Leon has completed the 20 sets of desks and chairs which will be showcased in this exhibition.

His original idea was to create a classroom environment that would “lead audiences to remember their childhood stories.” Ah Leon studied elementary school desks, determined that his creations would be authentic, revealing memories through carved initials, scratches and drawings on their worn surfaces. His classroom would preserve the stories of our childhood as if they were “frozen in the museum space.”

The first two rows of tables and chairs appear new. They become progressively more dilapidated--some broken, some leaning--until the last rows where the furniture is falling over and ultimately only chips and severed parts remain on the floor. In one area the desks are arranged as if a teacher reads to a group of children. The impact of the scene is immediate: viewers are taken back to their own childhood classroom and long forgotten memories drift to the surface.

Read a review!


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



Full Circle
Szozda Gallery

Szozda Gallery
Delavan Center, 501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Linda Esterley: mixed media collage
Lynette Blake: oil paintings
Elizabeth Moldenhauer: felted vessels


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



Amos Kennedy Prints!
Community Folk Art Center

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

Focusing on issues of race, violence and community, "Amos Kennedy Prints!" features the hand-printed works of Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr. and will include prints created at CFAC. By transforming the gallery into an active printmaking workshop, Kennedy will collaborate with students from the Syracuse area and Syracuse University to create images and broadsides that reflect issues of race, gender and politics and illustrate the impact of violence in the city on their lives and community. The public is invited to meet Kennedy and to observe and participate in the printmaking process.


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



Forrest Lesch-Middelton: Recent Work
Gandee Gallery

Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St., Fabius

Forrest Lesch-Middelton's pottery combines historic patterns with modern-day technology. The resulting work creates a subtle narrative that references the cross-cultural influences that impact every facet of daily life. Pottery is used as a metaphor to illustrate this phenomenon. To achieve the intricate patterns, Lesch-Middelton uses silkscreen and embossment transfer techniques. He says of his artwork, "By blending form, pattern, and surface, my goal is to create an object that simultaneously elicits a visceral and intellectual response, followed by a contemplation of my work as a whole."

Lesch-Middelton received his MFA in Ceramics from Utah State University in 2006 and a BFA in Ceramics from New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University in 1998. He is currently the Ceramics Program Coordinator at the Sonoma Community Center in Sonoma, California and teaches at Santa Rosa Jr. College and Solano College in the San Francisco Bay area. His artwork has been shown in many venues nationally, including the Baltimore Clayworks (MD), Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts (TN), and Santa Fe Clay Center (NM). He currently lives with his wife and two daughters in Northern California.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 19



Toys from the 1970s
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

This year's version will feature toys from the 1970s. Do you remember playing Pong on Atari, getting your first Luke Skywalker figure, or just wishing to have your own Malibu Barbie? Then you won't want to miss this journey into the decade of Charlie's Angels, Richard Nixon and a gallon of gasoline at fifty cents.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 19



Infinite Mirror: Images of American Identity
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

Infinite Mirror: Images of American Identity is a rich, reflective exhibition of works by 40 artists representing the vast cultural blend of modern American society.

American artists of African, Arab, European, Asian, Latino, and Native American descent explore their heritage in this vivid and diverse exhibition using a wide variety of media. The artists examine patriotism, communication, struggle for acceptance, being an American in the 21st century, and more. Humor, heartache, anger, apprehension--all emotions are evoked by these works, raising questions about race, class, gender and age. Four main themes run through Infinite Mirror: Self-Selection, Pride, Assimilation, and Protest, providing audiences with the opportunity to re-examine both the story and storytellers of the quintessential "American dream."

The exhibition was curated by Blake Bradford, Curator and Director of Education at the Barnes Foundation; Benito Huerta, Curator and Director of The Gallery at the University of Texas at Arlington; and Robert Lee, Curator and Executive Director at Asian American Arts Centre in New York.

Paid parking is available for weekday visitors in any SU pay lot. Free parking for weekend and evening visitors is available in the Q4 lot, located on College Place. Patrons should notify the attendant that they are visiting the SUArt Galleries. Evening and weekend parking is on a space-available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome.

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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 19



The Prints of Seong Moy
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

A selection of 30 woodcuts and etchings by the internationally known and collected Chinese American artist and educator. This exhibition is a limited retrospective look at Seong Moy's career as printmaker.

Moy's early works, small but complicated woodcuts on soft luminous papers, were immediately accepted by artists, curators, and the public. A painterly quality, so important to his entire graphic output, is evident in much of this work and is all the more special because it is captured in color wood block prints that require great sophistication and skill from the artist.

As Moy's career continued to develop, his interest in capturing spatial relationships of shapes and forms in his compositions, was heightened by the role color plays in energizing these elements. This trend continued for a number a years and could also be found in his cardboard relief prints.

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


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 19



Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

A profile of pulp artist Norman Saunders (1907-1989), including 10 lush and dramatic Saunders paintings from the university collection.

Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."


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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 19



100 Years of Women Rockin' the World
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

This exhibition features the art of 35 women artists -- nine local to Syracuse, and the rest from communities across the country. These women, in keeping with the mission of ArtRage, are also activists and their work expresses a whole range of issues important to both women and the community of concerned people worldwide: self-image, hunger, collective action, war, children, the status of women, immigration, environmental crisis, alternative lifestyles and self-discovery.

Participating artists include Arlene Abend, Amy Bartell, Ellen Blalock, Marlena Buczek, Elizabeth Carter, Jen Cartwright, the Chicago Women's Graphic Collective, Sue Coe, Erin Currier, Jane Evershed, Raina Gentry, Susan Grabel, Sharon Lee Hart, Robin Hewlett, Gail Hoffman, Nancy Hom, Katherine Hughes, Lahib Jaddo, Mollie Kellogg, Kate Luscher, Dierdre Luzwick, Sofia Perez, Ruth Putter, Favianna Rodriguez, Gazelle Samizay, Nicole Schulman, Sarah Walroth, Anita Welych and Oceans Unraveled project with artists: Aviva Alter, Mary Buczek, Mary Ellen Croteau.


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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 19



No Boundaries: Color & Landscape
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery

Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr., Fayetteville

Works by Scott Bennett and Michael Matthews.

Note: Limestone Art is now in its new location next to Pascale's at 105 Brooklea Dr. in Fayetteville.

Scott Bennett's new series of vivid landscape paintings have found their inspiration close to home, or rather at his new home and studio in Jamesville, NY.  While continuing his characteristic impasto painting technique, Bennett shares his inspiration with us: "Our property has wonderful woods and views in all directions, and most of these paintings are inspired by the beauty I see everyday when I look out any window or walk out the door." His work has been exhibited in over 40 national exhibitions, and is included in numerous corporate and private collections. This is Bennett's second exhibition at Limestone.
 
Michael Matthews' landscapes are developed from sketchbook watercolors created on site during his travels, at times during below freezing temperatures as ice forms while he paints.  Back in the studio, Matthews creates large paintings from a singe sketch or an amalgamation of his watercolors. Michael Matthews lives in Syracuse, NY and in Harrogate, British Columbia.  His work is found in over 60 corporate art collections.


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



New Directions in Photography
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

XL Projects
307-313 S. Clinton St., Syracuse

What does it mean to be an art photographer today? In this exhibition, the third-year art photography graduate students prove that the photographic medium has outgrown its traditional function as singular-print-on-the-wall and is now an expanded practice that includes video, sculpture, installation and performance.

Although the four photographers -- Sarah Zamecnik, Shimpei Shirafuji, Jeffrey Einhorn and Colleen Woolpert -- push their work in different directions, one belief unites them: the image is paramount, whether it is static or in motion; surrounded by a frame or mounted to a sculptural form; printed on paper or projected onto surfaces; silent or accompanied by sound. It operates sometimes as documentation, other times as replication or appropriation. It is used variously to depict truths or to create fictions derived from truths or the realm of the artist's imagination.

For more information, contact Colleen Woolpert at cmwoolpe@syr.edu. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours.


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



Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud
The Warehouse Gallery

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

The young female Swiss designer duo, Sarah Kueng and Lovis Caputo, will install a hotel in the Warehouse Gallery. The main gallery will be transformed into small ephemeral rooms where the visitor is invited to take a break from reality and to take a mini-vacation complete with a number of very simple, inexpensive and joyful elements. When seated or lying down, the public's focus is drawn to the interior space and lighting. The idea for a temporary hotel goes back to Kueng's and Caputo's 72 Hours Hotel, which was initially developed in 2006 for the train station in Zurich, Switzerland. Both artists have been widely exhibited. This is their first museum solo show in the U.S.

Read a review!


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6:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 19



Demitrus Oliver: Mare, 2009
Urban Video Project

Everson Museum of Art Plaza
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Mare, 2009, projects a circular image of a wave crashing against an unnamed shore. As the image rotates, the lines of the waves begin to resemble the layered surface of a Jovian planet such as Jupiter. Connecting the sea with heavenly phenomena, the installation recreates the sense of wonderment felt when looking at the night sky and the fundamental human desire to understand one's place in the universe. Mare, which is Latin for "seas", suggests movement and journeys both physical and metaphysical, as well as metaphors of darkness and illumination, looking and discovery.


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Film
 

8:30 AM - 5:00 PM, March 19



Cinefest 2011
Syracuse Cinephile Society

Price: $25/day; $75/ all four days
Palace Theater
2384 James St., Syracuse

The Woman and the Puppet (1920) with Geraldine Farrar. Preservation by the Library of Congress, courtesy of UK/Ltd/The Rohauer Collection
The Michigan Kid (1929) excerpt.
Burglar By Proxy (1919) with Jack Pickford, Gloria Hope
Lonesome (1928) with Barbara Kent, Glenn Tryon. Preservation by the George Eastman House, funded by the Packard humanities Institute and Universal Studios.

LUNCH BREAK

The Story of Temple Drake (1934) with Miriam Hopkins. Preservation by the Museum of Modern Art with support from Turner Classic Movies and the Celeste Barlos Film Preservation Fund.
Jazzmania (1923) with with Mae Murray, Rod LaRocque, Jean Hersholt. Preservation by the George Eastman House.


