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Events for Wednesday, August 22, 2007
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Mixed Media Art of Heidi Kuhl Westcott Community Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Icarus and Stravinsky: Color Prints by Swietlan Nicholas Kraczyna Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Tom Mazzullo Drawings Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art Everson Museum of Art
2:00 PM
Behind the Scenes Skaneateles Festival, featuring Jupiter String Quartet; Gilbert Kalish, piano
8:00 PM
Unicorn Basement; Abiku Spark Contemporary Art Space
Events for Thursday, August 23, 2007
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Mixed Media Art of Heidi Kuhl Westcott Community Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery, featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-8:00 PM
Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-8:00 PM
Icarus and Stravinsky: Color Prints by Swietlan Nicholas Kraczyna Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-8:00 PM
Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Tom Mazzullo Drawings Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art Everson Museum of Art
6:45 PM
Harry Crocker and the Saucerer's Stove Acme Mystery Company
7:00 PM-9:00 PM
Jazz in the City: Ultimate Motown Party CNY Jazz Arts Foundation
7:00 PM-7:30 PM
Prelude Concert Skaneateles Festival, featuring Robinson Award winner Nina Elhassan, clarinet
8:00 PM
Chamber Music Skaneateles Festival (Read a review!)
Events for Friday, August 24, 2007
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Mixed Media Art of Heidi Kuhl Westcott Community Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery, featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Icarus and Stravinsky: Color Prints by Swietlan Nicholas Kraczyna Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Tom Mazzullo Drawings Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art Everson Museum of Art
6:00 PM-9:00 PM
Lakescapes: Selected Works of Karen Thomas-Lillie Lucas Gallery
6:00 PM-9:00 PM
Notes on Paper: Watercolors of Musicians by Steve Ryan Lucas Gallery
8:00 PM
Things You Shouldn't Say Past Midnight Simply New Theatre (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
Chamber Music Skaneateles Festival
Events for Saturday, August 25, 2007
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Tom Mazzullo Drawings Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Lakescapes: Selected Works of Karen Thomas-Lillie Lucas Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Notes on Paper: Watercolors of Musicians by Steve Ryan Lucas Gallery
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
A Faith Ringgold Retrospective: Story Quilts and Children's Books Community Folk Art Center
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Icarus and Stravinsky: Color Prints by Swietlan Nicholas Kraczyna Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery, featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
12:30 PM
Hansel and Gretel Magic Circle Children's Theatre
6:00 PM
Don't Stop Believing Separate Ways and Grupo Pagan
6:00 PM
The 3 Constants Syracuse University Drama Department
7:00 PM
Disney's High School Musical On Stage Syracuse Civic Theatre
7:30 PM
Chamber Orchestra Skaneateles Festival, featuring Conrad Tao, piano
8:00 PM
Things You Shouldn't Say Past Midnight Simply New Theatre (Read a review!)
Events for Sunday, August 26, 2007
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Notes on Paper: Watercolors of Musicians by Steve Ryan Lucas Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Lakescapes: Selected Works of Karen Thomas-Lillie Lucas Gallery
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Icarus and Stravinsky: Color Prints by Swietlan Nicholas Kraczyna Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Tom Mazzullo Drawings Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art Everson Museum of Art
2:00 PM
Dreaming in Libro: How a Good Dog Tamed a Bad Woman
2:00 PM
Things You Shouldn't Say Past Midnight Simply New Theatre (Read a review!)
2:00 PM
Disney's High School Musical On Stage Syracuse Civic Theatre
8:00 PM
Daughters of Joy! Spark Contemporary Art Space
Events for Monday, August 27, 2007
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Mixed Media Art of Heidi Kuhl Westcott Community Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
8:00 PM
The King Hen Spark Contemporary Art Space
Events for Tuesday, August 28, 2007
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Mixed Media Art of Heidi Kuhl Westcott Community Center
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
A Faith Ringgold Retrospective: Story Quilts and Children's Books Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery, featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Icarus and Stravinsky: Color Prints by Swietlan Nicholas Kraczyna Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Tom Mazzullo Drawings Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art Everson Museum of Art
9:00 PM
B-Fest Night: Bad Reputation (2005) Alternative Movies and Events
Events for Wednesday, August 29, 2007
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Mixed Media Art of Heidi Kuhl Westcott Community Center
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
A Faith Ringgold Retrospective: Story Quilts and Children's Books Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery, featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
11:30 AM-4:30 PM
Icarus and Stravinsky: Color Prints by Swietlan Nicholas Kraczyna Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Tom Mazzullo Drawings Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art Everson Museum of Art
4:00 PM-8:30 PM
Summer Art Show North Syracuse Art Guild
Wednesday, August 22, 2007
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, August 22 |
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Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 22 |
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Mixed Media Art of Heidi Kuhl Westcott Community Center
Price: Free Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 22 |
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One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Vietnamese-American photographer Binh Danh has quietly gained recognition on the international art scene for his Vietnam War-inspired work. This exhibition features his most recognizable work, comprising appropriated war images that are printed directly onto leaves or grass, a process Danh invented while in college. On his first trip to Vietnam since his family immigrated to the United States, Danh was confronted by the remains of the war, such as bomb craters that had been converted into rice paddies, and he observed that memories of the war's devastation had become part of daily life. It was this experience that inspired him to create chlorophyll prints of found images from the Vietnam War with tropical leaves, sharing, in his words, the "epiphany that the memory of those people and events will reverberate forever through the country's landscape." Of his work, Danh states, "Much of my research has explored my own personal history and has become a way of visually and physically recollecting my family's history and honoring their collective memory." These concepts are very real with regard to any culture that has immigrated to the United States, looking at the stories families tell and the disconnected feeling experienced by the second generation. Danh was born in Vietnam in 1977. He received a BFA degree from San Jose State University and an MFA degree from Stanford University. His work has been exhibited in museums and galleries internationally, including the George Eastman House in Rochester, the Asia Society Museum in New York City, the University of Hawaii Art Museum, and the Haines Gallery in San Francisco. He lives and works in San Jose, CA. He participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2006.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 22 |
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The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
During the Vietnam War, Al Fasoldt was a photographer for Stars & Stripes. When he left Vietnam to come home, he left his negatives behind and brought a few 8"x10" prints and contact sheets of his work. Since then, the Pentagon has ordered all negatives of Stars & Stripes photographers be destroyed. Over the past few years, Fasoldt has been working to repair the prints and contact sheets he brought home years ago, using them to make prints of his Vietnam War images for exhibition.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, August 22 |
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Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city. The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 22 |
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Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death. Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts. This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 22 |
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Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
This exhibition features work by 18 photojournalists, three of whom -- Wesley Law, Ezra Shaw, and Justin Yurkanin -- are SU graduates. The subjects are diverse, ranging from the current conflicts in Africa to the legacy of Chernobyl. American topics focus on the Confederate flag controversy, life on the Navajo reservation and the 1997 reunion of people associated with The Farm, the Tennessee community that was America's largest hippie commune. The Alexia Foundation was begun by the parents of Alexia Tsairis, a Newhouse School of Public Communications undergraduate student who was killed in the Pan Am 103 bombing in 1988. Each year the foundation gives grants to selected student and professional photographers so they can pursue their interests in photojournalism. To date, the foundation has awarded over $500,000 in grants to 80 undergraduate photographers and 11 professionals. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 22 |
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Icarus and Stravinsky: Color Prints by Swietlan Nicholas Kraczyna Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Swietlin Nicholas Kraczyna is a Polish-born, American-raised artist who lives in Florence, Italy in the former studio of the Renaissance master painter Domenico Ghirlandaio. He teaches printmaking at Syracuse University's Florence campus and is spending the fall semester in Syracuse as a visiting artist. This exhibit presents a selection of Kraczyna's color etchings on two of the artist's favorite subjects: the myth of Icarus and Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring. Kraczyna binds these two different subjects together through their interest in pushing the limits of convention. Icarus was able to fly as a result of wings constructed by his father. The Rite of Spring was Igor Stravinsky's ground breaking and controversial ballet score that premiered in Paris in 1913. Many experts think modern orchestral music began with the score's dissonant, unpredictable composition. The images of Icarus often present the winged boy in unconventional settings. One of the more recent etchings, Icarus Flying out the Window, 2002, portrays him flying out of a contemporary building's upper floor window. Kraczyna's technical dexterity and a vivid palette are on clear display in this multi-plate etching. In The Rite of Spring prints the artist places Stravinsky's handwritten musical notes and markings from the score in the image. They act as a foundation upon which are added the figures of the ballet dancers. The notes become either costume decorations or independent decorative patterns in the spaces between the figures. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 22 |
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Tom Mazzullo Drawings Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Tom Mazzullo is quietly turning the age-old idea of still-life upside down. In Tom Mazzullo Drawings, fruits and vegetables no longer rest among plentiful pre-arranged settings atop tablecloths dressed with lacey doilies and wrinkles that fall gracefully to the floor. There are no half-filled water glasses for light to dance in or mirrored reflections to play tricks on the eye. The objects are meticulously drawn to scale, an invitation to move in for a closer look. The delicate, silverpoint lines become more apparent, reflecting light as one's eye wanders fervently over the layered network of cross-hatching where every line counts. Mazzullo wants the viewer to "concentrate on one subject, one idea at a time." The artist feels he has succeeded when "a drawing's pale, perfect surface elicits a liveliness and presence greater than the simplicity of its construction." Tom Mazzullo Drawings, which includes 20 silverpoint and four conté crayon drawings, is the artist's first solo museum exhibition.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 22 |
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African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art, an exhibition organized by the Longyear Museum of Anthropology at Colgate University, includes 85 religious objects, most of them from the 20th century, such as figures, masks and headdresses, divination trays, staffs, vessels, and shrine furniture. Much of the art figures in the veneration of divinities and ancestors, and the control of supernatural powers associated with nature, medicine, and witchcraft.
