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Events for Sunday, January 20, 2008

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Transmedia Photography Annual Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement Light Work Gallery

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

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Impressions, a Jasper Johns Retrospective Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Pollock Matters Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Annual Scholastic Art Awards Onondaga Community College

1:00 PM From Art to Wood to Music: Sculpted Sound Bells & Motley Consort

2:00 PM The Left Hand Singing Appleseed Productions (Read a review!)

2:00 PM Hamlet Syracuse Shakespeare-in-the-Park (Read a review!)

2:00 PM The Lieutenant of Inishmore Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

7:00 PM The Lieutenant of Inishmore Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Dido and Aeneas Syracuse University Setnor School of Music

Events for Monday, January 21, 2008

8:00 AM-6:00 PM Annual Scholastic Art Awards Onondaga Community College

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

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Transmedia Photography Annual Light Work Gallery

12:00 PM-4:00 PM A Collection of Stories Redhouse

Events for Tuesday, January 22, 2008

8:00 AM-6:00 PM Annual Scholastic Art Awards Onondaga Community College

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

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Transmedia Photography Annual Light Work Gallery

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Impressions, a Jasper Johns Retrospective Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Visual Arts Showcase #62, Brainstorms CNY Arts

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Pollock Matters Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-4:00 PM A Collection of Stories Redhouse

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

7:30 PM The Lieutenant of Inishmore Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

Events for Wednesday, January 23, 2008

8:00 AM-6:00 PM Annual Scholastic Art Awards Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: Mary Kester Onondaga Community College

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

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Transmedia Photography Annual Light Work Gallery

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

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Impressions, a Jasper Johns Retrospective Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Visual Arts Showcase #62, Brainstorms CNY Arts

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Pollock Matters Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-4:00 PM A Collection of Stories Redhouse

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

2:00 PM Civic Morning Musicals, featuring Stephen Pikarsky, piano

2:00 PM The Lieutenant of Inishmore Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

7:30 PM The Lieutenant of Inishmore Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

Events for Thursday, January 24, 2008

8:00 AM-6:00 PM Annual Scholastic Art Awards Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: Mary Kester Onondaga Community College

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

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Transmedia Photography Annual Light Work Gallery

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

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Impressions, a Jasper Johns Retrospective Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Visual Arts Showcase #62, Brainstorms CNY Arts

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Pollock Matters Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-4:00 PM A Collection of Stories Redhouse

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

5:00 PM-8:00 PM The Artistic Domain Delavan Art Gallery

7:30 PM The Lieutenant of Inishmore Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

Events for Friday, January 25, 2008

8:00 AM-6:00 PM Annual Scholastic Art Awards Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: Mary Kester Onondaga Community College

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

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Transmedia Photography Annual Light Work Gallery

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

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Impressions, a Jasper Johns Retrospective Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Visual Arts Showcase #62, Brainstorms CNY Arts

12:00 PM-6:00 PM The Artistic Domain Delavan Art Gallery

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Pollock Matters Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-4:00 PM A Collection of Stories Redhouse

12:00 PM BakeHouse Films Syracuse International Film Festival

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

7:00 PM Poet Christopher Kennedy Downtown Writer's Center

7:30 PM Words and Music Songwriter Showcase Folkus Project, featuring Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers

8:00 PM The Left Hand Singing Appleseed Productions (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Friday Night Live Redhouse

8:00 PM SparkVideo: Kitties and Babies Spark Contemporary Art Space

8:00 PM The Lieutenant of Inishmore Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Classics Series: Beethoven Festival: Fidelio Syracuse Symphony Orchestra, featuring Andrew Zaplatynsky, violin (Read a review!)

8:30 PM I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change Salt City Center for the Performing Arts (Read a review!)

Events for Saturday, January 26, 2008

8:00 AM-6:00 PM Annual Scholastic Art Awards Onondaga Community College

10:00 AM-4:00 PM The Artistic Domain Delavan Art Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Pollock Matters Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800 Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

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

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Impressions, a Jasper Johns Retrospective Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Visual Arts Showcase #62, Brainstorms CNY Arts

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

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

12:30 PM The Princess and the Pea Magic Circle Children's Theatre

1:00 PM Reading of Scores by Young Composers Society for New Music

3:00 PM The Lieutenant of Inishmore Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

4:00 PM America Sings Society for New Music

8:00 PM The Left Hand Singing Appleseed Productions (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Spirits of Suspicion Opening Night Productions (Read a review!)

8:00 PM The Lieutenant of Inishmore Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Classics Series: Beethoven Festival: Fidelio Syracuse Symphony Orchestra, featuring Andrew Zaplatynsky, violin (Read a review!)

8:30 PM I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change Salt City Center for the Performing Arts (Read a review!)

Events for Sunday, January 27, 2008

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Transmedia Photography Annual Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement Light Work Gallery

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

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Modernist Prints 1900-1955 Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Impressions, a Jasper Johns Retrospective Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Pollock Matters Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800 Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Annual Scholastic Art Awards Onondaga Community College

1:00 PM Seven Short Monologues Armory Square Playwrights

2:00 PM The Left Hand Singing Appleseed Productions (Read a review!)

2:00 PM Kevin Dorsey, bass; Mark Nanni, piano and vocals; John Magnante, guitar Central New York Jazz Composer's Cooperative

2:00 PM Sunday Musicale: Little Jazz Trio Fayetteville Free Library

2:00 PM The Lieutenant of Inishmore Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

4:00 PM Lionheart Vocal Chamber Music Malmgren Concert Series

4:30 PM SSYO Winter Concert Syracuse Youth Orchestras, featuring winner of the SSYO Concerto Competition, violist Emily Lane

6:30 PM A Cinema Showcase: “A Cantor’'s Tale” Syracuse International Film Festival

Next week  >>>

Sunday, January 20, 2008


Art
 

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



Transmedia Photography Annual
Light Work Gallery

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

Exhibit features work by Transmedia students at Syracuse University.


Back to list
 

 

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



Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement
Light Work Gallery

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

Photographer Don Gregorio Antón creates mystical retablos that look like sacred objects in themselves. They are intimately small and sit on little stands to be viewed individually. Each retablo is one of a kind. Retabols, or ex votos as they are sometimes called, have been part of Mexico's tradition since the 17th century. They were originally hung behind the altars of Catholic churches, and remain a tradition to this day.


Back to list
 

 

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



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

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

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


Back to list
 

 

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



Modernist Prints 1900-1955
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

Since the turn of the century America and Europe have had a symbiotic relationship towards art. Movements that were born in Europe have been nurtured in the United States and those styles developed here have had a significant impact on artists abroad. In the years before World War I avant-garde movements in Europe seemed radical to many Americans but also extremely exciting to others. As the century progressed movements emerged that borrowed issues, techniques, devices, or other attributes from pre-existing styles. This led to a generic 'modernist' label for those art forms that did not seem to emerge from a traditional, academic manner.

The artwork in this exhibition was created by important artists of the era including Vasily Kandinsky, Joan Miro, and S. W. Hayter from Europe, and the Americans Stuart Davis, Boris Margo, and Morris Blackburn. The prints have been chosen to illustrate the multiplicity of graphic art styles that became popular during the period.


Back to list
 

 

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



Impressions, a Jasper Johns Retrospective
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

This retrospective exhibition of Jasper Johns' prints from the John and Maxine Belger Family Foundation starts with the artist's first published print in 1960, six years after Johns consciously destroyed all of his artwork. That act liberated him from "becoming" an artist to "being" an artist. Johns spent the next few years in the studio creating a body of imagery: flags, numerals, letters, and targets that flew in the face of the then popular Abstract Expressionism.

Trained briefly at the University of South Carolina, Johns moved to New York in the 1950s. In New York, he met and was influenced by a number of other artists including the composer John Cage, the choreographer Merce Cunningham, and the painter Robert Rauschenberg. After a visit to Philadelphia to see a Marcel Duchamp painting, Johns became very interested in the French artist's work. Duchamp had revolutionized the art world with his "readymades" - a series of found objects presented as finished works of art.

Jasper Johns' interest in process led him to printmaking. Often he would make counterpart prints
to his paintings. He explains, "My experience of life is that it's very fragmented; certain kinds of things happen, and in another place, a different kind of thing occurs. I would like my work to have some vivid indication of those differences." For Johns, printmaking was a medium that encouraged experimentation with an ease for repeat patterns. His work in screen printing, lithography, and etching have revolutionized the field.


Back to list
 

 

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



Pollock Matters
Everson Museum of Art

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

Pollock Matters, curated by art historian Ellen G. Landau of Case-Western Reserve University, explores for the first time the personal and artistic relationship between famed American Abstract Expressionist painter Jackson Pollock and his close friend, noted Swiss-born photographer and graphic designer, Herbert Matter.

Featuring compelling visual and documentary evidence, the exhibition demonstrates the impact of the artists' interaction on their respective work. Comprising paintings, drawings, works on paper and other documentation -- including previously unseen photographs and letters -- it compares Matter's experimental abstract photos with known works by Pollock, and highlights their significant stylistic, technical and thematic connections.

Pollock Matters also showcases 24 small-scale works discovered by Herbert Matter's son, Alex Matter, in a storage facility in 2002. The paintings, although identified as "Jackson experimental works" by an inscription in Herbert Matter's hand and dated 1958 (2 years after the artist's death), have been the subject of much controversy, scientific study, scholarly analysis, and significant media attention. In the exhibition and accompanying catalog, Curator Ellen Landau thoroughly investigates questions raised by this unprecedented discovery of previously unknown works: "If Pollock did not paint a portion of the cache, who did? How many artists were involved? And, no less importantly, what was the purpose of these paintings?" The debate will, without doubt, continue beyond the exhibition and for decades to come.


