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Events for Tuesday, October 16, 2007
7:00 AM-8:00 PM
Species Unknown Syracuse University School of Art and Design
9:00 AM-9:00 PM
Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Gallery Exhibit: Donalee Peden-Wesley Onondaga Community College
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Annual Members' Exhibition Associated Artists of Central New York
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
A Faith Ringgold Retrospective: Story Quilts and Children's Books Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
2007 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Works by Brantley Carroll, Ella Gant, and David Moore Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery, featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
***CANCELLED*** 2007 Faculty Show Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art
7:30 PM
Erik Larson Friends of the Central Library Author Series
8:00 PM
Illusory Airs Society for New Music
Events for Wednesday, October 17, 2007
7:00 AM-8:00 PM
Species Unknown Syracuse University School of Art and Design
9:00 AM-9:00 PM
Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Gallery Exhibit: Donalee Peden-Wesley Onondaga Community College
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Annual Members' Exhibition Associated Artists of Central New York
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
A Faith Ringgold Retrospective: Story Quilts and Children's Books Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
2007 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Works by Brantley Carroll, Ella Gant, and David Moore Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-2:00 PM
Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery, featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
***CANCELLED*** 2007 Faculty Show Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art
12:30 PM
Musicke...Olde, and New! Civic Morning Musicals, featuring Eileen Allen, recorders; Walden Bass, cello, percussion; Bette Kahler, harpsichord, piano, percussion
4:30 PM
Surface/Subsurface: Marion Weiss and Michael Manfredi Syracuse University School of Architecture
5:15 PM
Syracuse Opera Mock Trial: Rigoletto Indicted in Stabbing Death of Daughter Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
5:30 PM
Donald Hall, poetry Raymond Carver Reading Series
Events for Thursday, October 18, 2007
7:00 AM-8:00 PM
Species Unknown Syracuse University School of Art and Design
9:00 AM-9:00 PM
Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center
9:00 AM-8:00 PM
Gallery Exhibit: Donalee Peden-Wesley Onondaga Community College
9:00 AM-8:00 PM
Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-8:00 PM
The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Annual Members' Exhibition Associated Artists of Central New York
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
A Faith Ringgold Retrospective: Story Quilts and Children's Books Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
2007 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Works by Brantley Carroll, Ella Gant, and David Moore Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery, featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-8:00 PM
Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-8:00 PM
***CANCELLED*** 2007 Faculty Show Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-8:00 PM
Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-8:00 PM
Maximum Color Delavan Art Gallery
12:00 PM-8:00 PM
Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-8:00 PM
On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art
5:00 PM-8:00 PM
Tango Point of Contact Gallery
5:00 PM-8:00 PM
Cosmology: Works by Alan Singer Redhouse
5:00 PM-8:00 PM
Million Dollar Blocks: Justice and the City ThINC
5:00 PM-8:00 PM
Alterity ThINC
6:00 PM-10:00 PM
Song Cycle for Haruki Murakami Urban Video Project
6:30 PM
Artist Talk Light Work Gallery, featuring Al Fasoldt
6:45 PM
Death Joins the Club Acme Mystery Company
8:00 PM
Baby With the Bathwater Rarely Done Productions (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
A Journey Towards Justice Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
8:00 PM
Emotional Realism The Warehouse Gallery
Events for Friday, October 19, 2007
Time TBD
Million Dollar Blocks: Justice and the City ThINC
7:00 AM-8:00 PM
Species Unknown Syracuse University School of Art and Design
9:00 AM-9:00 PM
Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Gallery Exhibit: Donalee Peden-Wesley Onondaga Community College
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Tango Point of Contact Gallery
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Annual Members' Exhibition Associated Artists of Central New York
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
A Faith Ringgold Retrospective: Story Quilts and Children's Books Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
2007 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Works by Brantley Carroll, Ella Gant, and David Moore Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-2:00 PM
Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery, featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
11:15 AM
OCC Brass Ensemble Onondaga Community College
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
***CANCELLED*** 2007 Faculty Show Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
Maximum Color Delavan Art Gallery
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art
3:00 PM-7:00 PM
Alterity ThINC
7:30 PM
A Party to Murder Baldwinsville Theatre Guild
7:30 PM
Stomp Broadway in Syracuse (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
Playing With Fire (After Frankenstein) Appleseed Productions (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
The Hypochondriac Black Box Players
8:00 PM
Stacey Earle and Mark Stuart Folkus Project
8:00 PM
Al Takes a Bride Kings Theatre
8:00 PM
Baby With the Bathwater Rarely Done Productions (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
A Man for All Seasons Simply New Theatre (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
Thanksgiving Spark Contemporary Art Space
8:00 PM
Classics Series: On the Town Syracuse Symphony Orchestra, featuring Terrence Wilson, piano (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
Faculty Cello Recital Syracuse University Setnor School of Music, featuring Caroline Stinson, cello
8:00 PM
The Will Rogers Follies: A Life In Revue Wit's End Players (Read a review!)
Events for Saturday, October 20, 2007
Time TBD
Million Dollar Blocks: Justice and the City ThINC
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Annual Members' Exhibition Associated Artists of Central New York
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Four to the Fore Associated Artists of Central New York
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Maximum Color Delavan Art Gallery
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Species Unknown Syracuse University School of Art and Design
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
A Faith Ringgold Retrospective: Story Quilts and Children's Books Community Folk Art Center
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
***CANCELLED*** 2007 Faculty Show Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery, featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
12:30 PM
Sleeping Beauty Magic Circle Children's Theatre
7:30 PM
A Party to Murder Baldwinsville Theatre Guild
7:30 PM
Stomp Broadway in Syracuse (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
Playing With Fire (After Frankenstein) Appleseed Productions (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
The Hypochondriac Black Box Players
8:00 PM
Al Takes a Bride Kings Theatre
8:00 PM
Baby With the Bathwater Rarely Done Productions (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
A Man for All Seasons Simply New Theatre (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
Classics Series: On the Town Syracuse Symphony Orchestra, featuring Terrence Wilson, piano (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
Handel's Dixit Dominus Syracuse Vocal Ensemble
8:00 PM
The Will Rogers Follies: A Life In Revue Wit's End Players (Read a review!)
Events for Sunday, October 21, 2007
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
2007 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Works by Brantley Carroll, Ella Gant, and David Moore Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
***CANCELLED*** 2007 Faculty Show Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art
1:00 PM-5:00 PM
Four to the Fore Associated Artists of Central New York
2:00 PM
Playing With Fire (After Frankenstein) Appleseed Productions (Read a review!)
2:00 PM
A Man for All Seasons Simply New Theatre (Read a review!)
2:00 PM
The Will Rogers Follies: A Life In Revue Wit's End Players (Read a review!)
3:00 PM-6:00 PM
Battle of the Bands
3:00 PM
Al Takes a Bride Kings Theatre
3:00 PM
Handel's Dixit Dominus Syracuse Vocal Ensemble
4:00 PM
Missa Caput and other English Surprises Schola Cantorum of Syracuse
6:00 PM
RedFilm Club Redhouse
7:00 PM
The Hypochondriac Black Box Players
7:30 PM
Stomp Broadway in Syracuse (Read a review!)
Events for Monday, October 22, 2007
7:00 AM-8:00 PM
Species Unknown Syracuse University School of Art and Design
9:00 AM-9:00 PM
Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Gallery Exhibit: Donalee Peden-Wesley Onondaga Community College
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Tango Point of Contact Gallery
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Four to the Fore Associated Artists of Central New York
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
2007 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Works by Brantley Carroll, Ella Gant, and David Moore Light Work Gallery
Events for Tuesday, October 23, 2007
7:00 AM-8:00 PM
Species Unknown Syracuse University School of Art and Design
9:00 AM-9:00 PM
Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Gallery Exhibit: Donalee Peden-Wesley Onondaga Community College
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Tango Point of Contact Gallery
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Four to the Fore Associated Artists of Central New York
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
2007 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Works by Brantley Carroll, Ella Gant, and David Moore Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery, featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
***CANCELLED*** 2007 Faculty Show Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
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7:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 16 |
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Species Unknown Syracuse University School of Art and Design
Price: Free The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Species Unknown, mixed media work by Diane Worth Doty, is a personal creation of false science using simple or modest materials such as needle and thread, cotton cloth, paper, coffee, tea, hair, and a manual typewriter. The artist explores the quiet rhythm of stitching with her interest in ornithology, combining women's craft through creative writing and choice of theoretical and scientific depiction of migratory patterns of birds and humans as the driving force.
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9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, October 16 |
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Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center
Price: Free YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 16 |
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Gallery Exhibit: Donalee Peden-Wesley Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
Large scale charcoal drawings with watercolor washes that address issues and relationships between humans and animals.
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 16 |
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Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 16 |
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The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
In commemoration of the 80th anniversary of the execution for murder of two Italian anarchist laborers, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, a selection of period ephemera issued by the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee together with a plethora of books associated with the trial that have been published in the intervening years by Paul Avrich, Felix Frankfurter, and Eugene Lyons, among others. The exhibit features artistic expressions (cartoons, illustrations, novels, plays, poems, songs and music) inspired by the trial, including the work of Maxwell Anderson, John Dos Passos, Fred Ellis, Howard Fast, Woodie Guthrie, William Gropper, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Rockwell Kent, Katherine Anne Porter, Pete Seeger, and Upton Sinclair. The story of the Sacco and Vanzetti mural by Ben Shahn on the east wall of H. B. Crouse will also be explored.
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, October 16 |
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Annual Members' Exhibition Associated Artists of Central New York
Price: Free Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr.,
Manlius
Thea Reidy, artist, designer and educator is jurying the show.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 16 |
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Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts
The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
A juried exhibit in which a dozen regional artists have individually interpreted the concept of "Tribal."