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5:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 19



Jenny Holzer installation
Urban Video Project

Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Internationally renowned artist Jenny Holzer created a site-specific installation that streams across the façade of Syracuse Stage on an LED curtain. The installation features 272 aphorisms from her celebrated series "Truisms" and "Survival" that challenge viewers' assumptions about the world we live in through the use of language as art. Whether questioning consumerist impulses or lamenting the struggles of daily living, Jenny Holzer always provokes a response. Her work crosses the boundary between poetry and visual art, and suggests both the limitations and power of technology and the information age.

For more than 30 years, this influential American conceptual artist has been creating subversive works that blend in among advertisements in public spaces questioning and confronting our passive consumption of information. Since the early 1970s, Holzer has been collecting and writing phrases and aphorisms found in literature, philosophy and contemporary culture. She calls these summaries her Truisms, and has printed them on bronze plaques, painted signs, stone benches, footstools, stickers, t-shirts, condoms, paintings, photographs, video, sound, light projection, and the Internet. In 1982, Holzer installed "Truisms" on one of Times Square's gigantic LED billboards. In the 1980s, for her "Survival" series, Holzer adopted more personal and urgent messages about the realities of everyday living. Power, vulnerability, violence, tenderness, moral struggles and motherhood are courageously chronicled in this series which continuously prods the viewer to question the role of individuals in society.

Read a review!


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8:00 PM, March 19



Women's Film Festival: Freeing Silvia Baraldini
ArtRage Gallery

Price: $5 suggested donation
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

Silvia Baraldini moved to the U.S. in the 1960s at the height of the Civil Rights Movement and came of age in a country burning in its own promise. Moved by African Americans' fight for human rights and incensed by the show of pretense in American democracy, Silvia began a life of political activism. In 1983, Silvia was indicted and convicted under the RICO conspiracy law for helping to free Assata Shakur (a Black revolutionary) from prison. Additionally she was charged with criminal contempt of court for refusing to answer questions to a Grand Jury investigating the Puerto Rican Independence Movement. Silvia was given a 43-year prison sentence. In 1999, after 17 years in U.S. prisons, she won the right to serve out her sentence in her homeland, Italy. Within six months of her transfer to a prison in Rome, she was diagnosed with cancer and granted house arrest. In September 2006, having been incarcerated since 1982, Silvia Baraldini was granted her freedom.

Screening will be followed by a Q&A with the filmmakers.


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8:10 PM - 12:30 AM, March 19



Cinefest 2011
Syracuse Cinephile Society

Price: $25/day; $75/ all four days
Holiday Inn
Electronics Parkway, Liverpool

8:10 pm: Vitaphone Show presented by Ron Hutchinson of The Vitaphone Project. Titles include:
     * Harry Fox and His Six American Beauties (1929), with Harry Fox
     * Carlena Diamond, Harpist Supreme (1929), with Carlena Diamond
     * The Country Gentlemen (1928), with Born & Lawrence
     * Sharps and Flats (1928), with Conlin & Glass
8:55 pm: Poor Jake's Demise (1913) with Lon Chaney; Flaming Youth (excerpt) (1926) with Colleen Moore, Milton Sills
9:30 pm: Lessons In Love (1921) with Constance Talmadge
10:45pm: Vitaphone Show II presented by Ron Hutchinson of The Vitaphone Project. Titles include:
     * Oklahoma Bob Albright And His Rodeo-Do Flappers (1929) with Oklahoma Bob Albright
     * Mel Klee, The Prince Of Wails (1929) with Mel Klee
     * She Who Gets Slapped (1930) with Tom Dugan, Dorothy Christie, George "Gabby" Hayes
11:20 pm: I Can't Escape (1934), with Onslow Stevens, Lila Lee


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History
 

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



Implements of Mass Construction
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

The Erie Canal was built by thousands of untrained men during the 19th century, before the United States had any civil engineering professionals. So how did they construct a canal across the entire state of New York? Come by the Erie Canal Museum and see the tools that made it possible. The 16 items on view were used for construction or industry along the Erie Canal in the 19th century. Visit the Museum's second floor gallery to try to guess what each instrument is. Tools similar to some of the implements on display are still used today, but others will require some guesswork. Come visit today to guess for yourself!


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Music
 

2:00 PM, March 19



September Trio
DCL Music Series

Price: Free
Dewitt Community Library
Shoppingtown Mall, Dewitt

Show tunes and light classics. Registration required -- phone 315-446-3578.


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2:00 PM, March 19



The World Begins at Home
Syracuse Children's Chorus
Featuring Nick Page, song-leader

Eastern Hills Bible Church
4600 Enders Rd., Manlius

The Syracuse Children's Chorus welcomes nationally-renowned composer, conductor, author, and song-leader, Nick Page, for a community singing event that brings the Syracuse Children's Chorus and audience together in song. Each choir will perform selections from Page's repertoire that exemplify the concert's theme, The World Begins at Home. Come experience the power of music through the collaboration of chorus and community!


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8:00 PM, March 19



Pictures at an Exhibition
CNY Jazz Arts Foundation
Orange Line Gallery
Featuring Charles Pillow, guest composer

Price: $19.50/$23.50/$27.50; $5 donor/student discount with ID
Carrier Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse

A unique, multi-generational, multimedia, cross-disciplinary event that breaks new artistic ground on a grand scale. Members of the CNY Jazz Orchestra will perform composer/guest artist Charles Pillow’s jazz suite Pictures at an Exhibition, a multi-movement piece based on the themes of the original Moussorgsky/Ravel masterpiece, accompanied by a digitally-manipulated video art show created by Eddie Colelli, lead artist of the Orange Line Gallery. The concert begins with a presentation of the original 19th century art and music by William West, Syracuse University faculty and long-time presenter of Syracuse Symphony pre-concert talks, and concludes with Pillow’s suite set against the backdrop of newly created digital art on multiple screens. The evening will conclude with a free post-concert "meet-the artists" reception at the Orange Line Gallery, where select Colelli pieces will be shown and the composer and artists will be on hand.

To reserve tickets, phone 315-435-2121.


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8:00 PM, March 19



*SOLD OUT* Karen Savoca and Pete Heitzman
Redhouse

Price: $15 regular, $12 students/seniors
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

The musical stylings of Karen Savoca and Pete Heitzman return for an album release party. Their new album, "Promise", contains ten original tracks in their blend of pop, funk, and whimsy that Syracuse loves. The duo has been performing together for over a decade across the state and across the country. Karen's lyrical talent fused with the stripped drums and guitar used in live performance will leave you ready for more -- and ready for your copy of their new album.


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8:00 PM, March 19



Cubical Sunrise, with Desolation Angels
Westcott Theater

Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse


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Theater
 

12:30 PM, March 19



Sleeping Beauty
Magic Circle Children's Theatre

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

Interactive comedy retelling of the children's classic.


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7:30 PM, March 19



Urinetown: The Musical
Baldwinsville Theatre Guild
Deborah Taylor and Heather Jensen, director

Price: $20 adults, $17 students
First Presbyterian Church of Baldwinsville
64 Oswego St., Baldwinsville

The satirical comedy musical features music and lyrics by Mark Hollman and book and lyrics by Greg Kotis. Urinetown lampoons the legal system, capitalism, social responsibility, bureaucracy, corporate mismanagement, and local politics. In addition the musical ridicules Broadway itself poking fun at shows such as Les Miserables and Annie, to name a few. The production won three Tony Awards in 2002.

A terrible water shortage, due to a 20-year drought, has hamstrung the Gotham-like town that is the setting for Urinetown: The Musical. In an attempt to regulate water consumption, the government has outlawed the use of private toilets. The citizenry must use public, designated pay-per-flush amenities owned and operated by Urine Good Company, a vindictive corporation run by the corrupt Caldwell B. Cladwell. Urinetown provides a story that centers on the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of a free flush.

Music directed by Dan Williams, choreographed by Stephfond Brunson.

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8:00 PM, March 19



Tonight at 8:30: Three Plays by Noel Coward
Appleseed Productions
Dan Stevens, director

Price: $18 regular; $15 students/seniors
Atonement Lutheran Church
116 W. Glen Ave., Syracuse

The Red Peppers: Doing a song and dance act in a vaudeville theatre are George Pepper and his wife, Lily. They also have a genius for picking quarrels and insulting co workers. When the house musical director, Bert, comes to the dressing room to bum a cigarette and a beer, they chide him for accompanying them in the wrong tempo, call him a drunk, and oust him. Mr. Edwards, house manager, comes to defend Bert, and he is insulted. At the following show Bert had his revenge when he plays the accompaniment so fast the Peppers get frantic and finally fall down. Lily stalks off the stage after heaving her hat at Bert.

Ways and Means: In a bedroom in Mrs. Lloyd Ransome's fabulous villa on the Cote d'Azur are heiress Stella Cartwright and her husband, a gambler. They are plagued by debts and their prolonged stay at the villa is becoming embarrassing when a scandalous chauffeur attempts to rob them and ends up saving their honor.

Hands Across the Sea: Lady Gilpin (Piggie) is so busy with social duties and gossip that she has no time for coherent thinking. She is set aflutter when her drawing room is suddenly filled with her husband's naval conferees, blueprint delivery boys and dumpy Mr. and Mrs. Wadhurst from the Far East, who flighty Piggie mistakes for the Rawlingsons. The Wadhursts overhear intimate phone conversations, are stumbled over, spilled upon and completely ignored before Piggie finally gets it straight.

Read a Review!


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8:00 PM, March 19



David Novak: The Divorce of Heaven & Earth
Open Hand Theater

Price: $18
International Mask and Puppet Museum
518 Prospect Ave., Syracuse

David Novak is one of the most exciting storytelling talents seen in America.