Back to list
 

 

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



Annual Scholastic Art Awards
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Whitney Applied Technology Center
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse

Scholastic Art is the largest juried art show for Junior and Senior high school students in Central New York. Covering a 13-county region, more than 5,000 pieces are submitted each year and over 1,200 winning pieces will be on display in the Whitney Applied Technology Center for six weeks following the awards ceremony. The work of Gold Key recipients is sent on to New York City for national consideration.


Back to list
 


Music
 

1:00 PM, January 20



From Art to Wood to Music: Sculpted Sound
Bells & Motley Consort

Price: Free
Onondaga Hill Free Library
4840 W. Seneca Tnpk., Syracuse

Sondra and John Bromka will bring their images and instruments to life, as the duo appears for a live concert and show & tell combining the art and science behind their work. The concert is being held in conjunction with a month-long extensive photo-documentary exhibit of Bells & Motley's activities and research trail in the recreation of historic instruments and music on display in the Community Room.


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Opera
 

8:00 PM, January 20



Dido and Aeneas
Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
Syracuse University Opera Workshop
Eric Johnson, director

Price: $5 general public; free with S.U. student ID
Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The Syracuse University Opera Workshop will present Henry Purcell's Dido and Aeneas. The production will be fully staged in English and accompanied by a student orchestra conducted by James R. Tapia.

Free parking is available in Irving Garage.

For more information, phone 315-443-2512 or ejohns01@syr.edu.


Back to list
 


Theater
 

2:00 PM, January 20



The Left Hand Singing
Appleseed Productions
Linda Lance, director

Price: $15 regular; $12 students/seniors (price includes dessert and beverage at intermission)
Atonement Lutheran Church
116 W. Glen Ave., Syracuse

Amidst the idealism and violence of Freedom Summer in 1964 Mississippi, three college students vanish, seemingly without a trace. As the parents of Honey, Linda, and Wes cope with their loss, they become inescapably linked -- the heirs of their lost children's dreams. Throughout the next three decades, the connections among these people with very disparate backgrounds are tested against the fire of the country's social and political turbulence. The structure of the play mixes naturalism with a surprising time curve that evokes the whirl of events surrounding the parents' interwoven journeys.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

2:00 PM, January 20



Hamlet
Syracuse Shakespeare-in-the-Park
Tony Brown, director

Price: $10 regular; $5 with S.U. student ID
The Warehouse, Main Auditorium
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Shakespeare reached his pinnacle when he wrote the dark and introspective masterpiece, Hamlet. You will see and hear it all as we reveal the layers of a tortured mind bent on avenging his father's death. This intimate portrait will leave you stunned by its power and beauty.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

2:00 PM, January 20



The Lieutenant of Inishmore
Syracuse Stage
Robert Moss, director

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

This gleeful and gruesome comedy about a fellow "too mad for the IRA" was a smash hit on Broadway and winner of Britains prestigious Olivier award. Blood and laughter flow liberally.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

7:00 PM, January 20



The Lieutenant of Inishmore
Syracuse Stage
Robert Moss, director

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

This gleeful and gruesome comedy about a fellow "too mad for the IRA" was a smash hit on Broadway and winner of Britains prestigious Olivier award. Blood and laughter flow liberally.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 


 

Monday, January 21, 2008


Art
 

8:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 21



Annual Scholastic Art Awards
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Whitney Applied Technology Center
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse

Scholastic Art is the largest juried art show for Junior and Senior high school students in Central New York. Covering a 13-county region, more than 5,000 pieces are submitted each year and over 1,200 winning pieces will be on display in the Whitney Applied Technology Center for six weeks following the awards ceremony. The work of Gold Key recipients is sent on to New York City for national consideration.


Back to list
 

 

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



Tango
Point of Contact Gallery

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

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

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

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


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 21



Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement
Light Work Gallery

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

Photographer Don Gregorio Antón creates mystical retablos that look like sacred objects in themselves. They are intimately small and sit on little stands to be viewed individually. Each retablo is one of a kind. Retabols, or ex votos as they are sometimes called, have been part of Mexico's tradition since the 17th century. They were originally hung behind the altars of Catholic churches, and remain a tradition to this day.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 21



Transmedia Photography Annual
Light Work Gallery

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

Exhibit features work by Transmedia students at Syracuse University.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, January 21



A Collection of Stories
Redhouse

Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

A Collection of Stories is an exhibition of paintings by Oswego artist Cayetano G. Valenzuela. Valenzuela's work explores our understanding of experience, from how we simplify ideas and each other to the complexities of memory. Communication and poetic resonance are at the core of his paintings while personal narratives are used in generating images.

Cayetano G. Valenzuela graduated from SUNY College of Art and Design at Purchase with a BFA. He has been working and showing artwork in CNY for six years. His paintings and illustrations have been reviewed in TLC magazine, The Philadelphia Daily News online, Stars magazine and Leisure Time. He has published three small press books. Cayetano has had solo exhibitions as well as group shows with The Hat Factory Art Collective around the Central New York area.

Free parking is conveniently located directly behind the Redhouse building.


Back to list
 


 

Tuesday, January 22, 2008


Art
 

8:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 22



Annual Scholastic Art Awards
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Whitney Applied Technology Center
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse

Scholastic Art is the largest juried art show for Junior and Senior high school students in Central New York. Covering a 13-county region, more than 5,000 pieces are submitted each year and over 1,200 winning pieces will be on display in the Whitney Applied Technology Center for six weeks following the awards ceremony. The work of Gold Key recipients is sent on to New York City for national consideration.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, January 22



Tango
Point of Contact Gallery

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

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

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

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


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 22



Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement
Light Work Gallery

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

Photographer Don Gregorio Antón creates mystical retablos that look like sacred objects in themselves. They are intimately small and sit on little stands to be viewed individually. Each retablo is one of a kind. Retabols, or ex votos as they are sometimes called, have been part of Mexico's tradition since the 17th century. They were originally hung behind the altars of Catholic churches, and remain a tradition to this day.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 22



Transmedia Photography Annual
Light Work Gallery

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

Exhibit features work by Transmedia students at Syracuse University.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, January 22



Impressions, a Jasper Johns Retrospective
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

This retrospective exhibition of Jasper Johns' prints from the John and Maxine Belger Family Foundation starts with the artist's first published print in 1960, six years after Johns consciously destroyed all of his artwork. That act liberated him from "becoming" an artist to "being" an artist. Johns spent the next few years in the studio creating a body of imagery: flags, numerals, letters, and targets that flew in the face of the then popular Abstract Expressionism.

Trained briefly at the University of South Carolina, Johns moved to New York in the 1950s. In New York, he met and was influenced by a number of other artists including the composer John Cage, the choreographer Merce Cunningham, and the painter Robert Rauschenberg. After a visit to Philadelphia to see a Marcel Duchamp painting, Johns became very interested in the French artist's work. Duchamp had revolutionized the art world with his "readymades" - a series of found objects presented as finished works of art.

Jasper Johns' interest in process led him to printmaking. Often he would make counterpart prints
to his paintings. He explains, "My experience of life is that it's very fragmented; certain kinds of things happen, and in another place, a different kind of thing occurs. I would like my work to have some vivid indication of those differences." For Johns, printmaking was a medium that encouraged experimentation with an ease for repeat patterns. His work in screen printing, lithography, and etching have revolutionized the field.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, January 22



Modernist Prints 1900-1955
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

Since the turn of the century America and Europe have had a symbiotic relationship towards art. Movements that were born in Europe have been nurtured in the United States and those styles developed here have had a significant impact on artists abroad. In the years before World War I avant-garde movements in Europe seemed radical to many Americans but also extremely exciting to others. As the century progressed movements emerged that borrowed issues, techniques, devices, or other attributes from pre-existing styles. This led to a generic 'modernist' label for those art forms that did not seem to emerge from a traditional, academic manner.

The artwork in this exhibition was created by important artists of the era including Vasily Kandinsky, Joan Miro, and S. W. Hayter from Europe, and the Americans Stuart Davis, Boris Margo, and Morris Blackburn. The prints have been chosen to illustrate the multiplicity of graphic art styles that became popular during the period.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, January 22



Visual Arts Showcase #62, Brainstorms
CNY Arts

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


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, January 22



Pollock Matters
Everson Museum of Art

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

Pollock Matters, curated by art historian Ellen G. Landau of Case-Western Reserve University, explores for the first time the personal and artistic relationship between famed American Abstract Expressionist painter Jackson Pollock and his close friend, noted Swiss-born photographer and graphic designer, Herbert Matter.

Featuring compelling visual and documentary evidence, the exhibition demonstrates the impact of the artists' interaction on their respective work. Comprising paintings, drawings, works on paper and other documentation -- including previously unseen photographs and letters -- it compares Matter's experimental abstract photos with known works by Pollock, and highlights their significant stylistic, technical and thematic connections.

Pollock Matters also showcases 24 small-scale works discovered by Herbert Matter's son, Alex Matter, in a storage facility in 2002. The paintings, although identified as "Jackson experimental works" by an inscription in Herbert Matter's hand and dated 1958 (2 years after the artist's death), have been the subject of much controversy, scientific study, scholarly analysis, and significant media attention. In the exhibition and accompanying catalog, Curator Ellen Landau thoroughly investigates questions raised by this unprecedented discovery of previously unknown works: "If Pollock did not paint a portion of the cache, who did? How many artists were involved? And, no less importantly, what was the purpose of these paintings?" The debate will, without doubt, continue beyond the exhibition and for decades to come.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, January 22



A Collection of Stories
Redhouse

Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

A Collection of Stories is an exhibition of paintings by Oswego artist Cayetano G. Valenzuela. Valenzuela's work explores our understanding of experience, from how we simplify ideas and each other to the complexities of memory. Communication and poetic resonance are at the core of his paintings while personal narratives are used in generating images.

