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Events for Monday, March 24, 2025
	
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Two Artists: Two Visions: Works by MaryBeth Sorber and Peter Valenti Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
 Peppy Downer Light Work Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
 Nabil Harb: Mater si, magistra no Light Work Gallery
 
	
7:00 PM
 Libeled Lady (1936) Syracuse Cinephile Society
 
	
7:45 PM-11:00 PM
 Joiri Minaya and Miryam Charles: Lines of Flight Urban Video Project
 
Events for Tuesday, March 25, 2025
	
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Two Artists: Two Visions: Works by MaryBeth Sorber and Peter Valenti Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery
 
	
9:30 AM-6:00 PM
 Under Open Sky Edgewood Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Weird Barrio / Por mi barrio La Casita Cultural Center
 
	
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
 Peppy Downer Light Work Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
 Nabil Harb: Mater si, magistra no Light Work Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
 The Earth Laughs in Flowers: Plants in the Syracuse University Art Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Faculty Fellows Curate Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Surrealism and Photography: "Where I Dream, It is Awake" Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Fruits of Their Labor: Work and Leisure at the Syracuse University Art Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
12:00 PM-2:00 PM
 Women’s History Month Pop Up Exhibition: Imagining Joan of Arc Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
2:00 PM-4:00 PM
 Women’s History Month Pop Up Exhibition: Imagining Joan of Arc Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
7:00 PM
 *SOLD OUT*  Sirsy The 443 Social Club
 
	
7:45 PM-11:00 PM
 Joiri Minaya and Miryam Charles: Lines of Flight Urban Video Project
 
	
8:00 PM
 Experience Hendrix Landmark Theatre
 
Events for Wednesday, March 26, 2025
	
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Two Artists: Two Visions: Works by MaryBeth Sorber and Peter Valenti Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery
 
	
9:30 AM-6:00 PM
 Under Open Sky Edgewood Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Weird Barrio / Por mi barrio La Casita Cultural Center
 
	
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
 Peppy Downer Light Work Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
 Nabil Harb: Mater si, magistra no Light Work Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Fruits of Their Labor: Work and Leisure at the Syracuse University Art Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Surrealism and Photography: "Where I Dream, It is Awake" Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Faculty Fellows Curate Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
 The Earth Laughs in Flowers: Plants in the Syracuse University Art Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Simply Simon: Pottery from the Collection of Michael Simon and Susan Roberts Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
 It Came from the '70s Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
 CNY Artist Initiative: Courtney Rile: Moments in Between Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
 At Water's Edge: Reflections on 200 Years of the Erie Canal Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Off the Rack Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Making American Artists: Stories from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1776-1976 Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Scholastic Art Awards of Central New York 2025 Everson Museum of Art
 
	
6:00 PM
 Snaps & Taps Open Mic Night Community Folk Art Center
 
	
7:00 PM
 *SOLD OUT*  The Barndogs The 443 Social Club
 
	
7:45 PM-11:00 PM
 Joiri Minaya and Miryam Charles: Lines of Flight Urban Video Project
 
	
8:00 PM
 Setnor Faculty Recital Series: Scott Cuellar, piano Syracuse University Setnor School of Music, featuring Ilya Shterenberg, clarinet
 
Events for Thursday, March 27, 2025
	
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Two Artists: Two Visions: Works by MaryBeth Sorber and Peter Valenti Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery
 
	
9:30 AM-6:00 PM
 Under Open Sky Edgewood Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Weird Barrio / Por mi barrio La Casita Cultural Center
 
	
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
 Peppy Downer Light Work Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
 Nabil Harb: Mater si, magistra no Light Work Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
 Fruits of Their Labor: Work and Leisure at the Syracuse University Art Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
 Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
 The Earth Laughs in Flowers: Plants in the Syracuse University Art Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
 Faculty Fellows Curate Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
 Surrealism and Photography: "Where I Dream, It is Awake" Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
 Simply Simon: Pottery from the Collection of Michael Simon and Susan Roberts Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
 At Water's Edge: Reflections on 200 Years of the Erie Canal Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
 CNY Artist Initiative: Courtney Rile: Moments in Between Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
 It Came from the '70s Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
 Off the Rack Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
 Scholastic Art Awards of Central New York 2025 Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
 Making American Artists: Stories from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1776-1976 Everson Museum of Art
 
	
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
 Manuel Hernandez: The Singing Wall Brewer Harris Projects
 
	
5:30 PM-6:30 PM
 Art Break: The Earth Laughs in Flowers Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
7:00 PM
 Dead Silent: Florence of Moravia Acme Mystery Company
 
	
7:00 PM
 Loren & LJ Barrigar The 443 Social Club
 
	
7:30 PM
 Nate Jackson: Super Funny World Tour The Oncenter
 
	
7:45 PM-11:00 PM
 Joiri Minaya and Miryam Charles: Lines of Flight Urban Video Project
 
Events for Friday, March 28, 2025
	
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Two Artists: Two Visions: Works by MaryBeth Sorber and Peter Valenti Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery
 
	
9:30 AM-6:00 PM
 Under Open Sky Edgewood Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Weird Barrio / Por mi barrio La Casita Cultural Center
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Peppy Downer Light Work Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Nabil Harb: Mater si, magistra no Light Work Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Fruits of Their Labor: Work and Leisure at the Syracuse University Art Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Surrealism and Photography: "Where I Dream, It is Awake" Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Faculty Fellows Curate Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
 The Earth Laughs in Flowers: Plants in the Syracuse University Art Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Simply Simon: Pottery from the Collection of Michael Simon and Susan Roberts Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
 It Came from the '70s Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
 CNY Artist Initiative: Courtney Rile: Moments in Between Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
 At Water's Edge: Reflections on 200 Years of the Erie Canal Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Off the Rack Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Making American Artists: Stories from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1776-1976 Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Scholastic Art Awards of Central New York 2025 Everson Museum of Art
 
	
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
 Manuel Hernandez: The Singing Wall Brewer Harris Projects
 
	
6:00 PM-8:30 PM
 Off the Wall ArtRage Gallery
 
	
7:00 PM
 Beyond Therapy CNY Playhouse
 
	
7:00 PM
 Student and Member Open Mic Downtown Writer's Center
 
	
7:30 PM
 How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying Covey Theatre Company
 
	
7:30 PM
 Ken Ludwig's Shakespeare in Hollywood Syracuse Shakespeare-in-the-Park
 
	
7:45 PM-11:00 PM
 Joiri Minaya and Miryam Charles: Lines of Flight Urban Video Project
 
	
8:00 PM
 American Hero LeMoyne College
 
	
8:00 PM
 Preview:  What the Moon Saw, or I Only Appear to Be Dead Syracuse University Drama Department
 
Events for Saturday, March 29, 2025
	
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Two Artists: Two Visions: Works by MaryBeth Sorber and Peter Valenti Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-2:00 PM
 Under Open Sky Edgewood Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Scholastic Art Awards of Central New York 2025 Everson Museum of Art
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Making American Artists: Stories from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1776-1976 Everson Museum of Art
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Off the Rack Everson Museum of Art
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 It Came from the '70s Everson Museum of Art
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 At Water's Edge: Reflections on 200 Years of the Erie Canal Everson Museum of Art
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 CNY Artist Initiative: Courtney Rile: Moments in Between Everson Museum of Art
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Simply Simon: Pottery from the Collection of Michael Simon and Susan Roberts Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-6:00 PM
 Nabil Harb: Mater si, magistra no Light Work Gallery
 
	
11:00 AM-6:00 PM
 Peppy Downer Light Work Gallery
 
	
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
 Manuel Hernandez: The Singing Wall Brewer Harris Projects
 
	
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
 Fruits of Their Labor: Work and Leisure at the Syracuse University Art Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
 Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
 The Earth Laughs in Flowers: Plants in the Syracuse University Art Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
 Faculty Fellows Curate Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
 Surrealism and Photography: "Where I Dream, It is Awake" Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
2:00 PM
 Try Me, Good King: Last Words of the Wives of Henry VIII Civic Morning Musicals
 
	
7:00 PM
 Beyond Therapy CNY Playhouse
 
	
7:00 PM
 Enduring Stories fivebyfive
 
	
7:30 PM
 How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying Covey Theatre Company
 
	
7:30 PM
 Dave Novak Five Steeple Coffee House
 
	
7:30 PM
 Pops Series: Jimmy Van Heusen: Swingin’ in Hollywood with Frank and Friends Syracuse Orchestra (formerly Symphoria), featuring Nick Ziobro and Julia Goodwin, vocalists
 
	
7:30 PM
 Ken Ludwig's Shakespeare in Hollywood Syracuse Shakespeare-in-the-Park
 
	
7:45 PM-11:00 PM
 Joiri Minaya and Miryam Charles: Lines of Flight Urban Video Project
 
	
8:00 PM
 American Hero LeMoyne College
 
	
8:00 PM
 Opening:  What the Moon Saw, or I Only Appear to Be Dead Syracuse University Drama Department
 
Events for Sunday, March 30, 2025
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 It Came from the '70s Everson Museum of Art
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 CNY Artist Initiative: Courtney Rile: Moments in Between Everson Museum of Art
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 At Water's Edge: Reflections on 200 Years of the Erie Canal Everson Museum of Art
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Simply Simon: Pottery from the Collection of Michael Simon and Susan Roberts Everson Museum of Art
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Off the Rack Everson Museum of Art
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Making American Artists: Stories from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1776-1976 Everson Museum of Art
 
	
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
 Scholastic Art Awards of Central New York 2025 Everson Museum of Art
 
	
11:00 AM-6:00 PM
 Peppy Downer Light Work Gallery
 
	
11:00 AM-6:00 PM
 Nabil Harb: Mater si, magistra no Light Work Gallery
 
	
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
 Fruits of Their Labor: Work and Leisure at the Syracuse University Art Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
 Surrealism and Photography: "Where I Dream, It is Awake" Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
 Faculty Fellows Curate Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
 The Earth Laughs in Flowers: Plants in the Syracuse University Art Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
 Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum Syracuse University Art Museum
 
	
2:00 PM
 Beyond Therapy CNY Playhouse
 
	
2:00 PM
 Ken Ludwig's Shakespeare in Hollywood Syracuse Shakespeare-in-the-Park
 
	
2:00 PM
 What the Moon Saw, or I Only Appear to Be Dead Syracuse University Drama Department
 
	
7:30 PM
 Special Event: Community Side-by-Side Concert Syracuse Orchestra (formerly Symphoria)
 
Events for Monday, March 31, 2025
	
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
 Two Artists: Two Visions: Works by MaryBeth Sorber and Peter Valenti Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
 Peppy Downer Light Work Gallery
 
	
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
 Nabil Harb: Mater si, magistra no Light Work Gallery
 
	
7:00 PM
 Spawn of the North (1938) Syracuse Cinephile Society
 
	
	
	 
	
	Monday, March 24, 2025
	
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	9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 24 | 
 
	
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	 Two Artists: Two Visions: Works by MaryBeth Sorber and Peter Valenti  Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery   
	
	Price: Free  Baltimore Woods Nature Center 
		4007 Bishop Hill Rd.,
		Marcellus
  
	 
	An exhibit comprised of the work of two Central New York artists who look to nature for inspiration and yet interpret it in very different ways.  
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	10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 24 | 
 
	
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	 Peppy Downer  Light Work Gallery   
	
	Light Work Gallery 
		316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Peppy Downer" draws exclusively from the Light Work Collection and pulls together works whose makers might have never imagined exhibiting together. It is a portrait through difference as much as similarity, but its music is a mixtape of our time, laid down by our importantly diverse and complicated cohort. Power to the people. The exhibit contains a selection of photographs by Vikky Alexander, Mike Barth, Robert Benjamin, Phil Block, David Broda, John Collier, Larry Cook, Peter De Lory, Lucinda Devlin, Lydia Ann Douglas, Alex Harsley, Biff Henrich, Jeffrey Hoone, Saiman Li, Pipo Nguyen-duy, Diane Neumaier, Ernesto Pujol, Jon Reis, Patricia Reynolds, Coreen Simpson, Aaron Siskind, Lenard Smith, Miso Suchy, and James Welling.  
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	10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 24 | 
 
	
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	 Nabil Harb: Mater si, magistra no  Light Work Gallery   
	