"Novak, a gifted teller who regularly performs at festivals around the country, enhances his stories with a bag of tricks. His fluid voice can become a dozen different characters. He sometimes takes out a looped string and turns cat's cradle tangles into antlers, beards and other costumes for his protagonists."
-Smithsonian Magazine

"He tells his stories with great physical awareness, a real sense of suspense, humor, and integrity. His range, personality, warmth, truthfulness, imagination, ability to transform, taste, all combined, make him a unique artist."
-June Dunbar, Artistic Director, Lincoln Center Institute

"In him, The Brothers Grimm and Carl Jung meet Monty Python."
-Jeannine Pasini Beekman, Houston Storytelling Festival


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8:00 PM, March 19



Corpus Christi
Rarely Done Productions
Dan Tursi, director

Price: $20
Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St., Syracuse

The most controversial and talked-about play of 1998. An old and familiar story, but from that point on, nothing feels quite familiar again. What follows is a story that parallels the New Testament, and its subject is nothing less than the birth, death, and resurrection of Jesus. But author Terrence McNally's Christ figure is a character named Joshua, a young man born and raised in Corpus Christi, Texas, in the early 1950s.

This play is intended for mature audiences only.

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Sunday, March 20, 2011


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, March 20



Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

This spring, both the main gallery and Window Projects feature emerging female artists and celebrate their artistic achievements at a time that coincides with International Women's Day (March 2011). Stephanie Rozene draws upon the fine line between design and the visual arts. Her work is the result of extensive research and gifted craftsmanship. Through the medium of ceramics (and with special attention to specific patterns, ornaments, and forms) she explores the politics of European ceramics and traces international developments in this medium back to the reigns of French kings Louis XV and Louis XVI. This is her first solo museum show.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 20



Full Circle
Szozda Gallery

Szozda Gallery
Delavan Center, 501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Linda Esterley: mixed media collage
Lynette Blake: oil paintings
Elizabeth Moldenhauer: felted vessels


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 20



Forrest Lesch-Middelton: Recent Work
Gandee Gallery

Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St., Fabius

Forrest Lesch-Middelton's pottery combines historic patterns with modern-day technology. The resulting work creates a subtle narrative that references the cross-cultural influences that impact every facet of daily life. Pottery is used as a metaphor to illustrate this phenomenon. To achieve the intricate patterns, Lesch-Middelton uses silkscreen and embossment transfer techniques. He says of his artwork, "By blending form, pattern, and surface, my goal is to create an object that simultaneously elicits a visceral and intellectual response, followed by a contemplation of my work as a whole."

Lesch-Middelton received his MFA in Ceramics from Utah State University in 2006 and a BFA in Ceramics from New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University in 1998. He is currently the Ceramics Program Coordinator at the Sonoma Community Center in Sonoma, California and teaches at Santa Rosa Jr. College and Solano College in the San Francisco Bay area. His artwork has been shown in many venues nationally, including the Baltimore Clayworks (MD), Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts (TN), and Santa Fe Clay Center (NM). He currently lives with his wife and two daughters in Northern California.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 20



Toys from the 1970s
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

This year's version will feature toys from the 1970s. Do you remember playing Pong on Atari, getting your first Luke Skywalker figure, or just wishing to have your own Malibu Barbie? Then you won't want to miss this journey into the decade of Charlie's Angels, Richard Nixon and a gallon of gasoline at fifty cents.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 20



The Prints of Seong Moy
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

A selection of 30 woodcuts and etchings by the internationally known and collected Chinese American artist and educator. This exhibition is a limited retrospective look at Seong Moy's career as printmaker.

Moy's early works, small but complicated woodcuts on soft luminous papers, were immediately accepted by artists, curators, and the public. A painterly quality, so important to his entire graphic output, is evident in much of this work and is all the more special because it is captured in color wood block prints that require great sophistication and skill from the artist.

As Moy's career continued to develop, his interest in capturing spatial relationships of shapes and forms in his compositions, was heightened by the role color plays in energizing these elements. This trend continued for a number a years and could also be found in his cardboard relief prints.

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


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 20



Infinite Mirror: Images of American Identity
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

Infinite Mirror: Images of American Identity is a rich, reflective exhibition of works by 40 artists representing the vast cultural blend of modern American society.

American artists of African, Arab, European, Asian, Latino, and Native American descent explore their heritage in this vivid and diverse exhibition using a wide variety of media. The artists examine patriotism, communication, struggle for acceptance, being an American in the 21st century, and more. Humor, heartache, anger, apprehension--all emotions are evoked by these works, raising questions about race, class, gender and age. Four main themes run through Infinite Mirror: Self-Selection, Pride, Assimilation, and Protest, providing audiences with the opportunity to re-examine both the story and storytellers of the quintessential "American dream."

The exhibition was curated by Blake Bradford, Curator and Director of Education at the Barnes Foundation; Benito Huerta, Curator and Director of The Gallery at the University of Texas at Arlington; and Robert Lee, Curator and Executive Director at Asian American Arts Centre in New York.

Paid parking is available for weekday visitors in any SU pay lot. Free parking for weekend and evening visitors is available in the Q4 lot, located on College Place. Patrons should notify the attendant that they are visiting the SUArt Galleries. Evening and weekend parking is on a space-available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome.

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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 20



Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

A profile of pulp artist Norman Saunders (1907-1989), including 10 lush and dramatic Saunders paintings from the university collection.

Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."


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



Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds
Everson Museum of Art

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

The 2011 exhibition program will continue to highlight the talented artists of New York State through a series of focused exhibitions. The season opens with Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds, an exhibition featuring more than 100 original works of art that are seriously hilarious. The small-scale drawings depicting the comedic daily lives of humans and animals alike are all rendered by hand in a variety of media, an approach that is becoming increasing rare in a world of computer-generated images.

Dan Reynolds began drawing cartoons in 1989, when he was 30. As a youth center instructor, Reynolds was surrounded by youthful energy and creative minds. He was an avid follower of popular cartoons of the time, such as Gary Larson's Far Side and Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes. A native of Brewerton, NY, Reynolds was inspired by his Central New York surroundings, a place where snow is abundant and cows can be found just minutes from anywhere. From the beginning, Reynolds has used farm animals as messengers of humor, particularly cows, pigs and chickens, a series that was immediately accepted by Reader's Digest in 1989. A new cartoon has appeared in every issue since then. Reynolds' cartoons have also appeared in thematic Reynolds Unwrapped book compilations featuring everything from sports to holiday special editions. American Greetings and Recycled Greeting Cards also feature Reynolds cartoons on greeting cards for every occasion.

In 2008, Reynolds was diagnosed with testicular cancer and subsequently received months of chemotherapy. While he was in treatment, he began drawing cartoons about cancer and his personal experience which he found was shared by his fellow patients. He shared the cartoons with the staff and patients at the facility and discovered the power of art to bring humor to an otherwise humorless situation.

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



Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School
Everson Museum of Art

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

In 2008, Ah Leon envisioned a monumental ceramic installation showcasing dozens of stoneware desks and chairs in neat rows like the classrooms of our youth. It began with a small grouping called Memories of Elementary School first exhibited in August 2008 at The Taipei Gallery Exposition and in 2009 at the Phoenix Art Museum in conjunction with the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) annual conference. Ah Leon continued to make more desks which were exhibited at the American Museum of Ceramic Art (AMOCA) in 2010. Another year has passed and Ah Leon has completed the 20 sets of desks and chairs which will be showcased in this exhibition.

His original idea was to create a classroom environment that would “lead audiences to remember their childhood stories.” Ah Leon studied elementary school desks, determined that his creations would be authentic, revealing memories through carved initials, scratches and drawings on their worn surfaces. His classroom would preserve the stories of our childhood as if they were “frozen in the museum space.”

The first two rows of tables and chairs appear new. They become progressively more dilapidated--some broken, some leaning--until the last rows where the furniture is falling over and ultimately only chips and severed parts remain on the floor. In one area the desks are arranged as if a teacher reads to a group of children. The impact of the scene is immediate: viewers are taken back to their own childhood classroom and long forgotten memories drift to the surface.

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12:00 PM - 2:00 AM, March 20



Ingrid Ludt: "Forest becomes Ocean"
LeMoyne College

Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College, Syracuse


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 20



New Directions in Photography
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

XL Projects
307-313 S. Clinton St., Syracuse

What does it mean to be an art photographer today? In this exhibition, the third-year art photography graduate students prove that the photographic medium has outgrown its traditional function as singular-print-on-the-wall and is now an expanded practice that includes video, sculpture, installation and performance.

Although the four photographers -- Sarah Zamecnik, Shimpei Shirafuji, Jeffrey Einhorn and Colleen Woolpert -- push their work in different directions, one belief unites them: the image is paramount, whether it is static or in motion; surrounded by a frame or mounted to a sculptural form; printed on paper or projected onto surfaces; silent or accompanied by sound. It operates sometimes as documentation, other times as replication or appropriation. It is used variously to depict truths or to create fictions derived from truths or the realm of the artist's imagination.

For more information, contact Colleen Woolpert at cmwoolpe@syr.edu. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours.


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2:00 PM, March 20



SUArt Kids: Infinite Mirror
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

When was the last time you enjoyed taking your children to an art gallery? Join us to participate in SUArt KIDS, an interactive art gallery experience that includes guided exhibition tours and art-related stories at the Syracuse University Art Galleries, designed specifically to engage your family with the exhibition "Infinite Mirror: Images of American Identity." Come and explore the SUArt Galleries and introduce the world of art to your family.

This event, geared towards kids aged 5-10, will cover themes from the exhibition that include the portrait, nationalism, and diversity. There will be a story and a guided art activity centered on "building a flag" using shapes, colors and concepts to describe who the child is, where they come from, etc.


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6:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 20



Demitrus Oliver: Mare, 2009
Urban Video Project

Everson Museum of Art Plaza
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Mare, 2009, projects a circular image of a wave crashing against an unnamed shore. As the image rotates, the lines of the waves begin to resemble the layered surface of a Jovian planet such as Jupiter. Connecting the sea with heavenly phenomena, the installation recreates the sense of wonderment felt when looking at the night sky and the fundamental human desire to understand one's place in the universe. Mare, which is Latin for "seas", suggests movement and journeys both physical and metaphysical, as well as metaphors of darkness and illumination, looking and discovery.