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Music |
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2:00 PM, August 22 |
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Behind the Scenes Skaneateles Festival Featuring Jupiter String Quartet; Gilbert Kalish, piano
Price: Free First Presbyterian Church of Skaneateles
97 E. Genesee St.,
Skaneateles
Listen in as the "out of this world" Jupiter Quartet rehearses a quintet with legendary pianist Gil Kalish. You might pick up a secret or two as Kalish mentors this fantastic young group.
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8:00 PM, August 22 |
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Unicorn Basement; Abiku Spark Contemporary Art Space
Price: $5 Spark Contemporary Art Space
1005 E. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
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Thursday, August 23, 2007
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Art |
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, August 23 |
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Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 23 |
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Mixed Media Art of Heidi Kuhl Westcott Community Center
Price: Free Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 23 |
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The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
During the Vietnam War, Al Fasoldt was a photographer for Stars & Stripes. When he left Vietnam to come home, he left his negatives behind and brought a few 8"x10" prints and contact sheets of his work. Since then, the Pentagon has ordered all negatives of Stars & Stripes photographers be destroyed. Over the past few years, Fasoldt has been working to repair the prints and contact sheets he brought home years ago, using them to make prints of his Vietnam War images for exhibition.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 23 |
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One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Vietnamese-American photographer Binh Danh has quietly gained recognition on the international art scene for his Vietnam War-inspired work. This exhibition features his most recognizable work, comprising appropriated war images that are printed directly onto leaves or grass, a process Danh invented while in college. On his first trip to Vietnam since his family immigrated to the United States, Danh was confronted by the remains of the war, such as bomb craters that had been converted into rice paddies, and he observed that memories of the war's devastation had become part of daily life. It was this experience that inspired him to create chlorophyll prints of found images from the Vietnam War with tropical leaves, sharing, in his words, the "epiphany that the memory of those people and events will reverberate forever through the country's landscape." Of his work, Danh states, "Much of my research has explored my own personal history and has become a way of visually and physically recollecting my family's history and honoring their collective memory." These concepts are very real with regard to any culture that has immigrated to the United States, looking at the stories families tell and the disconnected feeling experienced by the second generation. Danh was born in Vietnam in 1977. He received a BFA degree from San Jose State University and an MFA degree from Stanford University. His work has been exhibited in museums and galleries internationally, including the George Eastman House in Rochester, the Asia Society Museum in New York City, the University of Hawaii Art Museum, and the Haines Gallery in San Francisco. He lives and works in San Jose, CA. He participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2006.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 23 |
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COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery Featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This bold new exhibition, COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze, focuses on the psychological, social, cultural and political dimensions of desire, subjectivity and -- pleasure. COME ON presents an array of ideas, imagery and experiences on the topic of sexuality from the perspective of women in their 20s through mid 30s. The artists in this exhibition employ diverse media, including large-scale drawing, video installation, text work and ephemeral sculpture. COME ON reveals what is not represented in popular culture and provides a counterbalance to the ubiquitous imagery of sexualized female bodies created for mainstream heterosexual male sensibilities.
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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, August 23 |
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Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city. The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 8:00 PM, August 23 |
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Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death. Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts. This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 8:00 PM, August 23 |
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Icarus and Stravinsky: Color Prints by Swietlan Nicholas Kraczyna Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Swietlin Nicholas Kraczyna is a Polish-born, American-raised artist who lives in Florence, Italy in the former studio of the Renaissance master painter Domenico Ghirlandaio. He teaches printmaking at Syracuse University's Florence campus and is spending the fall semester in Syracuse as a visiting artist. This exhibit presents a selection of Kraczyna's color etchings on two of the artist's favorite subjects: the myth of Icarus and Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring. Kraczyna binds these two different subjects together through their interest in pushing the limits of convention. Icarus was able to fly as a result of wings constructed by his father. The Rite of Spring was Igor Stravinsky's ground breaking and controversial ballet score that premiered in Paris in 1913. Many experts think modern orchestral music began with the score's dissonant, unpredictable composition. The images of Icarus often present the winged boy in unconventional settings. One of the more recent etchings, Icarus Flying out the Window, 2002, portrays him flying out of a contemporary building's upper floor window. Kraczyna's technical dexterity and a vivid palette are on clear display in this multi-plate etching. In The Rite of Spring prints the artist places Stravinsky's handwritten musical notes and markings from the score in the image. They act as a foundation upon which are added the figures of the ballet dancers. The notes become either costume decorations or independent decorative patterns in the spaces between the figures. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 8:00 PM, August 23 |
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Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
This exhibition features work by 18 photojournalists, three of whom -- Wesley Law, Ezra Shaw, and Justin Yurkanin -- are SU graduates. The subjects are diverse, ranging from the current conflicts in Africa to the legacy of Chernobyl. American topics focus on the Confederate flag controversy, life on the Navajo reservation and the 1997 reunion of people associated with The Farm, the Tennessee community that was America's largest hippie commune. The Alexia Foundation was begun by the parents of Alexia Tsairis, a Newhouse School of Public Communications undergraduate student who was killed in the Pan Am 103 bombing in 1988. Each year the foundation gives grants to selected student and professional photographers so they can pursue their interests in photojournalism. To date, the foundation has awarded over $500,000 in grants to 80 undergraduate photographers and 11 professionals. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 23 |
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Tom Mazzullo Drawings Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Tom Mazzullo is quietly turning the age-old idea of still-life upside down. In Tom Mazzullo Drawings, fruits and vegetables no longer rest among plentiful pre-arranged settings atop tablecloths dressed with lacey doilies and wrinkles that fall gracefully to the floor. There are no half-filled water glasses for light to dance in or mirrored reflections to play tricks on the eye. The objects are meticulously drawn to scale, an invitation to move in for a closer look. The delicate, silverpoint lines become more apparent, reflecting light as one's eye wanders fervently over the layered network of cross-hatching where every line counts. Mazzullo wants the viewer to "concentrate on one subject, one idea at a time." The artist feels he has succeeded when "a drawing's pale, perfect surface elicits a liveliness and presence greater than the simplicity of its construction." Tom Mazzullo Drawings, which includes 20 silverpoint and four conté crayon drawings, is the artist's first solo museum exhibition.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 23 |
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African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art, an exhibition organized by the Longyear Museum of Anthropology at Colgate University, includes 85 religious objects, most of them from the 20th century, such as figures, masks and headdresses, divination trays, staffs, vessels, and shrine furniture. Much of the art figures in the veneration of divinities and ancestors, and the control of supernatural powers associated with nature, medicine, and witchcraft.