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 16 |
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A Faith Ringgold Retrospective: Story Quilts and Children's Books Community Folk Art Center
Price: Suggested donation $5 Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
An icon of American art and activism, Ringgold was born in Harlem, New York. From a young age, she was encouraged in her creative endeavors by her mother, Willi Posey Jones, who was a fashion designer and seamstress. Ringgold received her Bachelor's degree in Fine Art and Education and her Master's degree in Art at City College of New York. From 1955-1973, she taught art in the New York City public schools. In the mid-to late 1960s, Ringgold began portraying political and Civil Rights themes in her paintings. She abandoned traditional painting in the early 1970's, and began creating large unstretched paintings with elaborate fabric borders, similar to Tibetan tankas. She also began making fabric dolls, masks and soft sculptures, some of which were used in performance pieces. In the early 1980s, she began creating large story quilts, featuring painted images along with handwritten text. She adapted her story quilt Tar Beach into a children's book in 1990, and has since written and illustrated several children's books, and has also published her memoirs. From 1984 to 2002, Ringgold was a Professor of Art at University of California San Diego. She has been featured in numerous solo and group exhibitions since the 1960s. She has received many honors and awards for her achievements, including the National Endowment for the Arts awards in sculpture and painting, a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, and more than 15 honorary doctorates.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 16 |
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2007 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Works by Brantley Carroll, Ella Gant, and David Moore Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 16 |
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One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Vietnamese-American photographer Binh Danh has quietly gained recognition on the international art scene for his Vietnam War-inspired work. This exhibition features his most recognizable work, comprising appropriated war images that are printed directly onto leaves or grass, a process Danh invented while in college. On his first trip to Vietnam since his family immigrated to the United States, Danh was confronted by the remains of the war, such as bomb craters that had been converted into rice paddies, and he observed that memories of the war's devastation had become part of daily life. It was this experience that inspired him to create chlorophyll prints of found images from the Vietnam War with tropical leaves, sharing, in his words, the "epiphany that the memory of those people and events will reverberate forever through the country's landscape." Of his work, Danh states, "Much of my research has explored my own personal history and has become a way of visually and physically recollecting my family's history and honoring their collective memory." These concepts are very real with regard to any culture that has immigrated to the United States, looking at the stories families tell and the disconnected feeling experienced by the second generation. Danh was born in Vietnam in 1977. He received a BFA degree from San Jose State University and an MFA degree from Stanford University. His work has been exhibited in museums and galleries internationally, including the George Eastman House in Rochester, the Asia Society Museum in New York City, the University of Hawaii Art Museum, and the Haines Gallery in San Francisco. He lives and works in San Jose, CA. He participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2006.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 16 |
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The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
During the Vietnam War, Al Fasoldt was a photographer for Stars & Stripes. When he left Vietnam to come home, he left his negatives behind and brought a few 8"x10" prints and contact sheets of his work. Since then, the Pentagon has ordered all negatives of Stars & Stripes photographers be destroyed. Over the past few years, Fasoldt has been working to repair the prints and contact sheets he brought home years ago, using them to make prints of his Vietnam War images for exhibition.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 16 |
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COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery Featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This bold new exhibition, COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze, focuses on the psychological, social, cultural and political dimensions of desire, subjectivity and -- pleasure. COME ON presents an array of ideas, imagery and experiences on the topic of sexuality from the perspective of women in their 20s through mid 30s. The artists in this exhibition employ diverse media, including large-scale drawing, video installation, text work and ephemeral sculpture. COME ON reveals what is not represented in popular culture and provides a counterbalance to the ubiquitous imagery of sexualized female bodies created for mainstream heterosexual male sensibilities.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 16 |
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Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city. The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 16 |
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Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death. Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts. This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 16 |
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***CANCELLED*** 2007 Faculty Show Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 16 |
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Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
This exhibition features work by 18 photojournalists, three of whom -- Wesley Law, Ezra Shaw, and Justin Yurkanin -- are SU graduates. The subjects are diverse, ranging from the current conflicts in Africa to the legacy of Chernobyl. American topics focus on the Confederate flag controversy, life on the Navajo reservation and the 1997 reunion of people associated with The Farm, the Tennessee community that was America's largest hippie commune. The Alexia Foundation was begun by the parents of Alexia Tsairis, a Newhouse School of Public Communications undergraduate student who was killed in the Pan Am 103 bombing in 1988. Each year the foundation gives grants to selected student and professional photographers so they can pursue their interests in photojournalism. To date, the foundation has awarded over $500,000 in grants to 80 undergraduate photographers and 11 professionals. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 16 |
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Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Juxtapose artwork created by artists whose common thread is a shared studio/classroom space and expect the unexpected. This happened in 2004, when a group of women who work and teach at Syracuse University's ComArt building joined together for an exhibition entitled Under One Roof at SOHO20 Gallery in Chelsea, NY. This was the first time the artists - three generations of students/teachers - had shown together, yet their work spoke of seamless connections and closer ties than one might assume. Nine artists have reunited for the current exhibition Under One Roof Reprise. Their situations have changed slightly but their work once again has come together in surprising and interesting ways. Abby Goodman and Kim Carr Valdez earned their MFA degrees and moved to Brooklyn, while Laura Ledbetter now lives in Philadelphia. Anne Beffel, Ann Clarke, Mary Giehl, Gail Hoffman, and Jude Lewis continue to teach in the College of Visual and Performing Arts at Syracuse University, while Claire Harootunian, although officially retired, continues to teach, travel, and explore the art of found objects. The artists' processes are diverse, including large-scale installations, found object collaboration, casting, kinetics, video, and hand-tooled objects. Emphasis is placed on the creative use of materials such as fibers, metals, wood, plastics, resin, and everyday products. Each artist translates and illuminates human experience through her unique visual language and conceptual sensibility. These artists address common themes such as play, gender, identity, time, place, and most of all, memories. Mary Giehl's Ivory combines happy childhood memories of bathing with her siblings - recalling the "toys, the fun, the soap floating and the smell of Ivory" - with "those of sad and heartbreaking stories" not uncommon in today's headlines. Gail Hoffman, a sculptor immersed in the concept of time, presents "visual metaphorical narratives, freeze-framed in a state of suspended animation" through a variety of media including bronze, plastic toys, and other found objects. Plasco Ranch (Possible Outcomes) is a minature assemblage designed in the small scale to "invite the viewer to psychologically inhabit the space." A collection of disparate objects including a bronze sheep, Santa Claus, and military vehicles has been arranged to suggest a story that is left to the viewer's imagination. A journal placed nearby offers visitors the opportunity to record their stories and suggest possible outcomes for the scene as they see it unfold. Based on viewers' comments, Hoffman will return periodically to rearrange, add, or remove objects, providing photographic documentation of the ever changing Plasco Ranch as part of the exhibit. This group exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Syracuse University College of Visual and Performing Arts.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 16 |
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On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Since 1974, the Cultural Resources Council, in cooperation with the Everson, has presented On My Own Time. A celebration of artwork created by employees of local businesses on their own time, the exhibition is meant to promote creativity and artistic endeavors by those who are not full-time artists.
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Lecture |
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7:30 PM, October 16 |
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Erik Larson Friends of the Central Library Author Series
Price: $25 Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
Erik Larson's most famous book, The Devil in the White City, is a New York Times best seller, won an Edgar Award for nonfiction crime writing, and was nominated for a National Book Award. He has also written about the famous Galveston hurricane and has published articles in The Atlantic Monthly, Harper's and The New Yorker. His latest thriller, Thunderstruck, combines Marconi's quest for transatlantic communication with the story of notorious English murderer Dr. Hawley Harvey Crippen in another fascinating mystery.
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Music |
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8:00 PM, October 16 |
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Illusory Airs Society for New Music
Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
James Tapia and Armando Bayolo, conductor
Price: $15 regular, $12 seniors/students, 18 and under free; S.U. Music students free with valid I.D. Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Large chamber ensemble performing music by Michael Daugherty, Armando Bayolo, Andrew Waggoner and Eric Nathan.
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Wednesday, October 17, 2007
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Art |
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7:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 17 |
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Species Unknown Syracuse University School of Art and Design
Price: Free The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Species Unknown, mixed media work by Diane Worth Doty, is a personal creation of false science using simple or modest materials such as needle and thread, cotton cloth, paper, coffee, tea, hair, and a manual typewriter. The artist explores the quiet rhythm of stitching with her interest in ornithology, combining women's craft through creative writing and choice of theoretical and scientific depiction of migratory patterns of birds and humans as the driving force.
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9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, October 17 |
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Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center
Price: Free YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 17 |
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Gallery Exhibit: Donalee Peden-Wesley Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
Large scale charcoal drawings with watercolor washes that address issues and relationships between humans and animals.
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 17 |
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Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 17 |
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The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
In commemoration of the 80th anniversary of the execution for murder of two Italian anarchist laborers, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, a selection of period ephemera issued by the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee together with a plethora of books associated with the trial that have been published in the intervening years by Paul Avrich, Felix Frankfurter, and Eugene Lyons, among others. The exhibit features artistic expressions (cartoons, illustrations, novels, plays, poems, songs and music) inspired by the trial, including the work of Maxwell Anderson, John Dos Passos, Fred Ellis, Howard Fast, Woodie Guthrie, William Gropper, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Rockwell Kent, Katherine Anne Porter, Pete Seeger, and Upton Sinclair. The story of the Sacco and Vanzetti mural by Ben Shahn on the east wall of H. B. Crouse will also be explored.
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, October 17 |
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Annual Members' Exhibition Associated Artists of Central New York
Price: Free Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr.,
Manlius
Thea Reidy, artist, designer and educator is jurying the show.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 17 |
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Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts
The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
A juried exhibit in which a dozen regional artists have individually interpreted the concept of "Tribal."
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 17 |
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A Faith Ringgold Retrospective: Story Quilts and Children's Books Community Folk Art Center
Price: Suggested donation $5 Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
An icon of American art and activism, Ringgold was born in Harlem, New York. From a young age, she was encouraged in her creative endeavors by her mother, Willi Posey Jones, who was a fashion designer and seamstress. Ringgold received her Bachelor's degree in Fine Art and Education and her Master's degree in Art at City College of New York. From 1955-1973, she taught art in the New York City public schools. In the mid-to late 1960s, Ringgold began portraying political and Civil Rights themes in her paintings. She abandoned traditional painting in the early 1970's, and began creating large unstretched paintings with elaborate fabric borders, similar to Tibetan tankas. She also began making fabric dolls, masks and soft sculptures, some of which were used in performance pieces. In the early 1980s, she began creating large story quilts, featuring painted images along with handwritten text. She adapted her story quilt Tar Beach into a children's book in 1990, and has since written and illustrated several children's books, and has also published her memoirs. From 1984 to 2002, Ringgold was a Professor of Art at University of California San Diego. She has been featured in numerous solo and group exhibitions since the 1960s. She has received many honors and awards for her achievements, including the National Endowment for the Arts awards in sculpture and painting, a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, and more than 15 honorary doctorates.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 17 |
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One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Vietnamese-American photographer Binh Danh has quietly gained recognition on the international art scene for his Vietnam War-inspired work. This exhibition features his most recognizable work, comprising appropriated war images that are printed directly onto leaves or grass, a process Danh invented while in college. On his first trip to Vietnam since his family immigrated to the United States, Danh was confronted by the remains of the war, such as bomb craters that had been converted into rice paddies, and he observed that memories of the war's devastation had become part of daily life. It was this experience that inspired him to create chlorophyll prints of found images from the Vietnam War with tropical leaves, sharing, in his words, the "epiphany that the memory of those people and events will reverberate forever through the country's landscape." Of his work, Danh states, "Much of my research has explored my own personal history and has become a way of visually and physically recollecting my family's history and honoring their collective memory." These concepts are very real with regard to any culture that has immigrated to the United States, looking at the stories families tell and the disconnected feeling experienced by the second generation. Danh was born in Vietnam in 1977. He received a BFA degree from San Jose State University and an MFA degree from Stanford University. His work has been exhibited in museums and galleries internationally, including the George Eastman House in Rochester, the Asia Society Museum in New York City, the University of Hawaii Art Museum, and the Haines Gallery in San Francisco. He lives and works in San Jose, CA. He participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2006.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 17 |
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2007 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Works by Brantley Carroll, Ella Gant, and David Moore Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 17 |
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The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
During the Vietnam War, Al Fasoldt was a photographer for Stars & Stripes. When he left Vietnam to come home, he left his negatives behind and brought a few 8"x10" prints and contact sheets of his work. Since then, the Pentagon has ordered all negatives of Stars & Stripes photographers be destroyed. Over the past few years, Fasoldt has been working to repair the prints and contact sheets he brought home years ago, using them to make prints of his Vietnam War images for exhibition.
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10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, October 17 |
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Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition will feature artwork from the OHA collection that depicts various modes of local transportation and how artists interpreted it over the last two centuries. Local teachers and students will find subjects meeting their document-based questions social studies standards within the exhibit.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 17 |
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COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery Featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This bold new exhibition, COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze, focuses on the psychological, social, cultural and political dimensions of desire, subjectivity and -- pleasure. COME ON presents an array of ideas, imagery and experiences on the topic of sexuality from the perspective of women in their 20s through mid 30s. The artists in this exhibition employ diverse media, including large-scale drawing, video installation, text work and ephemeral sculpture. COME ON reveals what is not represented in popular culture and provides a counterbalance to the ubiquitous imagery of sexualized female bodies created for mainstream heterosexual male sensibilities.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 17 |
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Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city. The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 17 |
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***CANCELLED*** 2007 Faculty Show Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 17 |
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Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death. Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts. This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 17 |
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Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
This exhibition features work by 18 photojournalists, three of whom -- Wesley Law, Ezra Shaw, and Justin Yurkanin -- are SU graduates. The subjects are diverse, ranging from the current conflicts in Africa to the legacy of Chernobyl. American topics focus on the Confederate flag controversy, life on the Navajo reservation and the 1997 reunion of people associated with The Farm, the Tennessee community that was America's largest hippie commune. The Alexia Foundation was begun by the parents of Alexia Tsairis, a Newhouse School of Public Communications undergraduate student who was killed in the Pan Am 103 bombing in 1988. Each year the foundation gives grants to selected student and professional photographers so they can pursue their interests in photojournalism. To date, the foundation has awarded over $500,000 in grants to 80 undergraduate photographers and 11 professionals. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 17 |
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On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Since 1974, the Cultural Resources Council, in cooperation with the Everson, has presented On My Own Time. A celebration of artwork created by employees of local businesses on their own time, the exhibition is meant to promote creativity and artistic endeavors by those who are not full-time artists.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 17 |
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Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Juxtapose artwork created by artists whose common thread is a shared studio/classroom space and expect the unexpected. This happened in 2004, when a group of women who work and teach at Syracuse University's ComArt building joined together for an exhibition entitled Under One Roof at SOHO20 Gallery in Chelsea, NY. This was the first time the artists - three generations of students/teachers - had shown together, yet their work spoke of seamless connections and closer ties than one might assume. Nine artists have reunited for the current exhibition Under One Roof Reprise. Their situations have changed slightly but their work once again has come together in surprising and interesting ways. Abby Goodman and Kim Carr Valdez earned their MFA degrees and moved to Brooklyn, while Laura Ledbetter now lives in Philadelphia. Anne Beffel, Ann Clarke, Mary Giehl, Gail Hoffman, and Jude Lewis continue to teach in the College of Visual and Performing Arts at Syracuse University, while Claire Harootunian, although officially retired, continues to teach, travel, and explore the art of found objects. The artists' processes are diverse, including large-scale installations, found object collaboration, casting, kinetics, video, and hand-tooled objects. Emphasis is placed on the creative use of materials such as fibers, metals, wood, plastics, resin, and everyday products. Each artist translates and illuminates human experience through her unique visual language and conceptual sensibility. These artists address common themes such as play, gender, identity, time, place, and most of all, memories. Mary Giehl's Ivory combines happy childhood memories of bathing with her siblings - recalling the "toys, the fun, the soap floating and the smell of Ivory" - with "those of sad and heartbreaking stories" not uncommon in today's headlines. Gail Hoffman, a sculptor immersed in the concept of time, presents "visual metaphorical narratives, freeze-framed in a state of suspended animation" through a variety of media including bronze, plastic toys, and other found objects. Plasco Ranch (Possible Outcomes) is a minature assemblage designed in the small scale to "invite the viewer to psychologically inhabit the space." A collection of disparate objects including a bronze sheep, Santa Claus, and military vehicles has been arranged to suggest a story that is left to the viewer's imagination. A journal placed nearby offers visitors the opportunity to record their stories and suggest possible outcomes for the scene as they see it unfold. Based on viewers' comments, Hoffman will return periodically to rearrange, add, or remove objects, providing photographic documentation of the ever changing Plasco Ranch as part of the exhibit. This group exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Syracuse University College of Visual and Performing Arts.