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Film
 

9:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 20



Cinefest 2011
Syracuse Cinephile Society

Price: $25/day; $75/all four days
Holiday Inn
Electronics Parkway, Liverpool

9:00 am: The Phantom President (1932) with George M. Cohan
10:30 am: The Auction (2011), hosted by Leonard Maltin and Lafe McKee Jr
LUNCH BREAK
12:00 pm: Justin Herman Shorts III - titles include:
     * Neighbors in the Night (1949), Paramount Pacemaker
     * Country Cop (1950), Paramount Pacemaker
     * You're a TrooperR (1955), Paramount Pacemaker
12:35 pm: Kentucky (1938) with Loretta Young
2:00 pm: Hardy as a Heavy, with Oliver Hardy. Titles include:
     * The Fall Guy (1922) with Larry Semon
     * No Man's Law (1925)
3:30 pm: The Great Barrier (1937) with Richard Arlen, Lily Palmer


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2:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 20



Women's Film Festival
ArtRage Gallery

Price: $10 suggested donation
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

Continuing our weekend of films by women, we will screen four films by filmmakers Anjoo Khosla, Kathryn Beranich and Courtney Rile.


2:00 pm: Wahid's Mobile Bookstore, by Anjoo Khosla (11 min.)
Among the traffic, smog, blaring horns and careening commuters that crowd the intersections of Mumbai, India is Wahid, a 9-year-old mobile bookseller. While he does not read English, he deftly weaves in and around the cars selling international bestsellers, haggling over the price and recommending books to patrons sitting in their air-conditioned cars. It's a dangerous "paper route," but it provides his family of six with the extra income they need to survive in their one room slum. While the majority of all his book sales go to his mother, Wahid keeps 10 rupees (approximately 20 cents) for himself in a piggy bank. One day he hopes to buy a bicycle. Wahid also dreams of becoming a doctor as he supports his family with his mobile bookstore.

2:15 pm: Veil of Silence, by Anjoo Khosla
This documentary is about domestic violence in the South Asian Community of Silicon Valley. It deals with the issues and unique characteristics of this subject as well as the myths and stereotypes surrounding this issue. It focuses on the plight of South Asian women caught in this situation, where they are without family or any other recourse and the problems they face in getting help.

2:30 pm: Lesbian Centennial Project, by Kathryn L. Beranich (2003, 68 min.)
A stream-of-consciousness history lesson from an amazing range of 100 lesbians of all sizes, classes, colors and ages, all telling their part of our collective herstory. From the early 1900s when women gained the right to vote, to our modern fight for marriage equality rights, this is a relevant and riveting story of the struggle for equal rights for women and lesbians. Deftly weaving the testimonies from a 92-year-old "gentleman", to an ordained minister, to a young riot grrrl, this film transforms the idea of what it means to look or act like a lesbian. As much an inspiration of where we are going as it is a document of how far we’ve come.

3:45 pm: Stretching Boundaries: The life work of Sculptor Arlene Abend, by Courtney Rile and Michael Barletta (2010, 54 min.)
At nearly 80, sculptor Arlene Abend decides to have a retrospective exhibition. The process forces her to take a hard look at her life, the choices she has made and the art she has created. "I never thought that I would be defined by my work," she reflects on camera. For an added perspective on the woman and her sculpture, the camera turns towards Dick Case (Syracuse Post-Standard columnist), Mary Cunningham (Teacher, S.U. Early Education and Child Care Center), Bill Delavan (owner of Delavan Center), Anne Novado Cappuccilli (curator of Limestone Art and Framing Gallery), Jim Hueber (president of Mack Brothers) as well as Arlene's friend, painter Linda Bigness, and Arlene's two children, Les and Tema Abend. The result is a well rounded portrayal of a woman who consistently stretched the boundaries of her life and the materials she worked with to create her art.

A Q&A with the filmmakers will follow the screening.


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5:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 20



Jenny Holzer installation
Urban Video Project

Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Internationally renowned artist Jenny Holzer created a site-specific installation that streams across the façade of Syracuse Stage on an LED curtain. The installation features 272 aphorisms from her celebrated series "Truisms" and "Survival" that challenge viewers' assumptions about the world we live in through the use of language as art. Whether questioning consumerist impulses or lamenting the struggles of daily living, Jenny Holzer always provokes a response. Her work crosses the boundary between poetry and visual art, and suggests both the limitations and power of technology and the information age.

For more than 30 years, this influential American conceptual artist has been creating subversive works that blend in among advertisements in public spaces questioning and confronting our passive consumption of information. Since the early 1970s, Holzer has been collecting and writing phrases and aphorisms found in literature, philosophy and contemporary culture. She calls these summaries her Truisms, and has printed them on bronze plaques, painted signs, stone benches, footstools, stickers, t-shirts, condoms, paintings, photographs, video, sound, light projection, and the Internet. In 1982, Holzer installed "Truisms" on one of Times Square's gigantic LED billboards. In the 1980s, for her "Survival" series, Holzer adopted more personal and urgent messages about the realities of everyday living. Power, vulnerability, violence, tenderness, moral struggles and motherhood are courageously chronicled in this series which continuously prods the viewer to question the role of individuals in society.

Read a review!


Back to list
 


History
 

10:00 AM - 3:00 PM, March 20



Implements of Mass Construction
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

The Erie Canal was built by thousands of untrained men during the 19th century, before the United States had any civil engineering professionals. So how did they construct a canal across the entire state of New York? Come by the Erie Canal Museum and see the tools that made it possible. The 16 items on view were used for construction or industry along the Erie Canal in the 19th century. Visit the Museum's second floor gallery to try to guess what each instrument is. Tools similar to some of the implements on display are still used today, but others will require some guesswork. Come visit today to guess for yourself!


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Music
 

2:00 PM, March 20



Live! at the Everson: Syracuse Opera Resident Artists
Civic Morning Musicals

Price: $15 adults, students free with ID
Hosmer Auditorium, Everson Museum
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

From Die Schöne Müllerin by Franz Schubert, Matthew Velis, tenor
Nuit d'etoiles by Claude Debussy; Debra Stanley, soprano
Sieben Frühe Lieder by Alban Berg; Nora Graham-Smith, mezzo-soprano
Songs of Travel by Ralph Vaughan-Williams; Matthew Young, baritone
Six Songs of Emily Dickinson by John Duke; Debra Stanley, soprano

Accompanied by Christopher Turbessi, piano


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2:00 PM, March 20



Folk Music Series: A History of 18th Century Women in Song with Linda Russell
Liverpool Public Library

Price: Free
Liverpool Public Library
310 Tulip St., Liverpool

From the boisterous ballads of the 18th century to the sentimental melodies of the Victorian Age, Linda Russell recreates lost national treasures. While performing on guitar, mountain and hammered dulcimers, penny whistle and limberjack, Linda's rich singing voice illuminates the history of American women by punctuating her performances of songs from the period with anecdotes about pioneers, patriots and other figures from America's past.


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8:00 PM, March 20



Akuma Roots
Westcott Theater

Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse


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Theater
 

3:00 PM, March 20



Urinetown: The Musical
Baldwinsville Theatre Guild
Deborah Taylor and Heather Jensen, director

Price: $20 regular, $17 students/seniors
First Presbyterian Church of Baldwinsville
64 Oswego St., Baldwinsville

The satirical comedy musical features music and lyrics by Mark Hollman and book and lyrics by Greg Kotis. Urinetown lampoons the legal system, capitalism, social responsibility, bureaucracy, corporate mismanagement, and local politics. In addition the musical ridicules Broadway itself poking fun at shows such as Les Miserables and Annie, to name a few. The production won three Tony Awards in 2002.

A terrible water shortage, due to a 20-year drought, has hamstrung the Gotham-like town that is the setting for Urinetown: The Musical. In an attempt to regulate water consumption, the government has outlawed the use of private toilets. The citizenry must use public, designated pay-per-flush amenities owned and operated by Urine Good Company, a vindictive corporation run by the corrupt Caldwell B. Cladwell. Urinetown provides a story that centers on the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of a free flush.

Music directed by Dan Williams, choreographed by Stephfond Brunson.

Read a review!


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Monday, March 21, 2011


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, March 21



Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

This spring, both the main gallery and Window Projects feature emerging female artists and celebrate their artistic achievements at a time that coincides with International Women's Day (March 2011). Stephanie Rozene draws upon the fine line between design and the visual arts. Her work is the result of extensive research and gifted craftsmanship. Through the medium of ceramics (and with special attention to specific patterns, ornaments, and forms) she explores the politics of European ceramics and traces international developments in this medium back to the reigns of French kings Louis XV and Louis XVI. This is her first solo museum show.


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8:00 AM - 2:00 AM, March 21



Ingrid Ludt: "Forest becomes Ocean"
LeMoyne College

Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College, Syracuse


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 21



Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit
Onondaga Community College

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

Takafumi Ide is an interdisciplinary media artist specializing in installation with sound and light. He received his B.A. in graphic design from Tama Art University in Tokyo in 1989, and his M.F.A. in studio art from Stony Brook University in 2007. He has worked for more than 10 years as a graphic designer and an illustrator in Japan and now teaches at Stony Brook University as a lecturer, and Suffolk County Community College as an adjunct instructor.

He has received several honors, such as The Sculpture Space Fellowship and Residency (funded by both the Pollock-Krasner Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts), the Strategic Opportunity Stipend Program Grant through the New York Foundation for the Arts, and most recently the Nomura Cultural Foundation's Project Grant, Asahi Shimbun Foundation Project Grant, and the Vermont Studio Center's Partial-Grant and Residency. He has exhibited both nationally and internationally. More recent exhibitions include Sunroom Project Glynder Gallery, Wave Hill, NY, ISE Cultural Foundation in Soho, NY, and AC Institute in Chelsea, NY.

Read a review!


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 21



Davidovich in Situ: A Video Art Project
Point of Contact Gallery

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

Argentine video artist Jaime Davidovich returns to Syracuse University after an amazing year of grand-scale museum exhibitions worldwide, to work on site at The Point of Contact Gallery. Davidovich will present a series of his classic videos along with collage, photography, and a new series of paintings that he will produce on site.