	Light Work Gallery 
		316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Nabil Harb's project "Mater si, magistra no" (a macaronic phrase that translates as "Mother yes, teacher no") presents photographs that describe and depict moments and scenes within his hometown of Lakeland in Polk County, FL. This Central Florida location is both the backdrop and main character of Harb's visual narrative: a story that emits surreal qualities which twist ideas of the region through photography's formal language into a conceptual idea — an idea of how to describe the atmosphere of a place without words. Harb writes, "The landscape is the perfect reflection of our society, our ultimate index — it holds our histories, our secrets, our failures, and our hopes for the future."  
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	7:45 PM - 11:00 PM, March 24 | 
 
	
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	 Joiri Minaya and Miryam Charles: Lines of Flight  Urban Video Project   
	
	Everson Museum of Art Plaza 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Light Work's Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhibition Lines of Flight featuring short films by multimedia artist Joiri Minaya and filmmaker Miryam Charles exploring the tangled trajectories of displacement, immigration, invasion, exploration and escape. The exhibition will run as an architectural projection on the Everson Museum facade. Screening begins at dusk. Labadee, by Joiri Minaya, is a short video documenting parts of a Royal Caribbean cruise trip in Labadee, Haiti, and the dynamics that unfold in this privately-managed space, which is fenced off and leased to Royal Caribbean cruises until 2050. The subtitles in the video begin with text from the diary of Christopher Columbus when they first saw land, moving into a contemporary recount of the trip we're seeing. It meditates on the exploitation, self-exploitation, performance, and access control created by the system of tourism in the Caribbean, and, in linking it to Columbus' Invasion through the first sentences in the subtitles, it traces the lineage of these contemporary spaces to colonization. (2017, 7:06 minutes) In Fly, Fly Sadness, by Miryam Charles, a nuclear explosion mysteriously transforms the voices of all the inhabitants of an island. A journalist travels to the island to learn more and finds herself transformed. (2015, 5:23 minutes)  
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	7:00 PM, March 24 | 
 
	
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	 Libeled Lady (1936)  Syracuse Cinephile Society   
	
	Price: $4 non-members, $3.50 members  Spaghetti Warehouse 
		689 N. Clinton St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Cast: William Powell, Myrna Loy, Jean Harlow, Spencer Tracy, Walter Connolly, Charley Grapewin, Cora Witherspoon Director: Jack Conway Our season begins with this classic comedy from MGM. A newspaper editor (Tracy) hatches a scheme to get a libel suit against his paper dropped ... and he uses his fiancée (Harlow) and an ex-employee (Powell) to help him do it.  Fast-moving laughs with terrific performances from all involved.  
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	Tuesday, March 25, 2025
	
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	Art | 
 
		
	 
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	9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 25 | 
 
	
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	 Two Artists: Two Visions: Works by MaryBeth Sorber and Peter Valenti  Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery   
	
	Price: Free  Baltimore Woods Nature Center 
		4007 Bishop Hill Rd.,
		Marcellus
  
	 
	An exhibit comprised of the work of two Central New York artists who look to nature for inspiration and yet interpret it in very different ways.  
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	9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 25 | 
 
	
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	 Under Open Sky  Edgewood Gallery   
	
	Edgewood Gallery 
		216 Tecumseh Rd.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Nikolay Mikushkin: recent plein air paintings Peter Valenti: nature based series of ceramics Bead Society of CNY: bead works in nature themes  
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 25 | 
 
	
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	 Weird Barrio / Por mi barrio  La Casita Cultural Center   
	
	La Casita Cultural Center 
		109 Otisco St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Exhibit features the art of Manuel Matías.  
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	10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 25 | 
 
	
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	 Peppy Downer  Light Work Gallery   
	
	Light Work Gallery 
		316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Peppy Downer" draws exclusively from the Light Work Collection and pulls together works whose makers might have never imagined exhibiting together. It is a portrait through difference as much as similarity, but its music is a mixtape of our time, laid down by our importantly diverse and complicated cohort. Power to the people. The exhibit contains a selection of photographs by Vikky Alexander, Mike Barth, Robert Benjamin, Phil Block, David Broda, John Collier, Larry Cook, Peter De Lory, Lucinda Devlin, Lydia Ann Douglas, Alex Harsley, Biff Henrich, Jeffrey Hoone, Saiman Li, Pipo Nguyen-duy, Diane Neumaier, Ernesto Pujol, Jon Reis, Patricia Reynolds, Coreen Simpson, Aaron Siskind, Lenard Smith, Miso Suchy, and James Welling.  
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	10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 25 | 
 
	
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	 Nabil Harb: Mater si, magistra no  Light Work Gallery   
	
	Light Work Gallery 
		316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Nabil Harb's project "Mater si, magistra no" (a macaronic phrase that translates as "Mother yes, teacher no") presents photographs that describe and depict moments and scenes within his hometown of Lakeland in Polk County, FL. This Central Florida location is both the backdrop and main character of Harb's visual narrative: a story that emits surreal qualities which twist ideas of the region through photography's formal language into a conceptual idea — an idea of how to describe the atmosphere of a place without words. Harb writes, "The landscape is the perfect reflection of our society, our ultimate index — it holds our histories, our secrets, our failures, and our hopes for the future."  
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	10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 25 | 
 
	
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	 Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum" brings together artwork by the acclaimed New York City-based Dominican artist and objects from the collection to examine how Minaya critiques Western ideas of tropicality, which are rooted in otherness and exoticism. Through these comparisons, the exhibition explores how nature, landscape, culture, and race have been historically constructed and deployed as tropes in visual culture.  
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	10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 25 | 
 
	
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	 The Earth Laughs in Flowers: Plants in the Syracuse University Art Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Drawing upon Ralph Waldo Emerson's famous line "the earth laughs in flowers" from his poem, "Hamatreya" (1846), this exhibition explores images of plants, as well as plant-based objects, in the collections of the Syracuse University Art Museum. This exhibition is co-curated by senior art history majors under the supervision of Professor Romita Ray (Art and Music Histories), in collaboration with Melissa Yuen, PhD, and Kate Holohan, PhD. It is the outcome of the annual art history Senior Seminar taught in the College of Arts and Sciences.  
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	10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 25 | 
 
	
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	 Faculty Fellows Curate  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	In Summer 2022, the Syracuse University Art Museum launched a Faculty Fellows program to support innovative curriculum development, experiential learning, and the fuller integration of the museum's collection into academic life at the University. The program focuses on object-based teaching and research, which is active and student-centered. This exhibition features artworks that the 2024-2025 Faculty Fellows, Lyndsay Gratch (Communication and Rhetorical Studies) and Elizabeth Wimer (Management), will teach with during the Spring 2025 semester.  
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	10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 25 | 
 
	
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	 Surrealism and Photography: "Where I Dream, It is Awake"  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	This exhibition examines the role of Surrealism in modern photography, tracking the movement's love of chance, fragmentation, and uncanny dream imagery from its origins in Paris to Britain, Mexico, and Japan over the course of the 20th century.  Curated by graduate students in the Department of Art & Music Histories under the direction of Sam Johnson (associate professor and director of graduate studies in Art History), the exhibition features photographs from collections of the SU Art Museum alongside Surrealist books and periodicals from the Special Collections Research Center of the Syracuse University Libraries. 
   
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	10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 25 | 
 
	
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	 Fruits of Their Labor: Work and Leisure at the Syracuse University Art Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Fruits of Their Labor" seeks to reexamine depictions of labor and leisure in the Syracuse University Art Museum's permanent collection. The COVID-19 pandemic exposed systemic problems in the workplace, mirroring the societal shifts in the labor industry during the Great Depression. Through thematic groupings such as those that depict women's work in and out of the home or behind the scenes views into the entertainment industry, this exhibition challenges conventional depictions of labor.  
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	12:00 PM - 2:00 PM, March 25 | 
 
	
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	 Women’s History Month Pop Up Exhibition: Imagining Joan of Arc  Syracuse University Art Museum  
		Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center 
	 
	
	Price: Free  Bird Library, 6th Floor 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Discover art and archival materials created by writers and artists in Europe and North America from the 18th century to today that re-imagine Joan of Arc. The pious peasant Joan of Arc (circa 1412—1431) led the French army to victory during the Hundred Years' War and was executed for heresy in 1431. Canonized as a saint in 1920, over the centuries Joan has evolved into a powerful symbol of women's courage.  
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	2:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 25 | 
 
	
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	 Women’s History Month Pop Up Exhibition: Imagining Joan of Arc  Syracuse University Art Museum  
		Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center 
	 
	
	Price: Free  Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Discover art and archival materials created by writers and artists in Europe and North America from the 18th century to today that re-imagine Joan of Arc. The pious peasant Joan of Arc (circa 1412—1431) led the French army to victory during the Hundred Years' War and was executed for heresy in 1431. Canonized as a saint in 1920, over the centuries Joan has evolved into a powerful symbol of women's courage.  
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	7:45 PM - 11:00 PM, March 25 | 
 
	
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	 Joiri Minaya and Miryam Charles: Lines of Flight  Urban Video Project   
	
	Everson Museum of Art Plaza 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Light Work's Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhibition Lines of Flight featuring short films by multimedia artist Joiri Minaya and filmmaker Miryam Charles exploring the tangled trajectories of displacement, immigration, invasion, exploration and escape. The exhibition will run as an architectural projection on the Everson Museum facade. Screening begins at dusk. Labadee, by Joiri Minaya, is a short video documenting parts of a Royal Caribbean cruise trip in Labadee, Haiti, and the dynamics that unfold in this privately-managed space, which is fenced off and leased to Royal Caribbean cruises until 2050. The subtitles in the video begin with text from the diary of Christopher Columbus when they first saw land, moving into a contemporary recount of the trip we're seeing. It meditates on the exploitation, self-exploitation, performance, and access control created by the system of tourism in the Caribbean, and, in linking it to Columbus' Invasion through the first sentences in the subtitles, it traces the lineage of these contemporary spaces to colonization. (2017, 7:06 minutes) In Fly, Fly Sadness, by Miryam Charles, a nuclear explosion mysteriously transforms the voices of all the inhabitants of an island. A journalist travels to the island to learn more and finds herself transformed. (2015, 5:23 minutes)  
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	Music | 
 
		
	 
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	7:00 PM, March 25 | 
 
	
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	 *SOLD OUT* Sirsy  The 443 Social Club   
	
	The 443 Social Club 
		443 Burnet Ave.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Sirsy is fronted by powerhouse vocalist Melanie (Mel) Krahmer, who is described as "one of the most powerful & flexible voices you'll ever hear." (-Times Union). Aftertaste Magazine said, "Bursting and belting out emotion and substance, she can be the queen of 'in the groove' rocking or be simple and delicate." Still, there is more to Mel than her soul-inspired vocals: she also plays a full drum kit while standing up (she's been featured in Modern Drummer Magazine and is officially endorsed by Paiste Cymbals and Vater Percussion). At their live shows, Mel also plays bass parts with a drum stick (on a keyboard mounted on her drums). She even throws in an occasional flute solo, too. Guitarist Rich Libutti plays a well-loved and road-worn Rickenbacker through a pedalboard full of vintage effects. "The guitar player is flawless and raw. Clean enough to be enjoyed, and just edgy enough to make you grin." (-SXSW Music Blog, Austin TX). Live, Rich also plays bass on a keyboard with his feet.  
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	Theater | 
 
		
	 
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	8:00 PM, March 25 | 
 
	
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	 Experience Hendrix  Landmark Theatre   
	
	Landmark Theatre 
		362 S. Salina St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Celebrate the music and legacy of Jimi Hendrix with the All-Star concert event of the year featuring: Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Marcus King, Eric Johnson, Devon Allman, Noah Hunt, Ally Venable, Chuck Campbell & Calvin Cooke of the Slide Brothers, Mato Nanji, Dylan Triplett, Henri Brown, Chris Layton, Kevin McCormick.
   