Cayetano G. Valenzuela graduated from SUNY College of Art and Design at Purchase with a BFA. He has been working and showing artwork in CNY for six years. His paintings and illustrations have been reviewed in TLC magazine, The Philadelphia Daily News online, Stars magazine and Leisure Time. He has published three small press books. Cayetano has had solo exhibitions as well as group shows with The Hat Factory Art Collective around the Central New York area.

Free parking is conveniently located directly behind the Redhouse building.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, January 22



Genetic Self-Portrait: Works by Gary Schneider
The Warehouse Gallery

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

The show includes 55 photo-based works that South African-born, NYC-based artist Gary Schneider produced when he was offered a chance to create a new body of work inspired by the Human Genome Project (HGP). The HGP, a scientific race to uncover the mysteries of DNA, began formally in the 1990s and was completed in 2003. During that period, Schneider was able to collaborate with a number of scientists and was given access to advanced imaging systems from electron microscopes to x-ray machines.

The work in the exhibition ranges from images of his individual chromosomes made by a light microscope to panoramic dental x-rays. Schneider is known as a master photographic printer, and by combining his skill as a craftsman and selecting specimens for their aesthetic qualities, he moved beyond scientific descriptions to produce a personal portrait that asks us to consider how we are unique and where we stand on common ground.

Schneider had always been interested in alternative imaging techniques, and previous to this project he had been making images by imprinting his hands onto film emulsions. When he decided to include these prints along with the images he had been making with scientists, he realized that what he had been creating was a new kind of portrait. Ann Thomas, curator of photographs at the National Gallery of Canada, described it as a new approach that "challenges the traditional definition of the portrait, and revises our understanding of what it means to be revealed before the camera's lens."

By merging scientific accuracy with poetic resonance, Schneider has created a very personal illumination of how our individual identity is so closely linked to our broader understanding and use of the information contained in the human building blocks of our DNA. Through the personal exploration that went into creating genetic self-portrait, Schneider reveals that while we may always want to think of ourselves as more than the sum of our parts, our real promise might be found in looking at the 99 percent of ourselves we have in common with everyone else.

Read a review!


Back to list
 


Theater
 

7:30 PM, January 22



The Lieutenant of Inishmore
Syracuse Stage
Robert Moss, director

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

This gleeful and gruesome comedy about a fellow "too mad for the IRA" was a smash hit on Broadway and winner of Britains prestigious Olivier award. Blood and laughter flow liberally.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 


 

Wednesday, January 23, 2008


Art
 

8:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 23



Annual Scholastic Art Awards
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Whitney Applied Technology Center
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse

Scholastic Art is the largest juried art show for Junior and Senior high school students in Central New York. Covering a 13-county region, more than 5,000 pieces are submitted each year and over 1,200 winning pieces will be on display in the Whitney Applied Technology Center for six weeks following the awards ceremony. The work of Gold Key recipients is sent on to New York City for national consideration.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, January 23



Gallery Exhibit: Mary Kester
Onondaga Community College

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

Exhibit of tapestries of human and landscape forms. Ms. Kester works in tapestry to exploit the tactile woven medium in forms which give the illusion of depth and monumentality. The woven grid expands into actual layers and drawn depth to suggest crevices and hollows - spaces which appear deeper than they really are. The tension between real textural substance and pictured illusion gives her work an interest that calls for a second, longer look.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, January 23



Tango
Point of Contact Gallery

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

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

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

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


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 23



Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement
Light Work Gallery

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

Photographer Don Gregorio Antón creates mystical retablos that look like sacred objects in themselves. They are intimately small and sit on little stands to be viewed individually. Each retablo is one of a kind. Retabols, or ex votos as they are sometimes called, have been part of Mexico's tradition since the 17th century. They were originally hung behind the altars of Catholic churches, and remain a tradition to this day.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 23



Transmedia Photography Annual
Light Work Gallery

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

Exhibit features work by Transmedia students at Syracuse University.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, January 23



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

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

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


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, January 23



Modernist Prints 1900-1955
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

Since the turn of the century America and Europe have had a symbiotic relationship towards art. Movements that were born in Europe have been nurtured in the United States and those styles developed here have had a significant impact on artists abroad. In the years before World War I avant-garde movements in Europe seemed radical to many Americans but also extremely exciting to others. As the century progressed movements emerged that borrowed issues, techniques, devices, or other attributes from pre-existing styles. This led to a generic 'modernist' label for those art forms that did not seem to emerge from a traditional, academic manner.

The artwork in this exhibition was created by important artists of the era including Vasily Kandinsky, Joan Miro, and S. W. Hayter from Europe, and the Americans Stuart Davis, Boris Margo, and Morris Blackburn. The prints have been chosen to illustrate the multiplicity of graphic art styles that became popular during the period.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, January 23



Impressions, a Jasper Johns Retrospective
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

This retrospective exhibition of Jasper Johns' prints from the John and Maxine Belger Family Foundation starts with the artist's first published print in 1960, six years after Johns consciously destroyed all of his artwork. That act liberated him from "becoming" an artist to "being" an artist. Johns spent the next few years in the studio creating a body of imagery: flags, numerals, letters, and targets that flew in the face of the then popular Abstract Expressionism.

Trained briefly at the University of South Carolina, Johns moved to New York in the 1950s. In New York, he met and was influenced by a number of other artists including the composer John Cage, the choreographer Merce Cunningham, and the painter Robert Rauschenberg. After a visit to Philadelphia to see a Marcel Duchamp painting, Johns became very interested in the French artist's work. Duchamp had revolutionized the art world with his "readymades" - a series of found objects presented as finished works of art.

Jasper Johns' interest in process led him to printmaking. Often he would make counterpart prints
to his paintings. He explains, "My experience of life is that it's very fragmented; certain kinds of things happen, and in another place, a different kind of thing occurs. I would like my work to have some vivid indication of those differences." For Johns, printmaking was a medium that encouraged experimentation with an ease for repeat patterns. His work in screen printing, lithography, and etching have revolutionized the field.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, January 23



Visual Arts Showcase #62, Brainstorms
CNY Arts

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


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, January 23



Pollock Matters
Everson Museum of Art

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

Pollock Matters, curated by art historian Ellen G. Landau of Case-Western Reserve University, explores for the first time the personal and artistic relationship between famed American Abstract Expressionist painter Jackson Pollock and his close friend, noted Swiss-born photographer and graphic designer, Herbert Matter.

Featuring compelling visual and documentary evidence, the exhibition demonstrates the impact of the artists' interaction on their respective work. Comprising paintings, drawings, works on paper and other documentation -- including previously unseen photographs and letters -- it compares Matter's experimental abstract photos with known works by Pollock, and highlights their significant stylistic, technical and thematic connections.

Pollock Matters also showcases 24 small-scale works discovered by Herbert Matter's son, Alex Matter, in a storage facility in 2002. The paintings, although identified as "Jackson experimental works" by an inscription in Herbert Matter's hand and dated 1958 (2 years after the artist's death), have been the subject of much controversy, scientific study, scholarly analysis, and significant media attention. In the exhibition and accompanying catalog, Curator Ellen Landau thoroughly investigates questions raised by this unprecedented discovery of previously unknown works: "If Pollock did not paint a portion of the cache, who did? How many artists were involved? And, no less importantly, what was the purpose of these paintings?" The debate will, without doubt, continue beyond the exhibition and for decades to come.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, January 23



A Collection of Stories
Redhouse

Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

A Collection of Stories is an exhibition of paintings by Oswego artist Cayetano G. Valenzuela. Valenzuela's work explores our understanding of experience, from how we simplify ideas and each other to the complexities of memory. Communication and poetic resonance are at the core of his paintings while personal narratives are used in generating images.

Cayetano G. Valenzuela graduated from SUNY College of Art and Design at Purchase with a BFA. He has been working and showing artwork in CNY for six years. His paintings and illustrations have been reviewed in TLC magazine, The Philadelphia Daily News online, Stars magazine and Leisure Time. He has published three small press books. Cayetano has had solo exhibitions as well as group shows with The Hat Factory Art Collective around the Central New York area.

Free parking is conveniently located directly behind the Redhouse building.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, January 23



Genetic Self-Portrait: Works by Gary Schneider
The Warehouse Gallery

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

The show includes 55 photo-based works that South African-born, NYC-based artist Gary Schneider produced when he was offered a chance to create a new body of work inspired by the Human Genome Project (HGP). The HGP, a scientific race to uncover the mysteries of DNA, began formally in the 1990s and was completed in 2003. During that period, Schneider was able to collaborate with a number of scientists and was given access to advanced imaging systems from electron microscopes to x-ray machines.

The work in the exhibition ranges from images of his individual chromosomes made by a light microscope to panoramic dental x-rays. Schneider is known as a master photographic printer, and by combining his skill as a craftsman and selecting specimens for their aesthetic qualities, he moved beyond scientific descriptions to produce a personal portrait that asks us to consider how we are unique and where we stand on common ground.

Schneider had always been interested in alternative imaging techniques, and previous to this project he had been making images by imprinting his hands onto film emulsions. When he decided to include these prints along with the images he had been making with scientists, he realized that what he had been creating was a new kind of portrait. Ann Thomas, curator of photographs at the National Gallery of Canada, described it as a new approach that "challenges the traditional definition of the portrait, and revises our understanding of what it means to be revealed before the camera's lens."

By merging scientific accuracy with poetic resonance, Schneider has created a very personal illumination of how our individual identity is so closely linked to our broader understanding and use of the information contained in the human building blocks of our DNA. Through the personal exploration that went into creating genetic self-portrait, Schneider reveals that while we may always want to think of ourselves as more than the sum of our parts, our real promise might be found in looking at the 99 percent of ourselves we have in common with everyone else.

Read a review!