Davidovich, on Painting and Video Art:

"My paintings are hybrids combining the tactile sensation of painting with the electronic pulse of video. The works are small in scale and intimate in nature. I want to do an art that speaks on a one-to-one basis with the viewer, no actors or story line, just a scale for human dialogue. In a time of video as spectacle, my work is indeed conflictive. I am interested in establishing a link (no pun intended) between Morandi and the Internet; the personal gesture and digital reproduction. These are the opposites that attract me. I use video because it is intimate, personal. I use the brush because is my gestural DNA."


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 21



Cortland County Art Exhibit
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

Artists include Fred Zimmerman, David Yaman, Kathy Williams, Carl Steckler, Laurie Seamans, Meg Richardson, Lyla Phillips, Allen Phillips, Joan Niswender, Richard Mitchell, Amy Hnatko, Emily Gibbons, Serry Dans, Kathie Beale, and David Beale.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 21



Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

On display will be pulp magazines, notably titles like Weird Tales and Amazing Stories; the typescript of Isaac Asimov's "Strange Playfellow," which introduced readers to one of science fiction's best known characters, Robbie the Robot; and correspondence with figures like Ray Bradbury.

Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 21



Marcel Breuer and Postwar America
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

Drawings from the Marcel Breuer Papers, curated by SU Architecture students, with Barry Bergdoll and Jonathan Massey. The exhibition is the outcome of their work in the extensive Breuer archive at the Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center. It features images of 120 drawings, as well as photographs, documenting thirteen of Breuer’s major postwar buildings and projects. Full-scale reproductions highlight themes that characterized some of Breuer’s lesser-known major work and document his responses to the needs and opportunities of postwar American society.

Breuer (1902-1981) was a leading figure among the second generation of modernist architects whose striking designs for furniture, houses, institutions, and commercial buildings helped to set the shape and style of modernity in Europe and the United States, leading “Time” magazine to characterize him as one of the “form givers of the 20th century.” His works include the UNESCO headquarters in Paris and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 21



Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day
Westcott Community Art Gallery

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

This group exhibit showcases both the artwork of local women artists, as well as artwork with women-focused subjects. Artists will be sharing their personal experiences in a number of areas. The artists from the CNY area and include Maria Rizzo (painting), Amanda Gormley (photography), Patricia Seitz (painting), Suzanne Masters (paint and collage), Sherry Gordon (painting), Kristie Hayes (painting and drawing), Carla Senecal (installation artwork), and Michael Moody (painting and prints).


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 21



Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show
Redhouse

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

A selection of work from young women at Fowler, Nottingham and IT high schools.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 21



Fashionable Points of View
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

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

"Fashionable Points of View" marks the first time the SU fashion design faculty has presented its work as a group. The artwork in the exhibition includes beautifully crafted garments, accessories and fine art.

Among the faculty designers showcasing their expertise and interest within the field of fashion are Jeffrey Mayer, fashion design program coordinator; Karen Bakke; Todd Conover; Laurel Morton; Claudia Gervais; Joyce Backus; Elizabeth Shorrock; Megan Lawson Clark; and Jean Henry.

For more information, contact Mayer at jcmayer@syr.edu, or Lauren Tagliaferro at lktaglia@syr.edu.


Back to list
 


Film
 

5:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 21



Jenny Holzer installation
Urban Video Project

Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Internationally renowned artist Jenny Holzer created a site-specific installation that streams across the façade of Syracuse Stage on an LED curtain. The installation features 272 aphorisms from her celebrated series "Truisms" and "Survival" that challenge viewers' assumptions about the world we live in through the use of language as art. Whether questioning consumerist impulses or lamenting the struggles of daily living, Jenny Holzer always provokes a response. Her work crosses the boundary between poetry and visual art, and suggests both the limitations and power of technology and the information age.

For more than 30 years, this influential American conceptual artist has been creating subversive works that blend in among advertisements in public spaces questioning and confronting our passive consumption of information. Since the early 1970s, Holzer has been collecting and writing phrases and aphorisms found in literature, philosophy and contemporary culture. She calls these summaries her Truisms, and has printed them on bronze plaques, painted signs, stone benches, footstools, stickers, t-shirts, condoms, paintings, photographs, video, sound, light projection, and the Internet. In 1982, Holzer installed "Truisms" on one of Times Square's gigantic LED billboards. In the 1980s, for her "Survival" series, Holzer adopted more personal and urgent messages about the realities of everyday living. Power, vulnerability, violence, tenderness, moral struggles and motherhood are courageously chronicled in this series which continuously prods the viewer to question the role of individuals in society.

Read a review!


Back to list
 


History
 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 21



Implements of Mass Construction
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

The Erie Canal was built by thousands of untrained men during the 19th century, before the United States had any civil engineering professionals. So how did they construct a canal across the entire state of New York? Come by the Erie Canal Museum and see the tools that made it possible. The 16 items on view were used for construction or industry along the Erie Canal in the 19th century. Visit the Museum's second floor gallery to try to guess what each instrument is. Tools similar to some of the implements on display are still used today, but others will require some guesswork. Come visit today to guess for yourself!


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM, March 21



Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total)

Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.


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3:00 PM, March 21



Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total)

Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.


Back to list
 


Music
 

8:00 PM, March 21



Dangermuffin
Westcott Theater

Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse


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Tuesday, March 22, 2011


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, March 22



Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

This spring, both the main gallery and Window Projects feature emerging female artists and celebrate their artistic achievements at a time that coincides with International Women's Day (March 2011). Stephanie Rozene draws upon the fine line between design and the visual arts. Her work is the result of extensive research and gifted craftsmanship. Through the medium of ceramics (and with special attention to specific patterns, ornaments, and forms) she explores the politics of European ceramics and traces international developments in this medium back to the reigns of French kings Louis XV and Louis XVI. This is her first solo museum show.


Back to list
 

 

8:00 AM - 2:00 AM, March 22



Ingrid Ludt: "Forest becomes Ocean"
LeMoyne College

Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College, Syracuse


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 22



Winter Art Show
Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

Clayscapes Pottery Studio
1003 W. Fayette St., Suite L1, Syracuse

Come in from the cold and enjoy the warmth of friends and the glow of ceramic art made in The Studio at Clayscapes Pottery. Featuring ceramic artwork by Millie St. John, Tim See, Don Seymour, Shawn McGuire, Wes Weiss, and Sarah VanDerVoort as well as many others.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 22



Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit
Onondaga Community College

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

Takafumi Ide is an interdisciplinary media artist specializing in installation with sound and light. He received his B.A. in graphic design from Tama Art University in Tokyo in 1989, and his M.F.A. in studio art from Stony Brook University in 2007. He has worked for more than 10 years as a graphic designer and an illustrator in Japan and now teaches at Stony Brook University as a lecturer, and Suffolk County Community College as an adjunct instructor.

He has received several honors, such as The Sculpture Space Fellowship and Residency (funded by both the Pollock-Krasner Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts), the Strategic Opportunity Stipend Program Grant through the New York Foundation for the Arts, and most recently the Nomura Cultural Foundation's Project Grant, Asahi Shimbun Foundation Project Grant, and the Vermont Studio Center's Partial-Grant and Residency. He has exhibited both nationally and internationally. More recent exhibitions include Sunroom Project Glynder Gallery, Wave Hill, NY, ISE Cultural Foundation in Soho, NY, and AC Institute in Chelsea, NY.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 22



Cortland County Art Exhibit
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

Artists include Fred Zimmerman, David Yaman, Kathy Williams, Carl Steckler, Laurie Seamans, Meg Richardson, Lyla Phillips, Allen Phillips, Joan Niswender, Richard Mitchell, Amy Hnatko, Emily Gibbons, Serry Dans, Kathie Beale, and David Beale.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 7:00 PM, March 22



Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

On display will be pulp magazines, notably titles like Weird Tales and Amazing Stories; the typescript of Isaac Asimov's "Strange Playfellow," which introduced readers to one of science fiction's best known characters, Robbie the Robot; and correspondence with figures like Ray Bradbury.

Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 7:30 PM, March 22



Marcel Breuer and Postwar America
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

There will be a closing reception this evening 6:30-7:30 pm.

Drawings from the Marcel Breuer Papers, curated by SU Architecture students, with Barry Bergdoll and Jonathan Massey. The exhibition is the outcome of their work in the extensive Breuer archive at the Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center. It features images of 120 drawings, as well as photographs, documenting thirteen of Breuer’s major postwar buildings and projects. Full-scale reproductions highlight themes that characterized some of Breuer’s lesser-known major work and document his responses to the needs and opportunities of postwar American society.

Breuer (1902-1981) was a leading figure among the second generation of modernist architects whose striking designs for furniture, houses, institutions, and commercial buildings helped to set the shape and style of modernity in Europe and the United States, leading “Time” magazine to characterize him as one of the “form givers of the 20th century.” His works include the UNESCO headquarters in Paris and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 22



Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day
Westcott Community Art Gallery

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

This group exhibit showcases both the artwork of local women artists, as well as artwork with women-focused subjects. Artists will be sharing their personal experiences in a number of areas. The artists from the CNY area and include Maria Rizzo (painting), Amanda Gormley (photography), Patricia Seitz (painting), Suzanne Masters (paint and collage), Sherry Gordon (painting), Kristie Hayes (painting and drawing), Carla Senecal (installation artwork), and Michael Moody (painting and prints).


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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 22



Tonal Gestures
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Diana Godfrey: mixed media pastels and acrylic paintings
Carmel Nicoletti: bronze reliefs and glass works


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 22



Amos Kennedy Prints!
Community Folk Art Center

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

Focusing on issues of race, violence and community, "Amos Kennedy Prints!" features the hand-printed works of Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr. and will include prints created at CFAC. By transforming the gallery into an active printmaking workshop, Kennedy will collaborate with students from the Syracuse area and Syracuse University to create images and broadsides that reflect issues of race, gender and politics and illustrate the impact of violence in the city on their lives and community. The public is invited to meet Kennedy and to observe and participate in the printmaking process.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 22



Thilde Jensen: Canaries
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

The images in Canaries, an exhibition of photographs by Thilde Jensen, are a personal account of the life Jensen has lived with multiple chemical sensitivity, and the people she has met who suffer from the same condition. People with this sensitivity have been dubbed "human canaries," and they are the casualties of what Jensen calls a "ubiquitous synthetic chemical culture."