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	Wednesday, March 26, 2025
	
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	Art | 
 
		
	 
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	9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 Two Artists: Two Visions: Works by MaryBeth Sorber and Peter Valenti  Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery   
	
	Price: Free  Baltimore Woods Nature Center 
		4007 Bishop Hill Rd.,
		Marcellus
  
	 
	An exhibit comprised of the work of two Central New York artists who look to nature for inspiration and yet interpret it in very different ways.  
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	9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 Under Open Sky  Edgewood Gallery   
	
	Edgewood Gallery 
		216 Tecumseh Rd.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Nikolay Mikushkin: recent plein air paintings Peter Valenti: nature based series of ceramics Bead Society of CNY: bead works in nature themes  
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 Weird Barrio / Por mi barrio  La Casita Cultural Center   
	
	La Casita Cultural Center 
		109 Otisco St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Exhibit features the art of Manuel Matías.  
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	10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 Peppy Downer  Light Work Gallery   
	
	Light Work Gallery 
		316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Peppy Downer" draws exclusively from the Light Work Collection and pulls together works whose makers might have never imagined exhibiting together. It is a portrait through difference as much as similarity, but its music is a mixtape of our time, laid down by our importantly diverse and complicated cohort. Power to the people. The exhibit contains a selection of photographs by Vikky Alexander, Mike Barth, Robert Benjamin, Phil Block, David Broda, John Collier, Larry Cook, Peter De Lory, Lucinda Devlin, Lydia Ann Douglas, Alex Harsley, Biff Henrich, Jeffrey Hoone, Saiman Li, Pipo Nguyen-duy, Diane Neumaier, Ernesto Pujol, Jon Reis, Patricia Reynolds, Coreen Simpson, Aaron Siskind, Lenard Smith, Miso Suchy, and James Welling.  
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	10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 Nabil Harb: Mater si, magistra no  Light Work Gallery   
	
	Light Work Gallery 
		316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Nabil Harb's project "Mater si, magistra no" (a macaronic phrase that translates as "Mother yes, teacher no") presents photographs that describe and depict moments and scenes within his hometown of Lakeland in Polk County, FL. This Central Florida location is both the backdrop and main character of Harb's visual narrative: a story that emits surreal qualities which twist ideas of the region through photography's formal language into a conceptual idea — an idea of how to describe the atmosphere of a place without words. Harb writes, "The landscape is the perfect reflection of our society, our ultimate index — it holds our histories, our secrets, our failures, and our hopes for the future."  
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	10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 Fruits of Their Labor: Work and Leisure at the Syracuse University Art Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Fruits of Their Labor" seeks to reexamine depictions of labor and leisure in the Syracuse University Art Museum's permanent collection. The COVID-19 pandemic exposed systemic problems in the workplace, mirroring the societal shifts in the labor industry during the Great Depression. Through thematic groupings such as those that depict women's work in and out of the home or behind the scenes views into the entertainment industry, this exhibition challenges conventional depictions of labor.  
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	10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 Surrealism and Photography: "Where I Dream, It is Awake"  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	This exhibition examines the role of Surrealism in modern photography, tracking the movement's love of chance, fragmentation, and uncanny dream imagery from its origins in Paris to Britain, Mexico, and Japan over the course of the 20th century.  Curated by graduate students in the Department of Art & Music Histories under the direction of Sam Johnson (associate professor and director of graduate studies in Art History), the exhibition features photographs from collections of the SU Art Museum alongside Surrealist books and periodicals from the Special Collections Research Center of the Syracuse University Libraries. 
   
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	10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 Faculty Fellows Curate  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	In Summer 2022, the Syracuse University Art Museum launched a Faculty Fellows program to support innovative curriculum development, experiential learning, and the fuller integration of the museum's collection into academic life at the University. The program focuses on object-based teaching and research, which is active and student-centered. This exhibition features artworks that the 2024-2025 Faculty Fellows, Lyndsay Gratch (Communication and Rhetorical Studies) and Elizabeth Wimer (Management), will teach with during the Spring 2025 semester.  
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	10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 The Earth Laughs in Flowers: Plants in the Syracuse University Art Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Drawing upon Ralph Waldo Emerson's famous line "the earth laughs in flowers" from his poem, "Hamatreya" (1846), this exhibition explores images of plants, as well as plant-based objects, in the collections of the Syracuse University Art Museum. This exhibition is co-curated by senior art history majors under the supervision of Professor Romita Ray (Art and Music Histories), in collaboration with Melissa Yuen, PhD, and Kate Holohan, PhD. It is the outcome of the annual art history Senior Seminar taught in the College of Arts and Sciences.  
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	10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum" brings together artwork by the acclaimed New York City-based Dominican artist and objects from the collection to examine how Minaya critiques Western ideas of tropicality, which are rooted in otherness and exoticism. Through these comparisons, the exhibition explores how nature, landscape, culture, and race have been historically constructed and deployed as tropes in visual culture.  
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	11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 Simply Simon: Pottery from the Collection of Michael Simon and Susan Roberts  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Over the course of five decades, Georgia-based potter Michael Simon's name became synonymous with American functional pottery. Simon was born in Minnesota and studied with legendary pottery Warren MacKenzie. After building his own kiln near Athens, Georgia in 1980, Simon began setting one exemplary piece from each kiln firing aside for posterity. These "pick of the kiln" pieces are a testimony to Simon's enduring influence on the field of ceramics. In 2018, Simon donated one of his favorite "pick of the kiln" vases to the Everson's permanent collection. With the vase came a donation of more than 30 functional pots by other artists that Simon and his wife Susan Roberts had collected over the years. Simon passed away in August of 2021, but left an immense legacy through his work, which now graces the collections of more than 20 museums across the United States. The works exhibited in "Simply Simon" reflect the qualities that Simon valued as a potter, while also illuminating his enduring relationships with his friends and colleagues.  
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	11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 It Came from the '70s  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	The 1970s were a time of radical change in the field of ceramics. Artists began to grasp clay's potential when it came to Conceptual Art, Minimalism, Land Art, Performance Art, and other movements of the era. In the wake of the 1960s, artists felt free to use humor for self-expression, shock value, or to serve as a "spoonful of sugar" to deliver a message. While the 1970s are usually seen as a time of wild individual expression, the decade also saw the development of a network of galleries and collectors that would ultimately professionalize the field and develop grudging respect from the fine art world. "It Came From the '70s" features groovy works from the Everson collection that tell these stories.
   
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	11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 CNY Artist Initiative: Courtney Rile: Moments in Between  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Courtney Rile was the mother of a toddler when the emergence of COVID-19 triggered mandatory stay-at-home orders in March of 2020. The change, confusion, and uncertainty of that time mirrored the feelings she experienced during her "fourth trimester" — the 12 weeks in a mother and baby's life after the baby is born. Rile turned to photography to help process both motherhood and grief, and to cope with the changes in the world around her. The resulting portraits of friends with young children, as well as portraits of her daughter and other images captured in Rile's home, made during lockdown and its immediate aftermath, explore the passage of time and the duality of inward and outward looking.  
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	11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 At Water's Edge: Reflections on 200 Years of the Erie Canal  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	2025 marks the 200th anniversary of the Erie Canal's completion. The Canal transformed New York State in the 19th century. Today, 80% of the upstate population lives within 25 miles of the waterway, yet in much of the public's imagination, the canal remains confined to the past. The 2024 Erie Canal Artists-in-Residence — Alon Koppel, Judit German-Heins, and Clara Riedlinger — each embarked on a year-long photographic exploration contemplating the Canal's current condition, activating the landscape, and considering the waterway's lasting impacts on present-day American culture. "At Water's Edge: Reflections on 200 Years of the Erie Canal" highlights the culmination of these artists' projects. "At Water's Edge" is organized by the Erie Canal Museum in Syracuse. The Artist-in-Residence program was created through a partnership between the New York State Canal Corporation and the Erie Canal Museum.
   
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	11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 Off the Rack  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Off the Rack" is the happy by-product of a major renovation of the Everson's on-site art storage. As hundreds of paintings and framed works are displaced from their racks while renovations take place, the public has an unprecedented opportunity to view objects that have been in deep storage for years, never-before-seen recent acquisitions, and some perennial favorites — all hung together salon-style in our exhibition galleries. This smorgasbord of paintings and works on paper showcases the breadth and depth of the Museum's collections and provides a glimpse into the world of collections management and care.
   
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	11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 Making American Artists: Stories from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1776-1976  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Making American Artists: Stories from the Pennsylvania Academy of  the Fine Arts, 1776-1976" presents more than 70 of the most acclaimed and recognizable works of American art, which have played a demonstrable role in shaping conversations about the nation's history and identity. The exhibition explores new narratives of the history of American art, embracing stories about women artists, LGBTQ+ artists, and artists of color within a visual and thematic structure that also features iconic works traditionally associated with the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. "Making American Artists" presents PAFA's formidable collection of well-known historic works alongside pieces by traditionally underrepresented artists to pose questions about what it meant to be an American artist from when the institution was founded to the late 20th century. "Making American Artists" features works from PAFA's esteemed collection that helped define new chapters in the history of American art, including works by Mary Cassatt, Barkley L. Hendricks, Edward Hopper, Alice Neel, Georgia O'Keeffe, Gilbert Stuart, Henry O. Tanner, and Andrew Wyeth. The exhibition also features icons of PAFA's history and collection, such as Stuart's "George Washington" (Lansdowne Portrait) (1796) and Charles Wilson Peale's "The Artist in His Museum" (1822).  
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	11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 Scholastic Art Awards of Central New York 2025  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Founded in 1923, the Scholastic Art Awards are the nation's longest-running and most prestigious educational initiative supporting student achievement in the arts. Every year, students across the country in grades 7-12 are invited to enter original works of art in regional competitions. This year, thousands of students representing 14 counties in Central New York submitted 4,555 works of art, which were then judged by professional artists and educators. The judges awarded first place (Gold Key), second place (Silver Key), and honorable mentions to nearly 1,300 works in 17 different categories. Gold Key winners move on to compete at the national level, and a small selection of the Silver Key winners and honorable mentions are displayed at the Everson.
   
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	7:45 PM - 11:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 Joiri Minaya and Miryam Charles: Lines of Flight  Urban Video Project   
	
	Everson Museum of Art Plaza 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Light Work's Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhibition Lines of Flight featuring short films by multimedia artist Joiri Minaya and filmmaker Miryam Charles exploring the tangled trajectories of displacement, immigration, invasion, exploration and escape. The exhibition will run as an architectural projection on the Everson Museum facade. Screening begins at dusk. Labadee, by Joiri Minaya, is a short video documenting parts of a Royal Caribbean cruise trip in Labadee, Haiti, and the dynamics that unfold in this privately-managed space, which is fenced off and leased to Royal Caribbean cruises until 2050. The subtitles in the video begin with text from the diary of Christopher Columbus when they first saw land, moving into a contemporary recount of the trip we're seeing. It meditates on the exploitation, self-exploitation, performance, and access control created by the system of tourism in the Caribbean, and, in linking it to Columbus' Invasion through the first sentences in the subtitles, it traces the lineage of these contemporary spaces to colonization. (2017, 7:06 minutes) In Fly, Fly Sadness, by Miryam Charles, a nuclear explosion mysteriously transforms the voices of all the inhabitants of an island. A journalist travels to the island to learn more and finds herself transformed. (2015, 5:23 minutes)  
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	Music | 
 
		
	 
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	6:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 Snaps & Taps Open Mic Night  Community Folk Art Center   
	
	Price: Free  Community Folk Art Center 
		805 E. Genesee St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Connect with your spoken word and performing arts community! This month's open mic is hosted by the talented Cheeki Williams, featuring music by DJ Shy Guy.  
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	7:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 *SOLD OUT* The Barndogs  The 443 Social Club   
	
	The 443 Social Club 
		443 Burnet Ave.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	The Barndogs are one of CNY's favorite classic rock bands. Andy Comstock, Mark Westers, John Kapusniak and Pete Szymanski are going to rock the 443, so put your party pants on and join us for a fun night of all your favorites.  
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	8:00 PM, March 26 | 
 
	
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	 Setnor Faculty Recital Series: Scott Cuellar, piano  Syracuse University Setnor School of Music  Featuring Ilya Shterenberg, clarinet 
	
	Price: Free  Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	
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	Thursday, March 27, 2025
	
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	Art | 
 
		
	 
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	9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Two Artists: Two Visions: Works by MaryBeth Sorber and Peter Valenti  Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery   
	
	Price: Free  Baltimore Woods Nature Center 
		4007 Bishop Hill Rd.,
		Marcellus
  
	 
	An exhibit comprised of the work of two Central New York artists who look to nature for inspiration and yet interpret it in very different ways.  
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	9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Under Open Sky  Edgewood Gallery   
	
	Edgewood Gallery 
		216 Tecumseh Rd.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Nikolay Mikushkin: recent plein air paintings Peter Valenti: nature based series of ceramics Bead Society of CNY: bead works in nature themes  
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Weird Barrio / Por mi barrio  La Casita Cultural Center   
	
	La Casita Cultural Center 
		109 Otisco St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Exhibit features the art of Manuel Matías.  
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	10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Peppy Downer  Light Work Gallery   
	