Back to list
 


Music
 

2:00 PM, January 23



Civic Morning Musicals
Featuring Stephen Pikarsky, piano

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

Brahms-Paganini Variations, Verdi-Liszt Ernani, Beethoven Sonata, Op. 7.


Back to list
 


Theater
 

2:00 PM, January 23



The Lieutenant of Inishmore
Syracuse Stage
Robert Moss, director

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

This gleeful and gruesome comedy about a fellow "too mad for the IRA" was a smash hit on Broadway and winner of Britains prestigious Olivier award. Blood and laughter flow liberally.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

7:30 PM, January 23



The Lieutenant of Inishmore
Syracuse Stage
Robert Moss, director

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

This gleeful and gruesome comedy about a fellow "too mad for the IRA" was a smash hit on Broadway and winner of Britains prestigious Olivier award. Blood and laughter flow liberally.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 


 

Thursday, January 24, 2008


Art
 

8:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 24



Annual Scholastic Art Awards
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Whitney Applied Technology Center
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse

Scholastic Art is the largest juried art show for Junior and Senior high school students in Central New York. Covering a 13-county region, more than 5,000 pieces are submitted each year and over 1,200 winning pieces will be on display in the Whitney Applied Technology Center for six weeks following the awards ceremony. The work of Gold Key recipients is sent on to New York City for national consideration.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, January 24



Gallery Exhibit: Mary Kester
Onondaga Community College

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

Exhibit of tapestries of human and landscape forms. Ms. Kester works in tapestry to exploit the tactile woven medium in forms which give the illusion of depth and monumentality. The woven grid expands into actual layers and drawn depth to suggest crevices and hollows - spaces which appear deeper than they really are. The tension between real textural substance and pictured illusion gives her work an interest that calls for a second, longer look.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, January 24



Tango
Point of Contact Gallery

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

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

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

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


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 24



Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement
Light Work Gallery

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

Photographer Don Gregorio Antón creates mystical retablos that look like sacred objects in themselves. They are intimately small and sit on little stands to be viewed individually. Each retablo is one of a kind. Retabols, or ex votos as they are sometimes called, have been part of Mexico's tradition since the 17th century. They were originally hung behind the altars of Catholic churches, and remain a tradition to this day.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 24



Transmedia Photography Annual
Light Work Gallery

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

Exhibit features work by Transmedia students at Syracuse University.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, January 24



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

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

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


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, January 24



Modernist Prints 1900-1955
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

Since the turn of the century America and Europe have had a symbiotic relationship towards art. Movements that were born in Europe have been nurtured in the United States and those styles developed here have had a significant impact on artists abroad. In the years before World War I avant-garde movements in Europe seemed radical to many Americans but also extremely exciting to others. As the century progressed movements emerged that borrowed issues, techniques, devices, or other attributes from pre-existing styles. This led to a generic 'modernist' label for those art forms that did not seem to emerge from a traditional, academic manner.

The artwork in this exhibition was created by important artists of the era including Vasily Kandinsky, Joan Miro, and S. W. Hayter from Europe, and the Americans Stuart Davis, Boris Margo, and Morris Blackburn. The prints have been chosen to illustrate the multiplicity of graphic art styles that became popular during the period.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, January 24



Impressions, a Jasper Johns Retrospective
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

This retrospective exhibition of Jasper Johns' prints from the John and Maxine Belger Family Foundation starts with the artist's first published print in 1960, six years after Johns consciously destroyed all of his artwork. That act liberated him from "becoming" an artist to "being" an artist. Johns spent the next few years in the studio creating a body of imagery: flags, numerals, letters, and targets that flew in the face of the then popular Abstract Expressionism.

Trained briefly at the University of South Carolina, Johns moved to New York in the 1950s. In New York, he met and was influenced by a number of other artists including the composer John Cage, the choreographer Merce Cunningham, and the painter Robert Rauschenberg. After a visit to Philadelphia to see a Marcel Duchamp painting, Johns became very interested in the French artist's work. Duchamp had revolutionized the art world with his "readymades" - a series of found objects presented as finished works of art.

Jasper Johns' interest in process led him to printmaking. Often he would make counterpart prints
to his paintings. He explains, "My experience of life is that it's very fragmented; certain kinds of things happen, and in another place, a different kind of thing occurs. I would like my work to have some vivid indication of those differences." For Johns, printmaking was a medium that encouraged experimentation with an ease for repeat patterns. His work in screen printing, lithography, and etching have revolutionized the field.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, January 24



Visual Arts Showcase #62, Brainstorms
CNY Arts

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


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, January 24



Pollock Matters
Everson Museum of Art

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

Pollock Matters, curated by art historian Ellen G. Landau of Case-Western Reserve University, explores for the first time the personal and artistic relationship between famed American Abstract Expressionist painter Jackson Pollock and his close friend, noted Swiss-born photographer and graphic designer, Herbert Matter.

Featuring compelling visual and documentary evidence, the exhibition demonstrates the impact of the artists' interaction on their respective work. Comprising paintings, drawings, works on paper and other documentation -- including previously unseen photographs and letters -- it compares Matter's experimental abstract photos with known works by Pollock, and highlights their significant stylistic, technical and thematic connections.

Pollock Matters also showcases 24 small-scale works discovered by Herbert Matter's son, Alex Matter, in a storage facility in 2002. The paintings, although identified as "Jackson experimental works" by an inscription in Herbert Matter's hand and dated 1958 (2 years after the artist's death), have been the subject of much controversy, scientific study, scholarly analysis, and significant media attention. In the exhibition and accompanying catalog, Curator Ellen Landau thoroughly investigates questions raised by this unprecedented discovery of previously unknown works: "If Pollock did not paint a portion of the cache, who did? How many artists were involved? And, no less importantly, what was the purpose of these paintings?" The debate will, without doubt, continue beyond the exhibition and for decades to come.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, January 24



A Collection of Stories
Redhouse

Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

A Collection of Stories is an exhibition of paintings by Oswego artist Cayetano G. Valenzuela. Valenzuela's work explores our understanding of experience, from how we simplify ideas and each other to the complexities of memory. Communication and poetic resonance are at the core of his paintings while personal narratives are used in generating images.

Cayetano G. Valenzuela graduated from SUNY College of Art and Design at Purchase with a BFA. He has been working and showing artwork in CNY for six years. His paintings and illustrations have been reviewed in TLC magazine, The Philadelphia Daily News online, Stars magazine and Leisure Time. He has published three small press books. Cayetano has had solo exhibitions as well as group shows with The Hat Factory Art Collective around the Central New York area.

Free parking is conveniently located directly behind the Redhouse building.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, January 24



Genetic Self-Portrait: Works by Gary Schneider
The Warehouse Gallery

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

The show includes 55 photo-based works that South African-born, NYC-based artist Gary Schneider produced when he was offered a chance to create a new body of work inspired by the Human Genome Project (HGP). The HGP, a scientific race to uncover the mysteries of DNA, began formally in the 1990s and was completed in 2003. During that period, Schneider was able to collaborate with a number of scientists and was given access to advanced imaging systems from electron microscopes to x-ray machines.

The work in the exhibition ranges from images of his individual chromosomes made by a light microscope to panoramic dental x-rays. Schneider is known as a master photographic printer, and by combining his skill as a craftsman and selecting specimens for their aesthetic qualities, he moved beyond scientific descriptions to produce a personal portrait that asks us to consider how we are unique and where we stand on common ground.

Schneider had always been interested in alternative imaging techniques, and previous to this project he had been making images by imprinting his hands onto film emulsions. When he decided to include these prints along with the images he had been making with scientists, he realized that what he had been creating was a new kind of portrait. Ann Thomas, curator of photographs at the National Gallery of Canada, described it as a new approach that "challenges the traditional definition of the portrait, and revises our understanding of what it means to be revealed before the camera's lens."

By merging scientific accuracy with poetic resonance, Schneider has created a very personal illumination of how our individual identity is so closely linked to our broader understanding and use of the information contained in the human building blocks of our DNA. Through the personal exploration that went into creating genetic self-portrait, Schneider reveals that while we may always want to think of ourselves as more than the sum of our parts, our real promise might be found in looking at the 99 percent of ourselves we have in common with everyone else.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

5:00 PM - 8:00 PM, January 24



The Artistic Domain
Delavan Art Gallery

Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Featuring paintings by Sharon Gordon, encaustic paintings by Lew Graham, etchings and oil paintings by James Skvarch and works by artists in Stone Canoe, a journal of arts and ideas from Upstate New York.


Back to list
 


Theater
 

7:30 PM, January 24



The Lieutenant of Inishmore
Syracuse Stage
Robert Moss, director

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

This gleeful and gruesome comedy about a fellow "too mad for the IRA" was a smash hit on Broadway and winner of Britains prestigious Olivier award. Blood and laughter flow liberally.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 


 

Friday, January 25, 2008


Art
 

8:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 25



Annual Scholastic Art Awards
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Whitney Applied Technology Center
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse

Scholastic Art is the largest juried art show for Junior and Senior high school students in Central New York. Covering a 13-county region, more than 5,000 pieces are submitted each year and over 1,200 winning pieces will be on display in the Whitney Applied Technology Center for six weeks following the awards ceremony. The work of Gold Key recipients is sent on to New York City for national consideration.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, January 25



Gallery Exhibit: Mary Kester
Onondaga Community College

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

Exhibit of tapestries of human and landscape forms. Ms. Kester works in tapestry to exploit the tactile woven medium in forms which give the illusion of depth and monumentality. The woven grid expands into actual layers and drawn depth to suggest crevices and hollows - spaces which appear deeper than they really are. The tension between real textural substance and pictured illusion gives her work an interest that calls for a second, longer look.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, January 25



Tango
Point of Contact Gallery

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

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

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

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


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 25



Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement
Light Work Gallery

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

Photographer Don Gregorio Antón creates mystical retablos that look like sacred objects in themselves. They are intimately small and sit on little stands to be viewed individually. Each retablo is one of a kind. Retabols, or ex votos as they are sometimes called, have been part of Mexico's tradition since the 17th century. They were originally hung behind the altars of Catholic churches, and remain a tradition to this day.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 25



Transmedia Photography Annual
Light Work Gallery

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

Exhibit features work by Transmedia students at Syracuse University.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, January 25



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

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

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


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, January 25



Modernist Prints 1900-1955
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

Since the turn of the century America and Europe have had a symbiotic relationship towards art. Movements that were born in Europe have been nurtured in the United States and those styles developed here have had a significant impact on artists abroad. In the years before World War I avant-garde movements in Europe seemed radical to many Americans but also extremely exciting to others. As the century progressed movements emerged that borrowed issues, techniques, devices, or other attributes from pre-existing styles. This led to a generic 'modernist' label for those art forms that did not seem to emerge from a traditional, academic manner.