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Music |
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7:00 PM - 9:00 PM, August 23 |
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Jazz in the City: Ultimate Motown Party CNY Jazz Arts Foundation Ronnie Leigh's Jazz Quartet and Jr. Walker's All Stars
Price: Free POMCO lot
(across from Cummings Field in Eastwood),
Syracuse
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7:00 PM - 7:30 PM, August 23 |
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Prelude Concert Skaneateles Festival Featuring Robinson Award winner Nina Elhassan, clarinet
Price: Free First Presbyterian Church of Skaneateles
97 E. Genesee St.,
Skaneateles
Rabaud Solo de Concours for Clarinet and Piano, Op. 10 Beethoven Duet for Clarinet and Cello Beethoven Trio in B-flat Major, Op. 11 for Piano, Clarinet, and Cello III. Allegretto: Theme and Variations on "Pria ch'io l'impegno"
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8:00 PM, August 23 |
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Chamber Music Skaneateles Festival
Price: $22, $18 regular; $19, $15 students/seniors; children under 13 free First Presbyterian Church of Skaneateles
97 E. Genesee St.,
Skaneateles
Brahms Sonata for Viola and Piano in F minor Mendelssohn String Quartet in F minor, Op. 80 Schumann Quintet for Piano and Strings in E-flat Major, Op. 47 Performers include the Jupiter String Quartet; Gilbert Kalish, piano; and Roger Tapping, viola.
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Theater |
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6:45 PM, August 23 |
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Harry Crocker and the Saucerer's Stove Acme Mystery Company
Price: $25.95 plus tax and gratuities (includes meal and show) Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St.,
Syracuse
Interactive mystery dinner theater.
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Friday, August 24, 2007
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Art |
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, August 24 |
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Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 24 |
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Mixed Media Art of Heidi Kuhl Westcott Community Center
Price: Free Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 24 |
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One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Vietnamese-American photographer Binh Danh has quietly gained recognition on the international art scene for his Vietnam War-inspired work. This exhibition features his most recognizable work, comprising appropriated war images that are printed directly onto leaves or grass, a process Danh invented while in college. On his first trip to Vietnam since his family immigrated to the United States, Danh was confronted by the remains of the war, such as bomb craters that had been converted into rice paddies, and he observed that memories of the war's devastation had become part of daily life. It was this experience that inspired him to create chlorophyll prints of found images from the Vietnam War with tropical leaves, sharing, in his words, the "epiphany that the memory of those people and events will reverberate forever through the country's landscape." Of his work, Danh states, "Much of my research has explored my own personal history and has become a way of visually and physically recollecting my family's history and honoring their collective memory." These concepts are very real with regard to any culture that has immigrated to the United States, looking at the stories families tell and the disconnected feeling experienced by the second generation. Danh was born in Vietnam in 1977. He received a BFA degree from San Jose State University and an MFA degree from Stanford University. His work has been exhibited in museums and galleries internationally, including the George Eastman House in Rochester, the Asia Society Museum in New York City, the University of Hawaii Art Museum, and the Haines Gallery in San Francisco. He lives and works in San Jose, CA. He participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2006.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 24 |
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The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
During the Vietnam War, Al Fasoldt was a photographer for Stars & Stripes. When he left Vietnam to come home, he left his negatives behind and brought a few 8"x10" prints and contact sheets of his work. Since then, the Pentagon has ordered all negatives of Stars & Stripes photographers be destroyed. Over the past few years, Fasoldt has been working to repair the prints and contact sheets he brought home years ago, using them to make prints of his Vietnam War images for exhibition.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 24 |
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COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery Featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This bold new exhibition, COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze, focuses on the psychological, social, cultural and political dimensions of desire, subjectivity and -- pleasure. COME ON presents an array of ideas, imagery and experiences on the topic of sexuality from the perspective of women in their 20s through mid 30s. The artists in this exhibition employ diverse media, including large-scale drawing, video installation, text work and ephemeral sculpture. COME ON reveals what is not represented in popular culture and provides a counterbalance to the ubiquitous imagery of sexualized female bodies created for mainstream heterosexual male sensibilities.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, August 24 |
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Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city. The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 24 |
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Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death. Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts. This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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Back to list |
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 24 |
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Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
This exhibition features work by 18 photojournalists, three of whom -- Wesley Law, Ezra Shaw, and Justin Yurkanin -- are SU graduates. The subjects are diverse, ranging from the current conflicts in Africa to the legacy of Chernobyl. American topics focus on the Confederate flag controversy, life on the Navajo reservation and the 1997 reunion of people associated with The Farm, the Tennessee community that was America's largest hippie commune. The Alexia Foundation was begun by the parents of Alexia Tsairis, a Newhouse School of Public Communications undergraduate student who was killed in the Pan Am 103 bombing in 1988. Each year the foundation gives grants to selected student and professional photographers so they can pursue their interests in photojournalism. To date, the foundation has awarded over $500,000 in grants to 80 undergraduate photographers and 11 professionals. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 24 |
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Icarus and Stravinsky: Color Prints by Swietlan Nicholas Kraczyna Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Swietlin Nicholas Kraczyna is a Polish-born, American-raised artist who lives in Florence, Italy in the former studio of the Renaissance master painter Domenico Ghirlandaio. He teaches printmaking at Syracuse University's Florence campus and is spending the fall semester in Syracuse as a visiting artist. This exhibit presents a selection of Kraczyna's color etchings on two of the artist's favorite subjects: the myth of Icarus and Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring. Kraczyna binds these two different subjects together through their interest in pushing the limits of convention. Icarus was able to fly as a result of wings constructed by his father. The Rite of Spring was Igor Stravinsky's ground breaking and controversial ballet score that premiered in Paris in 1913. Many experts think modern orchestral music began with the score's dissonant, unpredictable composition. The images of Icarus often present the winged boy in unconventional settings. One of the more recent etchings, Icarus Flying out the Window, 2002, portrays him flying out of a contemporary building's upper floor window. Kraczyna's technical dexterity and a vivid palette are on clear display in this multi-plate etching. In The Rite of Spring prints the artist places Stravinsky's handwritten musical notes and markings from the score in the image. They act as a foundation upon which are added the figures of the ballet dancers. The notes become either costume decorations or independent decorative patterns in the spaces between the figures. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 24 |
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Tom Mazzullo Drawings Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Tom Mazzullo is quietly turning the age-old idea of still-life upside down. In Tom Mazzullo Drawings, fruits and vegetables no longer rest among plentiful pre-arranged settings atop tablecloths dressed with lacey doilies and wrinkles that fall gracefully to the floor. There are no half-filled water glasses for light to dance in or mirrored reflections to play tricks on the eye. The objects are meticulously drawn to scale, an invitation to move in for a closer look. The delicate, silverpoint lines become more apparent, reflecting light as one's eye wanders fervently over the layered network of cross-hatching where every line counts. Mazzullo wants the viewer to "concentrate on one subject, one idea at a time." The artist feels he has succeeded when "a drawing's pale, perfect surface elicits a liveliness and presence greater than the simplicity of its construction." Tom Mazzullo Drawings, which includes 20 silverpoint and four conté crayon drawings, is the artist's first solo museum exhibition.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 24 |
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African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art, an exhibition organized by the Longyear Museum of Anthropology at Colgate University, includes 85 religious objects, most of them from the 20th century, such as figures, masks and headdresses, divination trays, staffs, vessels, and shrine furniture. Much of the art figures in the veneration of divinities and ancestors, and the control of supernatural powers associated with nature, medicine, and witchcraft.