	Light Work Gallery 
		316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Peppy Downer" draws exclusively from the Light Work Collection and pulls together works whose makers might have never imagined exhibiting together. It is a portrait through difference as much as similarity, but its music is a mixtape of our time, laid down by our importantly diverse and complicated cohort. Power to the people. The exhibit contains a selection of photographs by Vikky Alexander, Mike Barth, Robert Benjamin, Phil Block, David Broda, John Collier, Larry Cook, Peter De Lory, Lucinda Devlin, Lydia Ann Douglas, Alex Harsley, Biff Henrich, Jeffrey Hoone, Saiman Li, Pipo Nguyen-duy, Diane Neumaier, Ernesto Pujol, Jon Reis, Patricia Reynolds, Coreen Simpson, Aaron Siskind, Lenard Smith, Miso Suchy, and James Welling.  
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	10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Nabil Harb: Mater si, magistra no  Light Work Gallery   
	
	Light Work Gallery 
		316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Nabil Harb's project "Mater si, magistra no" (a macaronic phrase that translates as "Mother yes, teacher no") presents photographs that describe and depict moments and scenes within his hometown of Lakeland in Polk County, FL. This Central Florida location is both the backdrop and main character of Harb's visual narrative: a story that emits surreal qualities which twist ideas of the region through photography's formal language into a conceptual idea — an idea of how to describe the atmosphere of a place without words. Harb writes, "The landscape is the perfect reflection of our society, our ultimate index — it holds our histories, our secrets, our failures, and our hopes for the future."  
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	10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Fruits of Their Labor: Work and Leisure at the Syracuse University Art Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Fruits of Their Labor" seeks to reexamine depictions of labor and leisure in the Syracuse University Art Museum's permanent collection. The COVID-19 pandemic exposed systemic problems in the workplace, mirroring the societal shifts in the labor industry during the Great Depression. Through thematic groupings such as those that depict women's work in and out of the home or behind the scenes views into the entertainment industry, this exhibition challenges conventional depictions of labor.  
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	10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum" brings together artwork by the acclaimed New York City-based Dominican artist and objects from the collection to examine how Minaya critiques Western ideas of tropicality, which are rooted in otherness and exoticism. Through these comparisons, the exhibition explores how nature, landscape, culture, and race have been historically constructed and deployed as tropes in visual culture.  
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	10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 The Earth Laughs in Flowers: Plants in the Syracuse University Art Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Drawing upon Ralph Waldo Emerson's famous line "the earth laughs in flowers" from his poem, "Hamatreya" (1846), this exhibition explores images of plants, as well as plant-based objects, in the collections of the Syracuse University Art Museum. This exhibition is co-curated by senior art history majors under the supervision of Professor Romita Ray (Art and Music Histories), in collaboration with Melissa Yuen, PhD, and Kate Holohan, PhD. It is the outcome of the annual art history Senior Seminar taught in the College of Arts and Sciences.  
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	10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Faculty Fellows Curate  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	In Summer 2022, the Syracuse University Art Museum launched a Faculty Fellows program to support innovative curriculum development, experiential learning, and the fuller integration of the museum's collection into academic life at the University. The program focuses on object-based teaching and research, which is active and student-centered. This exhibition features artworks that the 2024-2025 Faculty Fellows, Lyndsay Gratch (Communication and Rhetorical Studies) and Elizabeth Wimer (Management), will teach with during the Spring 2025 semester.  
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	10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Surrealism and Photography: "Where I Dream, It is Awake"  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	This exhibition examines the role of Surrealism in modern photography, tracking the movement's love of chance, fragmentation, and uncanny dream imagery from its origins in Paris to Britain, Mexico, and Japan over the course of the 20th century.  Curated by graduate students in the Department of Art & Music Histories under the direction of Sam Johnson (associate professor and director of graduate studies in Art History), the exhibition features photographs from collections of the SU Art Museum alongside Surrealist books and periodicals from the Special Collections Research Center of the Syracuse University Libraries. 
   
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	11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Simply Simon: Pottery from the Collection of Michael Simon and Susan Roberts  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Over the course of five decades, Georgia-based potter Michael Simon's name became synonymous with American functional pottery. Simon was born in Minnesota and studied with legendary pottery Warren MacKenzie. After building his own kiln near Athens, Georgia in 1980, Simon began setting one exemplary piece from each kiln firing aside for posterity. These "pick of the kiln" pieces are a testimony to Simon's enduring influence on the field of ceramics. In 2018, Simon donated one of his favorite "pick of the kiln" vases to the Everson's permanent collection. With the vase came a donation of more than 30 functional pots by other artists that Simon and his wife Susan Roberts had collected over the years. Simon passed away in August of 2021, but left an immense legacy through his work, which now graces the collections of more than 20 museums across the United States. The works exhibited in "Simply Simon" reflect the qualities that Simon valued as a potter, while also illuminating his enduring relationships with his friends and colleagues.  
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	11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 At Water's Edge: Reflections on 200 Years of the Erie Canal  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	2025 marks the 200th anniversary of the Erie Canal's completion. The Canal transformed New York State in the 19th century. Today, 80% of the upstate population lives within 25 miles of the waterway, yet in much of the public's imagination, the canal remains confined to the past. The 2024 Erie Canal Artists-in-Residence — Alon Koppel, Judit German-Heins, and Clara Riedlinger — each embarked on a year-long photographic exploration contemplating the Canal's current condition, activating the landscape, and considering the waterway's lasting impacts on present-day American culture. "At Water's Edge: Reflections on 200 Years of the Erie Canal" highlights the culmination of these artists' projects. "At Water's Edge" is organized by the Erie Canal Museum in Syracuse. The Artist-in-Residence program was created through a partnership between the New York State Canal Corporation and the Erie Canal Museum.
   
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	11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 CNY Artist Initiative: Courtney Rile: Moments in Between  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Courtney Rile was the mother of a toddler when the emergence of COVID-19 triggered mandatory stay-at-home orders in March of 2020. The change, confusion, and uncertainty of that time mirrored the feelings she experienced during her "fourth trimester" — the 12 weeks in a mother and baby's life after the baby is born. Rile turned to photography to help process both motherhood and grief, and to cope with the changes in the world around her. The resulting portraits of friends with young children, as well as portraits of her daughter and other images captured in Rile's home, made during lockdown and its immediate aftermath, explore the passage of time and the duality of inward and outward looking.  
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	11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 It Came from the '70s  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	The 1970s were a time of radical change in the field of ceramics. Artists began to grasp clay's potential when it came to Conceptual Art, Minimalism, Land Art, Performance Art, and other movements of the era. In the wake of the 1960s, artists felt free to use humor for self-expression, shock value, or to serve as a "spoonful of sugar" to deliver a message. While the 1970s are usually seen as a time of wild individual expression, the decade also saw the development of a network of galleries and collectors that would ultimately professionalize the field and develop grudging respect from the fine art world. "It Came From the '70s" features groovy works from the Everson collection that tell these stories.
   
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	11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Off the Rack  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Off the Rack" is the happy by-product of a major renovation of the Everson's on-site art storage. As hundreds of paintings and framed works are displaced from their racks while renovations take place, the public has an unprecedented opportunity to view objects that have been in deep storage for years, never-before-seen recent acquisitions, and some perennial favorites — all hung together salon-style in our exhibition galleries. This smorgasbord of paintings and works on paper showcases the breadth and depth of the Museum's collections and provides a glimpse into the world of collections management and care.
   
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	11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Scholastic Art Awards of Central New York 2025  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Founded in 1923, the Scholastic Art Awards are the nation's longest-running and most prestigious educational initiative supporting student achievement in the arts. Every year, students across the country in grades 7-12 are invited to enter original works of art in regional competitions. This year, thousands of students representing 14 counties in Central New York submitted 4,555 works of art, which were then judged by professional artists and educators. The judges awarded first place (Gold Key), second place (Silver Key), and honorable mentions to nearly 1,300 works in 17 different categories. Gold Key winners move on to compete at the national level, and a small selection of the Silver Key winners and honorable mentions are displayed at the Everson.
   
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	11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Making American Artists: Stories from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1776-1976  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Making American Artists: Stories from the Pennsylvania Academy of  the Fine Arts, 1776-1976" presents more than 70 of the most acclaimed and recognizable works of American art, which have played a demonstrable role in shaping conversations about the nation's history and identity. The exhibition explores new narratives of the history of American art, embracing stories about women artists, LGBTQ+ artists, and artists of color within a visual and thematic structure that also features iconic works traditionally associated with the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. "Making American Artists" presents PAFA's formidable collection of well-known historic works alongside pieces by traditionally underrepresented artists to pose questions about what it meant to be an American artist from when the institution was founded to the late 20th century. "Making American Artists" features works from PAFA's esteemed collection that helped define new chapters in the history of American art, including works by Mary Cassatt, Barkley L. Hendricks, Edward Hopper, Alice Neel, Georgia O'Keeffe, Gilbert Stuart, Henry O. Tanner, and Andrew Wyeth. The exhibition also features icons of PAFA's history and collection, such as Stuart's "George Washington" (Lansdowne Portrait) (1796) and Charles Wilson Peale's "The Artist in His Museum" (1822).  
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	12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Manuel Hernandez: The Singing Wall  Brewer Harris Projects   
	
	138 Bank Alley (University Building) 
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Gorgeously composed and filled with vibrant color, the mural paintings of Manuel Hernandez celebrate  Indigenous American roots and address a range of subjects, from migration, to contemporary stories of Indigenous people in Latin America, to gender and family. Combining western and Indigenous histories and myths, Hernandez Sanchez challenges established narratives and visual styles, drawing on a tradition dating back to the ancient frescos found in the temples of Teotihuacán, Mexico.  
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	7:45 PM - 11:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Joiri Minaya and Miryam Charles: Lines of Flight  Urban Video Project   
	
	Everson Museum of Art Plaza 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Light Work's Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhibition Lines of Flight featuring short films by multimedia artist Joiri Minaya and filmmaker Miryam Charles exploring the tangled trajectories of displacement, immigration, invasion, exploration and escape. The exhibition will run as an architectural projection on the Everson Museum facade. Screening begins at dusk. Labadee, by Joiri Minaya, is a short video documenting parts of a Royal Caribbean cruise trip in Labadee, Haiti, and the dynamics that unfold in this privately-managed space, which is fenced off and leased to Royal Caribbean cruises until 2050. The subtitles in the video begin with text from the diary of Christopher Columbus when they first saw land, moving into a contemporary recount of the trip we're seeing. It meditates on the exploitation, self-exploitation, performance, and access control created by the system of tourism in the Caribbean, and, in linking it to Columbus' Invasion through the first sentences in the subtitles, it traces the lineage of these contemporary spaces to colonization. (2017, 7:06 minutes) In Fly, Fly Sadness, by Miryam Charles, a nuclear explosion mysteriously transforms the voices of all the inhabitants of an island. A journalist travels to the island to learn more and finds herself transformed. (2015, 5:23 minutes)  
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	Comedy | 
 
		
	 
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	7:30 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Nate Jackson: Super Funny World Tour  The Oncenter   
	
	Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center 
		411 Montgomery St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Nate Jackson has exploded as one of the fastest growing comedians through his viral content and remarkable engagement on TikTok, where he has amassed over 3 million followers and more than 500 million views globally. Jackson is a comedian, actor, writer, and digital creator who sells out comedy clubs and theatres across America. Nate most recently booked a role in the upcoming feature "Good Fortune" directed by Aziz Ansari and was recurring on the hit NBC series "Young Rock." Nate has appeared on "Spirited" (Apple), "Curb Your Enthusiasm" (HBO),  "Nick Cannon Presents Wild'N Out" (MTV), "All Def Comedy" (HBO), "Kevin Hart's Hart of the City" (Comedy Central), "Off The Chain" (Bounce TV), "Comic View" (BET), and "Laff Mobb's Laff Tracks" (TruTV).  
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	Lecture | 
 
		
	 
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	5:30 PM - 6:30 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Art Break: The Earth Laughs in Flowers  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Price: Free  Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Art History seniors talk about "The Earth Laughs in Flowers," an exhibition they co-curated with professor Romita Ray.
   