Jensen became so sensitive to chemicals in the air that she could not sit in traffic, read a book or sit next to someone wearing perfume. She was forced to wear a gas mask when entering banks, supermarkets and doctor's offices. She left her life in New York City, her husband and her career, and moved to the country, where she lived in a tent away from the regular chemicals such as laundry detergents, pesticides and exhaust fumes.

Read a review!


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 22



Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

That Year of Living features stunning black-and-white photographs by Jeffrey Henson Scales. Diagnosed with cancer in 2008, Scales was forced to, in his words, weigh the possibilities of his own demise, and whether he had achieved what he felt he was put here to do. It was this diagnosis and contemplation, along with the urging of his wife, Meg Henson Scales, which led him to return to making photographs on a daily basis.

The images in That Year of Living were made in the year following his cancer diagnosis and surgery. Scales photographed mainly in and around Times Square, depicting the part of New York City that he visited every day going to and from work at The New York Times. The images capture the certain hardness mixed with joy, sadness, determination and bewilderment that is found in the faces of young and old alike in New York City. Created in the months following his own experience with mortality, the photographs explore the journey of life and death found in the faces on the streets of New York.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 22



No Boundaries: Color & Landscape
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery

Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr., Fayetteville

Works by Scott Bennett and Michael Matthews.

Note: Limestone Art is now in its new location next to Pascale's at 105 Brooklea Dr. in Fayetteville.

Scott Bennett's new series of vivid landscape paintings have found their inspiration close to home, or rather at his new home and studio in Jamesville, NY.  While continuing his characteristic impasto painting technique, Bennett shares his inspiration with us: "Our property has wonderful woods and views in all directions, and most of these paintings are inspired by the beauty I see everyday when I look out any window or walk out the door." His work has been exhibited in over 40 national exhibitions, and is included in numerous corporate and private collections. This is Bennett's second exhibition at Limestone.
 
Michael Matthews' landscapes are developed from sketchbook watercolors created on site during his travels, at times during below freezing temperatures as ice forms while he paints.  Back in the studio, Matthews creates large paintings from a singe sketch or an amalgamation of his watercolors. Michael Matthews lives in Syracuse, NY and in Harrogate, British Columbia.  His work is found in over 60 corporate art collections.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 22



Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show
Redhouse

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

A selection of work from young women at Fowler, Nottingham and IT high schools.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 22



Fashionable Points of View
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

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

"Fashionable Points of View" marks the first time the SU fashion design faculty has presented its work as a group. The artwork in the exhibition includes beautifully crafted garments, accessories and fine art.

Among the faculty designers showcasing their expertise and interest within the field of fashion are Jeffrey Mayer, fashion design program coordinator; Karen Bakke; Todd Conover; Laurel Morton; Claudia Gervais; Joyce Backus; Elizabeth Shorrock; Megan Lawson Clark; and Jean Henry.

For more information, contact Mayer at jcmayer@syr.edu, or Lauren Tagliaferro at lktaglia@syr.edu.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 22



Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

A profile of pulp artist Norman Saunders (1907-1989), including 10 lush and dramatic Saunders paintings from the university collection.

Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 22



Casey Landerkin: Paintings and Illustrations
Echo

745 N. Salina St. (formerly Craft Chemistry)
Syracuse


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 22



Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School
Everson Museum of Art

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

In 2008, Ah Leon envisioned a monumental ceramic installation showcasing dozens of stoneware desks and chairs in neat rows like the classrooms of our youth. It began with a small grouping called Memories of Elementary School first exhibited in August 2008 at The Taipei Gallery Exposition and in 2009 at the Phoenix Art Museum in conjunction with the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) annual conference. Ah Leon continued to make more desks which were exhibited at the American Museum of Ceramic Art (AMOCA) in 2010. Another year has passed and Ah Leon has completed the 20 sets of desks and chairs which will be showcased in this exhibition.

His original idea was to create a classroom environment that would “lead audiences to remember their childhood stories.” Ah Leon studied elementary school desks, determined that his creations would be authentic, revealing memories through carved initials, scratches and drawings on their worn surfaces. His classroom would preserve the stories of our childhood as if they were “frozen in the museum space.”

The first two rows of tables and chairs appear new. They become progressively more dilapidated--some broken, some leaning--until the last rows where the furniture is falling over and ultimately only chips and severed parts remain on the floor. In one area the desks are arranged as if a teacher reads to a group of children. The impact of the scene is immediate: viewers are taken back to their own childhood classroom and long forgotten memories drift to the surface.

Read a review!


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 22



Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds
Everson Museum of Art

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

The 2011 exhibition program will continue to highlight the talented artists of New York State through a series of focused exhibitions. The season opens with Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds, an exhibition featuring more than 100 original works of art that are seriously hilarious. The small-scale drawings depicting the comedic daily lives of humans and animals alike are all rendered by hand in a variety of media, an approach that is becoming increasing rare in a world of computer-generated images.

Dan Reynolds began drawing cartoons in 1989, when he was 30. As a youth center instructor, Reynolds was surrounded by youthful energy and creative minds. He was an avid follower of popular cartoons of the time, such as Gary Larson's Far Side and Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes. A native of Brewerton, NY, Reynolds was inspired by his Central New York surroundings, a place where snow is abundant and cows can be found just minutes from anywhere. From the beginning, Reynolds has used farm animals as messengers of humor, particularly cows, pigs and chickens, a series that was immediately accepted by Reader's Digest in 1989. A new cartoon has appeared in every issue since then. Reynolds' cartoons have also appeared in thematic Reynolds Unwrapped book compilations featuring everything from sports to holiday special editions. American Greetings and Recycled Greeting Cards also feature Reynolds cartoons on greeting cards for every occasion.

In 2008, Reynolds was diagnosed with testicular cancer and subsequently received months of chemotherapy. While he was in treatment, he began drawing cartoons about cancer and his personal experience which he found was shared by his fellow patients. He shared the cartoons with the staff and patients at the facility and discovered the power of art to bring humor to an otherwise humorless situation.

Read a review!


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 22



Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud
The Warehouse Gallery

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

The young female Swiss designer duo, Sarah Kueng and Lovis Caputo, will install a hotel in the Warehouse Gallery. The main gallery will be transformed into small ephemeral rooms where the visitor is invited to take a break from reality and to take a mini-vacation complete with a number of very simple, inexpensive and joyful elements. When seated or lying down, the public's focus is drawn to the interior space and lighting. The idea for a temporary hotel goes back to Kueng's and Caputo's 72 Hours Hotel, which was initially developed in 2006 for the train station in Zurich, Switzerland. Both artists have been widely exhibited. This is their first museum solo show in the U.S.

Read a review!


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Film
 

5:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 22



Jenny Holzer installation
Urban Video Project

Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Internationally renowned artist Jenny Holzer created a site-specific installation that streams across the façade of Syracuse Stage on an LED curtain. The installation features 272 aphorisms from her celebrated series "Truisms" and "Survival" that challenge viewers' assumptions about the world we live in through the use of language as art. Whether questioning consumerist impulses or lamenting the struggles of daily living, Jenny Holzer always provokes a response. Her work crosses the boundary between poetry and visual art, and suggests both the limitations and power of technology and the information age.

For more than 30 years, this influential American conceptual artist has been creating subversive works that blend in among advertisements in public spaces questioning and confronting our passive consumption of information. Since the early 1970s, Holzer has been collecting and writing phrases and aphorisms found in literature, philosophy and contemporary culture. She calls these summaries her Truisms, and has printed them on bronze plaques, painted signs, stone benches, footstools, stickers, t-shirts, condoms, paintings, photographs, video, sound, light projection, and the Internet. In 1982, Holzer installed "Truisms" on one of Times Square's gigantic LED billboards. In the 1980s, for her "Survival" series, Holzer adopted more personal and urgent messages about the realities of everyday living. Power, vulnerability, violence, tenderness, moral struggles and motherhood are courageously chronicled in this series which continuously prods the viewer to question the role of individuals in society.

Read a review!


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History
 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 22



Implements of Mass Construction
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

The Erie Canal was built by thousands of untrained men during the 19th century, before the United States had any civil engineering professionals. So how did they construct a canal across the entire state of New York? Come by the Erie Canal Museum and see the tools that made it possible. The 16 items on view were used for construction or industry along the Erie Canal in the 19th century. Visit the Museum's second floor gallery to try to guess what each instrument is. Tools similar to some of the implements on display are still used today, but others will require some guesswork. Come visit today to guess for yourself!


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12:00 PM, March 22



Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total)

Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.


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3:00 PM, March 22



Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total)

Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.


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Lecture
 

5:00 PM, March 22



Pippo Ciorra
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Auditorium
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

Lecture by Pippo Ciorra, Senior Curator of Rome's MAXXI Architeturra exhibit

Closing reception for the "Marcel Breuer and Postwar America" exhibition will immediately follow.


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6:30 PM, March 22



Visiting Artist Lecture: Paul Myoda
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

Price: Free
Shemin Auditorium, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Paul Myoda, a sculptor and co-creator of the "Tribute in Light" 9/11 memorial installation, is an assistant professor of visual art at Brown University whose work includes more than 40 exhibitions of sculptures, drawings and short films. He has also written for various art publications, including Art in America, Flash Art and Frieze. Prior to Brown, he lived in New York City where he co-founded Big Room, an art production company, and Myoda + Ruy-Klein Architecture, an architecture-ideas collaboration.

In 2001, Myoda participated in the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council's World Views Program and had a studio on the 91st floor of World Trade Center I. He co-created the "Tribute in Light" in 2001 in memory of the tragic events of 9/11, and the work has subsequently become an annual installation. More recently, Myoda has been developing "Glittering Machines," a series of modular, interactive, kinetic, sonic and illuminating sculptures.