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6:00 PM - 9:00 PM, August 24 |
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Lakescapes: Selected Works of Karen Thomas-Lillie Lucas Gallery
Lucas Gallery
33 Jordan St.,
Skaneateles
Karen Thomas-Lillie is an artist and designer with a degree from the Art Institute of Pittsburgh, who creates impressionistic landscapes of the Finger Lakes using oilbar on panels. Her aesthetic focuses on expanses, edges, distance, fields, drumlins, water and sky. Her work reflects her effort to unite art with the natural environments she sees as well as her respect for the natural beauty of the lakes.
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6:00 PM - 9:00 PM, August 24 |
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Notes on Paper: Watercolors of Musicians by Steve Ryan Lucas Gallery
Price: Free Lucas Gallery
33 Jordan St.,
Skaneateles
Ryan's work is impressionistic, wet-to-wet watercolors, painted on crescent textured illustration board. The board and paints are wetted repetitively and some areas are defined later with pastel conte pencil. Subjects include musicians, both children and adults, in the jazz as well as the classical genre.
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Music |
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8:00 PM, August 24 |
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Chamber Music Skaneateles Festival
Price: $22, $18 regular; $19, $15 students/seniors; children under 13 free First Presbyterian Church of Skaneateles
97 E. Genesee St.,
Skaneateles
Haydn String Quartet in C Major Op. 20 No. 2 Beethoven Bagatelles, Op. 119 Mozart Viola Quintet in G minor, K 516 Performers include the Jupiter String Quartet; Gilbert Kalish, piano; and Roger Tapping, viola. There will be a pre-concert talk, "Musical Mentors," with Gilbert Kalish, Roger Tapping, the Jupiter Quartet, and Conrad Tao at 7:00 pm.
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Theater |
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8:00 PM, August 24 |
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Things You Shouldn't Say Past Midnight Simply New Theatre Thomas Michael Quinn, director
Price: $25 BeVard Room, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
A comedy in three beds.
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Saturday, August 25, 2007
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Art |
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 25 |
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African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art, an exhibition organized by the Longyear Museum of Anthropology at Colgate University, includes 85 religious objects, most of them from the 20th century, such as figures, masks and headdresses, divination trays, staffs, vessels, and shrine furniture. Much of the art figures in the veneration of divinities and ancestors, and the control of supernatural powers associated with nature, medicine, and witchcraft.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 25 |
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Tom Mazzullo Drawings Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Tom Mazzullo is quietly turning the age-old idea of still-life upside down. In Tom Mazzullo Drawings, fruits and vegetables no longer rest among plentiful pre-arranged settings atop tablecloths dressed with lacey doilies and wrinkles that fall gracefully to the floor. There are no half-filled water glasses for light to dance in or mirrored reflections to play tricks on the eye. The objects are meticulously drawn to scale, an invitation to move in for a closer look. The delicate, silverpoint lines become more apparent, reflecting light as one's eye wanders fervently over the layered network of cross-hatching where every line counts. Mazzullo wants the viewer to "concentrate on one subject, one idea at a time." The artist feels he has succeeded when "a drawing's pale, perfect surface elicits a liveliness and presence greater than the simplicity of its construction." Tom Mazzullo Drawings, which includes 20 silverpoint and four conté crayon drawings, is the artist's first solo museum exhibition.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 25 |
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Lakescapes: Selected Works of Karen Thomas-Lillie Lucas Gallery
Lucas Gallery
33 Jordan St.,
Skaneateles
Karen Thomas-Lillie is an artist and designer with a degree from the Art Institute of Pittsburgh, who creates impressionistic landscapes of the Finger Lakes using oilbar on panels. Her aesthetic focuses on expanses, edges, distance, fields, drumlins, water and sky. Her work reflects her effort to unite art with the natural environments she sees as well as her respect for the natural beauty of the lakes.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 25 |
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Notes on Paper: Watercolors of Musicians by Steve Ryan Lucas Gallery
Price: Free Lucas Gallery
33 Jordan St.,
Skaneateles
Ryan's work is impressionistic, wet-to-wet watercolors, painted on crescent textured illustration board. The board and paints are wetted repetitively and some areas are defined later with pastel conte pencil. Subjects include musicians, both children and adults, in the jazz as well as the classical genre.
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 25 |
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A Faith Ringgold Retrospective: Story Quilts and Children's Books Community Folk Art Center
Price: Suggested donation $5 Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
An icon of American art and activism, Ringgold was born in Harlem, New York. From a young age, she was encouraged in her creative endeavors by her mother, Willi Posey Jones, who was a fashion designer and seamstress. Ringgold received her Bachelor's degree in Fine Art and Education and her Master's degree in Art at City College of New York. From 1955-1973, she taught art in the New York City public schools. In the mid-to late 1960s, Ringgold began portraying political and Civil Rights themes in her paintings. She abandoned traditional painting in the early 1970's, and began creating large unstretched paintings with elaborate fabric borders, similar to Tibetan tankas. She also began making fabric dolls, masks and soft sculptures, some of which were used in performance pieces. In the early 1980s, she began creating large story quilts, featuring painted images along with handwritten text. She adapted her story quilt Tar Beach into a children's book in 1990, and has since written and illustrated several children's books, and has also published her memoirs. From 1984 to 2002, Ringgold was a Professor of Art at University of California San Diego. She has been featured in numerous solo and group exhibitions since the 1960s. She has received many honors and awards for her achievements, including the National Endowment for the Arts awards in sculpture and painting, a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, and more than 15 honorary doctorates.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, August 25 |
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Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city. The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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Back to list |
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 25 |
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Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death. Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts. This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 25 |
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Icarus and Stravinsky: Color Prints by Swietlan Nicholas Kraczyna Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Swietlin Nicholas Kraczyna is a Polish-born, American-raised artist who lives in Florence, Italy in the former studio of the Renaissance master painter Domenico Ghirlandaio. He teaches printmaking at Syracuse University's Florence campus and is spending the fall semester in Syracuse as a visiting artist. This exhibit presents a selection of Kraczyna's color etchings on two of the artist's favorite subjects: the myth of Icarus and Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring. Kraczyna binds these two different subjects together through their interest in pushing the limits of convention. Icarus was able to fly as a result of wings constructed by his father. The Rite of Spring was Igor Stravinsky's ground breaking and controversial ballet score that premiered in Paris in 1913. Many experts think modern orchestral music began with the score's dissonant, unpredictable composition. The images of Icarus often present the winged boy in unconventional settings. One of the more recent etchings, Icarus Flying out the Window, 2002, portrays him flying out of a contemporary building's upper floor window. Kraczyna's technical dexterity and a vivid palette are on clear display in this multi-plate etching. In The Rite of Spring prints the artist places Stravinsky's handwritten musical notes and markings from the score in the image. They act as a foundation upon which are added the figures of the ballet dancers. The notes become either costume decorations or independent decorative patterns in the spaces between the figures. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 25 |
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Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
This exhibition features work by 18 photojournalists, three of whom -- Wesley Law, Ezra Shaw, and Justin Yurkanin -- are SU graduates. The subjects are diverse, ranging from the current conflicts in Africa to the legacy of Chernobyl. American topics focus on the Confederate flag controversy, life on the Navajo reservation and the 1997 reunion of people associated with The Farm, the Tennessee community that was America's largest hippie commune. The Alexia Foundation was begun by the parents of Alexia Tsairis, a Newhouse School of Public Communications undergraduate student who was killed in the Pan Am 103 bombing in 1988. Each year the foundation gives grants to selected student and professional photographers so they can pursue their interests in photojournalism. To date, the foundation has awarded over $500,000 in grants to 80 undergraduate photographers and 11 professionals. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, August 25 |
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COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery Featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This bold new exhibition, COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze, focuses on the psychological, social, cultural and political dimensions of desire, subjectivity and -- pleasure. COME ON presents an array of ideas, imagery and experiences on the topic of sexuality from the perspective of women in their 20s through mid 30s. The artists in this exhibition employ diverse media, including large-scale drawing, video installation, text work and ephemeral sculpture. COME ON reveals what is not represented in popular culture and provides a counterbalance to the ubiquitous imagery of sexualized female bodies created for mainstream heterosexual male sensibilities.