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Lecture |
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4:30 PM, October 17 |
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Surface/Subsurface: Marion Weiss and Michael Manfredi Syracuse University School of Architecture
Price: Free The Warehouse, Main Auditorium
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Known for their multidisciplinary projects integrating architecture, art, landscape, and urbanism, Weiss and Manfredi explore how dynamic relationships between surface and subsurface conditions define a new site for innovative design. The conceptualization and realization of recent projects will be discussed in the context of contemporary practice. The lecture will be followed by a reception and exhibition in the Architecture Gallery.
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Music |
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12:30 PM, October 17 |
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Musicke...Olde, and New! Civic Morning Musicals Featuring Eileen Allen, recorders; Walden Bass, cello, percussion; Bette Kahler, harpsichord, piano, percussion
Price: Free Hosmer Auditorium, Everson Museum
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
A concert of music from the Baroque and before alongside works composed in our own generation!
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Opera |
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5:15 PM, October 17 |
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Syracuse Opera Mock Trial: Rigoletto Indicted in Stabbing Death of Daughter Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
Price: Free (seating is limited) Bond, Schoeneck & King Courtroom
Syracuse University College of Law,
Syracuse
Rigoletto, a hunchback and a jester in the palace of the Duke of Mantua, has been arrested and subsequently indicted for Murder in the 2nd Degree, Criminal Solicitation in the 2nd Degree, and Conspiracy in the 2nd Degree, involving the stabbing death of his daughter, Gilda, on or about July 15, 2006. According to the indictment, Rigoletto hired Sparafucile to kill Rigoletto's employer, the Duke of Mantua. The prosecution claims that Rigoletto's motive was to avenge the Duke's alleged rape of Gilda. Sparafucile has been cooperating with the police in exchange for a plea to a reduced charge of criminally negligent homicide and leniency at sentencing. Sparafucile has a long criminal record. Sparafucile's sister, Maddalena, a known prostitute and accomplice to many of Sparafucile's crimes, was present when Gilda was murdered. Maddalena is also cooperating with the police. The Mock Trial of the case, "Syracuse Opera's People of the State of New York vs. Rigoletto", will be presided over by the Hon. Anthony F. Aloi, County Court Judge. The People are represented by Eloise Rogers and Gloria Aldrich, Jordan-Elbridge High School's Mock Trial Team, coached by Windsor Price, Jr. The Defendant is represented by Nicholas Vozzo and Tonya Murphy, Bishop Ludden High School's Mock Trial Team, coached by Larry Vozzo. Witnesses in the case are from the Opera Workshop, College of Visual and Performing Arts, Syracuse University, who are also involved in Syracuse Opera's upcoming production of the opera, Rigoletto. Faculty member and bass Eric Johnson, head of the Opera Workshop, portrays Sparafucile, both at the Mock Trial and onstage in the opera. Students of the Opera Workshop who are participating in a special Shadowing Program for Rigoletto will portray the other witnesses: Maddalena will be portrayed by Emily Wells; The Duke of Mantua will be portrayed by Ricardo Horsey; and the Defendant, Rigoletto, will be portrayed by Sam Emanuel. The rules of evidence used by the NY State Bar Association High School Mock Trial Competition will be used in this trial. There will be at least two attorneys per side, but no more than three per side. Different attorneys must present the opening and closing statements for each side. Each side may take up to 30 minutes to present their case. Opening and closing statements are limited to 5 minutes each. Portions of the opera libretto may be utilized by either party for purposes of impeachment or to refresh recollection as if those portions were Grand Jury testimony. The authenticity of the Grand Jury minutes may not be a basis for objection. For purposes of this trial, there will be no challenges based on "chain of custody" issues. The trial will be conducted as if in front of a jury. The defendant will not testify. Discounted parking is available in the Irving Garage -- mention "Syracuse Opera Mock Trial."
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Poetry/Reading |
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5:30 PM, October 17 |
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Donald Hall, poetry Raymond Carver Reading Series
Price: Free Grant Auditorium, College of Law
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Donald Hall is the author of more than two dozen books of poems and of prose, most recently Willow Temple, a collection of short stories, and White Apples and the Taste of Stone: Selected Poems 1946-2006. He has received the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in poetry for The One Day (1989), the Lenore Marshall Award for The Happy Man (1987), the 1990 Frost Medal from the Poetry Society of America for Old and New Poems (1990), and the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize. He also received two Guggenheim Fellowships, and he served as Poet Laureate in 2006. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and continues to inhabit the New Hampshire farmhouse, occupied by his family for generations, where he and Jane Kenyon lived together.
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Thursday, October 18, 2007
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Art |
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7:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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Species Unknown Syracuse University School of Art and Design
Price: Free The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Species Unknown, mixed media work by Diane Worth Doty, is a personal creation of false science using simple or modest materials such as needle and thread, cotton cloth, paper, coffee, tea, hair, and a manual typewriter. The artist explores the quiet rhythm of stitching with her interest in ornithology, combining women's craft through creative writing and choice of theoretical and scientific depiction of migratory patterns of birds and humans as the driving force.
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9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, October 18 |
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Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center
Price: Free YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
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9:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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Gallery Exhibit: Donalee Peden-Wesley Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
Large scale charcoal drawings with watercolor washes that address issues and relationships between humans and animals.
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9:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.
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9:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
In commemoration of the 80th anniversary of the execution for murder of two Italian anarchist laborers, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, a selection of period ephemera issued by the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee together with a plethora of books associated with the trial that have been published in the intervening years by Paul Avrich, Felix Frankfurter, and Eugene Lyons, among others. The exhibit features artistic expressions (cartoons, illustrations, novels, plays, poems, songs and music) inspired by the trial, including the work of Maxwell Anderson, John Dos Passos, Fred Ellis, Howard Fast, Woodie Guthrie, William Gropper, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Rockwell Kent, Katherine Anne Porter, Pete Seeger, and Upton Sinclair. The story of the Sacco and Vanzetti mural by Ben Shahn on the east wall of H. B. Crouse will also be explored.
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, October 18 |
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Annual Members' Exhibition Associated Artists of Central New York
Price: Free Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr.,
Manlius
Thea Reidy, artist, designer and educator is jurying the show.
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts
The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
A juried exhibit in which a dozen regional artists have individually interpreted the concept of "Tribal."
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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A Faith Ringgold Retrospective: Story Quilts and Children's Books Community Folk Art Center
Price: Suggested donation $5 Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
An icon of American art and activism, Ringgold was born in Harlem, New York. From a young age, she was encouraged in her creative endeavors by her mother, Willi Posey Jones, who was a fashion designer and seamstress. Ringgold received her Bachelor's degree in Fine Art and Education and her Master's degree in Art at City College of New York. From 1955-1973, she taught art in the New York City public schools. In the mid-to late 1960s, Ringgold began portraying political and Civil Rights themes in her paintings. She abandoned traditional painting in the early 1970's, and began creating large unstretched paintings with elaborate fabric borders, similar to Tibetan tankas. She also began making fabric dolls, masks and soft sculptures, some of which were used in performance pieces. In the early 1980s, she began creating large story quilts, featuring painted images along with handwritten text. She adapted her story quilt Tar Beach into a children's book in 1990, and has since written and illustrated several children's books, and has also published her memoirs. From 1984 to 2002, Ringgold was a Professor of Art at University of California San Diego. She has been featured in numerous solo and group exhibitions since the 1960s. She has received many honors and awards for her achievements, including the National Endowment for the Arts awards in sculpture and painting, a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, and more than 15 honorary doctorates.
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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2007 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Works by Brantley Carroll, Ella Gant, and David Moore Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Vietnamese-American photographer Binh Danh has quietly gained recognition on the international art scene for his Vietnam War-inspired work. This exhibition features his most recognizable work, comprising appropriated war images that are printed directly onto leaves or grass, a process Danh invented while in college. On his first trip to Vietnam since his family immigrated to the United States, Danh was confronted by the remains of the war, such as bomb craters that had been converted into rice paddies, and he observed that memories of the war's devastation had become part of daily life. It was this experience that inspired him to create chlorophyll prints of found images from the Vietnam War with tropical leaves, sharing, in his words, the "epiphany that the memory of those people and events will reverberate forever through the country's landscape." Of his work, Danh states, "Much of my research has explored my own personal history and has become a way of visually and physically recollecting my family's history and honoring their collective memory." These concepts are very real with regard to any culture that has immigrated to the United States, looking at the stories families tell and the disconnected feeling experienced by the second generation. Danh was born in Vietnam in 1977. He received a BFA degree from San Jose State University and an MFA degree from Stanford University. His work has been exhibited in museums and galleries internationally, including the George Eastman House in Rochester, the Asia Society Museum in New York City, the University of Hawaii Art Museum, and the Haines Gallery in San Francisco. He lives and works in San Jose, CA. He participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2006.
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
During the Vietnam War, Al Fasoldt was a photographer for Stars & Stripes. When he left Vietnam to come home, he left his negatives behind and brought a few 8"x10" prints and contact sheets of his work. Since then, the Pentagon has ordered all negatives of Stars & Stripes photographers be destroyed. Over the past few years, Fasoldt has been working to repair the prints and contact sheets he brought home years ago, using them to make prints of his Vietnam War images for exhibition.
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition will feature artwork from the OHA collection that depicts various modes of local transportation and how artists interpreted it over the last two centuries. Local teachers and students will find subjects meeting their document-based questions social studies standards within the exhibit.
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery Featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This bold new exhibition, COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze, focuses on the psychological, social, cultural and political dimensions of desire, subjectivity and -- pleasure. COME ON presents an array of ideas, imagery and experiences on the topic of sexuality from the perspective of women in their 20s through mid 30s. The artists in this exhibition employ diverse media, including large-scale drawing, video installation, text work and ephemeral sculpture. COME ON reveals what is not represented in popular culture and provides a counterbalance to the ubiquitous imagery of sexualized female bodies created for mainstream heterosexual male sensibilities.
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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city. The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death. Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts. This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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***CANCELLED*** 2007 Faculty Show Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
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11:30 AM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
This exhibition features work by 18 photojournalists, three of whom -- Wesley Law, Ezra Shaw, and Justin Yurkanin -- are SU graduates. The subjects are diverse, ranging from the current conflicts in Africa to the legacy of Chernobyl. American topics focus on the Confederate flag controversy, life on the Navajo reservation and the 1997 reunion of people associated with The Farm, the Tennessee community that was America's largest hippie commune. The Alexia Foundation was begun by the parents of Alexia Tsairis, a Newhouse School of Public Communications undergraduate student who was killed in the Pan Am 103 bombing in 1988. Each year the foundation gives grants to selected student and professional photographers so they can pursue their interests in photojournalism. To date, the foundation has awarded over $500,000 in grants to 80 undergraduate photographers and 11 professionals. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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Maximum Color Delavan Art Gallery
Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Featuring glass by Phil Austin, paintings by Alison Fisher, landscapes and abstractions by Jim Loveless, non-representational paintings by Lutz Scherneck, and creative photography by Linda Spatuzzi.
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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Juxtapose artwork created by artists whose common thread is a shared studio/classroom space and expect the unexpected. This happened in 2004, when a group of women who work and teach at Syracuse University's ComArt building joined together for an exhibition entitled Under One Roof at SOHO20 Gallery in Chelsea, NY. This was the first time the artists - three generations of students/teachers - had shown together, yet their work spoke of seamless connections and closer ties than one might assume. Nine artists have reunited for the current exhibition Under One Roof Reprise. Their situations have changed slightly but their work once again has come together in surprising and interesting ways. Abby Goodman and Kim Carr Valdez earned their MFA degrees and moved to Brooklyn, while Laura Ledbetter now lives in Philadelphia. Anne Beffel, Ann Clarke, Mary Giehl, Gail Hoffman, and Jude Lewis continue to teach in the College of Visual and Performing Arts at Syracuse University, while Claire Harootunian, although officially retired, continues to teach, travel, and explore the art of found objects. The artists' processes are diverse, including large-scale installations, found object collaboration, casting, kinetics, video, and hand-tooled objects. Emphasis is placed on the creative use of materials such as fibers, metals, wood, plastics, resin, and everyday products. Each artist translates and illuminates human experience through her unique visual language and conceptual sensibility. These artists address common themes such as play, gender, identity, time, place, and most of all, memories. Mary Giehl's Ivory combines happy childhood memories of bathing with her siblings - recalling the "toys, the fun, the soap floating and the smell of Ivory" - with "those of sad and heartbreaking stories" not uncommon in today's headlines. Gail Hoffman, a sculptor immersed in the concept of time, presents "visual metaphorical narratives, freeze-framed in a state of suspended animation" through a variety of media including bronze, plastic toys, and other found objects. Plasco Ranch (Possible Outcomes) is a minature assemblage designed in the small scale to "invite the viewer to psychologically inhabit the space." A collection of disparate objects including a bronze sheep, Santa Claus, and military vehicles has been arranged to suggest a story that is left to the viewer's imagination. A journal placed nearby offers visitors the opportunity to record their stories and suggest possible outcomes for the scene as they see it unfold. Based on viewers' comments, Hoffman will return periodically to rearrange, add, or remove objects, providing photographic documentation of the ever changing Plasco Ranch as part of the exhibit. This group exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Syracuse University College of Visual and Performing Arts.