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	Music | 
 
		
	 
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	7:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Loren & LJ Barrigar  The 443 Social Club   
	
	The 443 Social Club 
		443 Burnet Ave.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Loren Barrigar started playing guitar when he was only four years old, and by the time he was six, played the Chet Atkins hit "Yackety Axe" in front of thousands of country music fans at the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville. He went on to study with Jimmy Atkins (Chet's brother) which led to a touring career with his family band from Nashville to Las Vegas. Since settling down in Central New York, he has been in constant demand as a studio musician. These days, his talented son LJ joins him on stage, following in the family business.  
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	Theater | 
 
		
	 
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	7:00 PM, March 27 | 
 
	
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	 Dead Silent: Florence of Moravia  Acme Mystery Company   
	
	Spaghetti Warehouse 
		689 N. Clinton St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	It's 1927 and local radio personality Nevelle Haspin invites you to the broadcast of a gala reception for silent film diva Lorraine Bowes who is making a film portraying hometown hero and notorious WWI spy Florence Goode a.k.a. Hata Mahma. Joining Lorraine will be her leading man, if he's sober, Roland DeHay, and Lorraine's agent, Harold "Hawk" Toohey. Arriving without an invitation is nationally syndicated gossip columnist Helena Handbasquet. Be careful. These celebrities autograph with poisoned pens.  
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	Friday, March 28, 2025
	
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	Art | 
 
		
	 
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	9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Two Artists: Two Visions: Works by MaryBeth Sorber and Peter Valenti  Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery   
	
	Price: Free  Baltimore Woods Nature Center 
		4007 Bishop Hill Rd.,
		Marcellus
  
	 
	An exhibit comprised of the work of two Central New York artists who look to nature for inspiration and yet interpret it in very different ways.  
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	9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Under Open Sky  Edgewood Gallery   
	
	Edgewood Gallery 
		216 Tecumseh Rd.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Nikolay Mikushkin: recent plein air paintings Peter Valenti: nature based series of ceramics Bead Society of CNY: bead works in nature themes  
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Weird Barrio / Por mi barrio  La Casita Cultural Center   
	
	La Casita Cultural Center 
		109 Otisco St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Exhibit features the art of Manuel Matías.  
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Peppy Downer  Light Work Gallery   
	
	Light Work Gallery 
		316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Peppy Downer" draws exclusively from the Light Work Collection and pulls together works whose makers might have never imagined exhibiting together. It is a portrait through difference as much as similarity, but its music is a mixtape of our time, laid down by our importantly diverse and complicated cohort. Power to the people. The exhibit contains a selection of photographs by Vikky Alexander, Mike Barth, Robert Benjamin, Phil Block, David Broda, John Collier, Larry Cook, Peter De Lory, Lucinda Devlin, Lydia Ann Douglas, Alex Harsley, Biff Henrich, Jeffrey Hoone, Saiman Li, Pipo Nguyen-duy, Diane Neumaier, Ernesto Pujol, Jon Reis, Patricia Reynolds, Coreen Simpson, Aaron Siskind, Lenard Smith, Miso Suchy, and James Welling.  
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Nabil Harb: Mater si, magistra no  Light Work Gallery   
	
	Light Work Gallery 
		316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Nabil Harb's project "Mater si, magistra no" (a macaronic phrase that translates as "Mother yes, teacher no") presents photographs that describe and depict moments and scenes within his hometown of Lakeland in Polk County, FL. This Central Florida location is both the backdrop and main character of Harb's visual narrative: a story that emits surreal qualities which twist ideas of the region through photography's formal language into a conceptual idea — an idea of how to describe the atmosphere of a place without words. Harb writes, "The landscape is the perfect reflection of our society, our ultimate index — it holds our histories, our secrets, our failures, and our hopes for the future."  
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	10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Fruits of Their Labor: Work and Leisure at the Syracuse University Art Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Fruits of Their Labor" seeks to reexamine depictions of labor and leisure in the Syracuse University Art Museum's permanent collection. The COVID-19 pandemic exposed systemic problems in the workplace, mirroring the societal shifts in the labor industry during the Great Depression. Through thematic groupings such as those that depict women's work in and out of the home or behind the scenes views into the entertainment industry, this exhibition challenges conventional depictions of labor.  
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	10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Surrealism and Photography: "Where I Dream, It is Awake"  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	This exhibition examines the role of Surrealism in modern photography, tracking the movement's love of chance, fragmentation, and uncanny dream imagery from its origins in Paris to Britain, Mexico, and Japan over the course of the 20th century.  Curated by graduate students in the Department of Art & Music Histories under the direction of Sam Johnson (associate professor and director of graduate studies in Art History), the exhibition features photographs from collections of the SU Art Museum alongside Surrealist books and periodicals from the Special Collections Research Center of the Syracuse University Libraries. 
   
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	10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Faculty Fellows Curate  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	In Summer 2022, the Syracuse University Art Museum launched a Faculty Fellows program to support innovative curriculum development, experiential learning, and the fuller integration of the museum's collection into academic life at the University. The program focuses on object-based teaching and research, which is active and student-centered. This exhibition features artworks that the 2024-2025 Faculty Fellows, Lyndsay Gratch (Communication and Rhetorical Studies) and Elizabeth Wimer (Management), will teach with during the Spring 2025 semester.  
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	10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 The Earth Laughs in Flowers: Plants in the Syracuse University Art Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Drawing upon Ralph Waldo Emerson's famous line "the earth laughs in flowers" from his poem, "Hamatreya" (1846), this exhibition explores images of plants, as well as plant-based objects, in the collections of the Syracuse University Art Museum. This exhibition is co-curated by senior art history majors under the supervision of Professor Romita Ray (Art and Music Histories), in collaboration with Melissa Yuen, PhD, and Kate Holohan, PhD. It is the outcome of the annual art history Senior Seminar taught in the College of Arts and Sciences.  
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	10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum" brings together artwork by the acclaimed New York City-based Dominican artist and objects from the collection to examine how Minaya critiques Western ideas of tropicality, which are rooted in otherness and exoticism. Through these comparisons, the exhibition explores how nature, landscape, culture, and race have been historically constructed and deployed as tropes in visual culture.  
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	11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Simply Simon: Pottery from the Collection of Michael Simon and Susan Roberts  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Over the course of five decades, Georgia-based potter Michael Simon's name became synonymous with American functional pottery. Simon was born in Minnesota and studied with legendary pottery Warren MacKenzie. After building his own kiln near Athens, Georgia in 1980, Simon began setting one exemplary piece from each kiln firing aside for posterity. These "pick of the kiln" pieces are a testimony to Simon's enduring influence on the field of ceramics. In 2018, Simon donated one of his favorite "pick of the kiln" vases to the Everson's permanent collection. With the vase came a donation of more than 30 functional pots by other artists that Simon and his wife Susan Roberts had collected over the years. Simon passed away in August of 2021, but left an immense legacy through his work, which now graces the collections of more than 20 museums across the United States. The works exhibited in "Simply Simon" reflect the qualities that Simon valued as a potter, while also illuminating his enduring relationships with his friends and colleagues.  
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	11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 It Came from the '70s  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	The 1970s were a time of radical change in the field of ceramics. Artists began to grasp clay's potential when it came to Conceptual Art, Minimalism, Land Art, Performance Art, and other movements of the era. In the wake of the 1960s, artists felt free to use humor for self-expression, shock value, or to serve as a "spoonful of sugar" to deliver a message. While the 1970s are usually seen as a time of wild individual expression, the decade also saw the development of a network of galleries and collectors that would ultimately professionalize the field and develop grudging respect from the fine art world. "It Came From the '70s" features groovy works from the Everson collection that tell these stories.
   
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	11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 CNY Artist Initiative: Courtney Rile: Moments in Between  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Courtney Rile was the mother of a toddler when the emergence of COVID-19 triggered mandatory stay-at-home orders in March of 2020. The change, confusion, and uncertainty of that time mirrored the feelings she experienced during her "fourth trimester" — the 12 weeks in a mother and baby's life after the baby is born. Rile turned to photography to help process both motherhood and grief, and to cope with the changes in the world around her. The resulting portraits of friends with young children, as well as portraits of her daughter and other images captured in Rile's home, made during lockdown and its immediate aftermath, explore the passage of time and the duality of inward and outward looking.  
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	11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 At Water's Edge: Reflections on 200 Years of the Erie Canal  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	2025 marks the 200th anniversary of the Erie Canal's completion. The Canal transformed New York State in the 19th century. Today, 80% of the upstate population lives within 25 miles of the waterway, yet in much of the public's imagination, the canal remains confined to the past. The 2024 Erie Canal Artists-in-Residence — Alon Koppel, Judit German-Heins, and Clara Riedlinger — each embarked on a year-long photographic exploration contemplating the Canal's current condition, activating the landscape, and considering the waterway's lasting impacts on present-day American culture. "At Water's Edge: Reflections on 200 Years of the Erie Canal" highlights the culmination of these artists' projects. "At Water's Edge" is organized by the Erie Canal Museum in Syracuse. The Artist-in-Residence program was created through a partnership between the New York State Canal Corporation and the Erie Canal Museum.
   
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	11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Off the Rack  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Off the Rack" is the happy by-product of a major renovation of the Everson's on-site art storage. As hundreds of paintings and framed works are displaced from their racks while renovations take place, the public has an unprecedented opportunity to view objects that have been in deep storage for years, never-before-seen recent acquisitions, and some perennial favorites — all hung together salon-style in our exhibition galleries. This smorgasbord of paintings and works on paper showcases the breadth and depth of the Museum's collections and provides a glimpse into the world of collections management and care.
   
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	11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Making American Artists: Stories from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1776-1976  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Making American Artists: Stories from the Pennsylvania Academy of  the Fine Arts, 1776-1976" presents more than 70 of the most acclaimed and recognizable works of American art, which have played a demonstrable role in shaping conversations about the nation's history and identity. The exhibition explores new narratives of the history of American art, embracing stories about women artists, LGBTQ+ artists, and artists of color within a visual and thematic structure that also features iconic works traditionally associated with the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. "Making American Artists" presents PAFA's formidable collection of well-known historic works alongside pieces by traditionally underrepresented artists to pose questions about what it meant to be an American artist from when the institution was founded to the late 20th century. "Making American Artists" features works from PAFA's esteemed collection that helped define new chapters in the history of American art, including works by Mary Cassatt, Barkley L. Hendricks, Edward Hopper, Alice Neel, Georgia O'Keeffe, Gilbert Stuart, Henry O. Tanner, and Andrew Wyeth. The exhibition also features icons of PAFA's history and collection, such as Stuart's "George Washington" (Lansdowne Portrait) (1796) and Charles Wilson Peale's "The Artist in His Museum" (1822).  
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	11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Scholastic Art Awards of Central New York 2025  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Founded in 1923, the Scholastic Art Awards are the nation's longest-running and most prestigious educational initiative supporting student achievement in the arts. Every year, students across the country in grades 7-12 are invited to enter original works of art in regional competitions. This year, thousands of students representing 14 counties in Central New York submitted 4,555 works of art, which were then judged by professional artists and educators. The judges awarded first place (Gold Key), second place (Silver Key), and honorable mentions to nearly 1,300 works in 17 different categories. Gold Key winners move on to compete at the national level, and a small selection of the Silver Key winners and honorable mentions are displayed at the Everson.
   