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Music |
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6:00 PM, August 25 |
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Don't Stop Believing Separate Ways and Grupo Pagan
Price: $5 regular, children 12 and under free Paper Mill Island
Baldwinsville
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7:30 PM, August 25 |
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Chamber Orchestra Skaneateles Festival Hugh Keelan, conductor Featuring Conrad Tao, piano
Price: $26, $20; children under 13 free Brook Farm
2.5 miles south of the village on Route 41A,
Skaneateles
Gluck/Mozart Overture to Iphigénia en Aulide Mozart Piano Concerto No. 21 in C major, K467 Ibert Hommage à Mozart Haydn Symphony No. 86 in D Major Rain location: Skaneateles High School
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Theater |
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12:30 PM, August 25 |
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Hansel and Gretel Magic Circle Children's Theatre
Price: $5 Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St.,
Syracuse
Interactive version of the children's classic.
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6:00 PM, August 25 |
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The 3 Constants Syracuse University Drama Department
Price: Free Armory Square
Clinton and Jefferson St.,
Syracuse
Three short plays by Pulitzer Prize-winner playwright Suzan-Lori Parks.
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7:00 PM, August 25 |
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Disney's High School Musical On Stage Syracuse Civic Theatre
Price: $24 regular; $20 seniors/students; $16 children 12 and under Carrier Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
Disney's High School Musical On Stage is the live version of the acclaimed Disney television movie that follows two high school students who are worlds apart, the school's hoops star and the president of the science club, who decide to audition for their school's musical, a decision that turns both their world and their school upside down.
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8:00 PM, August 25 |
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Things You Shouldn't Say Past Midnight Simply New Theatre Thomas Michael Quinn, director
Price: $25 BeVard Room, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
A comedy in three beds.
Read a Review!
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Sunday, August 26, 2007
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Art |
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 26 |
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The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
During the Vietnam War, Al Fasoldt was a photographer for Stars & Stripes. When he left Vietnam to come home, he left his negatives behind and brought a few 8"x10" prints and contact sheets of his work. Since then, the Pentagon has ordered all negatives of Stars & Stripes photographers be destroyed. Over the past few years, Fasoldt has been working to repair the prints and contact sheets he brought home years ago, using them to make prints of his Vietnam War images for exhibition.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 26 |
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One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Vietnamese-American photographer Binh Danh has quietly gained recognition on the international art scene for his Vietnam War-inspired work. This exhibition features his most recognizable work, comprising appropriated war images that are printed directly onto leaves or grass, a process Danh invented while in college. On his first trip to Vietnam since his family immigrated to the United States, Danh was confronted by the remains of the war, such as bomb craters that had been converted into rice paddies, and he observed that memories of the war's devastation had become part of daily life. It was this experience that inspired him to create chlorophyll prints of found images from the Vietnam War with tropical leaves, sharing, in his words, the "epiphany that the memory of those people and events will reverberate forever through the country's landscape." Of his work, Danh states, "Much of my research has explored my own personal history and has become a way of visually and physically recollecting my family's history and honoring their collective memory." These concepts are very real with regard to any culture that has immigrated to the United States, looking at the stories families tell and the disconnected feeling experienced by the second generation. Danh was born in Vietnam in 1977. He received a BFA degree from San Jose State University and an MFA degree from Stanford University. His work has been exhibited in museums and galleries internationally, including the George Eastman House in Rochester, the Asia Society Museum in New York City, the University of Hawaii Art Museum, and the Haines Gallery in San Francisco. He lives and works in San Jose, CA. He participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2006.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 26 |
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Notes on Paper: Watercolors of Musicians by Steve Ryan Lucas Gallery
Price: Free Lucas Gallery
33 Jordan St.,
Skaneateles
Ryan's work is impressionistic, wet-to-wet watercolors, painted on crescent textured illustration board. The board and paints are wetted repetitively and some areas are defined later with pastel conte pencil. Subjects include musicians, both children and adults, in the jazz as well as the classical genre.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 26 |
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Lakescapes: Selected Works of Karen Thomas-Lillie Lucas Gallery
Lucas Gallery
33 Jordan St.,
Skaneateles
Karen Thomas-Lillie is an artist and designer with a degree from the Art Institute of Pittsburgh, who creates impressionistic landscapes of the Finger Lakes using oilbar on panels. Her aesthetic focuses on expanses, edges, distance, fields, drumlins, water and sky. Her work reflects her effort to unite art with the natural environments she sees as well as her respect for the natural beauty of the lakes.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, August 26 |
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Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city. The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 26 |
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Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death. Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts. This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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Back to list |
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 26 |
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Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
This exhibition features work by 18 photojournalists, three of whom -- Wesley Law, Ezra Shaw, and Justin Yurkanin -- are SU graduates. The subjects are diverse, ranging from the current conflicts in Africa to the legacy of Chernobyl. American topics focus on the Confederate flag controversy, life on the Navajo reservation and the 1997 reunion of people associated with The Farm, the Tennessee community that was America's largest hippie commune. The Alexia Foundation was begun by the parents of Alexia Tsairis, a Newhouse School of Public Communications undergraduate student who was killed in the Pan Am 103 bombing in 1988. Each year the foundation gives grants to selected student and professional photographers so they can pursue their interests in photojournalism. To date, the foundation has awarded over $500,000 in grants to 80 undergraduate photographers and 11 professionals. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 26 |
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Icarus and Stravinsky: Color Prints by Swietlan Nicholas Kraczyna Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Swietlin Nicholas Kraczyna is a Polish-born, American-raised artist who lives in Florence, Italy in the former studio of the Renaissance master painter Domenico Ghirlandaio. He teaches printmaking at Syracuse University's Florence campus and is spending the fall semester in Syracuse as a visiting artist. This exhibit presents a selection of Kraczyna's color etchings on two of the artist's favorite subjects: the myth of Icarus and Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring. Kraczyna binds these two different subjects together through their interest in pushing the limits of convention. Icarus was able to fly as a result of wings constructed by his father. The Rite of Spring was Igor Stravinsky's ground breaking and controversial ballet score that premiered in Paris in 1913. Many experts think modern orchestral music began with the score's dissonant, unpredictable composition. The images of Icarus often present the winged boy in unconventional settings. One of the more recent etchings, Icarus Flying out the Window, 2002, portrays him flying out of a contemporary building's upper floor window. Kraczyna's technical dexterity and a vivid palette are on clear display in this multi-plate etching. In The Rite of Spring prints the artist places Stravinsky's handwritten musical notes and markings from the score in the image. They act as a foundation upon which are added the figures of the ballet dancers. The notes become either costume decorations or independent decorative patterns in the spaces between the figures. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 26 |
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Tom Mazzullo Drawings Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Tom Mazzullo is quietly turning the age-old idea of still-life upside down. In Tom Mazzullo Drawings, fruits and vegetables no longer rest among plentiful pre-arranged settings atop tablecloths dressed with lacey doilies and wrinkles that fall gracefully to the floor. There are no half-filled water glasses for light to dance in or mirrored reflections to play tricks on the eye. The objects are meticulously drawn to scale, an invitation to move in for a closer look. The delicate, silverpoint lines become more apparent, reflecting light as one's eye wanders fervently over the layered network of cross-hatching where every line counts. Mazzullo wants the viewer to "concentrate on one subject, one idea at a time." The artist feels he has succeeded when "a drawing's pale, perfect surface elicits a liveliness and presence greater than the simplicity of its construction." Tom Mazzullo Drawings, which includes 20 silverpoint and four conté crayon drawings, is the artist's first solo museum exhibition.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 26 |
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African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art, an exhibition organized by the Longyear Museum of Anthropology at Colgate University, includes 85 religious objects, most of them from the 20th century, such as figures, masks and headdresses, divination trays, staffs, vessels, and shrine furniture. Much of the art figures in the veneration of divinities and ancestors, and the control of supernatural powers associated with nature, medicine, and witchcraft.