The artwork in this exhibition was created by important artists of the era including Vasily Kandinsky, Joan Miro, and S. W. Hayter from Europe, and the Americans Stuart Davis, Boris Margo, and Morris Blackburn. The prints have been chosen to illustrate the multiplicity of graphic art styles that became popular during the period.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, January 25



Impressions, a Jasper Johns Retrospective
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

This retrospective exhibition of Jasper Johns' prints from the John and Maxine Belger Family Foundation starts with the artist's first published print in 1960, six years after Johns consciously destroyed all of his artwork. That act liberated him from "becoming" an artist to "being" an artist. Johns spent the next few years in the studio creating a body of imagery: flags, numerals, letters, and targets that flew in the face of the then popular Abstract Expressionism.

Trained briefly at the University of South Carolina, Johns moved to New York in the 1950s. In New York, he met and was influenced by a number of other artists including the composer John Cage, the choreographer Merce Cunningham, and the painter Robert Rauschenberg. After a visit to Philadelphia to see a Marcel Duchamp painting, Johns became very interested in the French artist's work. Duchamp had revolutionized the art world with his "readymades" - a series of found objects presented as finished works of art.

Jasper Johns' interest in process led him to printmaking. Often he would make counterpart prints
to his paintings. He explains, "My experience of life is that it's very fragmented; certain kinds of things happen, and in another place, a different kind of thing occurs. I would like my work to have some vivid indication of those differences." For Johns, printmaking was a medium that encouraged experimentation with an ease for repeat patterns. His work in screen printing, lithography, and etching have revolutionized the field.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, January 25



Visual Arts Showcase #62, Brainstorms
CNY Arts

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


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, January 25



The Artistic Domain
Delavan Art Gallery

Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Featuring paintings by Sharon Gordon, encaustic paintings by Lew Graham, etchings and oil paintings by James Skvarch and works by artists in Stone Canoe, a journal of arts and ideas from Upstate New York.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, January 25



Pollock Matters
Everson Museum of Art

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

Pollock Matters, curated by art historian Ellen G. Landau of Case-Western Reserve University, explores for the first time the personal and artistic relationship between famed American Abstract Expressionist painter Jackson Pollock and his close friend, noted Swiss-born photographer and graphic designer, Herbert Matter.

Featuring compelling visual and documentary evidence, the exhibition demonstrates the impact of the artists' interaction on their respective work. Comprising paintings, drawings, works on paper and other documentation -- including previously unseen photographs and letters -- it compares Matter's experimental abstract photos with known works by Pollock, and highlights their significant stylistic, technical and thematic connections.

Pollock Matters also showcases 24 small-scale works discovered by Herbert Matter's son, Alex Matter, in a storage facility in 2002. The paintings, although identified as "Jackson experimental works" by an inscription in Herbert Matter's hand and dated 1958 (2 years after the artist's death), have been the subject of much controversy, scientific study, scholarly analysis, and significant media attention. In the exhibition and accompanying catalog, Curator Ellen Landau thoroughly investigates questions raised by this unprecedented discovery of previously unknown works: "If Pollock did not paint a portion of the cache, who did? How many artists were involved? And, no less importantly, what was the purpose of these paintings?" The debate will, without doubt, continue beyond the exhibition and for decades to come.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, January 25



A Collection of Stories
Redhouse

Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

A Collection of Stories is an exhibition of paintings by Oswego artist Cayetano G. Valenzuela. Valenzuela's work explores our understanding of experience, from how we simplify ideas and each other to the complexities of memory. Communication and poetic resonance are at the core of his paintings while personal narratives are used in generating images.

Cayetano G. Valenzuela graduated from SUNY College of Art and Design at Purchase with a BFA. He has been working and showing artwork in CNY for six years. His paintings and illustrations have been reviewed in TLC magazine, The Philadelphia Daily News online, Stars magazine and Leisure Time. He has published three small press books. Cayetano has had solo exhibitions as well as group shows with The Hat Factory Art Collective around the Central New York area.

Free parking is conveniently located directly behind the Redhouse building.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, January 25



Genetic Self-Portrait: Works by Gary Schneider
The Warehouse Gallery

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

The show includes 55 photo-based works that South African-born, NYC-based artist Gary Schneider produced when he was offered a chance to create a new body of work inspired by the Human Genome Project (HGP). The HGP, a scientific race to uncover the mysteries of DNA, began formally in the 1990s and was completed in 2003. During that period, Schneider was able to collaborate with a number of scientists and was given access to advanced imaging systems from electron microscopes to x-ray machines.

The work in the exhibition ranges from images of his individual chromosomes made by a light microscope to panoramic dental x-rays. Schneider is known as a master photographic printer, and by combining his skill as a craftsman and selecting specimens for their aesthetic qualities, he moved beyond scientific descriptions to produce a personal portrait that asks us to consider how we are unique and where we stand on common ground.

Schneider had always been interested in alternative imaging techniques, and previous to this project he had been making images by imprinting his hands onto film emulsions. When he decided to include these prints along with the images he had been making with scientists, he realized that what he had been creating was a new kind of portrait. Ann Thomas, curator of photographs at the National Gallery of Canada, described it as a new approach that "challenges the traditional definition of the portrait, and revises our understanding of what it means to be revealed before the camera's lens."

By merging scientific accuracy with poetic resonance, Schneider has created a very personal illumination of how our individual identity is so closely linked to our broader understanding and use of the information contained in the human building blocks of our DNA. Through the personal exploration that went into creating genetic self-portrait, Schneider reveals that while we may always want to think of ourselves as more than the sum of our parts, our real promise might be found in looking at the 99 percent of ourselves we have in common with everyone else.

Read a review!


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8:00 PM, January 25



SparkVideo: Kitties and Babies
Spark Contemporary Art Space

Price: $3
Spark Contemporary Art Space
1005 E. Fayette St., Syracuse

This month's video selection, Kitties and Babies, curated by Ann Hirsch, features a mix of international and local artists. This month's show will also debut the inclusion of sound works into the program. Artists include Yu Araki, Frank McCauley, Sacha Fink, Katie Micak, Catherine Forster and more!


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Film
 

12:00 PM, January 25



BakeHouse Films
Syracuse International Film Festival

Price: Free. Food and beverages available for purchase
Pascale's Bakehouse and Cafe
Hotel Syracuse, 500 S. Warren St., Syracuse

Kalakaar (Directed by Tejas Degskar, fiction (India), 12 min Best of Fest Nominee 2006)
A delightful tale about how the rubber eraser gets accidentally invented and saves a sketch artist from going to the gallows.

Cigar on the Beach (Directed by Stephen Keep Mills, fiction (USA), 15 min. Best of Fest Winner 2006)
A man withdraws to an empty beach to smoke a cigar and fantasize. An approaching storm out across the water mirrors the storm inside him as his fantasies propel him to the very edge of himself and to a surprise yearning greater than flesh or adventure.

Lucky (Directed by Avie Luthra, fiction (England), 20 min)
Lucky is a South African AIDS orphan who learns about life through an unlikely bond with a racist Indian woman.

The “BakeHouse Films” series features Best of Fest shorts and animation from the Syracuse International Film Festival archive. The programs last from 40 minutes to an hour. For more information, phone 315-443-8826.


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Music
 

7:30 PM, January 25



Words and Music Songwriter Showcase
Folkus Project
Featuring Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers

Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St., Syracuse

The series opener features Lisa Gentile, Timothy Daniel, Dusty Pas'cal, and Leo Crandall of Gonstermachers.

The Words and Music Songwriter Showcase is a celebration of original music from Central New York and beyond, featuring established and emerging artists of all genres in an up-close-and-personal acoustic setting.

The series is hosted by singer-songwriter, author, and NPR contributor Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers.

Each monthly show includes a featured artist performing a full set, four songwriters in the round, original music by Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers, The Song Schmooze, where musicians and music lovers mingle over a drink and a bite to eat. Plus special guests, surprise collaborations, and the Soundbite of the Night, where Rodgers shares a memorable moment from his extraordinary archive of interviews with artists such as Joni Mitchell, Paul Simon, Jerry Garcia, Ani DiFranco, and Dave Matthews.


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8:00 PM, January 25



Classics Series: Beethoven Festival: Fidelio
Syracuse Symphony Orchestra
Syracuse University Oratorio Society
Daniel Hege, conductor
Featuring Andrew Zaplatynsky, violin

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

Beethoven Romance No. 2 in F major, op. 50
Beethoven Symphony No. 7 in A major, op. 92
Beethoven Fidelio Excerpts

There will be a free pre-concert talk in the theater at 7:00 pm and a free post-concert talk-back in the lobby immediately following the concert.

Read a review!