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	12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Manuel Hernandez: The Singing Wall  Brewer Harris Projects   
	
	138 Bank Alley (University Building) 
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Gorgeously composed and filled with vibrant color, the mural paintings of Manuel Hernandez celebrate  Indigenous American roots and address a range of subjects, from migration, to contemporary stories of Indigenous people in Latin America, to gender and family. Combining western and Indigenous histories and myths, Hernandez Sanchez challenges established narratives and visual styles, drawing on a tradition dating back to the ancient frescos found in the temples of Teotihuacán, Mexico.  
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	6:00 PM - 8:30 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Off the Wall  ArtRage Gallery   
	
	Price: Free  ArtRage Gallery 
		505 Hawley Ave.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	An exhibition and sale of community-donated progressive art that inspires resistance, promotes social awareness, supports social justice, challenges preconceptions, or encourages cultural change, to benefit ArtRage. All pieces will sell for $25.  
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	7:45 PM - 11:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Joiri Minaya and Miryam Charles: Lines of Flight  Urban Video Project   
	
	Everson Museum of Art Plaza 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Light Work's Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhibition Lines of Flight featuring short films by multimedia artist Joiri Minaya and filmmaker Miryam Charles exploring the tangled trajectories of displacement, immigration, invasion, exploration and escape. The exhibition will run as an architectural projection on the Everson Museum facade. Screening begins at dusk. Labadee, by Joiri Minaya, is a short video documenting parts of a Royal Caribbean cruise trip in Labadee, Haiti, and the dynamics that unfold in this privately-managed space, which is fenced off and leased to Royal Caribbean cruises until 2050. The subtitles in the video begin with text from the diary of Christopher Columbus when they first saw land, moving into a contemporary recount of the trip we're seeing. It meditates on the exploitation, self-exploitation, performance, and access control created by the system of tourism in the Caribbean, and, in linking it to Columbus' Invasion through the first sentences in the subtitles, it traces the lineage of these contemporary spaces to colonization. (2017, 7:06 minutes) In Fly, Fly Sadness, by Miryam Charles, a nuclear explosion mysteriously transforms the voices of all the inhabitants of an island. A journalist travels to the island to learn more and finds herself transformed. (2015, 5:23 minutes)  
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	Poetry/Reading | 
 
		
	 
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	7:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Student and Member Open Mic  Downtown Writer's Center   
	
	Price: Free  YMCA Downtown 
		340 Montgomery St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Join us at our Winter open mic night, and strut your stuff... or just listen in! To be added to the list of readers, email Tim Carter. Please plan to read 1-2 pages of poetry, or a bit of prose that you can read in approximately two minutes.  
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	Theater | 
 
		
	 
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	7:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Beyond Therapy  CNY Playhouse  Jim Sharples, director   
	
	Atonement Lutheran Church 
		116 W. Glen Ave.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Christopher Durang's delightful off-Broadway hit concerns two modern, neurotic urbanites searching for love and sanity – with the questionable help of their offbeat therapists. Bruce and Prudence are deeply into therapy. Prudence's macho therapist is urging her to be more assertive, while Bruce's wacky female therapist wants him to meet women by placing a personal ad. She does not fully comprehend that Bruce has a male lover who is not pleased by Bruce's desire to date a woman. Bruce doesn't know how to handle poor, nervous Prudence, and Prudence doesn't know what to make of her unpredictable new boyfriend.  
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	7:30 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying  Covey Theatre Company   
	
	Hosmer Auditorium, Everson Museum 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Big business means big laughs in this delightfully clever lampoon of life on the corporate ladder. A tune-filled comic gem that took Broadway by storm, winning both the Tony Award for Best Musical and a Pulitzer Prize, How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying boasts an exhilarating score by Frank Loesser, including "I Believe in You," "Brotherhood of Man," and "The Company Way." A satire of big business and all it holds sacred, How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying follows the rise of J. Pierrepont Finch, who uses a little handbook called How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying to climb the corporate ladder from lowly window washer to high-powered executive, tackling such familiar but potent dangers as the aggressively compliant "company man," the office party, backstabbing coworkers, caffeine addiction, and, of course, true love.  
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	7:30 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Ken Ludwig's Shakespeare in Hollywood  Syracuse Shakespeare-in-the-Park  Dan Stevens, director   
	
	Jazz Central 
		441 E. Washington St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	It's 1934, and Shakespeare's most famous fairies, Oberon and Puck, have magically materialized on the Warner Bros. Hollywood set of Max Reinhardt's A Midsummer Night's Dream. Instantly smitten by the glitz and glamour of show biz, the two are ushered onto the silver screen to play (who else?) themselves. With a little help from a feisty flower, blonde bombshells, movie moguls, and arrogant "asses" are tossed into loopy love triangles, with raucous results. The mischievous magic of moviedom sparkles in this hilarious comic romp.  
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	8:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 American Hero  LeMoyne College  Alisha Espinosa, director   
	
	Price: $20 regular, $15 seniors, $10 LeMoyne faculty and staff, $5 students  Coyne Center for the Performing Arts 
		LeMoyne College,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	At a toasted subs franchise in the local mall, three up-and-coming "sandwich artists" — a teenager, a single mom and a downsized refugee from corporate banking — are perfecting the mustard-to-cheese ratio according to the company manual. But when their shot at the American dream is interrupted by a series of strange events, they become unlikely allies in a post-recession world. American Hero is a supersized dark comedy about life, liberty, and the pursuit of sandwiches. By Bess Wohl.  
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	8:00 PM, March 28 | 
 
	
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	 Preview: What the Moon Saw, or I Only Appear to Be Dead  Syracuse University Drama Department  Danyon Davis, director   
	
	Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage 
		820 E. Genesee St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	A fantastical collage of Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tales told through a post-9/11 lens, by Stephanie Fleishman. Traveling to Shanghai to celebrate his 200th birthday, Andersen encounters mermaids, a street urchin, a supermodel, teenagers in love, a cabdriver, firemen, and husks of humans who appear as ghouls in this "kaleidoscopic meditation on how we move through calamity" inspired by Andersen's fragile, timeless tales.  
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	Saturday, March 29, 2025
	
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	Art | 
 
		
	 
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	10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Two Artists: Two Visions: Works by MaryBeth Sorber and Peter Valenti  Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery   
	
	Price: Free  Baltimore Woods Nature Center 
		4007 Bishop Hill Rd.,
		Marcellus
  
	 
	An exhibit comprised of the work of two Central New York artists who look to nature for inspiration and yet interpret it in very different ways.  
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	10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Under Open Sky  Edgewood Gallery   
	
	Edgewood Gallery 
		216 Tecumseh Rd.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Nikolay Mikushkin: recent plein air paintings Peter Valenti: nature based series of ceramics Bead Society of CNY: bead works in nature themes  
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Scholastic Art Awards of Central New York 2025  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Founded in 1923, the Scholastic Art Awards are the nation's longest-running and most prestigious educational initiative supporting student achievement in the arts. Every year, students across the country in grades 7-12 are invited to enter original works of art in regional competitions. This year, thousands of students representing 14 counties in Central New York submitted 4,555 works of art, which were then judged by professional artists and educators. The judges awarded first place (Gold Key), second place (Silver Key), and honorable mentions to nearly 1,300 works in 17 different categories. Gold Key winners move on to compete at the national level, and a small selection of the Silver Key winners and honorable mentions are displayed at the Everson.
   
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Making American Artists: Stories from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1776-1976  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Making American Artists: Stories from the Pennsylvania Academy of  the Fine Arts, 1776-1976" presents more than 70 of the most acclaimed and recognizable works of American art, which have played a demonstrable role in shaping conversations about the nation's history and identity. The exhibition explores new narratives of the history of American art, embracing stories about women artists, LGBTQ+ artists, and artists of color within a visual and thematic structure that also features iconic works traditionally associated with the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. "Making American Artists" presents PAFA's formidable collection of well-known historic works alongside pieces by traditionally underrepresented artists to pose questions about what it meant to be an American artist from when the institution was founded to the late 20th century. "Making American Artists" features works from PAFA's esteemed collection that helped define new chapters in the history of American art, including works by Mary Cassatt, Barkley L. Hendricks, Edward Hopper, Alice Neel, Georgia O'Keeffe, Gilbert Stuart, Henry O. Tanner, and Andrew Wyeth. The exhibition also features icons of PAFA's history and collection, such as Stuart's "George Washington" (Lansdowne Portrait) (1796) and Charles Wilson Peale's "The Artist in His Museum" (1822).  
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Off the Rack  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Off the Rack" is the happy by-product of a major renovation of the Everson's on-site art storage. As hundreds of paintings and framed works are displaced from their racks while renovations take place, the public has an unprecedented opportunity to view objects that have been in deep storage for years, never-before-seen recent acquisitions, and some perennial favorites — all hung together salon-style in our exhibition galleries. This smorgasbord of paintings and works on paper showcases the breadth and depth of the Museum's collections and provides a glimpse into the world of collections management and care.
   
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 It Came from the '70s  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	The 1970s were a time of radical change in the field of ceramics. Artists began to grasp clay's potential when it came to Conceptual Art, Minimalism, Land Art, Performance Art, and other movements of the era. In the wake of the 1960s, artists felt free to use humor for self-expression, shock value, or to serve as a "spoonful of sugar" to deliver a message. While the 1970s are usually seen as a time of wild individual expression, the decade also saw the development of a network of galleries and collectors that would ultimately professionalize the field and develop grudging respect from the fine art world. "It Came From the '70s" features groovy works from the Everson collection that tell these stories.
   
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 At Water's Edge: Reflections on 200 Years of the Erie Canal  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	2025 marks the 200th anniversary of the Erie Canal's completion. The Canal transformed New York State in the 19th century. Today, 80% of the upstate population lives within 25 miles of the waterway, yet in much of the public's imagination, the canal remains confined to the past. The 2024 Erie Canal Artists-in-Residence — Alon Koppel, Judit German-Heins, and Clara Riedlinger — each embarked on a year-long photographic exploration contemplating the Canal's current condition, activating the landscape, and considering the waterway's lasting impacts on present-day American culture. "At Water's Edge: Reflections on 200 Years of the Erie Canal" highlights the culmination of these artists' projects. "At Water's Edge" is organized by the Erie Canal Museum in Syracuse. The Artist-in-Residence program was created through a partnership between the New York State Canal Corporation and the Erie Canal Museum.
   
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 CNY Artist Initiative: Courtney Rile: Moments in Between  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Courtney Rile was the mother of a toddler when the emergence of COVID-19 triggered mandatory stay-at-home orders in March of 2020. The change, confusion, and uncertainty of that time mirrored the feelings she experienced during her "fourth trimester" — the 12 weeks in a mother and baby's life after the baby is born. Rile turned to photography to help process both motherhood and grief, and to cope with the changes in the world around her. The resulting portraits of friends with young children, as well as portraits of her daughter and other images captured in Rile's home, made during lockdown and its immediate aftermath, explore the passage of time and the duality of inward and outward looking.  
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Simply Simon: Pottery from the Collection of Michael Simon and Susan Roberts  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Over the course of five decades, Georgia-based potter Michael Simon's name became synonymous with American functional pottery. Simon was born in Minnesota and studied with legendary pottery Warren MacKenzie. After building his own kiln near Athens, Georgia in 1980, Simon began setting one exemplary piece from each kiln firing aside for posterity. These "pick of the kiln" pieces are a testimony to Simon's enduring influence on the field of ceramics. In 2018, Simon donated one of his favorite "pick of the kiln" vases to the Everson's permanent collection. With the vase came a donation of more than 30 functional pots by other artists that Simon and his wife Susan Roberts had collected over the years. Simon passed away in August of 2021, but left an immense legacy through his work, which now graces the collections of more than 20 museums across the United States. The works exhibited in "Simply Simon" reflect the qualities that Simon valued as a potter, while also illuminating his enduring relationships with his friends and colleagues.  
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	11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Nabil Harb: Mater si, magistra no  Light Work Gallery   
	
	Light Work Gallery 
		316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Nabil Harb's project "Mater si, magistra no" (a macaronic phrase that translates as "Mother yes, teacher no") presents photographs that describe and depict moments and scenes within his hometown of Lakeland in Polk County, FL. This Central Florida location is both the backdrop and main character of Harb's visual narrative: a story that emits surreal qualities which twist ideas of the region through photography's formal language into a conceptual idea — an idea of how to describe the atmosphere of a place without words. Harb writes, "The landscape is the perfect reflection of our society, our ultimate index — it holds our histories, our secrets, our failures, and our hopes for the future."  
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	11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Peppy Downer  Light Work Gallery   
	
	Light Work Gallery 
		316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Peppy Downer" draws exclusively from the Light Work Collection and pulls together works whose makers might have never imagined exhibiting together. It is a portrait through difference as much as similarity, but its music is a mixtape of our time, laid down by our importantly diverse and complicated cohort. Power to the people. The exhibit contains a selection of photographs by Vikky Alexander, Mike Barth, Robert Benjamin, Phil Block, David Broda, John Collier, Larry Cook, Peter De Lory, Lucinda Devlin, Lydia Ann Douglas, Alex Harsley, Biff Henrich, Jeffrey Hoone, Saiman Li, Pipo Nguyen-duy, Diane Neumaier, Ernesto Pujol, Jon Reis, Patricia Reynolds, Coreen Simpson, Aaron Siskind, Lenard Smith, Miso Suchy, and James Welling.  
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	12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Manuel Hernandez: The Singing Wall  Brewer Harris Projects   
	