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8:00 PM, August 26 |
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Daughters of Joy! Spark Contemporary Art Space
Price: $5 (mature audiences only) Spark Contemporary Art Space
1005 E. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Experimental video and audio about sex and the American launch of Lickity Split smut zine Curated by Amber Goodwyn, with work by Kathleen K-R, Lamathilde, Nicole Koschmann, Scott Stark, Anita Schoepp, Peter Miller, Elin Gustafson, Jackie Gallant and Dayna MacLeod, and more. Presented by Lickety Split, organized with the support of Syracuse Experimental Film and Media Workshop and The Warehouse Gallery, in combination with the exhibition "COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze."
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Poetry/Reading |
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2:00 PM, August 26 |
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Dreaming in Libro: How a Good Dog Tamed a Bad Woman Featuring Louise Bernikow
Price: $5 regular, $3 students/seniors Matilda Joslyn Gage Foundation
109 Walnut St.,
Fayetteville
Author Louise Bernikow, noted women's historian and member of the Matilda Joslyn Gage Foundation's national advisory committee, will celebrate the dogs in women's lives with this reading from her new book on the lawn of the Gage Foundation offices. Dogs and their human companions are invited to this celebration of Women's Equality Day.
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Theater |
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2:00 PM, August 26 |
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Things You Shouldn't Say Past Midnight Simply New Theatre Thomas Michael Quinn, director
Price: $25 BeVard Room, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
A comedy in three beds.
Read a Review!
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Back to list |
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2:00 PM, August 26 |
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Disney's High School Musical On Stage Syracuse Civic Theatre
Price: $24 regular; $20 seniors/students; $16 children 12 and under Carrier Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
Disney's High School Musical On Stage is the live version of the acclaimed Disney television movie that follows two high school students who are worlds apart, the school's hoops star and the president of the science club, who decide to audition for their school's musical, a decision that turns both their world and their school upside down.
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Monday, August 27, 2007
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Art |
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, August 27 |
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Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 27 |
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Mixed Media Art of Heidi Kuhl Westcott Community Center
Price: Free Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 27 |
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One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Vietnamese-American photographer Binh Danh has quietly gained recognition on the international art scene for his Vietnam War-inspired work. This exhibition features his most recognizable work, comprising appropriated war images that are printed directly onto leaves or grass, a process Danh invented while in college. On his first trip to Vietnam since his family immigrated to the United States, Danh was confronted by the remains of the war, such as bomb craters that had been converted into rice paddies, and he observed that memories of the war's devastation had become part of daily life. It was this experience that inspired him to create chlorophyll prints of found images from the Vietnam War with tropical leaves, sharing, in his words, the "epiphany that the memory of those people and events will reverberate forever through the country's landscape." Of his work, Danh states, "Much of my research has explored my own personal history and has become a way of visually and physically recollecting my family's history and honoring their collective memory." These concepts are very real with regard to any culture that has immigrated to the United States, looking at the stories families tell and the disconnected feeling experienced by the second generation. Danh was born in Vietnam in 1977. He received a BFA degree from San Jose State University and an MFA degree from Stanford University. His work has been exhibited in museums and galleries internationally, including the George Eastman House in Rochester, the Asia Society Museum in New York City, the University of Hawaii Art Museum, and the Haines Gallery in San Francisco. He lives and works in San Jose, CA. He participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2006.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 27 |
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The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
During the Vietnam War, Al Fasoldt was a photographer for Stars & Stripes. When he left Vietnam to come home, he left his negatives behind and brought a few 8"x10" prints and contact sheets of his work. Since then, the Pentagon has ordered all negatives of Stars & Stripes photographers be destroyed. Over the past few years, Fasoldt has been working to repair the prints and contact sheets he brought home years ago, using them to make prints of his Vietnam War images for exhibition.
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Music |
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8:00 PM, August 27 |
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The King Hen Spark Contemporary Art Space
Price: $5 Spark Contemporary Art Space
1005 E. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
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Tuesday, August 28, 2007
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Art |
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, August 28 |
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Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 28 |
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Mixed Media Art of Heidi Kuhl Westcott Community Center
Price: Free Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 28 |
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A Faith Ringgold Retrospective: Story Quilts and Children's Books Community Folk Art Center
Price: Suggested donation $5 Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
An icon of American art and activism, Ringgold was born in Harlem, New York. From a young age, she was encouraged in her creative endeavors by her mother, Willi Posey Jones, who was a fashion designer and seamstress. Ringgold received her Bachelor's degree in Fine Art and Education and her Master's degree in Art at City College of New York. From 1955-1973, she taught art in the New York City public schools. In the mid-to late 1960s, Ringgold began portraying political and Civil Rights themes in her paintings. She abandoned traditional painting in the early 1970's, and began creating large unstretched paintings with elaborate fabric borders, similar to Tibetan tankas. She also began making fabric dolls, masks and soft sculptures, some of which were used in performance pieces. In the early 1980s, she began creating large story quilts, featuring painted images along with handwritten text. She adapted her story quilt Tar Beach into a children's book in 1990, and has since written and illustrated several children's books, and has also published her memoirs. From 1984 to 2002, Ringgold was a Professor of Art at University of California San Diego. She has been featured in numerous solo and group exhibitions since the 1960s. She has received many honors and awards for her achievements, including the National Endowment for the Arts awards in sculpture and painting, a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, and more than 15 honorary doctorates.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 28 |
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The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
During the Vietnam War, Al Fasoldt was a photographer for Stars & Stripes. When he left Vietnam to come home, he left his negatives behind and brought a few 8"x10" prints and contact sheets of his work. Since then, the Pentagon has ordered all negatives of Stars & Stripes photographers be destroyed. Over the past few years, Fasoldt has been working to repair the prints and contact sheets he brought home years ago, using them to make prints of his Vietnam War images for exhibition.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 28 |
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One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Vietnamese-American photographer Binh Danh has quietly gained recognition on the international art scene for his Vietnam War-inspired work. This exhibition features his most recognizable work, comprising appropriated war images that are printed directly onto leaves or grass, a process Danh invented while in college. On his first trip to Vietnam since his family immigrated to the United States, Danh was confronted by the remains of the war, such as bomb craters that had been converted into rice paddies, and he observed that memories of the war's devastation had become part of daily life. It was this experience that inspired him to create chlorophyll prints of found images from the Vietnam War with tropical leaves, sharing, in his words, the "epiphany that the memory of those people and events will reverberate forever through the country's landscape." Of his work, Danh states, "Much of my research has explored my own personal history and has become a way of visually and physically recollecting my family's history and honoring their collective memory." These concepts are very real with regard to any culture that has immigrated to the United States, looking at the stories families tell and the disconnected feeling experienced by the second generation. Danh was born in Vietnam in 1977. He received a BFA degree from San Jose State University and an MFA degree from Stanford University. His work has been exhibited in museums and galleries internationally, including the George Eastman House in Rochester, the Asia Society Museum in New York City, the University of Hawaii Art Museum, and the Haines Gallery in San Francisco. He lives and works in San Jose, CA. He participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2006.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 28 |