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Poetry/Reading
 

7:00 PM, January 25



Poet Christopher Kennedy
Downtown Writer's Center

Price: Free
YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Christopher Kennedy is the Director of the MFA Program in Creative Writing at Syracuse University. He is the author of three full-length collections of poetry, Nietzsche's Horse (Mitki/Mitki Press), Trouble with the Machine (Low Fidelity Press), and his latest, Encouragement for a Man Falling to His Death (BOA Editions, Ltd., 2007), and three poetry chapbooks, Greatest Hits (Pudding House Press), King Cobra Does the Mambo (M2 Press, Fall 2005), and "B" Sides (M2 Press, Fall 2005). Kennedy has received grants from the New York Foundation for the Arts and the Constance Saltonstall Foundation for the Arts. His work has appeared in Grand Street, Ploughshares, The Threepenny Review, Mississippi Review, McSweeney's and many other journals and magazines.


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Theater
 

8:00 PM, January 25



The Left Hand Singing
Appleseed Productions
Linda Lance, director

Price: $15 regular; $12 students/seniors (price includes dessert and beverage at intermission)
Atonement Lutheran Church
116 W. Glen Ave., Syracuse

Amidst the idealism and violence of Freedom Summer in 1964 Mississippi, three college students vanish, seemingly without a trace. As the parents of Honey, Linda, and Wes cope with their loss, they become inescapably linked -- the heirs of their lost children's dreams. Throughout the next three decades, the connections among these people with very disparate backgrounds are tested against the fire of the country's social and political turbulence. The structure of the play mixes naturalism with a surprising time curve that evokes the whirl of events surrounding the parents' interwoven journeys.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, January 25



Friday Night Live
Redhouse

Price: $15 regular; $10 students/seniors
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

Redhouse brings back its hi-energy, interactive and very unique program, Friday Night Live from Redhouse! A troupe of 5 seasoned actors will perform a series of games and scenarios based on audience suggestion and participation. We guarantee 90 minutes of dangerous fun and no bodily injuries.

Featured performers are Laura Austin, Tim Mahar, Tim Davis, Brenda Owens, Jeff Kinsler.


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, January 25



The Lieutenant of Inishmore
Syracuse Stage
Robert Moss, director

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

This gleeful and gruesome comedy about a fellow "too mad for the IRA" was a smash hit on Broadway and winner of Britains prestigious Olivier award. Blood and laughter flow liberally.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

8:30 PM, January 25



I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change
Salt City Center for the Performing Arts

Price: $22 regular; $20 students/seniors
Empire Theater
New York State Fairgrounds, Geddes

Read a review!


Back to list
 


 

Saturday, January 26, 2008


Art
 

8:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 26



Annual Scholastic Art Awards
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Whitney Applied Technology Center
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse

Scholastic Art is the largest juried art show for Junior and Senior high school students in Central New York. Covering a 13-county region, more than 5,000 pieces are submitted each year and over 1,200 winning pieces will be on display in the Whitney Applied Technology Center for six weeks following the awards ceremony. The work of Gold Key recipients is sent on to New York City for national consideration.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, January 26



The Artistic Domain
Delavan Art Gallery

Delavan Art Gallery
501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Featuring paintings by Sharon Gordon, encaustic paintings by Lew Graham, etchings and oil paintings by James Skvarch and works by artists in Stone Canoe, a journal of arts and ideas from Upstate New York.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, January 26



Pollock Matters
Everson Museum of Art

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

Pollock Matters, curated by art historian Ellen G. Landau of Case-Western Reserve University, explores for the first time the personal and artistic relationship between famed American Abstract Expressionist painter Jackson Pollock and his close friend, noted Swiss-born photographer and graphic designer, Herbert Matter.

Featuring compelling visual and documentary evidence, the exhibition demonstrates the impact of the artists' interaction on their respective work. Comprising paintings, drawings, works on paper and other documentation -- including previously unseen photographs and letters -- it compares Matter's experimental abstract photos with known works by Pollock, and highlights their significant stylistic, technical and thematic connections.

Pollock Matters also showcases 24 small-scale works discovered by Herbert Matter's son, Alex Matter, in a storage facility in 2002. The paintings, although identified as "Jackson experimental works" by an inscription in Herbert Matter's hand and dated 1958 (2 years after the artist's death), have been the subject of much controversy, scientific study, scholarly analysis, and significant media attention. In the exhibition and accompanying catalog, Curator Ellen Landau thoroughly investigates questions raised by this unprecedented discovery of previously unknown works: "If Pollock did not paint a portion of the cache, who did? How many artists were involved? And, no less importantly, what was the purpose of these paintings?" The debate will, without doubt, continue beyond the exhibition and for decades to come.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, January 26



Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800
Everson Museum of Art

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

The Low Countries, a region comprising present-day Holland and Belgium, was a site of truly spectacular art production during the so-called early modern period, ca. 1600 to ca. 1800. Indeed, some of the foremost artists in the history of European art practiced within this region, including Rembrandt van Rijn and Peter Paul Rubens. Although the art-loving public is quite familiar with paintings by Dutch (Holland) and Flemish (Belgium) masters their drawings and prints are less known, despite the many outstanding examples of such work that survive. Some of the most memorable and impressive art during this period was made with ink and paper, as opposed to oil paint and canvases and panels. Paper Arts in the Low Countries, 1600-1800 consists of 35 noteworthy examples of drawings and prints by prominent masters of the Low Countries (including Rembrandt and Rubens), drawn from a number of private collections and from the holdings of the Syracuse University Art Collection and the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University.

Paper Arts in the Low Countries is curated by Dr. Wayne Franits, Professor and Department Chair, Department of Fine Arts, Syracuse University with the assistance of graduate students currently enrolled in the Fine Arts program.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, January 26



Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection
Everson Museum of Art

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

Images of Vice and Virtue investigates how artists from different cultures and time periods visualized fundamental themes of good and evil. Early civilizations enacted codes of conduct believing that individual behavior benefited from these guidelines. The ancient Greeks developed a set of inspirational values that included prudence, justice, courage and temperance. Later, Christianity refined and enlarged these to the seven holy virtues against which were set seven deadly sins. Additionally, bible stories illustrated what would happen to individuals who either followed or violated church doctrine.

Western society's growing secularization from the late 18th century onward gave artists greater freedom in interpreting biblical subjects and themes. Artists like Picasso strongly criticized the Spanish government in a pair of prints that depicted the ruler Francisco Franco as a biological polyp. Andy Warhol showed his support for the civil rights movement in a 1964 print of the Birmingham race riot. These examples further indicated the artist's growing role as an individual commenting on good and evil.

Also included in the exhibition are several pieces by non-western cultures. Like their western counterparts, these pieces were inspired and informed by their culture's historical beliefs about good and evil and were often drawn from stories used to explain those beliefs. All of the objects in the exhibition have been drawn from Syracuse Universitys encyclopedic collection of over 45,000 objects.

Images of Vice and Virtue is curated by David Prince, Associate Director of Syracuse University Art Collection.

Read a review!


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, January 26



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

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

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


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, January 26



Impressions, a Jasper Johns Retrospective
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

This retrospective exhibition of Jasper Johns' prints from the John and Maxine Belger Family Foundation starts with the artist's first published print in 1960, six years after Johns consciously destroyed all of his artwork. That act liberated him from "becoming" an artist to "being" an artist. Johns spent the next few years in the studio creating a body of imagery: flags, numerals, letters, and targets that flew in the face of the then popular Abstract Expressionism.

Trained briefly at the University of South Carolina, Johns moved to New York in the 1950s. In New York, he met and was influenced by a number of other artists including the composer John Cage, the choreographer Merce Cunningham, and the painter Robert Rauschenberg. After a visit to Philadelphia to see a Marcel Duchamp painting, Johns became very interested in the French artist's work. Duchamp had revolutionized the art world with his "readymades" - a series of found objects presented as finished works of art.

Jasper Johns' interest in process led him to printmaking. Often he would make counterpart prints
to his paintings. He explains, "My experience of life is that it's very fragmented; certain kinds of things happen, and in another place, a different kind of thing occurs. I would like my work to have some vivid indication of those differences." For Johns, printmaking was a medium that encouraged experimentation with an ease for repeat patterns. His work in screen printing, lithography, and etching have revolutionized the field.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, January 26



Modernist Prints 1900-1955
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

Since the turn of the century America and Europe have had a symbiotic relationship towards art. Movements that were born in Europe have been nurtured in the United States and those styles developed here have had a significant impact on artists abroad. In the years before World War I avant-garde movements in Europe seemed radical to many Americans but also extremely exciting to others. As the century progressed movements emerged that borrowed issues, techniques, devices, or other attributes from pre-existing styles. This led to a generic 'modernist' label for those art forms that did not seem to emerge from a traditional, academic manner.

The artwork in this exhibition was created by important artists of the era including Vasily Kandinsky, Joan Miro, and S. W. Hayter from Europe, and the Americans Stuart Davis, Boris Margo, and Morris Blackburn. The prints have been chosen to illustrate the multiplicity of graphic art styles that became popular during the period.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, January 26



Visual Arts Showcase #62, Brainstorms
CNY Arts

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


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, January 26



Genetic Self-Portrait: Works by Gary Schneider
The Warehouse Gallery

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

The show includes 55 photo-based works that South African-born, NYC-based artist Gary Schneider produced when he was offered a chance to create a new body of work inspired by the Human Genome Project (HGP). The HGP, a scientific race to uncover the mysteries of DNA, began formally in the 1990s and was completed in 2003. During that period, Schneider was able to collaborate with a number of scientists and was given access to advanced imaging systems from electron microscopes to x-ray machines.

The work in the exhibition ranges from images of his individual chromosomes made by a light microscope to panoramic dental x-rays. Schneider is known as a master photographic printer, and by combining his skill as a craftsman and selecting specimens for their aesthetic qualities, he moved beyond scientific descriptions to produce a personal portrait that asks us to consider how we are unique and where we stand on common ground.