	138 Bank Alley (University Building) 
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Gorgeously composed and filled with vibrant color, the mural paintings of Manuel Hernandez celebrate  Indigenous American roots and address a range of subjects, from migration, to contemporary stories of Indigenous people in Latin America, to gender and family. Combining western and Indigenous histories and myths, Hernandez Sanchez challenges established narratives and visual styles, drawing on a tradition dating back to the ancient frescos found in the temples of Teotihuacán, Mexico.  
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	12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Fruits of Their Labor: Work and Leisure at the Syracuse University Art Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Fruits of Their Labor" seeks to reexamine depictions of labor and leisure in the Syracuse University Art Museum's permanent collection. The COVID-19 pandemic exposed systemic problems in the workplace, mirroring the societal shifts in the labor industry during the Great Depression. Through thematic groupings such as those that depict women's work in and out of the home or behind the scenes views into the entertainment industry, this exhibition challenges conventional depictions of labor.  
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	12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum" brings together artwork by the acclaimed New York City-based Dominican artist and objects from the collection to examine how Minaya critiques Western ideas of tropicality, which are rooted in otherness and exoticism. Through these comparisons, the exhibition explores how nature, landscape, culture, and race have been historically constructed and deployed as tropes in visual culture.  
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	12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 The Earth Laughs in Flowers: Plants in the Syracuse University Art Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Drawing upon Ralph Waldo Emerson's famous line "the earth laughs in flowers" from his poem, "Hamatreya" (1846), this exhibition explores images of plants, as well as plant-based objects, in the collections of the Syracuse University Art Museum. This exhibition is co-curated by senior art history majors under the supervision of Professor Romita Ray (Art and Music Histories), in collaboration with Melissa Yuen, PhD, and Kate Holohan, PhD. It is the outcome of the annual art history Senior Seminar taught in the College of Arts and Sciences.  
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	12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Faculty Fellows Curate  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	In Summer 2022, the Syracuse University Art Museum launched a Faculty Fellows program to support innovative curriculum development, experiential learning, and the fuller integration of the museum's collection into academic life at the University. The program focuses on object-based teaching and research, which is active and student-centered. This exhibition features artworks that the 2024-2025 Faculty Fellows, Lyndsay Gratch (Communication and Rhetorical Studies) and Elizabeth Wimer (Management), will teach with during the Spring 2025 semester.  
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	12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Surrealism and Photography: "Where I Dream, It is Awake"  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	This exhibition examines the role of Surrealism in modern photography, tracking the movement's love of chance, fragmentation, and uncanny dream imagery from its origins in Paris to Britain, Mexico, and Japan over the course of the 20th century.  Curated by graduate students in the Department of Art & Music Histories under the direction of Sam Johnson (associate professor and director of graduate studies in Art History), the exhibition features photographs from collections of the SU Art Museum alongside Surrealist books and periodicals from the Special Collections Research Center of the Syracuse University Libraries. 
   
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	7:45 PM - 11:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Joiri Minaya and Miryam Charles: Lines of Flight  Urban Video Project   
	
	Everson Museum of Art Plaza 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Light Work's Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhibition Lines of Flight featuring short films by multimedia artist Joiri Minaya and filmmaker Miryam Charles exploring the tangled trajectories of displacement, immigration, invasion, exploration and escape. The exhibition will run as an architectural projection on the Everson Museum facade. Screening begins at dusk. Labadee, by Joiri Minaya, is a short video documenting parts of a Royal Caribbean cruise trip in Labadee, Haiti, and the dynamics that unfold in this privately-managed space, which is fenced off and leased to Royal Caribbean cruises until 2050. The subtitles in the video begin with text from the diary of Christopher Columbus when they first saw land, moving into a contemporary recount of the trip we're seeing. It meditates on the exploitation, self-exploitation, performance, and access control created by the system of tourism in the Caribbean, and, in linking it to Columbus' Invasion through the first sentences in the subtitles, it traces the lineage of these contemporary spaces to colonization. (2017, 7:06 minutes) In Fly, Fly Sadness, by Miryam Charles, a nuclear explosion mysteriously transforms the voices of all the inhabitants of an island. A journalist travels to the island to learn more and finds herself transformed. (2015, 5:23 minutes)  
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	Music | 
 
		
	 
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	2:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Try Me, Good King: Last Words of the Wives of Henry VIII  Civic Morning Musicals   
	
	Price: $10  St. David's Episcopal Church 
		13 Jamar Dr.,
		Dewitt
  
	 
	Libby Larsen's Try Me, Good King, performed by Julia Ebner, soprano; Laura Enslin, soprano; Klark Johnson, soprano; Danan Tsan, mezzo-soprano; Bruce Paulsen, bass; and Sar-Shalom Strong, piano; with Victoria King, stage director.  
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	7:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Enduring Stories  fivebyfive  Featuring Emily Pinkerton, banjo 
	
	Price: $20 regular, $40 max/family  May Memorial Unitarian Society 
		3800 E. Genesee St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Emily Pinkerton and fivebyfive present "Enduring Stories: ghost, murdery, and lost voices of the Appalachians and Catskills." Concert will feature the world premiere of Pinkerton's Ephemera Ballads. There will be a pre-concert chat beginning at 6:30 pm.  
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	7:30 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Dave Novak Five  Steeple Coffee House   
	
	Price: $15-$20 suggested donation covers entertainment, dessert, coffee/tea  United Church of Fayetteville 
		310 E. Genesee St.,
		Fayetteville
  
	 
	
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	7:30 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Pops Series: Jimmy Van Heusen: Swingin’ in Hollywood with Frank and Friends  Syracuse Orchestra (formerly Symphoria)  Sean O'Loughlin, conductor  Featuring Nick Ziobro and Julia Goodwin, vocalists 
	
	Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center 
		411 Montgomery St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Come fly with four-time Oscar-winning songwriter and Syracuse native Jimmy Van Heusen, as his music comes to life as never before in classic Hollywood films accompanied by live symphony orchestra. All-time hits such as Love and Marriage, All The Way, Come Fly With Me, and My Kind of Town are featured as originally debuted on film by Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole, Ella Fitzgerald and Sammy Davis, Jr., among others. The unique film-with-symphony concert, including special live guest vocalists, tells the story of the remarkable life and music of Jimmy Van Heusen, who test-piloted fighter planes while creating some of the most beloved melodies of the Great American Songbook. His storied musical partnership with close friend and Rat Pack pal Frank Sinatra resulted in over 80 of his songs recorded by Sinatra, more than by any other songwriter. Sean O'Loughlin is music director and arranger of the program. Producer and writer is Jim Burns, who directed and wrote the PBS documentary Jimmy Van Heusen – Swingin' with Frank & Bing. Executive producer is Brook Babcock, grandnephew of Jimmy Van Heusen and president of Van Heusen Music Group.  
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	Theater | 
 
		
	 
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	7:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Beyond Therapy  CNY Playhouse  Jim Sharples, director   
	
	Atonement Lutheran Church 
		116 W. Glen Ave.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Christopher Durang's delightful off-Broadway hit concerns two modern, neurotic urbanites searching for love and sanity – with the questionable help of their offbeat therapists. Bruce and Prudence are deeply into therapy. Prudence's macho therapist is urging her to be more assertive, while Bruce's wacky female therapist wants him to meet women by placing a personal ad. She does not fully comprehend that Bruce has a male lover who is not pleased by Bruce's desire to date a woman. Bruce doesn't know how to handle poor, nervous Prudence, and Prudence doesn't know what to make of her unpredictable new boyfriend.  
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	7:30 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying  Covey Theatre Company   
	
	Hosmer Auditorium, Everson Museum 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Big business means big laughs in this delightfully clever lampoon of life on the corporate ladder. A tune-filled comic gem that took Broadway by storm, winning both the Tony Award for Best Musical and a Pulitzer Prize, How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying boasts an exhilarating score by Frank Loesser, including "I Believe in You," "Brotherhood of Man," and "The Company Way." A satire of big business and all it holds sacred, How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying follows the rise of J. Pierrepont Finch, who uses a little handbook called How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying to climb the corporate ladder from lowly window washer to high-powered executive, tackling such familiar but potent dangers as the aggressively compliant "company man," the office party, backstabbing coworkers, caffeine addiction, and, of course, true love.  
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	7:30 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Ken Ludwig's Shakespeare in Hollywood  Syracuse Shakespeare-in-the-Park  Dan Stevens, director   
	
	Jazz Central 
		441 E. Washington St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	It's 1934, and Shakespeare's most famous fairies, Oberon and Puck, have magically materialized on the Warner Bros. Hollywood set of Max Reinhardt's A Midsummer Night's Dream. Instantly smitten by the glitz and glamour of show biz, the two are ushered onto the silver screen to play (who else?) themselves. With a little help from a feisty flower, blonde bombshells, movie moguls, and arrogant "asses" are tossed into loopy love triangles, with raucous results. The mischievous magic of moviedom sparkles in this hilarious comic romp.  
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	8:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 American Hero  LeMoyne College  Alisha Espinosa, director   
	
	Price: $20 regular, $15 seniors, $10 LeMoyne faculty and staff, $5 students  Coyne Center for the Performing Arts 
		LeMoyne College,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	At a toasted subs franchise in the local mall, three up-and-coming "sandwich artists" — a teenager, a single mom and a downsized refugee from corporate banking — are perfecting the mustard-to-cheese ratio according to the company manual. But when their shot at the American dream is interrupted by a series of strange events, they become unlikely allies in a post-recession world. American Hero is a supersized dark comedy about life, liberty, and the pursuit of sandwiches. By Bess Wohl.  
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	8:00 PM, March 29 | 
 
	
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	 Opening: What the Moon Saw, or I Only Appear to Be Dead  Syracuse University Drama Department  Danyon Davis, director   
	
	Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage 
		820 E. Genesee St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	A fantastical collage of Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tales told through a post-9/11 lens, by Stephanie Fleishman. Traveling to Shanghai to celebrate his 200th birthday, Andersen encounters mermaids, a street urchin, a supermodel, teenagers in love, a cabdriver, firemen, and husks of humans who appear as ghouls in this "kaleidoscopic meditation on how we move through calamity" inspired by Andersen's fragile, timeless tales.  
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	Sunday, March 30, 2025
	
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	Art | 
 
		
	 
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 It Came from the '70s  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	The 1970s were a time of radical change in the field of ceramics. Artists began to grasp clay's potential when it came to Conceptual Art, Minimalism, Land Art, Performance Art, and other movements of the era. In the wake of the 1960s, artists felt free to use humor for self-expression, shock value, or to serve as a "spoonful of sugar" to deliver a message. While the 1970s are usually seen as a time of wild individual expression, the decade also saw the development of a network of galleries and collectors that would ultimately professionalize the field and develop grudging respect from the fine art world. "It Came From the '70s" features groovy works from the Everson collection that tell these stories.
   
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 CNY Artist Initiative: Courtney Rile: Moments in Between  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Courtney Rile was the mother of a toddler when the emergence of COVID-19 triggered mandatory stay-at-home orders in March of 2020. The change, confusion, and uncertainty of that time mirrored the feelings she experienced during her "fourth trimester" — the 12 weeks in a mother and baby's life after the baby is born. Rile turned to photography to help process both motherhood and grief, and to cope with the changes in the world around her. The resulting portraits of friends with young children, as well as portraits of her daughter and other images captured in Rile's home, made during lockdown and its immediate aftermath, explore the passage of time and the duality of inward and outward looking.  
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 At Water's Edge: Reflections on 200 Years of the Erie Canal  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	2025 marks the 200th anniversary of the Erie Canal's completion. The Canal transformed New York State in the 19th century. Today, 80% of the upstate population lives within 25 miles of the waterway, yet in much of the public's imagination, the canal remains confined to the past. The 2024 Erie Canal Artists-in-Residence — Alon Koppel, Judit German-Heins, and Clara Riedlinger — each embarked on a year-long photographic exploration contemplating the Canal's current condition, activating the landscape, and considering the waterway's lasting impacts on present-day American culture. "At Water's Edge: Reflections on 200 Years of the Erie Canal" highlights the culmination of these artists' projects. "At Water's Edge" is organized by the Erie Canal Museum in Syracuse. The Artist-in-Residence program was created through a partnership between the New York State Canal Corporation and the Erie Canal Museum.
   