Myoda has received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Warhol Foundation and the Howard Foundation, among others.

Parking is available for $4 in Booth Garage; mention event to obtain rate. For more information, contact Robert Wysocki, 315-443-2318 or rjwysock@syr.edu.


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7:30 PM, March 22



Transformation and Liberation: Rising up from Fear to Hope
University Lectures
Featuring Karen Tse

Price: Free
Hendricks Chapel
Syracuse University, Syracuse

A former public defender, Karen Tse first developed her interest in the intersection of criminal law and human rights as a Thomas J. Watson fellow in 1986 after observing Southeast Asian refugees detained in a local prison without trial. She later moved to Cambodia in 1994 to train the country's first core group of public defenders and subsequently served as a United Nations Judicial Mentor. Under the auspices of the U.N, she trained judges and prosecutors and established the first arraignment court in Cambodia. Tse founded IBJ in 2000 to promote systemic global change in the administration of criminal justice. As director, she provides the vision and direction for IBJ, and is a leader in the global criminal defense movement. She has since negotiated and implemented groundbreaking measures in judicial reform with the Chinese, Vietnamese and Cambodian governments. Under her leadership, IBJ has expanded its programming to Rwanda, Burundi and Zimbabwe and is now working to create a Global Defender Support Program that will bring IBJ assistance to public defenders worldwide. Tse is a graduate of UCLA Law School and Harvard Divinity School. She is the recipient of numerous awards and was named by the U.S. News & World Report as one of America’s Best Leaders. In 2008, Tse received the American Bar Association's Section of Litigation International Human Rights Award which annually recognizes individuals who have made extraordinary contributions to the cause of human rights, rule of law and access to justice.

Reduced-rate parking for the event is available in the Irving Avenue parking garage.


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Wednesday, March 23, 2011


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, March 23



Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

This spring, both the main gallery and Window Projects feature emerging female artists and celebrate their artistic achievements at a time that coincides with International Women's Day (March 2011). Stephanie Rozene draws upon the fine line between design and the visual arts. Her work is the result of extensive research and gifted craftsmanship. Through the medium of ceramics (and with special attention to specific patterns, ornaments, and forms) she explores the politics of European ceramics and traces international developments in this medium back to the reigns of French kings Louis XV and Louis XVI. This is her first solo museum show.


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8:00 AM - 2:00 AM, March 23



Ingrid Ludt: "Forest becomes Ocean"
LeMoyne College

Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College, Syracuse


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 23



Winter Art Show
Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

Clayscapes Pottery Studio
1003 W. Fayette St., Suite L1, Syracuse

Come in from the cold and enjoy the warmth of friends and the glow of ceramic art made in The Studio at Clayscapes Pottery. Featuring ceramic artwork by Millie St. John, Tim See, Don Seymour, Shawn McGuire, Wes Weiss, and Sarah VanDerVoort as well as many others.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 23



Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit
Onondaga Community College

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

Takafumi Ide is an interdisciplinary media artist specializing in installation with sound and light. He received his B.A. in graphic design from Tama Art University in Tokyo in 1989, and his M.F.A. in studio art from Stony Brook University in 2007. He has worked for more than 10 years as a graphic designer and an illustrator in Japan and now teaches at Stony Brook University as a lecturer, and Suffolk County Community College as an adjunct instructor.

He has received several honors, such as The Sculpture Space Fellowship and Residency (funded by both the Pollock-Krasner Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts), the Strategic Opportunity Stipend Program Grant through the New York Foundation for the Arts, and most recently the Nomura Cultural Foundation's Project Grant, Asahi Shimbun Foundation Project Grant, and the Vermont Studio Center's Partial-Grant and Residency. He has exhibited both nationally and internationally. More recent exhibitions include Sunroom Project Glynder Gallery, Wave Hill, NY, ISE Cultural Foundation in Soho, NY, and AC Institute in Chelsea, NY.

Read a review!


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 23



Davidovich in Situ: A Video Art Project
Point of Contact Gallery

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

Argentine video artist Jaime Davidovich returns to Syracuse University after an amazing year of grand-scale museum exhibitions worldwide, to work on site at The Point of Contact Gallery. Davidovich will present a series of his classic videos along with collage, photography, and a new series of paintings that he will produce on site.

Davidovich, on Painting and Video Art:

"My paintings are hybrids combining the tactile sensation of painting with the electronic pulse of video. The works are small in scale and intimate in nature. I want to do an art that speaks on a one-to-one basis with the viewer, no actors or story line, just a scale for human dialogue. In a time of video as spectacle, my work is indeed conflictive. I am interested in establishing a link (no pun intended) between Morandi and the Internet; the personal gesture and digital reproduction. These are the opposites that attract me. I use video because it is intimate, personal. I use the brush because is my gestural DNA."


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 23



Cortland County Art Exhibit
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

Artists include Fred Zimmerman, David Yaman, Kathy Williams, Carl Steckler, Laurie Seamans, Meg Richardson, Lyla Phillips, Allen Phillips, Joan Niswender, Richard Mitchell, Amy Hnatko, Emily Gibbons, Serry Dans, Kathie Beale, and David Beale.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 23



Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

On display will be pulp magazines, notably titles like Weird Tales and Amazing Stories; the typescript of Isaac Asimov's "Strange Playfellow," which introduced readers to one of science fiction's best known characters, Robbie the Robot; and correspondence with figures like Ray Bradbury.

Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 23



Marcel Breuer and Postwar America
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

Drawings from the Marcel Breuer Papers, curated by SU Architecture students, with Barry Bergdoll and Jonathan Massey. The exhibition is the outcome of their work in the extensive Breuer archive at the Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center. It features images of 120 drawings, as well as photographs, documenting thirteen of Breuer’s major postwar buildings and projects. Full-scale reproductions highlight themes that characterized some of Breuer’s lesser-known major work and document his responses to the needs and opportunities of postwar American society.

Breuer (1902-1981) was a leading figure among the second generation of modernist architects whose striking designs for furniture, houses, institutions, and commercial buildings helped to set the shape and style of modernity in Europe and the United States, leading “Time” magazine to characterize him as one of the “form givers of the 20th century.” His works include the UNESCO headquarters in Paris and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 23



Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day
Westcott Community Art Gallery

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

This group exhibit showcases both the artwork of local women artists, as well as artwork with women-focused subjects. Artists will be sharing their personal experiences in a number of areas. The artists from the CNY area and include Maria Rizzo (painting), Amanda Gormley (photography), Patricia Seitz (painting), Suzanne Masters (paint and collage), Sherry Gordon (painting), Kristie Hayes (painting and drawing), Carla Senecal (installation artwork), and Michael Moody (painting and prints).


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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 23



Tonal Gestures
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Diana Godfrey: mixed media pastels and acrylic paintings
Carmel Nicoletti: bronze reliefs and glass works


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 23



Amos Kennedy Prints!
Community Folk Art Center

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

Focusing on issues of race, violence and community, "Amos Kennedy Prints!" features the hand-printed works of Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr. and will include prints created at CFAC. By transforming the gallery into an active printmaking workshop, Kennedy will collaborate with students from the Syracuse area and Syracuse University to create images and broadsides that reflect issues of race, gender and politics and illustrate the impact of violence in the city on their lives and community. The public is invited to meet Kennedy and to observe and participate in the printmaking process.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 23



Thilde Jensen: Canaries
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

The images in Canaries, an exhibition of photographs by Thilde Jensen, are a personal account of the life Jensen has lived with multiple chemical sensitivity, and the people she has met who suffer from the same condition. People with this sensitivity have been dubbed "human canaries," and they are the casualties of what Jensen calls a "ubiquitous synthetic chemical culture."

Jensen became so sensitive to chemicals in the air that she could not sit in traffic, read a book or sit next to someone wearing perfume. She was forced to wear a gas mask when entering banks, supermarkets and doctor's offices. She left her life in New York City, her husband and her career, and moved to the country, where she lived in a tent away from the regular chemicals such as laundry detergents, pesticides and exhaust fumes.

Read a review!


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 23



Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

That Year of Living features stunning black-and-white photographs by Jeffrey Henson Scales. Diagnosed with cancer in 2008, Scales was forced to, in his words, weigh the possibilities of his own demise, and whether he had achieved what he felt he was put here to do. It was this diagnosis and contemplation, along with the urging of his wife, Meg Henson Scales, which led him to return to making photographs on a daily basis.

The images in That Year of Living were made in the year following his cancer diagnosis and surgery. Scales photographed mainly in and around Times Square, depicting the part of New York City that he visited every day going to and from work at The New York Times. The images capture the certain hardness mixed with joy, sadness, determination and bewilderment that is found in the faces of young and old alike in New York City. Created in the months following his own experience with mortality, the photographs explore the journey of life and death found in the faces on the streets of New York.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 23



No Boundaries: Color & Landscape
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery

Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr., Fayetteville

Works by Scott Bennett and Michael Matthews.

Note: Limestone Art is now in its new location next to Pascale's at 105 Brooklea Dr. in Fayetteville.

Scott Bennett's new series of vivid landscape paintings have found their inspiration close to home, or rather at his new home and studio in Jamesville, NY.  While continuing his characteristic impasto painting technique, Bennett shares his inspiration with us: "Our property has wonderful woods and views in all directions, and most of these paintings are inspired by the beauty I see everyday when I look out any window or walk out the door." His work has been exhibited in over 40 national exhibitions, and is included in numerous corporate and private collections. This is Bennett's second exhibition at Limestone.
 