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COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery Featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This bold new exhibition, COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze, focuses on the psychological, social, cultural and political dimensions of desire, subjectivity and -- pleasure. COME ON presents an array of ideas, imagery and experiences on the topic of sexuality from the perspective of women in their 20s through mid 30s. The artists in this exhibition employ diverse media, including large-scale drawing, video installation, text work and ephemeral sculpture. COME ON reveals what is not represented in popular culture and provides a counterbalance to the ubiquitous imagery of sexualized female bodies created for mainstream heterosexual male sensibilities.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, August 28 |
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Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city. The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 28 |
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Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death. Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts. This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 28 |
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Icarus and Stravinsky: Color Prints by Swietlan Nicholas Kraczyna Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Swietlin Nicholas Kraczyna is a Polish-born, American-raised artist who lives in Florence, Italy in the former studio of the Renaissance master painter Domenico Ghirlandaio. He teaches printmaking at Syracuse University's Florence campus and is spending the fall semester in Syracuse as a visiting artist. This exhibit presents a selection of Kraczyna's color etchings on two of the artist's favorite subjects: the myth of Icarus and Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring. Kraczyna binds these two different subjects together through their interest in pushing the limits of convention. Icarus was able to fly as a result of wings constructed by his father. The Rite of Spring was Igor Stravinsky's ground breaking and controversial ballet score that premiered in Paris in 1913. Many experts think modern orchestral music began with the score's dissonant, unpredictable composition. The images of Icarus often present the winged boy in unconventional settings. One of the more recent etchings, Icarus Flying out the Window, 2002, portrays him flying out of a contemporary building's upper floor window. Kraczyna's technical dexterity and a vivid palette are on clear display in this multi-plate etching. In The Rite of Spring prints the artist places Stravinsky's handwritten musical notes and markings from the score in the image. They act as a foundation upon which are added the figures of the ballet dancers. The notes become either costume decorations or independent decorative patterns in the spaces between the figures. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 28 |
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Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
This exhibition features work by 18 photojournalists, three of whom -- Wesley Law, Ezra Shaw, and Justin Yurkanin -- are SU graduates. The subjects are diverse, ranging from the current conflicts in Africa to the legacy of Chernobyl. American topics focus on the Confederate flag controversy, life on the Navajo reservation and the 1997 reunion of people associated with The Farm, the Tennessee community that was America's largest hippie commune. The Alexia Foundation was begun by the parents of Alexia Tsairis, a Newhouse School of Public Communications undergraduate student who was killed in the Pan Am 103 bombing in 1988. Each year the foundation gives grants to selected student and professional photographers so they can pursue their interests in photojournalism. To date, the foundation has awarded over $500,000 in grants to 80 undergraduate photographers and 11 professionals. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 28 |
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Tom Mazzullo Drawings Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Tom Mazzullo is quietly turning the age-old idea of still-life upside down. In Tom Mazzullo Drawings, fruits and vegetables no longer rest among plentiful pre-arranged settings atop tablecloths dressed with lacey doilies and wrinkles that fall gracefully to the floor. There are no half-filled water glasses for light to dance in or mirrored reflections to play tricks on the eye. The objects are meticulously drawn to scale, an invitation to move in for a closer look. The delicate, silverpoint lines become more apparent, reflecting light as one's eye wanders fervently over the layered network of cross-hatching where every line counts. Mazzullo wants the viewer to "concentrate on one subject, one idea at a time." The artist feels he has succeeded when "a drawing's pale, perfect surface elicits a liveliness and presence greater than the simplicity of its construction." Tom Mazzullo Drawings, which includes 20 silverpoint and four conté crayon drawings, is the artist's first solo museum exhibition.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 28 |
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African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art, an exhibition organized by the Longyear Museum of Anthropology at Colgate University, includes 85 religious objects, most of them from the 20th century, such as figures, masks and headdresses, divination trays, staffs, vessels, and shrine furniture. Much of the art figures in the veneration of divinities and ancestors, and the control of supernatural powers associated with nature, medicine, and witchcraft.
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Film |
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9:00 PM, August 28 |
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B-Fest Night: Bad Reputation (2005) Alternative Movies and Events
Price: $5 Funk 'n Waffles University
727 S. Crouse Ave. (Campus Plaza, behind Marshall ,
Syracuse
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Wednesday, August 29, 2007
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Art |
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, August 29 |
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Annual Exhibition Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The exhibition features abstract artwork from 16 New York State artists. Artists exhibiting: Anatoli Truskalo, Linda Bigness, Bob Gates, Amber Blanding, Hunter O'Reilly, Stan Bowman, Lynne Taetzsch, Paul McMillan, Cheyne Rood, Fred Wellner, Laura Wellner, Barbara Page, Barbara Mink, Len Fishman, Melissa Tiffany and Al D'Agostino. The show holds a number of different and unique mediums including paintings, sculptures, glass work, photographs, collage, drawings, and giclee prints on canvas.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 29 |
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Mixed Media Art of Heidi Kuhl Westcott Community Center
Price: Free Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 29 |
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A Faith Ringgold Retrospective: Story Quilts and Children's Books Community Folk Art Center
Price: Suggested donation $5 Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
An icon of American art and activism, Ringgold was born in Harlem, New York. From a young age, she was encouraged in her creative endeavors by her mother, Willi Posey Jones, who was a fashion designer and seamstress. Ringgold received her Bachelor's degree in Fine Art and Education and her Master's degree in Art at City College of New York. From 1955-1973, she taught art in the New York City public schools. In the mid-to late 1960s, Ringgold began portraying political and Civil Rights themes in her paintings. She abandoned traditional painting in the early 1970's, and began creating large unstretched paintings with elaborate fabric borders, similar to Tibetan tankas. She also began making fabric dolls, masks and soft sculptures, some of which were used in performance pieces. In the early 1980s, she began creating large story quilts, featuring painted images along with handwritten text. She adapted her story quilt Tar Beach into a children's book in 1990, and has since written and illustrated several children's books, and has also published her memoirs. From 1984 to 2002, Ringgold was a Professor of Art at University of California San Diego. She has been featured in numerous solo and group exhibitions since the 1960s. She has received many honors and awards for her achievements, including the National Endowment for the Arts awards in sculpture and painting, a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, and more than 15 honorary doctorates.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 29 |
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One Week's Dead: Works of Binh Danh Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Vietnamese-American photographer Binh Danh has quietly gained recognition on the international art scene for his Vietnam War-inspired work. This exhibition features his most recognizable work, comprising appropriated war images that are printed directly onto leaves or grass, a process Danh invented while in college. On his first trip to Vietnam since his family immigrated to the United States, Danh was confronted by the remains of the war, such as bomb craters that had been converted into rice paddies, and he observed that memories of the war's devastation had become part of daily life. It was this experience that inspired him to create chlorophyll prints of found images from the Vietnam War with tropical leaves, sharing, in his words, the "epiphany that the memory of those people and events will reverberate forever through the country's landscape." Of his work, Danh states, "Much of my research has explored my own personal history and has become a way of visually and physically recollecting my family's history and honoring their collective memory." These concepts are very real with regard to any culture that has immigrated to the United States, looking at the stories families tell and the disconnected feeling experienced by the second generation. Danh was born in Vietnam in 1977. He received a BFA degree from San Jose State University and an MFA degree from Stanford University. His work has been exhibited in museums and galleries internationally, including the George Eastman House in Rochester, the Asia Society Museum in New York City, the University of Hawaii Art Museum, and the Haines Gallery in San Francisco. He lives and works in San Jose, CA. He participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program in 2006.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 29 |
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The Lost Photos of Vietnam: Works of Al Fasoldt Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