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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Since 1974, the Cultural Resources Council, in cooperation with the Everson, has presented On My Own Time. A celebration of artwork created by employees of local businesses on their own time, the exhibition is meant to promote creativity and artistic endeavors by those who are not full-time artists.
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5:00 PM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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Tango Point of Contact Gallery
Price: Free Point of Contact Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Tango, a large format folio published by Iris Editions in New York (1991) with eight intaglio prints by Nancy Graves and 13 pages of text by Pedro Cuperman that gaze at the aesthetics of this Latin American dance. Tango proposes an evening of music, dance, and food transposed into videoa sort of "performance" projected into the space of the gallery where audience and art become intertwined in the field of representation. "Graves conceived of the prints in the folio as a continued exploration of pattern in nature and as a tonal study of black and white," writes Thomas Padon in his book, Nancy Graves, Excavations in Print A Catalogue Raisonné (1996). "More than once the artist has asserted, 'There is nothing more challenging and meaningful than to make prints in black and white.' For an admitted colorist, it is ironic that the nine prints Graves has made in black and white are among her most powerful." The cryptic titles of the prints in the folio were selected by Graves from Cuperman's text for Tango. The poet speaks of the dance as a gradually unfolding ritual, stating near the conclusion, "Tango helps you find your own levels of proximity." At the opening reception, a renowned Miami-based Tango instrumentalist and composer Maestro Miguel Arrabal, will play the classic bandoneón while Vatan & Georgia from SyracuseTango along with Jean Fung from New York Citys Fun-Tango will perform to the rhythms of the Maestro. Point of Contact welcomes tangueros from near and far to this one-time only extravaganza, where the space of the gallery and the sidewalks of East Genesee St. turn to dance floors.
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5:00 PM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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Cosmology: Works by Alan Singer Redhouse
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
Alan Singer utilizes traditional painting and drawing techniques combined with high-tech digital tools and printmaking techniques to create his abstract environments. William Zimmer, New York Times' art critic, commented that "Singer's art has the refreshing jauntiness found in the pioneering American abstractionists." Alan Singer says: "My subjects are derived from visual and physical phenomena related to space (in the geometric sense), and our human interactions with nature. I think about how our environment interweaves things we can see and things which we can only feel, like the wind. I am very conscious of the elements in our natural world and the forces that are exerted on us, and how we adapt. I try to open my art to representations of physical and social forces that may draw upon literary, scientific or mathematical resources. Patterns in my painting find correlations to the textures and rhythms of music, dance, textile arts and more."
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5:00 PM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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Million Dollar Blocks: Justice and the City ThINC
Company Gallery
110 W. Fayette St. (corner of Clinton),
Syracuse
The United States currently has more than 2 million people locked up in jails and prisons. A disproportionate number of them come from a very few neighborhoods in the country's biggest cities. In many places, the concentration is so dense that states are spending in excess of a million dollars a year to incarcerate the residents of single census blocks. When these people are released and reenter their communities, roughly 40% do not stay more than three years before they are reincarcerated. Using rarely accessible data from the criminal justice system, the Spatial Information Design Lab and the Justice Mapping Center have created maps of these "million dollar blocks" and of the city-prison-city-prison migration for of the nation's cities. The maps suggest that the criminal justice system has become the predominant government institution in these communities and that public investment in this system has resulted in significant costs to other elements of our civic infrastructure -- education, housing, health, and family. The maps pose difficult ethical and political questions for policymakers and designers. When they are linked to other urban social and economic indicators of incarceration they also suggest new strategies for approaching urban design and criminal justice reform together.
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5:00 PM - 8:00 PM, October 18 |
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Alterity ThINC
Price: Free Company Gallery
110 W. Fayette St. (corner of Clinton),
Syracuse
A group show of art drawn from alternative art movements. The 20 works included in the exhibition represent a range of so-called "outsider" art made by those who do not work within the sphere of the traditional art world: prisoners, people with various compulsive agendas (the evils of taxes, for instance), and individuals with such significant disabilities as schizophrenia and autism. Dan Miller, currently featured at White Columns Gallery in New York, and one of whose drawings was recently purchased by The Museum of Modern Art in New York, is one of the artists whose art those who visit the exhibition will be able to enjoy; he is represented by several works in ThINC's exhibition. Also on view are drawings and objects produced by prisoners and former prison inmates who participated in programs at the Center for Community Alternatives in Syracuse. In addition, there are three sculptures by Edward Nagrodzki, a self-appointed 'tax rebel'. The sculptures are representative of the wide array of creative forms he used to protest the imposition of taxes.
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6:00 PM - 10:00 PM, October 18 |
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Song Cycle for Haruki Murakami Urban Video Project
Price: Free Fayette Firefighters Memorial Park
Fayette St.,
Syracuse
The Urban Video Project (UVP) will present "Song Cycle for Haruki Murakami," its fifth volume of outdoor multimedia projections. "Song Cycle for Haruki Murakami" is a four-part sound and image composition by musicians/media artists Matthew Dotson and Bart Woodstrup. Curator of the show is the Avalanche Collective, an artist group led by three graduate students from Syracuse University's College of Visual and Performing Arts: Blake Carrington, Christopher Gianunzio and Colin Todd. The screening is part of the fall season of UVP, which features international artists and coincides with the fall evenings of Th3: A City-Wide Art Open, which is held on the third Thursday of each month. Based on four quotes from Murakami's book "The Wind-up Bird Chronicle," "Song Cycle for Haruki Murakami" attempts to create new narratives out of the fragments of the original structure. Dotson, the composer and sound designer, uses ambient sound recordings in addition to cello, drum, flute and clarinet solo performance to construct these new narratives. In response to the sound composition, Woodstrup creates stark imagery of elegantly animated text. The imagery imitates the themes of insect wings, earth, dust and lock by mapping the animation to elements of the sonic spectrum.
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Film |
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8:00 PM, October 18 |
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Emotional Realism The Warehouse Gallery
Price: Free Watson Theater, Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave. (Syracuse University),
Syracuse
A collection of short videos exploring the "real", curated by Emily Vey Duke and Cooper Battersby, featuring works by Miriam Backstrom, LaToya Frazier, Dena DeCola and Karin Wandner, Amanda Baggs. Emotional Realism proposes that the truth claim made by documentaries as well as reality-style features and vignettes allows the viewer to identify with the author/subjects more profoundly and to engage the work with greater mercy. This is programmed in conjunction with The Warehouse Gallery's exhibition, COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze, which focuses on the psychological, social, cultural and political dimensions of desire, subjectivity and pleasure, and is on view through Oct. 27 in the main gallery.
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Lecture |
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6:30 PM, October 18 |
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Artist Talk Light Work Gallery Featuring Al Fasoldt
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Talk in conjunction with the exhibit "The Lost Photos of Vietnam."
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Music |
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8:00 PM, October 18 |
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Syracuse University Setnor School of Music A Journey Towards Justice
Price: Free Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
New jazz by composer and musician Bill Cole with Billy Bang, Jayne Cortez and the Untempered Ensemble
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Theater |
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6:45 PM, October 18 |
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Death Joins the Club Acme Mystery Company
Price: $25.95 plus tax and gratuities (includes meal and show) Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St.,
Syracuse
Interactive dinner theater murder mystery.
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8:00 PM, October 18 |
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Baby With the Bathwater Rarely Done Productions Linda Lance, director
Price: Pay-what-you-can preview ($5 minimum) Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St.,
Syracuse
Playwright Christoper Durang's dark comedy about how difficult it is to be a parent, and how scary it is to be a baby and a child. The play is written in an absurdist, playful style and, for all its darkness, has a hopeful ending. Mature audiences.
Read a Review!
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Friday, October 19, 2007
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Art |
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Time TBD, October 19 |
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Million Dollar Blocks: Justice and the City ThINC
Company Gallery
110 W. Fayette St. (corner of Clinton),
Syracuse
The United States currently has more than 2 million people locked up in jails and prisons. A disproportionate number of them come from a very few neighborhoods in the country's biggest cities. In many places, the concentration is so dense that states are spending in excess of a million dollars a year to incarcerate the residents of single census blocks. When these people are released and reenter their communities, roughly 40% do not stay more than three years before they are reincarcerated. Using rarely accessible data from the criminal justice system, the Spatial Information Design Lab and the Justice Mapping Center have created maps of these "million dollar blocks" and of the city-prison-city-prison migration for of the nation's cities. The maps suggest that the criminal justice system has become the predominant government institution in these communities and that public investment in this system has resulted in significant costs to other elements of our civic infrastructure -- education, housing, health, and family. The maps pose difficult ethical and political questions for policymakers and designers. When they are linked to other urban social and economic indicators of incarceration they also suggest new strategies for approaching urban design and criminal justice reform together.
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7:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 19 |
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Species Unknown Syracuse University School of Art and Design
Price: Free The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Species Unknown, mixed media work by Diane Worth Doty, is a personal creation of false science using simple or modest materials such as needle and thread, cotton cloth, paper, coffee, tea, hair, and a manual typewriter. The artist explores the quiet rhythm of stitching with her interest in ornithology, combining women's craft through creative writing and choice of theoretical and scientific depiction of migratory patterns of birds and humans as the driving force.
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9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, October 19 |
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Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center
Price: Free YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 19 |
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Gallery Exhibit: Donalee Peden-Wesley Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
Large scale charcoal drawings with watercolor washes that address issues and relationships between humans and animals.
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 19 |
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Tango Point of Contact Gallery
Price: Free Point of Contact Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Tango, a large format folio published by Iris Editions in New York (1991) with eight intaglio prints by Nancy Graves and 13 pages of text by Pedro Cuperman that gaze at the aesthetics of this Latin American dance. Tango proposes an evening of music, dance, and food transposed into videoa sort of "performance" projected into the space of the gallery where audience and art become intertwined in the field of representation. "Graves conceived of the prints in the folio as a continued exploration of pattern in nature and as a tonal study of black and white," writes Thomas Padon in his book, Nancy Graves, Excavations in Print A Catalogue Raisonné (1996). "More than once the artist has asserted, 'There is nothing more challenging and meaningful than to make prints in black and white.' For an admitted colorist, it is ironic that the nine prints Graves has made in black and white are among her most powerful." The cryptic titles of the prints in the folio were selected by Graves from Cuperman's text for Tango. The poet speaks of the dance as a gradually unfolding ritual, stating near the conclusion, "Tango helps you find your own levels of proximity."
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 19 |
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Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 19 |
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The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
In commemoration of the 80th anniversary of the execution for murder of two Italian anarchist laborers, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, a selection of period ephemera issued by the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee together with a plethora of books associated with the trial that have been published in the intervening years by Paul Avrich, Felix Frankfurter, and Eugene Lyons, among others. The exhibit features artistic expressions (cartoons, illustrations, novels, plays, poems, songs and music) inspired by the trial, including the work of Maxwell Anderson, John Dos Passos, Fred Ellis, Howard Fast, Woodie Guthrie, William Gropper, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Rockwell Kent, Katherine Anne Porter, Pete Seeger, and Upton Sinclair. The story of the Sacco and Vanzetti mural by Ben Shahn on the east wall of H. B. Crouse will also be explored.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 19 |
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Annual Members' Exhibition Associated Artists of Central New York
Price: Free Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr.,
Manlius
Thea Reidy, artist, designer and educator is jurying the show.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 19 |
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Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts
The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
A juried exhibit in which a dozen regional artists have individually interpreted the concept of "Tribal."