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 Simply Simon: Pottery from the Collection of Michael Simon and Susan Roberts  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Over the course of five decades, Georgia-based potter Michael Simon's name became synonymous with American functional pottery. Simon was born in Minnesota and studied with legendary pottery Warren MacKenzie. After building his own kiln near Athens, Georgia in 1980, Simon began setting one exemplary piece from each kiln firing aside for posterity. These "pick of the kiln" pieces are a testimony to Simon's enduring influence on the field of ceramics. In 2018, Simon donated one of his favorite "pick of the kiln" vases to the Everson's permanent collection. With the vase came a donation of more than 30 functional pots by other artists that Simon and his wife Susan Roberts had collected over the years. Simon passed away in August of 2021, but left an immense legacy through his work, which now graces the collections of more than 20 museums across the United States. The works exhibited in "Simply Simon" reflect the qualities that Simon valued as a potter, while also illuminating his enduring relationships with his friends and colleagues.  
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 Off the Rack  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Off the Rack" is the happy by-product of a major renovation of the Everson's on-site art storage. As hundreds of paintings and framed works are displaced from their racks while renovations take place, the public has an unprecedented opportunity to view objects that have been in deep storage for years, never-before-seen recent acquisitions, and some perennial favorites — all hung together salon-style in our exhibition galleries. This smorgasbord of paintings and works on paper showcases the breadth and depth of the Museum's collections and provides a glimpse into the world of collections management and care.
   
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 Making American Artists: Stories from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1776-1976  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Making American Artists: Stories from the Pennsylvania Academy of  the Fine Arts, 1776-1976" presents more than 70 of the most acclaimed and recognizable works of American art, which have played a demonstrable role in shaping conversations about the nation's history and identity. The exhibition explores new narratives of the history of American art, embracing stories about women artists, LGBTQ+ artists, and artists of color within a visual and thematic structure that also features iconic works traditionally associated with the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. "Making American Artists" presents PAFA's formidable collection of well-known historic works alongside pieces by traditionally underrepresented artists to pose questions about what it meant to be an American artist from when the institution was founded to the late 20th century. "Making American Artists" features works from PAFA's esteemed collection that helped define new chapters in the history of American art, including works by Mary Cassatt, Barkley L. Hendricks, Edward Hopper, Alice Neel, Georgia O'Keeffe, Gilbert Stuart, Henry O. Tanner, and Andrew Wyeth. The exhibition also features icons of PAFA's history and collection, such as Stuart's "George Washington" (Lansdowne Portrait) (1796) and Charles Wilson Peale's "The Artist in His Museum" (1822).  
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	10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 Scholastic Art Awards of Central New York 2025  Everson Museum of Art   
	
	Everson Museum of Art 
		401 Harrison St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Founded in 1923, the Scholastic Art Awards are the nation's longest-running and most prestigious educational initiative supporting student achievement in the arts. Every year, students across the country in grades 7-12 are invited to enter original works of art in regional competitions. This year, thousands of students representing 14 counties in Central New York submitted 4,555 works of art, which were then judged by professional artists and educators. The judges awarded first place (Gold Key), second place (Silver Key), and honorable mentions to nearly 1,300 works in 17 different categories. Gold Key winners move on to compete at the national level, and a small selection of the Silver Key winners and honorable mentions are displayed at the Everson.
   
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	11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 Peppy Downer  Light Work Gallery   
	
	Light Work Gallery 
		316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Peppy Downer" draws exclusively from the Light Work Collection and pulls together works whose makers might have never imagined exhibiting together. It is a portrait through difference as much as similarity, but its music is a mixtape of our time, laid down by our importantly diverse and complicated cohort. Power to the people. The exhibit contains a selection of photographs by Vikky Alexander, Mike Barth, Robert Benjamin, Phil Block, David Broda, John Collier, Larry Cook, Peter De Lory, Lucinda Devlin, Lydia Ann Douglas, Alex Harsley, Biff Henrich, Jeffrey Hoone, Saiman Li, Pipo Nguyen-duy, Diane Neumaier, Ernesto Pujol, Jon Reis, Patricia Reynolds, Coreen Simpson, Aaron Siskind, Lenard Smith, Miso Suchy, and James Welling.  
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	11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 Nabil Harb: Mater si, magistra no  Light Work Gallery   
	
	Light Work Gallery 
		316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Nabil Harb's project "Mater si, magistra no" (a macaronic phrase that translates as "Mother yes, teacher no") presents photographs that describe and depict moments and scenes within his hometown of Lakeland in Polk County, FL. This Central Florida location is both the backdrop and main character of Harb's visual narrative: a story that emits surreal qualities which twist ideas of the region through photography's formal language into a conceptual idea — an idea of how to describe the atmosphere of a place without words. Harb writes, "The landscape is the perfect reflection of our society, our ultimate index — it holds our histories, our secrets, our failures, and our hopes for the future."  
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	12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 Fruits of Their Labor: Work and Leisure at the Syracuse University Art Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Fruits of Their Labor" seeks to reexamine depictions of labor and leisure in the Syracuse University Art Museum's permanent collection. The COVID-19 pandemic exposed systemic problems in the workplace, mirroring the societal shifts in the labor industry during the Great Depression. Through thematic groupings such as those that depict women's work in and out of the home or behind the scenes views into the entertainment industry, this exhibition challenges conventional depictions of labor.  
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	12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 Surrealism and Photography: "Where I Dream, It is Awake"  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	This exhibition examines the role of Surrealism in modern photography, tracking the movement's love of chance, fragmentation, and uncanny dream imagery from its origins in Paris to Britain, Mexico, and Japan over the course of the 20th century.  Curated by graduate students in the Department of Art & Music Histories under the direction of Sam Johnson (associate professor and director of graduate studies in Art History), the exhibition features photographs from collections of the SU Art Museum alongside Surrealist books and periodicals from the Special Collections Research Center of the Syracuse University Libraries. 
   
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	12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 Faculty Fellows Curate  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	In Summer 2022, the Syracuse University Art Museum launched a Faculty Fellows program to support innovative curriculum development, experiential learning, and the fuller integration of the museum's collection into academic life at the University. The program focuses on object-based teaching and research, which is active and student-centered. This exhibition features artworks that the 2024-2025 Faculty Fellows, Lyndsay Gratch (Communication and Rhetorical Studies) and Elizabeth Wimer (Management), will teach with during the Spring 2025 semester.  
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	12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 The Earth Laughs in Flowers: Plants in the Syracuse University Art Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Drawing upon Ralph Waldo Emerson's famous line "the earth laughs in flowers" from his poem, "Hamatreya" (1846), this exhibition explores images of plants, as well as plant-based objects, in the collections of the Syracuse University Art Museum. This exhibition is co-curated by senior art history majors under the supervision of Professor Romita Ray (Art and Music Histories), in collaboration with Melissa Yuen, PhD, and Kate Holohan, PhD. It is the outcome of the annual art history Senior Seminar taught in the College of Arts and Sciences.  
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	12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum  Syracuse University Art Museum   
	
	Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building 
		Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Joiri Minaya: Unseeing the Tropics at the Museum" brings together artwork by the acclaimed New York City-based Dominican artist and objects from the collection to examine how Minaya critiques Western ideas of tropicality, which are rooted in otherness and exoticism. Through these comparisons, the exhibition explores how nature, landscape, culture, and race have been historically constructed and deployed as tropes in visual culture.  
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	Music | 
 
		
	 
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	7:30 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 Special Event: Community Side-by-Side Concert  Syracuse Orchestra (formerly Symphoria)  Ho-Yin Kwok, conductor   
	
	Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center 
		411 Montgomery St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Concert performed by community members along with members of the Syracuse Orchestra. Glinka Ruslan and Ludmilla Frescobaldi Toccata O'Loughlin Art of Racing in the Rain Bizet Selections from L'Arlésienne Powell/O'Loughlin How to Train Your Dragon Dvorak Movement 4 from Symphony No. 9, "New World"  
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	Theater | 
 
		
	 
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	2:00 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 Beyond Therapy  CNY Playhouse  Jim Sharples, director   
	
	Atonement Lutheran Church 
		116 W. Glen Ave.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Christopher Durang's delightful off-Broadway hit concerns two modern, neurotic urbanites searching for love and sanity – with the questionable help of their offbeat therapists. Bruce and Prudence are deeply into therapy. Prudence's macho therapist is urging her to be more assertive, while Bruce's wacky female therapist wants him to meet women by placing a personal ad. She does not fully comprehend that Bruce has a male lover who is not pleased by Bruce's desire to date a woman. Bruce doesn't know how to handle poor, nervous Prudence, and Prudence doesn't know what to make of her unpredictable new boyfriend.  
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	2:00 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 Ken Ludwig's Shakespeare in Hollywood  Syracuse Shakespeare-in-the-Park  Dan Stevens, director   
	
	Jazz Central 
		441 E. Washington St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	It's 1934, and Shakespeare's most famous fairies, Oberon and Puck, have magically materialized on the Warner Bros. Hollywood set of Max Reinhardt's A Midsummer Night's Dream. Instantly smitten by the glitz and glamour of show biz, the two are ushered onto the silver screen to play (who else?) themselves. With a little help from a feisty flower, blonde bombshells, movie moguls, and arrogant "asses" are tossed into loopy love triangles, with raucous results. The mischievous magic of moviedom sparkles in this hilarious comic romp.  
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	2:00 PM, March 30 | 
 
	
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	 What the Moon Saw, or I Only Appear to Be Dead  Syracuse University Drama Department  Danyon Davis, director   
	
	Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage 
		820 E. Genesee St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	A fantastical collage of Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tales told through a post-9/11 lens, by Stephanie Fleishman. Traveling to Shanghai to celebrate his 200th birthday, Andersen encounters mermaids, a street urchin, a supermodel, teenagers in love, a cabdriver, firemen, and husks of humans who appear as ghouls in this "kaleidoscopic meditation on how we move through calamity" inspired by Andersen's fragile, timeless tales.  
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	Monday, March 31, 2025
	
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	9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 31 | 
 
	
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	 Two Artists: Two Visions: Works by MaryBeth Sorber and Peter Valenti  Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery   
	
	Price: Free  Baltimore Woods Nature Center 
		4007 Bishop Hill Rd.,
		Marcellus
  
	 
	An exhibit comprised of the work of two Central New York artists who look to nature for inspiration and yet interpret it in very different ways.  
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	10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 31 | 
 
	
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	 Peppy Downer  Light Work Gallery   
	
	Light Work Gallery 
		316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	"Peppy Downer" draws exclusively from the Light Work Collection and pulls together works whose makers might have never imagined exhibiting together. It is a portrait through difference as much as similarity, but its music is a mixtape of our time, laid down by our importantly diverse and complicated cohort. Power to the people. The exhibit contains a selection of photographs by Vikky Alexander, Mike Barth, Robert Benjamin, Phil Block, David Broda, John Collier, Larry Cook, Peter De Lory, Lucinda Devlin, Lydia Ann Douglas, Alex Harsley, Biff Henrich, Jeffrey Hoone, Saiman Li, Pipo Nguyen-duy, Diane Neumaier, Ernesto Pujol, Jon Reis, Patricia Reynolds, Coreen Simpson, Aaron Siskind, Lenard Smith, Miso Suchy, and James Welling.  
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	10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 31 | 
 
	
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	 Nabil Harb: Mater si, magistra no  Light Work Gallery   
	
	Light Work Gallery 
		316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Nabil Harb's project "Mater si, magistra no" (a macaronic phrase that translates as "Mother yes, teacher no") presents photographs that describe and depict moments and scenes within his hometown of Lakeland in Polk County, FL. This Central Florida location is both the backdrop and main character of Harb's visual narrative: a story that emits surreal qualities which twist ideas of the region through photography's formal language into a conceptual idea — an idea of how to describe the atmosphere of a place without words. Harb writes, "The landscape is the perfect reflection of our society, our ultimate index — it holds our histories, our secrets, our failures, and our hopes for the future."  
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	7:00 PM, March 31 | 
 
	
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	 Spawn of the North (1938)  Syracuse Cinephile Society   
	
	Price: $4 non-members, $3.50 members  Spaghetti Warehouse 
		689 N. Clinton St.,
		Syracuse
  
	 
	Cast: George Raft, Henry Fonda, Dorothy Lamour, John Barrymore, Akim Tamiroff, Louise Platt, Lynne Overman Director: Henry Hathaway An exciting action-adventure tale of two fishermen (Raft and Fonda) in Alaska and the trouble they have with a tough band of fish pirates. This Paramount hit won an Academy Award for its excellent special effects.   
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