Schneider had always been interested in alternative imaging techniques, and previous to this project he had been making images by imprinting his hands onto film emulsions. When he decided to include these prints along with the images he had been making with scientists, he realized that what he had been creating was a new kind of portrait. Ann Thomas, curator of photographs at the National Gallery of Canada, described it as a new approach that "challenges the traditional definition of the portrait, and revises our understanding of what it means to be revealed before the camera's lens."

By merging scientific accuracy with poetic resonance, Schneider has created a very personal illumination of how our individual identity is so closely linked to our broader understanding and use of the information contained in the human building blocks of our DNA. Through the personal exploration that went into creating genetic self-portrait, Schneider reveals that while we may always want to think of ourselves as more than the sum of our parts, our real promise might be found in looking at the 99 percent of ourselves we have in common with everyone else.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, January 26



Genetic Self-Portrait: Works by Gary Schneider
The Warehouse Gallery

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

The show includes 55 photo-based works that South African-born, NYC-based artist Gary Schneider produced when he was offered a chance to create a new body of work inspired by the Human Genome Project (HGP). The HGP, a scientific race to uncover the mysteries of DNA, began formally in the 1990s and was completed in 2003. During that period, Schneider was able to collaborate with a number of scientists and was given access to advanced imaging systems from electron microscopes to x-ray machines.

The work in the exhibition ranges from images of his individual chromosomes made by a light microscope to panoramic dental x-rays. Schneider is known as a master photographic printer, and by combining his skill as a craftsman and selecting specimens for their aesthetic qualities, he moved beyond scientific descriptions to produce a personal portrait that asks us to consider how we are unique and where we stand on common ground.

Schneider had always been interested in alternative imaging techniques, and previous to this project he had been making images by imprinting his hands onto film emulsions. When he decided to include these prints along with the images he had been making with scientists, he realized that what he had been creating was a new kind of portrait. Ann Thomas, curator of photographs at the National Gallery of Canada, described it as a new approach that "challenges the traditional definition of the portrait, and revises our understanding of what it means to be revealed before the camera's lens."

By merging scientific accuracy with poetic resonance, Schneider has created a very personal illumination of how our individual identity is so closely linked to our broader understanding and use of the information contained in the human building blocks of our DNA. Through the personal exploration that went into creating genetic self-portrait, Schneider reveals that while we may always want to think of ourselves as more than the sum of our parts, our real promise might be found in looking at the 99 percent of ourselves we have in common with everyone else.

Read a review!


Back to list
 


Music
 

1:00 PM, January 26



Reading of Scores by Young Composers
Society for New Music
Da Capo Chamber Players

May Memorial Unitarian Society
3800 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Composers whose work will be performed include Diego Davidenko, Ian Hartsough, Tom Healy, Diane Jones, and Elizabeth Luttinger.


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4:00 PM, January 26



America Sings
Society for New Music
Da Capo Chamber Players

Price: $10 regular; $5 students/seniors
May Memorial Unitarian Society
3800 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

John Harbison Songs America Loves to Sing
Daniel Godfrey Luna Rugosa
Elliott Carter Canon for 4
Igor Golubev Sparkling Thirds
Igor Stravinsky Suite from L'histoire du soldat
Joan Tower Petroushskates


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8:00 PM, January 26



Classics Series: Beethoven Festival: Fidelio
Syracuse Symphony Orchestra
Syracuse University Oratorio Society
Daniel Hege, conductor
Featuring Andrew Zaplatynsky, violin

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

Beethoven Romance No. 2 in F major, op. 50
Beethoven Symphony No. 7 in A major, op. 92
Beethoven Fidelio Excerpts

There will be a free pre-concert talk in the theater at 7:00 pm and a free post-concert talk-back in the lobby immediately following the concert.

Read a review!


Back to list
 


Theater
 

12:30 PM, January 26



The Princess and the Pea
Magic Circle Children's Theatre

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

Interactive comedy.


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3:00 PM, January 26



The Lieutenant of Inishmore
Syracuse Stage
Robert Moss, director

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

This gleeful and gruesome comedy about a fellow "too mad for the IRA" was a smash hit on Broadway and winner of Britains prestigious Olivier award. Blood and laughter flow liberally.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, January 26



The Left Hand Singing
Appleseed Productions
Linda Lance, director

Price: $15 regular; $12 students/seniors (price includes dessert and beverage at intermission)
Atonement Lutheran Church
116 W. Glen Ave., Syracuse

Amidst the idealism and violence of Freedom Summer in 1964 Mississippi, three college students vanish, seemingly without a trace. As the parents of Honey, Linda, and Wes cope with their loss, they become inescapably linked -- the heirs of their lost children's dreams. Throughout the next three decades, the connections among these people with very disparate backgrounds are tested against the fire of the country's social and political turbulence. The structure of the play mixes naturalism with a surprising time curve that evokes the whirl of events surrounding the parents' interwoven journeys.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, January 26



Spirits of Suspicion
Opening Night Productions

Glen Loch Restaurant
4626 North St., Jamesville

An interactive spoof of the Thin Man movies of the 1930s and '40s.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, January 26



The Lieutenant of Inishmore
Syracuse Stage
Robert Moss, director

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

This gleeful and gruesome comedy about a fellow "too mad for the IRA" was a smash hit on Broadway and winner of Britains prestigious Olivier award. Blood and laughter flow liberally.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

8:30 PM, January 26



I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change
Salt City Center for the Performing Arts

Price: $22 regular; $20 students/seniors
Empire Theater
New York State Fairgrounds, Geddes

Read a review!


Back to list
 


 

Sunday, January 27, 2008


Art
 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 27



Transmedia Photography Annual
Light Work Gallery

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

Exhibit features work by Transmedia students at Syracuse University.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, January 27



Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movement
Light Work Gallery

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

Photographer Don Gregorio Antón creates mystical retablos that look like sacred objects in themselves. They are intimately small and sit on little stands to be viewed individually. Each retablo is one of a kind. Retabols, or ex votos as they are sometimes called, have been part of Mexico's tradition since the 17th century. They were originally hung behind the altars of Catholic churches, and remain a tradition to this day.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, January 27



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

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

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


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, January 27



Modernist Prints 1900-1955
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

Since the turn of the century America and Europe have had a symbiotic relationship towards art. Movements that were born in Europe have been nurtured in the United States and those styles developed here have had a significant impact on artists abroad. In the years before World War I avant-garde movements in Europe seemed radical to many Americans but also extremely exciting to others. As the century progressed movements emerged that borrowed issues, techniques, devices, or other attributes from pre-existing styles. This led to a generic 'modernist' label for those art forms that did not seem to emerge from a traditional, academic manner.

The artwork in this exhibition was created by important artists of the era including Vasily Kandinsky, Joan Miro, and S. W. Hayter from Europe, and the Americans Stuart Davis, Boris Margo, and Morris Blackburn. The prints have been chosen to illustrate the multiplicity of graphic art styles that became popular during the period.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, January 27



Impressions, a Jasper Johns Retrospective
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

This retrospective exhibition of Jasper Johns' prints from the John and Maxine Belger Family Foundation starts with the artist's first published print in 1960, six years after Johns consciously destroyed all of his artwork. That act liberated him from "becoming" an artist to "being" an artist. Johns spent the next few years in the studio creating a body of imagery: flags, numerals, letters, and targets that flew in the face of the then popular Abstract Expressionism.

Trained briefly at the University of South Carolina, Johns moved to New York in the 1950s. In New York, he met and was influenced by a number of other artists including the composer John Cage, the choreographer Merce Cunningham, and the painter Robert Rauschenberg. After a visit to Philadelphia to see a Marcel Duchamp painting, Johns became very interested in the French artist's work. Duchamp had revolutionized the art world with his "readymades" - a series of found objects presented as finished works of art.

Jasper Johns' interest in process led him to printmaking. Often he would make counterpart prints
to his paintings. He explains, "My experience of life is that it's very fragmented; certain kinds of things happen, and in another place, a different kind of thing occurs. I would like my work to have some vivid indication of those differences." For Johns, printmaking was a medium that encouraged experimentation with an ease for repeat patterns. His work in screen printing, lithography, and etching have revolutionized the field.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, January 27



Pollock Matters
Everson Museum of Art

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

Pollock Matters, curated by art historian Ellen G. Landau of Case-Western Reserve University, explores for the first time the personal and artistic relationship between famed American Abstract Expressionist painter Jackson Pollock and his close friend, noted Swiss-born photographer and graphic designer, Herbert Matter.

Featuring compelling visual and documentary evidence, the exhibition demonstrates the impact of the artists' interaction on their respective work. Comprising paintings, drawings, works on paper and other documentation -- including previously unseen photographs and letters -- it compares Matter's experimental abstract photos with known works by Pollock, and highlights their significant stylistic, technical and thematic connections.

Pollock Matters also showcases 24 small-scale works discovered by Herbert Matter's son, Alex Matter, in a storage facility in 2002. The paintings, although identified as "Jackson experimental works" by an inscription in Herbert Matter's hand and dated 1958 (2 years after the artist's death), have been the subject of much controversy, scientific study, scholarly analysis, and significant media attention. In the exhibition and accompanying catalog, Curator Ellen Landau thoroughly investigates questions raised by this unprecedented discovery of previously unknown works: "If Pollock did not paint a portion of the cache, who did? How many artists were involved? And, no less importantly, what was the purpose of these paintings?" The debate will, without doubt, continue beyond the exhibition and for decades to come.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, January 27



Images of Vice and Virtue from the Syracuse University Art Collection
Everson Museum of Art

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

Images of Vice and Virtue investigates how artists from different cultures and time periods visualized fundamental themes of good and evil. Early civilizations enacted codes of conduct believing that individual behavior benefited from these guidelines. The ancient Greeks developed a set of inspirational values that included prudence, justice, courage and temperance. Later, Christianity refined and enlarged these to the seven holy virtues against which were set seven deadly sins. Additionally, bible stories illustrated what would happen to individuals who either followed or violated church doctrine.