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 19 |
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A Faith Ringgold Retrospective: Story Quilts and Children's Books Community Folk Art Center
Price: Suggested donation $5 Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
An icon of American art and activism, Ringgold was born in Harlem, New York. From a young age, she was encouraged in her creative endeavors by her mother, Willi Posey Jones, who was a fashion designer and seamstress. Ringgold received her Bachelor's degree in Fine Art and Education and her Master's degree in Art at City College of New York. From 1955-1973, she taught art in the New York City public schools. In the mid-to late 1960s, Ringgold began portraying political and Civil Rights themes in her paintings. She abandoned traditional painting in the early 1970's, and began creating large unstretched paintings with elaborate fabric borders, similar to Tibetan tankas. She also began making fabric dolls, masks and soft sculptures, some of which were used in performance pieces. In the early 1980s, she began creating large story quilts, featuring painted images along with handwritten text. She adapted her story quilt Tar Beach into a children's book in 1990, and has since written and illustrated several children's books, and has also published her memoirs. From 1984 to 2002, Ringgold was a Professor of Art at University of California San Diego. She has been featured in numerous solo and group exhibitions since the 1960s. She has received many honors and awards for her achievements, including the National Endowment for the Arts awards in sculpture and painting, a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, and more than 15 honorary doctorates.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 19 |
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One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Vietnamese-American photographer Binh Danh has quietly gained recognition on the international art scene for his Vietnam War-inspired work. This exhibition features his most recognizable work, comprising appropriated war images that are printed directly onto leaves or grass, a process Danh invented while in college. On his first trip to Vietnam since his family immigrated to the United States, Danh was confronted by the remains of the war, such as bomb craters that had been converted into rice paddies, and he observed that memories of the war's devastation had become part of daily life. It was this experience that inspired him to create chlorophyll prints of found images from the Vietnam War with tropical leaves, sharing, in his words, the "epiphany that the memory of those people and events will reverberate forever through the country's landscape." Of his work, Danh states, "Much of my research has explored my own personal history and has become a way of visually and physically recollecting my family's history and honoring their collective memory." These concepts are very real with regard to any culture that has immigrated to the United States, looking at the stories families tell and the disconnected feeling experienced by the second generation. Danh was born in Vietnam in 1977. He received a BFA degree from San Jose State University and an MFA degree from Stanford University. His work has been exhibited in museums and galleries internationally, including the George Eastman House in Rochester, the Asia Society Museum in New York City, the University of Hawaii Art Museum, and the Haines Gallery in San Francisco. He lives and works in San Jose, CA. He participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2006.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 19 |
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2007 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Works by Brantley Carroll, Ella Gant, and David Moore Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 19 |
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The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
During the Vietnam War, Al Fasoldt was a photographer for Stars & Stripes. When he left Vietnam to come home, he left his negatives behind and brought a few 8"x10" prints and contact sheets of his work. Since then, the Pentagon has ordered all negatives of Stars & Stripes photographers be destroyed. Over the past few years, Fasoldt has been working to repair the prints and contact sheets he brought home years ago, using them to make prints of his Vietnam War images for exhibition.
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10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, October 19 |
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Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition will feature artwork from the OHA collection that depicts various modes of local transportation and how artists interpreted it over the last two centuries. Local teachers and students will find subjects meeting their document-based questions social studies standards within the exhibit.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 19 |
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COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery Featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This bold new exhibition, COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze, focuses on the psychological, social, cultural and political dimensions of desire, subjectivity and -- pleasure. COME ON presents an array of ideas, imagery and experiences on the topic of sexuality from the perspective of women in their 20s through mid 30s. The artists in this exhibition employ diverse media, including large-scale drawing, video installation, text work and ephemeral sculpture. COME ON reveals what is not represented in popular culture and provides a counterbalance to the ubiquitous imagery of sexualized female bodies created for mainstream heterosexual male sensibilities.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 19 |
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Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city. The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 19 |
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***CANCELLED*** 2007 Faculty Show Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 19 |
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Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death. Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts. This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 19 |
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Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
This exhibition features work by 18 photojournalists, three of whom -- Wesley Law, Ezra Shaw, and Justin Yurkanin -- are SU graduates. The subjects are diverse, ranging from the current conflicts in Africa to the legacy of Chernobyl. American topics focus on the Confederate flag controversy, life on the Navajo reservation and the 1997 reunion of people associated with The Farm, the Tennessee community that was America's largest hippie commune. The Alexia Foundation was begun by the parents of Alexia Tsairis, a Newhouse School of Public Communications undergraduate student who was killed in the Pan Am 103 bombing in 1988. Each year the foundation gives grants to selected student and professional photographers so they can pursue their interests in photojournalism. To date, the foundation has awarded over $500,000 in grants to 80 undergraduate photographers and 11 professionals. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 19 |
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Maximum Color Delavan Art Gallery
Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Featuring glass by Phil Austin, paintings by Alison Fisher, landscapes and abstractions by Jim Loveless, non-representational paintings by Lutz Scherneck, and creative photography by Linda Spatuzzi.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 19 |
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On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Since 1974, the Cultural Resources Council, in cooperation with the Everson, has presented On My Own Time. A celebration of artwork created by employees of local businesses on their own time, the exhibition is meant to promote creativity and artistic endeavors by those who are not full-time artists.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 19 |
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Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Juxtapose artwork created by artists whose common thread is a shared studio/classroom space and expect the unexpected. This happened in 2004, when a group of women who work and teach at Syracuse University's ComArt building joined together for an exhibition entitled Under One Roof at SOHO20 Gallery in Chelsea, NY. This was the first time the artists - three generations of students/teachers - had shown together, yet their work spoke of seamless connections and closer ties than one might assume. Nine artists have reunited for the current exhibition Under One Roof Reprise. Their situations have changed slightly but their work once again has come together in surprising and interesting ways. Abby Goodman and Kim Carr Valdez earned their MFA degrees and moved to Brooklyn, while Laura Ledbetter now lives in Philadelphia. Anne Beffel, Ann Clarke, Mary Giehl, Gail Hoffman, and Jude Lewis continue to teach in the College of Visual and Performing Arts at Syracuse University, while Claire Harootunian, although officially retired, continues to teach, travel, and explore the art of found objects. The artists' processes are diverse, including large-scale installations, found object collaboration, casting, kinetics, video, and hand-tooled objects. Emphasis is placed on the creative use of materials such as fibers, metals, wood, plastics, resin, and everyday products. Each artist translates and illuminates human experience through her unique visual language and conceptual sensibility. These artists address common themes such as play, gender, identity, time, place, and most of all, memories. Mary Giehl's Ivory combines happy childhood memories of bathing with her siblings - recalling the "toys, the fun, the soap floating and the smell of Ivory" - with "those of sad and heartbreaking stories" not uncommon in today's headlines. Gail Hoffman, a sculptor immersed in the concept of time, presents "visual metaphorical narratives, freeze-framed in a state of suspended animation" through a variety of media including bronze, plastic toys, and other found objects. Plasco Ranch (Possible Outcomes) is a minature assemblage designed in the small scale to "invite the viewer to psychologically inhabit the space." A collection of disparate objects including a bronze sheep, Santa Claus, and military vehicles has been arranged to suggest a story that is left to the viewer's imagination. A journal placed nearby offers visitors the opportunity to record their stories and suggest possible outcomes for the scene as they see it unfold. Based on viewers' comments, Hoffman will return periodically to rearrange, add, or remove objects, providing photographic documentation of the ever changing Plasco Ranch as part of the exhibit. This group exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Syracuse University College of Visual and Performing Arts.
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3:00 PM - 7:00 PM, October 19 |
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Alterity ThINC
Price: Free Company Gallery
110 W. Fayette St. (corner of Clinton),
Syracuse
A group show of art drawn from alternative art movements. The 20 works included in the exhibition represent a range of so-called "outsider" art made by those who do not work within the sphere of the traditional art world: prisoners, people with various compulsive agendas (the evils of taxes, for instance), and individuals with such significant disabilities as schizophrenia and autism. Dan Miller, currently featured at White Columns Gallery in New York, and one of whose drawings was recently purchased by The Museum of Modern Art in New York, is one of the artists whose art those who visit the exhibition will be able to enjoy; he is represented by several works in ThINC's exhibition. Also on view are drawings and objects produced by prisoners and former prison inmates who participated in programs at the Center for Community Alternatives in Syracuse. In addition, there are three sculptures by Edward Nagrodzki, a self-appointed 'tax rebel'. The sculptures are representative of the wide array of creative forms he used to protest the imposition of taxes.
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Music |
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11:15 AM, October 19 |
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OCC Brass Ensemble Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Storer Auditorium
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
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8:00 PM, October 19 |
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Folkus Project Stacey Earle and Mark Stuart
Price: $10 May Memorial Unitarian Society
3800 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Warm, homespun songs portray an intimate, lived-in version of Americana.
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8:00 PM, October 19 |
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Thanksgiving Spark Contemporary Art Space
Price: $5 Spark Contemporary Art Space
1005 E. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Thanksgiving: (aka Adrian Orange) is a musician out of Portland, OR, on Marriage Records. "Adrian Orange's unique brand of fuzzy outsider-folk isn't always the easiest to describe, and, as a result, is often just given a place among the likes of Mount Eerie, Little Wings and Karl Blau by the adjectively challenged like myself." - The Nerve Magazine
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8:00 PM, October 19 |
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Classics Series: On the Town Syracuse Symphony Orchestra Daniel Hege, conductor Featuring Terrence Wilson, piano
Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
Bernstein On the Town: Three Dance Episodes Daugherty Deus ex machina Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 5
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8:00 PM, October 19 |
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Faculty Cello Recital Syracuse University Setnor School of Music Featuring Caroline Stinson, cello
Price: Free Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
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Theater |
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7:30 PM, October 19 |
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A Party to Murder Baldwinsville Theatre Guild Deborah Taylor, director
First Presbyterian Church of Baldwinsville
64 Oswego St.,
Baldwinsville
Six people have come in secret on Halloween to play a murder mystery game at a rustic island cottage. Invited by writer Charles Prince, they appear set for a weekend of fun until ghosts from the past begin to haunt the proceedings and it becomes clear that all is not as it seems. The game takes on a sinister dimension when guests begin to die and the remaining players realize that they are playing for their lives. Tension rises. Secret passageways, incriminating letters, hidden compartments, bodies in the window seat and a 25-year-old unsolved mystery twist and turn toward the unexpected and terrifying conclusion.
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7:30 PM, October 19 |
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Stomp Broadway in Syracuse
Price: $47.50, $37.50, $25.50 Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
Stomp, an overwhelming success marked by rave reviews, numerous awards, and sell-out engagements, is the winner of an Olivier Award for Best Choreography (London's Tony Award), a New York Obie Award, a Drama Desk Award for Unique Theatre Experience, and a Special Citation from Best Plays. The young performers "make a rhythm out of anything we can get our hands on that makes a sound," says co-creator/director Luke Cresswell. Stiff-bristle brooms become a sweeping orchestra; Zippo lighters flip open and closed to create a fiery fugue; wooden poles thump and clack in a rhythmic explosion. Stomp uses everything but conventional percussion instruments - trashcans, tea chests, plastic bags, plungers, boots, and hubcaps - to fill the stage with compelling and infectious rhythms. Tickets are available at the Landmark Box Office and all Ticketmaster locations.
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8:00 PM, October 19 |
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Playing With Fire (After Frankenstein) Appleseed Productions William Edward White, director
Price: $15 regular; $12 students/seniors (price includes dessert and beverage at intermission) Atonement Lutheran Church
116 W. Glen Ave.,
Syracuse
As the play, written by Barbara Field, adapted from Mary Shelley's novel, begins, an exhausted and dying Victor Frankenstein has finally tracked down his Creature in the lonely, frozen tundra of the North Pole. Determined to right the wrong he has committed by, at last, destroying the malignant evil he believes he has created, Frankenstein finds that he must first deal with his own responsibility and guilt -- for, as their fascinating confrontation develops, it is evident that the Creature has become a pathetic, lonely and even sensitive being who wants only to find love and that he, Frankenstein, by intruding into the very secrets of life, is truly the evil one. As the two debate, scenes from the past flash by: Frankenstein's young bride, whom the Monster killed out of pique when the scientist failed to provide him with a mate of his own; the brilliant, quick-witted Professor Krempe, Frankenstein's university mentor; and moments between the youthful Victor and his brother, who also fell victim to the Creature's vengeance. Ultimately the exchange between Frankenstein and the Creature becomes a confrontation between parent and child, scientist and experiment, rejection and love, and even good and evil -- culminating in the Creature's agonizing question, "Why did you make me?"
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8:00 PM, October 19 |
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The Hypochondriac Black Box Players
Price: Free Loft Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
For more information, phone 443-2102.
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8:00 PM, October 19 |
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Al Takes a Bride Kings Theatre
Price: $20 regular; $50 preferred seating and opening reception Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
On a moonlit riverbank, over a hundred years before the U.S. Congress passed the Defense of Marriage Act, two young southern women imagine their wedding to each other. Full of lyrical suspense and based loosely on a high-profile, turn of the century murder case, "Al Takes a Bride" hinges on impossible choices, where decisions rest somewhere between dreaming and dying. It has been produced in NYC and Sydney, Australia. Performances will benefit Vera House.
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8:00 PM, October 19 |
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Baby With the Bathwater Rarely Done Productions Linda Lance, director
Price: $25 Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St.,
Syracuse
Playwright Christoper Durang's dark comedy about how difficult it is to be a parent, and how scary it is to be a baby and a child. The play is written in an absurdist, playful style and, for all its darkness, has a hopeful ending. Mature audiences.