Michael Matthews' landscapes are developed from sketchbook watercolors created on site during his travels, at times during below freezing temperatures as ice forms while he paints.  Back in the studio, Matthews creates large paintings from a singe sketch or an amalgamation of his watercolors. Michael Matthews lives in Syracuse, NY and in Harrogate, British Columbia.  His work is found in over 60 corporate art collections.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 23



Toys from the 1970s
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

This year's version will feature toys from the 1970s. Do you remember playing Pong on Atari, getting your first Luke Skywalker figure, or just wishing to have your own Malibu Barbie? Then you won't want to miss this journey into the decade of Charlie's Angels, Richard Nixon and a gallon of gasoline at fifty cents.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 23



Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show
Redhouse

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

A selection of work from young women at Fowler, Nottingham and IT high schools.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 23



Fashionable Points of View
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

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

"Fashionable Points of View" marks the first time the SU fashion design faculty has presented its work as a group. The artwork in the exhibition includes beautifully crafted garments, accessories and fine art.

Among the faculty designers showcasing their expertise and interest within the field of fashion are Jeffrey Mayer, fashion design program coordinator; Karen Bakke; Todd Conover; Laurel Morton; Claudia Gervais; Joyce Backus; Elizabeth Shorrock; Megan Lawson Clark; and Jean Henry.

For more information, contact Mayer at jcmayer@syr.edu, or Lauren Tagliaferro at lktaglia@syr.edu.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 23



Full Circle
Szozda Gallery

Szozda Gallery
Delavan Center, 501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Linda Esterley: mixed media collage
Lynette Blake: oil paintings
Elizabeth Moldenhauer: felted vessels


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 23



Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

A profile of pulp artist Norman Saunders (1907-1989), including 10 lush and dramatic Saunders paintings from the university collection.

Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 23



Casey Landerkin: Paintings and Illustrations
Echo

745 N. Salina St. (formerly Craft Chemistry)
Syracuse


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 23



Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School
Everson Museum of Art

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

In 2008, Ah Leon envisioned a monumental ceramic installation showcasing dozens of stoneware desks and chairs in neat rows like the classrooms of our youth. It began with a small grouping called Memories of Elementary School first exhibited in August 2008 at The Taipei Gallery Exposition and in 2009 at the Phoenix Art Museum in conjunction with the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) annual conference. Ah Leon continued to make more desks which were exhibited at the American Museum of Ceramic Art (AMOCA) in 2010. Another year has passed and Ah Leon has completed the 20 sets of desks and chairs which will be showcased in this exhibition.

His original idea was to create a classroom environment that would “lead audiences to remember their childhood stories.” Ah Leon studied elementary school desks, determined that his creations would be authentic, revealing memories through carved initials, scratches and drawings on their worn surfaces. His classroom would preserve the stories of our childhood as if they were “frozen in the museum space.”

The first two rows of tables and chairs appear new. They become progressively more dilapidated--some broken, some leaning--until the last rows where the furniture is falling over and ultimately only chips and severed parts remain on the floor. In one area the desks are arranged as if a teacher reads to a group of children. The impact of the scene is immediate: viewers are taken back to their own childhood classroom and long forgotten memories drift to the surface.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 23



Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds
Everson Museum of Art

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

The 2011 exhibition program will continue to highlight the talented artists of New York State through a series of focused exhibitions. The season opens with Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds, an exhibition featuring more than 100 original works of art that are seriously hilarious. The small-scale drawings depicting the comedic daily lives of humans and animals alike are all rendered by hand in a variety of media, an approach that is becoming increasing rare in a world of computer-generated images.

Dan Reynolds began drawing cartoons in 1989, when he was 30. As a youth center instructor, Reynolds was surrounded by youthful energy and creative minds. He was an avid follower of popular cartoons of the time, such as Gary Larson's Far Side and Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes. A native of Brewerton, NY, Reynolds was inspired by his Central New York surroundings, a place where snow is abundant and cows can be found just minutes from anywhere. From the beginning, Reynolds has used farm animals as messengers of humor, particularly cows, pigs and chickens, a series that was immediately accepted by Reader's Digest in 1989. A new cartoon has appeared in every issue since then. Reynolds' cartoons have also appeared in thematic Reynolds Unwrapped book compilations featuring everything from sports to holiday special editions. American Greetings and Recycled Greeting Cards also feature Reynolds cartoons on greeting cards for every occasion.

In 2008, Reynolds was diagnosed with testicular cancer and subsequently received months of chemotherapy. While he was in treatment, he began drawing cartoons about cancer and his personal experience which he found was shared by his fellow patients. He shared the cartoons with the staff and patients at the facility and discovered the power of art to bring humor to an otherwise humorless situation.

Read a review!


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 23



New Directions in Photography
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

XL Projects
307-313 S. Clinton St., Syracuse

What does it mean to be an art photographer today? In this exhibition, the third-year art photography graduate students prove that the photographic medium has outgrown its traditional function as singular-print-on-the-wall and is now an expanded practice that includes video, sculpture, installation and performance.

Although the four photographers -- Sarah Zamecnik, Shimpei Shirafuji, Jeffrey Einhorn and Colleen Woolpert -- push their work in different directions, one belief unites them: the image is paramount, whether it is static or in motion; surrounded by a frame or mounted to a sculptural form; printed on paper or projected onto surfaces; silent or accompanied by sound. It operates sometimes as documentation, other times as replication or appropriation. It is used variously to depict truths or to create fictions derived from truths or the realm of the artist's imagination.

For more information, contact Colleen Woolpert at cmwoolpe@syr.edu. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 23



Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud
The Warehouse Gallery

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

The young female Swiss designer duo, Sarah Kueng and Lovis Caputo, will install a hotel in the Warehouse Gallery. The main gallery will be transformed into small ephemeral rooms where the visitor is invited to take a break from reality and to take a mini-vacation complete with a number of very simple, inexpensive and joyful elements. When seated or lying down, the public's focus is drawn to the interior space and lighting. The idea for a temporary hotel goes back to Kueng's and Caputo's 72 Hours Hotel, which was initially developed in 2006 for the train station in Zurich, Switzerland. Both artists have been widely exhibited. This is their first museum solo show in the U.S.

Read a review!


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2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, March 23



100 Years of Women Rockin' the World
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

This exhibition features the art of 35 women artists -- nine local to Syracuse, and the rest from communities across the country. These women, in keeping with the mission of ArtRage, are also activists and their work expresses a whole range of issues important to both women and the community of concerned people worldwide: self-image, hunger, collective action, war, children, the status of women, immigration, environmental crisis, alternative lifestyles and self-discovery.

Participating artists include Arlene Abend, Amy Bartell, Ellen Blalock, Marlena Buczek, Elizabeth Carter, Jen Cartwright, the Chicago Women's Graphic Collective, Sue Coe, Erin Currier, Jane Evershed, Raina Gentry, Susan Grabel, Sharon Lee Hart, Robin Hewlett, Gail Hoffman, Nancy Hom, Katherine Hughes, Lahib Jaddo, Mollie Kellogg, Kate Luscher, Dierdre Luzwick, Sofia Perez, Ruth Putter, Favianna Rodriguez, Gazelle Samizay, Nicole Schulman, Sarah Walroth, Anita Welych and Oceans Unraveled project with artists: Aviva Alter, Mary Buczek, Mary Ellen Croteau.


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Film
 

5:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 23



Jenny Holzer installation
Urban Video Project

Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Internationally renowned artist Jenny Holzer created a site-specific installation that streams across the façade of Syracuse Stage on an LED curtain. The installation features 272 aphorisms from her celebrated series "Truisms" and "Survival" that challenge viewers' assumptions about the world we live in through the use of language as art. Whether questioning consumerist impulses or lamenting the struggles of daily living, Jenny Holzer always provokes a response. Her work crosses the boundary between poetry and visual art, and suggests both the limitations and power of technology and the information age.

For more than 30 years, this influential American conceptual artist has been creating subversive works that blend in among advertisements in public spaces questioning and confronting our passive consumption of information. Since the early 1970s, Holzer has been collecting and writing phrases and aphorisms found in literature, philosophy and contemporary culture. She calls these summaries her Truisms, and has printed them on bronze plaques, painted signs, stone benches, footstools, stickers, t-shirts, condoms, paintings, photographs, video, sound, light projection, and the Internet. In 1982, Holzer installed "Truisms" on one of Times Square's gigantic LED billboards. In the 1980s, for her "Survival" series, Holzer adopted more personal and urgent messages about the realities of everyday living. Power, vulnerability, violence, tenderness, moral struggles and motherhood are courageously chronicled in this series which continuously prods the viewer to question the role of individuals in society.

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History
 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 23



Implements of Mass Construction
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

The Erie Canal was built by thousands of untrained men during the 19th century, before the United States had any civil engineering professionals. So how did they construct a canal across the entire state of New York? Come by the Erie Canal Museum and see the tools that made it possible. The 16 items on view were used for construction or industry along the Erie Canal in the 19th century. Visit the Museum's second floor gallery to try to guess what each instrument is. Tools similar to some of the implements on display are still used today, but others will require some guesswork. Come visit today to guess for yourself!


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12:00 PM, March 23



Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total)

Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.


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3:00 PM, March 23



Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal
Erie Canal Museum

Price: Free
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse

"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total)

Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.


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Music
 

12:30 PM, March 23



Juan La Manna, piano; David Mastrangelo, violin
Civic Morning Musicals

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

Violin and piano works of Schumann, Pärt Fratres, and J.S. Bach.


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8:00 PM, March 23



Civil Twilight, with A Silent Film, Aunt Martha
Westcott Theater

Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse


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Poetry/Reading
 

5:30 PM, March 23



Briget Pegeen Kelly, poetry
Raymond Carver Reading Series

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

Reading is preceded by a question and answer session from 3:45-4:30.


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Theater
 

7:30 PM, March 23



Preview: The Miracle Worker
Syracuse Stage
Paul Barnes, director

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

"Once I knew only darkness and stillness... my life was without past or future... but a little word from the fingers of another fell into my hand that clutched at emptiness, and my heart leaped to the rapture of living." In her own words, Helen Keller captures the inspirational heart of William Gibson's classic American play. Between the emptiness and the rapture, though, came a fierce struggle of wills, with Helen, in her darkness and stillness, on one side, and the determined Annie Sullivan on the other, a young woman who had endured a lifetime of pain in just 20 years. Gibson's text is unsparing and unflinching in its depiction of their confrontation and mutual triumph. The hearts that will be leaping will be ours.

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