Western society's growing secularization from the late 18th century onward gave artists greater freedom in interpreting biblical subjects and themes. Artists like Picasso strongly criticized the Spanish government in a pair of prints that depicted the ruler Francisco Franco as a biological polyp. Andy Warhol showed his support for the civil rights movement in a 1964 print of the Birmingham race riot. These examples further indicated the artist's growing role as an individual commenting on good and evil.

Also included in the exhibition are several pieces by non-western cultures. Like their western counterparts, these pieces were inspired and informed by their culture's historical beliefs about good and evil and were often drawn from stories used to explain those beliefs. All of the objects in the exhibition have been drawn from Syracuse Universitys encyclopedic collection of over 45,000 objects.

Images of Vice and Virtue is curated by David Prince, Associate Director of Syracuse University Art Collection.

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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, January 27



Paper Arts in the Low Countries: 1600 - 1800
Everson Museum of Art

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

The Low Countries, a region comprising present-day Holland and Belgium, was a site of truly spectacular art production during the so-called early modern period, ca. 1600 to ca. 1800. Indeed, some of the foremost artists in the history of European art practiced within this region, including Rembrandt van Rijn and Peter Paul Rubens. Although the art-loving public is quite familiar with paintings by Dutch (Holland) and Flemish (Belgium) masters their drawings and prints are less known, despite the many outstanding examples of such work that survive. Some of the most memorable and impressive art during this period was made with ink and paper, as opposed to oil paint and canvases and panels. Paper Arts in the Low Countries, 1600-1800 consists of 35 noteworthy examples of drawings and prints by prominent masters of the Low Countries (including Rembrandt and Rubens), drawn from a number of private collections and from the holdings of the Syracuse University Art Collection and the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University.

Paper Arts in the Low Countries is curated by Dr. Wayne Franits, Professor and Department Chair, Department of Fine Arts, Syracuse University with the assistance of graduate students currently enrolled in the Fine Arts program.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, January 27



Annual Scholastic Art Awards
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Whitney Applied Technology Center
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse

Scholastic Art is the largest juried art show for Junior and Senior high school students in Central New York. Covering a 13-county region, more than 5,000 pieces are submitted each year and over 1,200 winning pieces will be on display in the Whitney Applied Technology Center for six weeks following the awards ceremony. The work of Gold Key recipients is sent on to New York City for national consideration.


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Film
 

6:30 PM, January 27



A Cinema Showcase: “A Cantor’'s Tale”
Syracuse International Film Festival

Price: $10 film only; $25 film and reception
Palace Theater
2384 James St., Syracuse

This documentary by Erik Greenberg Anjou profiles Cantor Jacob Mendelson who is jovial, rotund and prone to impromptu bursts of song. The Cantor explores the American roots of Jewish liturgical music while taking us on a musical voyage that spans the Atlantic, originating in his birthplace of Boro Park, Brooklyn and reaching all the way to Jerusalem.

The film has received rave reviews including from The New York Times, Variety, and TV Guide.

Both Cantor Mendelson and Director Erik Greenberg Anjou will be in attendence. They will do a question and answer session after the film and then attend a reception. Also, cantors from area synagogues will sing some songs with Cantor Mendelson at the event.

This event is open to the general public, not just the Jewish community. Audiences that love great singers along with anybody that participates in their church and synagogue choirs would appreciate seeing this film.

For more information, phone 315-443-8826.


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Music
 

2:00 PM, January 27



Central New York Jazz Composer's Cooperative
Kevin Dorsey, bass; Mark Nanni, piano and vocals; John Magnante, guitar

Price: $10 regular; $7 donors
Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St., Syracuse


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2:00 PM, January 27



Sunday Musicale: Little Jazz Trio
Fayetteville Free Library

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


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4:00 PM, January 27



Lionheart Vocal Chamber Music
Malmgren Concert Series
Society for New Music

Price: Free (contributions for the Society for New Music accepted)
Hendricks Chapel
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Phil Kline John the Revelator
Marc Mellits String Quartet No. 2

One of America’'s leading chamber ensembles, Lionheart interprets medieval and Renaissance a cappella music with Gregorian chant, the keystone of its repertoire. Kline, hailed for the originality, beauty, subversive subtext and wry humor of his compositions, was the only classical composer nominated for the 2004 ShortList Music Prize, honoring the most creative records of the year.

Phil Kline wrote John the Revelator as a kind of spiritual portal through which one can become part of a universal body. This is not a blues Mass any more than it is a medieval one, although the title was inspired by a song by gospel-blues legend Blind Willie Johnson, and it does set the traditional Latin Ordinary along with Klines own set of Propers.

The texts Kline ultimately chose suggest a narrative of redemption in a blighted world. Several are from the Old Testament, including two from the Lamentations of Jeremiah, plus one by American poet David Shapiro, whose image of indifferently falling snow recalls the ashes falling from the skies of lower Manhattan. Offered as a prayer, Samuel Becketts monologue "The Unnamable" portrays the struggle of the mind in present tense. And while "Dark was the Night" has no text that can be heard, it is a fantasy on Willie Johnsons 1927 recording of an old hymn depicting Jesus doubt at the Passion, paraphrased in wordless moaning.

Bookending the Mass are treatments of two early American shape-note hymns from The Sacred Harp: "Northport" and "Wondrous Love." Klines favorite part of religion has always been the mystery. What wondrous love is this? 


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4:30 PM, January 27



SSYO Winter Concert
Syracuse Youth Orchestras
Featuring winner of the SSYO Concerto Competition, violist Emily Lane

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

Syracuse Symphony Youth Orchestra; Kenneth Andrews, conductor
Beethoven Overture to Fidelio, Op. 72c
Hoffmeister Viola Concerto
Humperdinck Excerpts from "Hansel and Gretel"
Williams March from "Superman"

Syracuse Symphony Youth String Orchestra; Muriel Bodley, conductor
Mozart Overture to "The Marriage of Figaro"
Handel Concerto Grosso, Op. 6, No. 7
Faure Pavane


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Theater
 

1:00 PM, January 27



Seven Short Monologues
Armory Square Playwrights

Price: $5 regular, $4 students/seniors
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

Armory Square playhouse will present script-in-hand readings of seven new short monologues by Armory Square Playhouse members Amy Doherty, David Feldman, Len Fonte, Richard Harris, Charles Lupia, Peter Moller, and Joel Potash. The short pieces were inspired by genuine oddball incidents reported in the news.

In Amy Doherty's This Little Pig a woman reconnects with her marriage while relating to a local reporter the details of her pet pig, Boots' escape from his pen...again. Read by the author.

David Feldman's Greyhound focuses on a new employee in the Greyhound bus company who escapes clutches of a lecherous boss and finds a new life for herself in the process. It features Donna Stuccio as the young employee.

A man confronts family history while telling as ghost story in Len Fonte's Where is My Brother?

In a verse monologue titled Lateisha and written by Charles Lupia, a woman recalls her
troubled marriage and subsequent custody battle. It will be read by Eleanor Russell.

In Peter Moller's The Mystery at the MCCL, one overly-officious person confronts an even more-overly-officious person at the Madison Country Carnegie Library. And because no one is more officious than the author, he will play the part of Mr. Collins.

Connie wants a quiet day at home, but Alejandro won't let her alone. On Christmas Eve she finally finds a way to get rid of him forever in Joel Potash's piece, Santa Baby.

Mozart and What's His Name is the story of a love sick Manhattanite, whose love life is ruined by a feud between his dog and her cat. Narrated by the author, Richard Harris.

About the Playwrights:
Amy Doherty, a graduate of the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theater, holds a BFA in Theater Arts from Drake University, and an MLS from Syracuse University.

David Feldman is Artistic Director of Armory Square Playhouse and is Professor Emeritus of English and Journalism at Onondaga Community College. He has also taught drama at Syracuse University.

Len Fonte, who retired from the Syracuse City School district after 33 years and 45 productions, recently, directed the Armory Square Playhouse production of Jeff Kramer's Lowdown Lies.

A retired advertising executive, Richard Harris has tried acting wings in Los Angeles and teaching Readers Theatre in London.

Charles Lupia's plays have been featured at SABEL, Theatre Three, NY Artists Unlimited and The Barnstormers. His radio plays have received broadcasts in San Francisco and Oswego. He is a graduate of Syracuse University.

Peter Moller has been a member of the Armory Square Playhouse since its beginning. Moller teaches courses in screenwriting, producing and directing at Syracuse University's Newhouse School of Public Communications.

Joel Potash is a retiring family doctor who sees the absurdity of putting our sometimes violent thoughts into action.


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2:00 PM, January 27



The Left Hand Singing
Appleseed Productions
Linda Lance, director

Price: $15 regular; $12 students/seniors (price includes dessert and beverage at intermission)
Atonement Lutheran Church
116 W. Glen Ave., Syracuse

Amidst the idealism and violence of Freedom Summer in 1964 Mississippi, three college students vanish, seemingly without a trace. As the parents of Honey, Linda, and Wes cope with their loss, they become inescapably linked -- the heirs of their lost children's dreams. Throughout the next three decades, the connections among these people with very disparate backgrounds are tested against the fire of the country's social and political turbulence. The structure of the play mixes naturalism with a surprising time curve that evokes the whirl of events surrounding the parents' interwoven journeys.

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2:00 PM, January 27



The Lieutenant of Inishmore
Syracuse Stage
Robert Moss, director

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

This gleeful and gruesome comedy about a fellow "too mad for the IRA" was a smash hit on Broadway and winner of Britains prestigious Olivier award. Blood and laughter flow liberally.

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