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8:00 PM, October 19 |
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A Man for All Seasons Simply New Theatre
Price: $25 regular; $20 students/seniors BeVard Room, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
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8:00 PM, October 19 |
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The Will Rogers Follies: A Life In Revue Wit's End Players
Price: $25 adults; $20 seniors/students; $14 children Empire Theater
New York State Fairgrounds,
Geddes
Song, dance, humor, and wisdom highlight this spectacular family musical. With Syracuse's own Bob Brown in the title role, the life of that great entertainer, Will Rogers, unfolds on the Ziegfeld Follies stage. Between rope tricks to entertain the audience while the show girls are changing their costumes, Will soothes us with his old-fashioned common sense and introduces us to his family. The beautiful girls, in stunning costumes, return to entertain as Will takes us on a happy journey through some of America's most patriotic and nostalgic days.
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Saturday, October 20, 2007
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Art |
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Time TBD, October 20 |
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Million Dollar Blocks: Justice and the City ThINC
Company Gallery
110 W. Fayette St. (corner of Clinton),
Syracuse
The United States currently has more than 2 million people locked up in jails and prisons. A disproportionate number of them come from a very few neighborhoods in the country's biggest cities. In many places, the concentration is so dense that states are spending in excess of a million dollars a year to incarcerate the residents of single census blocks. When these people are released and reenter their communities, roughly 40% do not stay more than three years before they are reincarcerated. Using rarely accessible data from the criminal justice system, the Spatial Information Design Lab and the Justice Mapping Center have created maps of these "million dollar blocks" and of the city-prison-city-prison migration for of the nation's cities. The maps suggest that the criminal justice system has become the predominant government institution in these communities and that public investment in this system has resulted in significant costs to other elements of our civic infrastructure -- education, housing, health, and family. The maps pose difficult ethical and political questions for policymakers and designers. When they are linked to other urban social and economic indicators of incarceration they also suggest new strategies for approaching urban design and criminal justice reform together.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 20 |
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Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center
Price: Free YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 20 |
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Annual Members' Exhibition Associated Artists of Central New York
Price: Free Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr.,
Manlius
Thea Reidy, artist, designer and educator is jurying the show.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 20 |
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Four to the Fore Associated Artists of Central New York
Price: Free Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr.,
Manlius
The exhibits highlights the varied work of four members, Barbara Emmons, Judith Jaquith, Elizabeth Pilbeam, and Clara Towell.
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 20 |
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Maximum Color Delavan Art Gallery
Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Featuring glass by Phil Austin, paintings by Alison Fisher, landscapes and abstractions by Jim Loveless, non-representational paintings by Lutz Scherneck, and creative photography by Linda Spatuzzi.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 20 |
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Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Juxtapose artwork created by artists whose common thread is a shared studio/classroom space and expect the unexpected. This happened in 2004, when a group of women who work and teach at Syracuse University's ComArt building joined together for an exhibition entitled Under One Roof at SOHO20 Gallery in Chelsea, NY. This was the first time the artists - three generations of students/teachers - had shown together, yet their work spoke of seamless connections and closer ties than one might assume. Nine artists have reunited for the current exhibition Under One Roof Reprise. Their situations have changed slightly but their work once again has come together in surprising and interesting ways. Abby Goodman and Kim Carr Valdez earned their MFA degrees and moved to Brooklyn, while Laura Ledbetter now lives in Philadelphia. Anne Beffel, Ann Clarke, Mary Giehl, Gail Hoffman, and Jude Lewis continue to teach in the College of Visual and Performing Arts at Syracuse University, while Claire Harootunian, although officially retired, continues to teach, travel, and explore the art of found objects. The artists' processes are diverse, including large-scale installations, found object collaboration, casting, kinetics, video, and hand-tooled objects. Emphasis is placed on the creative use of materials such as fibers, metals, wood, plastics, resin, and everyday products. Each artist translates and illuminates human experience through her unique visual language and conceptual sensibility. These artists address common themes such as play, gender, identity, time, place, and most of all, memories. Mary Giehl's Ivory combines happy childhood memories of bathing with her siblings - recalling the "toys, the fun, the soap floating and the smell of Ivory" - with "those of sad and heartbreaking stories" not uncommon in today's headlines. Gail Hoffman, a sculptor immersed in the concept of time, presents "visual metaphorical narratives, freeze-framed in a state of suspended animation" through a variety of media including bronze, plastic toys, and other found objects. Plasco Ranch (Possible Outcomes) is a minature assemblage designed in the small scale to "invite the viewer to psychologically inhabit the space." A collection of disparate objects including a bronze sheep, Santa Claus, and military vehicles has been arranged to suggest a story that is left to the viewer's imagination. A journal placed nearby offers visitors the opportunity to record their stories and suggest possible outcomes for the scene as they see it unfold. Based on viewers' comments, Hoffman will return periodically to rearrange, add, or remove objects, providing photographic documentation of the ever changing Plasco Ranch as part of the exhibit. This group exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Syracuse University College of Visual and Performing Arts.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 20 |
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On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Since 1974, the Cultural Resources Council, in cooperation with the Everson, has presented On My Own Time. A celebration of artwork created by employees of local businesses on their own time, the exhibition is meant to promote creativity and artistic endeavors by those who are not full-time artists.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 20 |
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Species Unknown Syracuse University School of Art and Design
Price: Free The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Species Unknown, mixed media work by Diane Worth Doty, is a personal creation of false science using simple or modest materials such as needle and thread, cotton cloth, paper, coffee, tea, hair, and a manual typewriter. The artist explores the quiet rhythm of stitching with her interest in ornithology, combining women's craft through creative writing and choice of theoretical and scientific depiction of migratory patterns of birds and humans as the driving force.
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 20 |
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A Faith Ringgold Retrospective: Story Quilts and Children's Books Community Folk Art Center
Price: Suggested donation $5 Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
An icon of American art and activism, Ringgold was born in Harlem, New York. From a young age, she was encouraged in her creative endeavors by her mother, Willi Posey Jones, who was a fashion designer and seamstress. Ringgold received her Bachelor's degree in Fine Art and Education and her Master's degree in Art at City College of New York. From 1955-1973, she taught art in the New York City public schools. In the mid-to late 1960s, Ringgold began portraying political and Civil Rights themes in her paintings. She abandoned traditional painting in the early 1970's, and began creating large unstretched paintings with elaborate fabric borders, similar to Tibetan tankas. She also began making fabric dolls, masks and soft sculptures, some of which were used in performance pieces. In the early 1980s, she began creating large story quilts, featuring painted images along with handwritten text. She adapted her story quilt Tar Beach into a children's book in 1990, and has since written and illustrated several children's books, and has also published her memoirs. From 1984 to 2002, Ringgold was a Professor of Art at University of California San Diego. She has been featured in numerous solo and group exhibitions since the 1960s. She has received many honors and awards for her achievements, including the National Endowment for the Arts awards in sculpture and painting, a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, and more than 15 honorary doctorates.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 20 |
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Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition will feature artwork from the OHA collection that depicts various modes of local transportation and how artists interpreted it over the last two centuries. Local teachers and students will find subjects meeting their document-based questions social studies standards within the exhibit.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 20 |
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Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city. The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 20 |
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Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death. Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts. This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 20 |
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***CANCELLED*** 2007 Faculty Show Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 20 |
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Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
This exhibition features work by 18 photojournalists, three of whom -- Wesley Law, Ezra Shaw, and Justin Yurkanin -- are SU graduates. The subjects are diverse, ranging from the current conflicts in Africa to the legacy of Chernobyl. American topics focus on the Confederate flag controversy, life on the Navajo reservation and the 1997 reunion of people associated with The Farm, the Tennessee community that was America's largest hippie commune. The Alexia Foundation was begun by the parents of Alexia Tsairis, a Newhouse School of Public Communications undergraduate student who was killed in the Pan Am 103 bombing in 1988. Each year the foundation gives grants to selected student and professional photographers so they can pursue their interests in photojournalism. To date, the foundation has awarded over $500,000 in grants to 80 undergraduate photographers and 11 professionals. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 20 |
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Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts
The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
A juried exhibit in which a dozen regional artists have individually interpreted the concept of "Tribal."
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 20 |
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COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery Featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This bold new exhibition, COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze, focuses on the psychological, social, cultural and political dimensions of desire, subjectivity and -- pleasure. COME ON presents an array of ideas, imagery and experiences on the topic of sexuality from the perspective of women in their 20s through mid 30s. The artists in this exhibition employ diverse media, including large-scale drawing, video installation, text work and ephemeral sculpture. COME ON reveals what is not represented in popular culture and provides a counterbalance to the ubiquitous imagery of sexualized female bodies created for mainstream heterosexual male sensibilities.
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Music |
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8:00 PM, October 20 |
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Classics Series: On the Town Syracuse Symphony Orchestra Daniel Hege, conductor Featuring Terrence Wilson, piano
Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
Bernstein On the Town: Three Dance Episodes Daugherty Deus ex machina Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 5
Read a review!
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8:00 PM, October 20 |
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Handel's Dixit Dominus Syracuse Vocal Ensemble Robert Cowles, conductor
Price: $12 regular, $10 students/seniors Syracuse Center for the Performing Arts
728 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
SVE opens its season with a performance of George Frideric Handel's magnificent psalm setting, Dixit Dominus. This work dates from Handel's early years while living and studying in Italy, during which time he wrote a number of Latin choral settings. In fact, Handel composed this virtuosic work in 1707 -- exactly 300 years ago! In contrast, The Ecstacies Above, a recent work by English composer Tarik O'Regan, using a moving text by Edgar Allen Poe, will complete the program. Both exceptional pieces will be accompanied by chamber strings.
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Theater |
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12:30 PM, October 20 |
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Sleeping Beauty Magic Circle Children's Theatre
Price: $5 Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St.,
Syracuse
Interactive version of the children's classic.
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7:30 PM, October 20 |
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A Party to Murder Baldwinsville Theatre Guild Deborah Taylor, director
First Presbyterian Church of Baldwinsville
64 Oswego St.,
Baldwinsville
Six people have come in secret on Halloween to play a murder mystery game at a rustic island cottage. Invited by writer Charles Prince, they appear set for a weekend of fun until ghosts from the past begin to haunt the proceedings and it becomes clear that all is not as it seems. The game takes on a sinister dimension when guests begin to die and the remaining players realize that they are playing for their lives. Tension rises. Secret passageways, incriminating letters, hidden compartments, bodies in the window seat and a 25-year-old unsolved mystery twist and turn toward the unexpected and terrifying conclusion.
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7:30 PM, October 20 |
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Stomp Broadway in Syracuse
Price: $47.50, $37.50, $25.50 Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
Stomp, an overwhelming success marked by rave reviews, numerous awards, and sell-out engagements, is the winner of an Olivier Award for Best Choreography (London's Tony Award), a New York Obie Award, a Drama Desk Award for Unique Theatre Experience, and a Special Citation from Best Plays. The young performers "make a rhythm out of anything we can get our hands on that makes a sound," says co-creator/director Luke Cresswell. Stiff-bristle brooms become a sweeping orchestra; Zippo lighters flip open and closed to create a fiery fugue; wooden poles thump and clack in a rhythmic explosion. Stomp uses everything but conventional percussion instruments - trashcans, tea chests, plastic bags, plungers, boots, and hubcaps - to fill the stage with compelling and infectious rhythms. Tickets are available at the Landmark Box Office and all Ticketmaster locations.
Read a review!
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8:00 PM, October 20 |
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Playing With Fire (After Frankenstein) Appleseed Productions William Edward White, director
Price: $15 regular; $12 students/seniors (price includes dessert and beverage at intermission) Atonement Lutheran Church
116 W. Glen Ave.,
Syracuse
As the play, written by Barbara Field, adapted from Mary Shelley's novel, begins, an exhausted and dying Victor Frankenstein has finally tracked down his Creature in the lonely, frozen tundra of the North Pole. Determined to right the wrong he has committed by, at last, destroying the malignant evil he believes he has created, Frankenstein finds that he must first deal with his own responsibility and guilt -- for, as their fascinating confrontation develops, it is evident that the Creature has become a pathetic, lonely and even sensitive being who wants only to find love and that he, Frankenstein, by intruding into the very secrets of life, is truly the evil one. As the two debate, scenes from the past flash by: Frankenstein's young bride, whom the Monster killed out of pique when the scientist failed to provide him with a mate of his own; the brilliant, quick-witted Professor Krempe, Frankenstein's university mentor; and moments between the youthful Victor and his brother, who also fell victim to the Creature's vengeance. Ultimately the exchange between Frankenstein and the Creature becomes a confrontation between parent and child, scientist and experiment, rejection and love, and even good and evil -- culminating in the Creature's agonizing question, "Why did you make me?"
Read a Review!
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8:00 PM, October 20 |
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The Hypochondriac Black Box Players
Price: Free Loft Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
For more information, phone 443-2102.
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8:00 PM, October 20 |
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Al Takes a Bride Kings Theatre
Price: $20 regular; $50 preferred seating and opening reception Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
On a moonlit riverbank, over a hundred years before the U.S. Congress passed the Defense of Marriage Act, two young southern women imagine their wedding to each other. Full of lyrical suspense and based loosely on a high-profile, turn of the century murder case, "Al Takes a Bride" hinges on impossible choices, where decisions rest somewhere between dreaming and dying. It has been produced in NYC and Sydney, Australia. Performances will benefit Vera House.