During the Vietnam War, Al Fasoldt was a photographer for Stars & Stripes. When he left Vietnam to come home, he left his negatives behind and brought a few 8"x10" prints and contact sheets of his work. Since then, the Pentagon has ordered all negatives of Stars & Stripes photographers be destroyed. Over the past few years, Fasoldt has been working to repair the prints and contact sheets he brought home years ago, using them to make prints of his Vietnam War images for exhibition.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 29 |
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COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze The Warehouse Gallery Featuring works of Jo-Anne Balcaen, Juliet Jacobson, Rachel Rampleman
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This bold new exhibition, COME ON: Desire Under The Female Gaze, focuses on the psychological, social, cultural and political dimensions of desire, subjectivity and -- pleasure. COME ON presents an array of ideas, imagery and experiences on the topic of sexuality from the perspective of women in their 20s through mid 30s. The artists in this exhibition employ diverse media, including large-scale drawing, video installation, text work and ephemeral sculpture. COME ON reveals what is not represented in popular culture and provides a counterbalance to the ubiquitous imagery of sexualized female bodies created for mainstream heterosexual male sensibilities.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, August 29 |
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Water and Light: The Etchings and Drypoints of James MacNeill Whistler Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Water and Light is a focused examination of two of James MacNeill Whistler's favorite subjects. The American expatriate was fascinated with water and the effects of light. A highlight of his career as a printmaker were his famous Venetian "nocturnes" that so effectively captured the mood and atmosphere of Italy's famous floating city. The strength of these images is Whistler's unique talent at blending the reflections of the water in the canals with the natural light that suffused the city. Later in his career he journeyed to Amsterdam where he again combined water and light into images that captured that city's particular flavor. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 (VIP) lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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Back to list |
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 29 |
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Goya: The Disasters of War Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
For the first time ever in central New York, the SUArt Galleries will be presenting a complete, First Edition of Francisco de Goya's monumental graphic statement, The Disasters of War. Considered by many to be unrivaled in its graphic depiction of cruelty, terror, and the inhumanity of man toward his fellow man, the Disasters were not printed in their entirety during the artist's lifetime. Originally conceived and partially executed during the Peninsula War of 1808-1814 and the immediate post-war years, Goya dared not publish the series during his lifetime. The immediacy of the images, the bluntness of his approach to depicting the violence of war, and the fact that the post-war Spanish regime decreed that the War was to be forgotten made publication of the series impossible until 35 years after Goya's death. Set against a backdrop of war, political turmoil, dictatorship, military occupation, and a growing sense of nationalism, the Disasters may be both the beginning and highlight of modern graphics. When the "fatal consequences of the bloody war in Spain with Bonaparte and other emphatic caprices" (as it had been described by Goya and his son Javier) was published in 1863 by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, it revolutionized the role of the artist as journalist and an observer of war. Goya, to a large extent, recorded what he saw and purposefully maintained the independence of the observed facts as distinct from his personal reactions to the cruelty, injustice, or whatever emotion the horror he witnessed might have engendered, in order to give greater clarity to the facts. This series of prints has transcended the specific references to a Napoleonic era war that was borne of imperialist aspirations and has become synonymous with the gross brutality of war and its impact on the innocents of every conflict. In fact, it is not uncommon to hear contemporary war photographers pay homage to Goya and his brilliant concepts that abound in The Disasters of War. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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Back to list |
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 29 |
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Eyes on the World: Photographs from the Alexia Foundation for World Peace and Cultural Understanding Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
This exhibition features work by 18 photojournalists, three of whom -- Wesley Law, Ezra Shaw, and Justin Yurkanin -- are SU graduates. The subjects are diverse, ranging from the current conflicts in Africa to the legacy of Chernobyl. American topics focus on the Confederate flag controversy, life on the Navajo reservation and the 1997 reunion of people associated with The Farm, the Tennessee community that was America's largest hippie commune. The Alexia Foundation was begun by the parents of Alexia Tsairis, a Newhouse School of Public Communications undergraduate student who was killed in the Pan Am 103 bombing in 1988. Each year the foundation gives grants to selected student and professional photographers so they can pursue their interests in photojournalism. To date, the foundation has awarded over $500,000 in grants to 80 undergraduate photographers and 11 professionals. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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11:30 AM - 4:30 PM, August 29 |
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Icarus and Stravinsky: Color Prints by Swietlan Nicholas Kraczyna Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Swietlin Nicholas Kraczyna is a Polish-born, American-raised artist who lives in Florence, Italy in the former studio of the Renaissance master painter Domenico Ghirlandaio. He teaches printmaking at Syracuse University's Florence campus and is spending the fall semester in Syracuse as a visiting artist. This exhibit presents a selection of Kraczyna's color etchings on two of the artist's favorite subjects: the myth of Icarus and Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring. Kraczyna binds these two different subjects together through their interest in pushing the limits of convention. Icarus was able to fly as a result of wings constructed by his father. The Rite of Spring was Igor Stravinsky's ground breaking and controversial ballet score that premiered in Paris in 1913. Many experts think modern orchestral music began with the score's dissonant, unpredictable composition. The images of Icarus often present the winged boy in unconventional settings. One of the more recent etchings, Icarus Flying out the Window, 2002, portrays him flying out of a contemporary building's upper floor window. Kraczyna's technical dexterity and a vivid palette are on clear display in this multi-plate etching. In The Rite of Spring prints the artist places Stravinsky's handwritten musical notes and markings from the score in the image. They act as a foundation upon which are added the figures of the ballet dancers. The notes become either costume decorations or independent decorative patterns in the spaces between the figures. Weekend and evening Galleries visitors can park in the Q4 lot on College Place. Notify the attendant that you are visiting the Galleries and you will be directed where to park. Parking is on a space available basis and may be restricted during events held at the Carrier Dome. If spaces aren't available the attendant will direct you to the nearest lot.
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Back to list |
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 29 |
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Tom Mazzullo Drawings Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Tom Mazzullo is quietly turning the age-old idea of still-life upside down. In Tom Mazzullo Drawings, fruits and vegetables no longer rest among plentiful pre-arranged settings atop tablecloths dressed with lacey doilies and wrinkles that fall gracefully to the floor. There are no half-filled water glasses for light to dance in or mirrored reflections to play tricks on the eye. The objects are meticulously drawn to scale, an invitation to move in for a closer look. The delicate, silverpoint lines become more apparent, reflecting light as one's eye wanders fervently over the layered network of cross-hatching where every line counts. Mazzullo wants the viewer to "concentrate on one subject, one idea at a time." The artist feels he has succeeded when "a drawing's pale, perfect surface elicits a liveliness and presence greater than the simplicity of its construction." Tom Mazzullo Drawings, which includes 20 silverpoint and four conté crayon drawings, is the artist's first solo museum exhibition.
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Back to list |
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 29 |
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African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art Everson Museum of Art
Price: Suggested donation, $5, adults Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
African Shapes of the Sacred: Yoruba Religious Art, an exhibition organized by the Longyear Museum of Anthropology at Colgate University, includes 85 religious objects, most of them from the 20th century, such as figures, masks and headdresses, divination trays, staffs, vessels, and shrine furniture. Much of the art figures in the veneration of divinities and ancestors, and the control of supernatural powers associated with nature, medicine, and witchcraft.
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Back to list |
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4:00 PM - 8:30 PM, August 29 |
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Summer Art Show North Syracuse Art Guild
Price: Free Lonergan Park
Route 11, just north of Taft Road,
North Syracuse
Member's paintings will be displayed in conjunction with the concert in the park. The Mario DeSantis Orchestra will entertain from 6:15 p.m. until 8:15 p.m. For more information, contact the North Syracuse Parks and Recreation office at 315-458-8050.
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Next week >>>
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