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8:00 PM, October 20 |
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Baby With the Bathwater Rarely Done Productions Linda Lance, director
Price: $20 Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St.,
Syracuse
Playwright Christoper Durang's dark comedy about how difficult it is to be a parent, and how scary it is to be a baby and a child. The play is written in an absurdist, playful style and, for all its darkness, has a hopeful ending. Mature audiences.
Read a Review!
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8:00 PM, October 20 |
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A Man for All Seasons Simply New Theatre
Price: $25 regular; $20 students/seniors BeVard Room, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
Read a Review!
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8:00 PM, October 20 |
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The Will Rogers Follies: A Life In Revue Wit's End Players
Price: $25 adults; $20 seniors/students; $14 children Empire Theater
New York State Fairgrounds,
Geddes
Song, dance, humor, and wisdom highlight this spectacular family musical. With Syracuse's own Bob Brown in the title role, the life of that great entertainer, Will Rogers, unfolds on the Ziegfeld Follies stage. Between rope tricks to entertain the audience while the show girls are changing their costumes, Will soothes us with his old-fashioned common sense and introduces us to his family. The beautiful girls, in stunning costumes, return to entertain as Will takes us on a happy journey through some of America's most patriotic and nostalgic days.
Read a Review!
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Sunday, October 21, 2007
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Art |
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 21 |
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The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
During the Vietnam War, Al Fasoldt was a photographer for Stars & Stripes. When he left Vietnam to come home, he left his negatives behind and brought a few 8"x10" prints and contact sheets of his work. Since then, the Pentagon has ordered all negatives of Stars & Stripes photographers be destroyed. Over the past few years, Fasoldt has been working to repair the prints and contact sheets he brought home years ago, using them to make prints of his Vietnam War images for exhibition.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 21 |
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2007 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Works by Brantley Carroll, Ella Gant, and David Moore Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 21 |
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One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Vietnamese-American photographer Binh Danh has quietly gained recognition on the international art scene for his Vietnam War-inspired work. This exhibition features his most recognizable work, comprising appropriated war images that are printed directly onto leaves or grass, a process Danh invented while in college. On his first trip to Vietnam since his family immigrated to the United States, Danh was confronted by the remains of the war, such as bomb craters that had been converted into rice paddies, and he observed that memories of the war's devastation had become part of daily life. It was this experience that inspired him to create chlorophyll prints of found images from the Vietnam War with tropical leaves, sharing, in his words, the "epiphany that the memory of those people and events will reverberate forever through the country's landscape." Of his work, Danh states, "Much of my research has explored my own personal history and has become a way of visually and physically recollecting my family's history and honoring their collective memory." These concepts are very real with regard to any culture that has immigrated to the United States, looking at the stories families tell and the disconnected feeling experienced by the second generation. Danh was born in Vietnam in 1977. He received a BFA degree from San Jose State University and an MFA degree from Stanford University. His work has been exhibited in museums and galleries internationally, including the George Eastman House in Rochester, the Asia Society Museum in New York City, the University of Hawaii Art Museum, and the Haines Gallery in San Francisco. He lives and works in San Jose, CA. He participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2006.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 21 |
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Exploring History with Art -- Onondaga County on the Move: 200 Years of Transportation Onondaga Historical Association
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition will feature artwork from the OHA collection that depicts various modes of local transportation and how artists interpreted it over the last two centuries. Local teachers and students will find subjects meeting their document-based questions social studies standards within the exhibit.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 21 |
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Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city. The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 21 |
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***CANCELLED*** 2007 Faculty Show Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 21 |
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Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death. Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts. This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 21 |
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Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
This exhibition features work by 18 photojournalists, three of whom -- Wesley Law, Ezra Shaw, and Justin Yurkanin -- are SU graduates. The subjects are diverse, ranging from the current conflicts in Africa to the legacy of Chernobyl. American topics focus on the Confederate flag controversy, life on the Navajo reservation and the 1997 reunion of people associated with The Farm, the Tennessee community that was America's largest hippie commune. The Alexia Foundation was begun by the parents of Alexia Tsairis, a Newhouse School of Public Communications undergraduate student who was killed in the Pan Am 103 bombing in 1988. Each year the foundation gives grants to selected student and professional photographers so they can pursue their interests in photojournalism. To date, the foundation has awarded over $500,000 in grants to 80 undergraduate photographers and 11 professionals. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 21 |
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On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Since 1974, the Cultural Resources Council, in cooperation with the Everson, has presented On My Own Time. A celebration of artwork created by employees of local businesses on their own time, the exhibition is meant to promote creativity and artistic endeavors by those who are not full-time artists.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 21 |
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Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Juxtapose artwork created by artists whose common thread is a shared studio/classroom space and expect the unexpected. This happened in 2004, when a group of women who work and teach at Syracuse University's ComArt building joined together for an exhibition entitled Under One Roof at SOHO20 Gallery in Chelsea, NY. This was the first time the artists - three generations of students/teachers - had shown together, yet their work spoke of seamless connections and closer ties than one might assume. Nine artists have reunited for the current exhibition Under One Roof Reprise. Their situations have changed slightly but their work once again has come together in surprising and interesting ways. Abby Goodman and Kim Carr Valdez earned their MFA degrees and moved to Brooklyn, while Laura Ledbetter now lives in Philadelphia. Anne Beffel, Ann Clarke, Mary Giehl, Gail Hoffman, and Jude Lewis continue to teach in the College of Visual and Performing Arts at Syracuse University, while Claire Harootunian, although officially retired, continues to teach, travel, and explore the art of found objects. The artists' processes are diverse, including large-scale installations, found object collaboration, casting, kinetics, video, and hand-tooled objects. Emphasis is placed on the creative use of materials such as fibers, metals, wood, plastics, resin, and everyday products. Each artist translates and illuminates human experience through her unique visual language and conceptual sensibility. These artists address common themes such as play, gender, identity, time, place, and most of all, memories. Mary Giehl's Ivory combines happy childhood memories of bathing with her siblings - recalling the "toys, the fun, the soap floating and the smell of Ivory" - with "those of sad and heartbreaking stories" not uncommon in today's headlines. Gail Hoffman, a sculptor immersed in the concept of time, presents "visual metaphorical narratives, freeze-framed in a state of suspended animation" through a variety of media including bronze, plastic toys, and other found objects. Plasco Ranch (Possible Outcomes) is a minature assemblage designed in the small scale to "invite the viewer to psychologically inhabit the space." A collection of disparate objects including a bronze sheep, Santa Claus, and military vehicles has been arranged to suggest a story that is left to the viewer's imagination. A journal placed nearby offers visitors the opportunity to record their stories and suggest possible outcomes for the scene as they see it unfold. Based on viewers' comments, Hoffman will return periodically to rearrange, add, or remove objects, providing photographic documentation of the ever changing Plasco Ranch as part of the exhibit. This group exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Syracuse University College of Visual and Performing Arts.
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1:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 21 |
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Four to the Fore Associated Artists of Central New York
Price: Free Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr.,
Manlius
The exhibits highlights the varied work of four members, Barbara Emmons, Judith Jaquith, Elizabeth Pilbeam, and Clara Towell.
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Film |
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6:00 PM, October 21 |
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RedFilm Club Redhouse
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
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Music |
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3:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 21 |
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Battle of the Bands
Price: $1 to vote for your favorite band Manlius Amphitheater
Behind the swan pond,
Manlius
Information: 315-682-7887.
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3:00 PM, October 21 |
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Handel's Dixit Dominus Syracuse Vocal Ensemble Robert Cowles, conductor
Price: $12 regular, $10 students/seniors First Presbyterian Church of Skaneateles
97 E. Genesee St.,
Skaneateles
SVE opens its season with a performance of George Frideric Handel's magnificent psalm setting, Dixit Dominus. This work dates from Handel's early years while living and studying in Italy, during which time he wrote a number of Latin choral settings. In fact, Handel composed this virtuosic work in 1707 -- exactly 300 years ago! In contrast, The Ecstacies Above, a recent work by English composer Tarik O'Regan, using a moving text by Edgar Allen Poe, will complete the program. Both exceptional pieces will be accompanied by chamber strings.
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4:00 PM, October 21 |
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Missa Caput and other English Surprises Schola Cantorum of Syracuse Leon Carapetyan, conductor
Price: $12 regular; $8 student/senior Pebble Hill Presbyterian Church
5299 Jamesville Rd.,
Dewitt
15th and 16th century English music, including music of John Dunstable in the 15th century, and with an emphasis on the motets of Thomas Tallis in the 16th. There will also be some of the madrigalian motets of John Amner, a late 16th century composer who died in 1641. These are quite delightful pieces. (Maybe that's a surprise too.) Concert will be preceded by a viol prelude at 3:30 pm.
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Theater |
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2:00 PM, October 21 |
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Playing With Fire (After Frankenstein) Appleseed Productions William Edward White, director
Price: $15 regular; $12 students/seniors (price includes dessert and beverage at intermission) Atonement Lutheran Church
116 W. Glen Ave.,
Syracuse
As the play, written by Barbara Field, adapted from Mary Shelley's novel, begins, an exhausted and dying Victor Frankenstein has finally tracked down his Creature in the lonely, frozen tundra of the North Pole. Determined to right the wrong he has committed by, at last, destroying the malignant evil he believes he has created, Frankenstein finds that he must first deal with his own responsibility and guilt -- for, as their fascinating confrontation develops, it is evident that the Creature has become a pathetic, lonely and even sensitive being who wants only to find love and that he, Frankenstein, by intruding into the very secrets of life, is truly the evil one. As the two debate, scenes from the past flash by: Frankenstein's young bride, whom the Monster killed out of pique when the scientist failed to provide him with a mate of his own; the brilliant, quick-witted Professor Krempe, Frankenstein's university mentor; and moments between the youthful Victor and his brother, who also fell victim to the Creature's vengeance. Ultimately the exchange between Frankenstein and the Creature becomes a confrontation between parent and child, scientist and experiment, rejection and love, and even good and evil -- culminating in the Creature's agonizing question, "Why did you make me?"
Read a Review!
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2:00 PM, October 21 |
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A Man for All Seasons Simply New Theatre
Price: $25 regular; $20 students/seniors BeVard Room, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
Read a Review!
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2:00 PM, October 21 |
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The Will Rogers Follies: A Life In Revue Wit's End Players
Price: $25 adults; $20 seniors/students; $14 children Empire Theater
New York State Fairgrounds,
Geddes
Song, dance, humor, and wisdom highlight this spectacular family musical. With Syracuse's own Bob Brown in the title role, the life of that great entertainer, Will Rogers, unfolds on the Ziegfeld Follies stage. Between rope tricks to entertain the audience while the show girls are changing their costumes, Will soothes us with his old-fashioned common sense and introduces us to his family. The beautiful girls, in stunning costumes, return to entertain as Will takes us on a happy journey through some of America's most patriotic and nostalgic days.
Read a Review!
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3:00 PM, October 21 |
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Al Takes a Bride Kings Theatre
Price: $20 regular; $50 preferred seating and opening reception Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
On a moonlit riverbank, over a hundred years before the U.S. Congress passed the Defense of Marriage Act, two young southern women imagine their wedding to each other. Full of lyrical suspense and based loosely on a high-profile, turn of the century murder case, "Al Takes a Bride" hinges on impossible choices, where decisions rest somewhere between dreaming and dying. It has been produced in NYC and Sydney, Australia. Performances will benefit Vera House.
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7:00 PM, October 21 |
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The Hypochondriac Black Box Players
Price: Free Loft Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
For more information, phone 443-2102.
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7:30 PM, October 21 |
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Stomp Broadway in Syracuse
Price: $47.50, $37.50, $25.50 Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
Stomp, an overwhelming success marked by rave reviews, numerous awards, and sell-out engagements, is the winner of an Olivier Award for Best Choreography (London's Tony Award), a New York Obie Award, a Drama Desk Award for Unique Theatre Experience, and a Special Citation from Best Plays. The young performers "make a rhythm out of anything we can get our hands on that makes a sound," says co-creator/director Luke Cresswell. Stiff-bristle brooms become a sweeping orchestra; Zippo lighters flip open and closed to create a fiery fugue; wooden poles thump and clack in a rhythmic explosion. Stomp uses everything but conventional percussion instruments - trashcans, tea chests, plastic bags, plungers, boots, and hubcaps - to fill the stage with compelling and infectious rhythms. Tickets are available at the Landmark Box Office and all Ticketmaster locations.
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Monday, October 22, 2007
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Art |
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7:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 22 |
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Species Unknown Syracuse University School of Art and Design
Price: Free The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Species Unknown, mixed media work by Diane Worth Doty, is a personal creation of false science using simple or modest materials such as needle and thread, cotton cloth, paper, coffee, tea, hair, and a manual typewriter. The artist explores the quiet rhythm of stitching with her interest in ornithology, combining women's craft through creative writing and choice of theoretical and scientific depiction of migratory patterns of birds and humans as the driving force.
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9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, October 22 |
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Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center
Price: Free YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 22 |
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Gallery Exhibit: Donalee Peden-Wesley Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
Large scale charcoal drawings with watercolor washes that address issues and relationships between humans and animals.
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 22 |
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Tango Point of Contact Gallery
Price: Free Point of Contact Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Tango, a large format folio published by Iris Editions in New York (1991) with eight intaglio prints by Nancy Graves and 13 pages of text by Pedro Cuperman that gaze at the aesthetics of this Latin American dance. Tango proposes an evening of music, dance, and food transposed into videoa sort of "performance" projected into the space of the gallery where audience and art become intertwined in the field of representation. "Graves conceived of the prints in the folio as a continued exploration of pattern in nature and as a tonal study of black and white," writes Thomas Padon in his book, Nancy Graves, Excavations in Print A Catalogue Raisonné (1996). "More than once the artist has asserted, 'There is nothing more challenging and meaningful than to make prints in black and white.' For an admitted colorist, it is ironic that the nine prints Graves has made in black and white are among her most powerful." The cryptic titles of the prints in the folio were selected by Graves from Cuperman's text for Tango. The poet speaks of the dance as a gradually unfolding ritual, stating near the conclusion, "Tango helps you find your own levels of proximity."
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 22 |
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Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 22 |
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The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
In commemoration of the 80th anniversary of the execution for murder of two Italian anarchist laborers, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, a selection of period ephemera issued by the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee together with a plethora of books associated with the trial that have been published in the intervening years by Paul Avrich, Felix Frankfurter, and Eugene Lyons, among others. The exhibit features artistic expressions (cartoons, illustrations, novels, plays, poems, songs and music) inspired by the trial, including the work of Maxwell Anderson, John Dos Passos, Fred Ellis, Howard Fast, Woodie Guthrie, William Gropper, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Rockwell Kent, Katherine Anne Porter, Pete Seeger, and Upton Sinclair. The story of the Sacco and Vanzetti mural by Ben Shahn on the east wall of H. B. Crouse will also be explored.
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, October 22 |
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Four to the Fore Associated Artists of Central New York
Price: Free Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr.,
Manlius
The exhibits highlights the varied work of four members, Barbara Emmons, Judith Jaquith, Elizabeth Pilbeam, and Clara Towell.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 22 |
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The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
During the Vietnam War, Al Fasoldt was a photographer for Stars & Stripes. When he left Vietnam to come home, he left his negatives behind and brought a few 8"x10" prints and contact sheets of his work. Since then, the Pentagon has ordered all negatives of Stars & Stripes photographers be destroyed. Over the past few years, Fasoldt has been working to repair the prints and contact sheets he brought home years ago, using them to make prints of his Vietnam War images for exhibition.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 22 |
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One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Vietnamese-American photographer Binh Danh has quietly gained recognition on the international art scene for his Vietnam War-inspired work. This exhibition features his most recognizable work, comprising appropriated war images that are printed directly onto leaves or grass, a process Danh invented while in college. On his first trip to Vietnam since his family immigrated to the United States, Danh was confronted by the remains of the war, such as bomb craters that had been converted into rice paddies, and he observed that memories of the war's devastation had become part of daily life. It was this experience that inspired him to create chlorophyll prints of found images from the Vietnam War with tropical leaves, sharing, in his words, the "epiphany that the memory of those people and events will reverberate forever through the country's landscape." Of his work, Danh states, "Much of my research has explored my own personal history and has become a way of visually and physically recollecting my family's history and honoring their collective memory." These concepts are very real with regard to any culture that has immigrated to the United States, looking at the stories families tell and the disconnected feeling experienced by the second generation. Danh was born in Vietnam in 1977. He received a BFA degree from San Jose State University and an MFA degree from Stanford University. His work has been exhibited in museums and galleries internationally, including the George Eastman House in Rochester, the Asia Society Museum in New York City, the University of Hawaii Art Museum, and the Haines Gallery in San Francisco. He lives and works in San Jose, CA. He participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2006.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 22 |
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2007 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Works by Brantley Carroll, Ella Gant, and David Moore Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
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Tuesday, October 23, 2007
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Art |
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7:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 23 |
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Species Unknown Syracuse University School of Art and Design
Price: Free The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Species Unknown, mixed media work by Diane Worth Doty, is a personal creation of false science using simple or modest materials such as needle and thread, cotton cloth, paper, coffee, tea, hair, and a manual typewriter. The artist explores the quiet rhythm of stitching with her interest in ornithology, combining women's craft through creative writing and choice of theoretical and scientific depiction of migratory patterns of birds and humans as the driving force.
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Back to list |
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9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, October 23 |
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Small Human Detail: Photographs by Philip MacCabe and Poems by Martin Walls Downtown Writer's Center
Price: Free YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
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Back to list |
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 23 |
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Gallery Exhibit: Donalee Peden-Wesley Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
Large scale charcoal drawings with watercolor washes that address issues and relationships between humans and animals.
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Back to list |
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 23 |
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Tango Point of Contact Gallery
Price: Free Point of Contact Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Tango, a large format folio published by Iris Editions in New York (1991) with eight intaglio prints by Nancy Graves and 13 pages of text by Pedro Cuperman that gaze at the aesthetics of this Latin American dance. Tango proposes an evening of music, dance, and food transposed into videoa sort of "performance" projected into the space of the gallery where audience and art become intertwined in the field of representation. "Graves conceived of the prints in the folio as a continued exploration of pattern in nature and as a tonal study of black and white," writes Thomas Padon in his book, Nancy Graves, Excavations in Print A Catalogue Raisonné (1996). "More than once the artist has asserted, 'There is nothing more challenging and meaningful than to make prints in black and white.' For an admitted colorist, it is ironic that the nine prints Graves has made in black and white are among her most powerful." The cryptic titles of the prints in the folio were selected by Graves from Cuperman's text for Tango. The poet speaks of the dance as a gradually unfolding ritual, stating near the conclusion, "Tango helps you find your own levels of proximity."
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Back to list |
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 23 |
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Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.
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Back to list |
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 23 |
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The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
In commemoration of the 80th anniversary of the execution for murder of two Italian anarchist laborers, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, a selection of period ephemera issued by the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee together with a plethora of books associated with the trial that have been published in the intervening years by Paul Avrich, Felix Frankfurter, and Eugene Lyons, among others. The exhibit features artistic expressions (cartoons, illustrations, novels, plays, poems, songs and music) inspired by the trial, including the work of Maxwell Anderson, John Dos Passos, Fred Ellis, Howard Fast, Woodie Guthrie, William Gropper, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Rockwell Kent, Katherine Anne Porter, Pete Seeger, and Upton Sinclair. The story of the Sacco and Vanzetti mural by Ben Shahn on the east wall of H. B. Crouse will also be explored.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, October 23 |
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Four to the Fore Associated Artists of Central New York
Price: Free Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr.,
Manlius
The exhibits highlights the varied work of four members, Barbara Emmons, Judith Jaquith, Elizabeth Pilbeam, and Clara Towell.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 23 |
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Visual Arts Showcase #61, Tribal CNY Arts
The Warehouse Link Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
A juried exhibit in which a dozen regional artists have individually interpreted the concept of "Tribal."
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 23 |
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2007 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Works by Brantley Carroll, Ella Gant, and David Moore Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 23 |
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One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Vietnamese-American photographer Binh Danh has quietly gained recognition on the international art scene for his Vietnam War-inspired work. This exhibition features his most recognizable work, comprising appropriated war images that are printed directly onto leaves or grass, a process Danh invented while in college. On his first trip to Vietnam since his family immigrated to the United States, Danh was confronted by the remains of the war, such as bomb craters that had been converted into rice paddies, and he observed that memories of the war's devastation had become part of daily life. It was this experience that inspired him to create chlorophyll prints of found images from the Vietnam War with tropical leaves, sharing, in his words, the "epiphany that the memory of those people and events will reverberate forever through the country's landscape." Of his work, Danh states, "Much of my research has explored my own personal history and has become a way of visually and physically recollecting my family's history and honoring their collective memory." These concepts are very real with regard to any culture that has immigrated to the United States, looking at the stories families tell and the disconnected feeling experienced by the second generation. Danh was born in Vietnam in 1977. He received a BFA degree from San Jose State University and an MFA degree from Stanford University. His work has been exhibited in museums and galleries internationally, including the George Eastman House in Rochester, the Asia Society Museum in New York City, the University of Hawaii Art Museum, and the Haines Gallery in San Francisco. He lives and works in San Jose, CA. He participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2006.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 23 |
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The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
During the Vietnam War, Al Fasoldt was a photographer for Stars & Stripes. When he left Vietnam to come home, he left his negatives behind and brought a few 8"x10" prints and contact sheets of his work. Since then, the Pentagon has ordered all negatives of Stars & Stripes photographers be destroyed. Over the past few years, Fasoldt has been working to repair the prints and contact sheets he brought home years ago, using them to make prints of his Vietnam War images for exhibition.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 23 |
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COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery Featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This bold new exhibition, COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze, focuses on the psychological, social, cultural and political dimensions of desire, subjectivity and -- pleasure. COME ON presents an array of ideas, imagery and experiences on the topic of sexuality from the perspective of women in their 20s through mid 30s. The artists in this exhibition employ diverse media, including large-scale drawing, video installation, text work and ephemeral sculpture. COME ON reveals what is not represented in popular culture and provides a counterbalance to the ubiquitous imagery of sexualized female bodies created for mainstream heterosexual male sensibilities.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 23 |
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Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city. The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 23 |
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Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death. Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts. This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 23 |
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***CANCELLED*** 2007 Faculty Show Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, October 23 |
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Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
This exhibition features work by 18 photojournalists, three of whom -- Wesley Law, Ezra Shaw, and Justin Yurkanin -- are SU graduates. The subjects are diverse, ranging from the current conflicts in Africa to the legacy of Chernobyl. American topics focus on the Confederate flag controversy, life on the Navajo reservation and the 1997 reunion of people associated with The Farm, the Tennessee community that was America's largest hippie commune. The Alexia Foundation was begun by the parents of Alexia Tsairis, a Newhouse School of Public Communications undergraduate student who was killed in the Pan Am 103 bombing in 1988. Each year the foundation gives grants to selected student and professional photographers so they can pursue their interests in photojournalism. To date, the foundation has awarded over $500,000 in grants to 80 undergraduate photographers and 11 professionals. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 23 |
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Under One Roof Reprise Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Juxtapose artwork created by artists whose common thread is a shared studio/classroom space and expect the unexpected. This happened in 2004, when a group of women who work and teach at Syracuse University's ComArt building joined together for an exhibition entitled Under One Roof at SOHO20 Gallery in Chelsea, NY. This was the first time the artists - three generations of students/teachers - had shown together, yet their work spoke of seamless connections and closer ties than one might assume. Nine artists have reunited for the current exhibition Under One Roof Reprise. Their situations have changed slightly but their work once again has come together in surprising and interesting ways. Abby Goodman and Kim Carr Valdez earned their MFA degrees and moved to Brooklyn, while Laura Ledbetter now lives in Philadelphia. Anne Beffel, Ann Clarke, Mary Giehl, Gail Hoffman, and Jude Lewis continue to teach in the College of Visual and Performing Arts at Syracuse University, while Claire Harootunian, although officially retired, continues to teach, travel, and explore the art of found objects. The artists' processes are diverse, including large-scale installations, found object collaboration, casting, kinetics, video, and hand-tooled objects. Emphasis is placed on the creative use of materials such as fibers, metals, wood, plastics, resin, and everyday products. Each artist translates and illuminates human experience through her unique visual language and conceptual sensibility. These artists address common themes such as play, gender, identity, time, place, and most of all, memories. Mary Giehl's Ivory combines happy childhood memories of bathing with her siblings - recalling the "toys, the fun, the soap floating and the smell of Ivory" - with "those of sad and heartbreaking stories" not uncommon in today's headlines. Gail Hoffman, a sculptor immersed in the concept of time, presents "visual metaphorical narratives, freeze-framed in a state of suspended animation" through a variety of media including bronze, plastic toys, and other found objects. Plasco Ranch (Possible Outcomes) is a minature assemblage designed in the small scale to "invite the viewer to psychologically inhabit the space." A collection of disparate objects including a bronze sheep, Santa Claus, and military vehicles has been arranged to suggest a story that is left to the viewer's imagination. A journal placed nearby offers visitors the opportunity to record their stories and suggest possible outcomes for the scene as they see it unfold. Based on viewers' comments, Hoffman will return periodically to rearrange, add, or remove objects, providing photographic documentation of the ever changing Plasco Ranch as part of the exhibit. This group exhibition is presented in conjunction with the Syracuse University College of Visual and Performing Arts.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 23 |
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On My Own Time Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Since 1974, the Cultural Resources Council, in cooperation with the Everson, has presented On My Own Time. A celebration of artwork created by employees of local businesses on their own time, the exhibition is meant to promote creativity and artistic endeavors by those who are not full-time artists.
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