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Events for Wednesday, March 28, 2012

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Windows Project: Chaz Griffin: The History of Silence The Warehouse Gallery

7:30 AM-10:00 PM The Reflections Series: Works by Nevin Mercede Redhouse

8:00 AM-2:00 AM Being Impossible: Works by Deborah Zlotsky LeMoyne College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Interpreting Nature Baltimore Woods Art Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: The Narrative Tradition in the 21st Century: The Art of Randy Elliott and Richard Williams Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-8:00 PM "Images of Upstate New York" and "Juxtaposed Through Wonderland" SUNY Oswego Metro Center at the Atrium

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Patently Syracuse Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-5:00 PM The Power and The Piety: The World of Medieval and Renaissance Europe Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Teddy Cruz/The Architect's Work 9 Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Creatures Small and Great Edgewood Gallery

9:30 AM-3:00 PM Time, Again Time: Works by Ana Tiscornia Point of Contact Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Reflection and Identity: Works by W. Michelle Harris and Michael Roman Community Folk Art Center (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Academic Art...teachers that do Eureka Crafts

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Pastoral: Landscape Photos by Alexander Gronsky Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Wounding the Black Male Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Creativity through Exhibition Design II Syracuse University School of Art and Design

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Educational Toys by Roy Wilson Syracuse University School of Art and Design

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Illusionistic Szozda Gallery

11:10 AM-12:20 PM Poetry Reading & Book Signing Onondaga Community College, featuring Elizabeth Twiddy

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Reliquaries: New Work by Drew Goerlitz Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM CNY Art Showcase: Juried Preview of Live Auction Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-6:00 PM The Photographer as Child: Memories of Guatemala La Casita Cultural Center

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Noriko Ambe: Inner Water The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-6:00 PM I Like America and America Likes Me XL Projects

12:30 PM Syracuse Chorale Chamber Singers Civic Morning Musicals

6:00 PM-8:00 PM For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Enuf Onondaga Community College

6:45 PM Wednesday Film Series: Chelovek's Kino-Apparatom Syracuse University School of Architecture

7:30 PM MythBusters: Behind the Myths

7:30 PM-12:00 AM For Syracuse, 2010: Selections of Truisms and Survival Urban Video Project

8:00 PM Zach Deputy Westcott Theater

Events for Thursday, March 29, 2012

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Windows Project: Chaz Griffin: The History of Silence The Warehouse Gallery

7:30 AM-10:00 PM The Reflections Series: Works by Nevin Mercede Redhouse

8:00 AM-2:00 AM Being Impossible: Works by Deborah Zlotsky LeMoyne College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Interpreting Nature Baltimore Woods Art Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: The Narrative Tradition in the 21st Century: The Art of Randy Elliott and Richard Williams Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-8:00 PM "Images of Upstate New York" and "Juxtaposed Through Wonderland" SUNY Oswego Metro Center at the Atrium

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Patently Syracuse Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-7:00 PM The Power and The Piety: The World of Medieval and Renaissance Europe Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Teddy Cruz/The Architect's Work 9 Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Creatures Small and Great Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Reflection and Identity: Works by W. Michelle Harris and Michael Roman Community Folk Art Center (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Academic Art...teachers that do Eureka Crafts

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Wounding the Black Male Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Pastoral: Landscape Photos by Alexander Gronsky Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Creativity through Exhibition Design II Syracuse University School of Art and Design

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Educational Toys by Roy Wilson Syracuse University School of Art and Design

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Illusionistic Szozda Gallery

11:00 AM-6:00 PM Kala Stein: Form & Plenty Gandee Gallery

11:00 AM-3:00 PM Time, Again Time: Works by Ana Tiscornia Point of Contact Gallery

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Reliquaries: New Work by Drew Goerlitz Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM CNY Art Showcase: Juried Preview of Live Auction Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-6:00 PM The Photographer as Child: Memories of Guatemala La Casita Cultural Center

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Noriko Ambe: Inner Water The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-8:00 PM I Like America and America Likes Me XL Projects

5:00 PM-7:30 PM Iron Jawed Angels Onondaga Community College

6:30 PM Avenue Q (School Edition) Fowler High School

6:45 PM Death Takes a Bow Acme Mystery Company

7:00 PM Images of Sexual Crime and Punishment in Medieval and Early Modern Europe Syracuse University College of Arts and Sciences, featuring Diane Wolfthal, art historian

7:30 PM The Writer As Witness University Lectures, featuring Terry Tempest Williams, environmentalist and author

7:30 PM-11:00 PM William Wegman: Flo Flow (2011) Urban Video Project

7:30 PM-12:00 AM For Syracuse, 2010: Selections of Truisms and Survival Urban Video Project

8:00 PM Bill Horrace Trio with jazz vocalists

8:00 PM Twelfth Night Redhouse (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Dirty South Westcott Theater

Events for Friday, March 30, 2012

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Windows Project: Chaz Griffin: The History of Silence The Warehouse Gallery

7:30 AM-10:00 PM The Reflections Series: Works by Nevin Mercede Redhouse

8:00 AM-8:00 PM Being Impossible: Works by Deborah Zlotsky LeMoyne College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Interpreting Nature Baltimore Woods Art Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: The Narrative Tradition in the 21st Century: The Art of Randy Elliott and Richard Williams Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM "Images of Upstate New York" and "Juxtaposed Through Wonderland" SUNY Oswego Metro Center at the Atrium

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Patently Syracuse Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-5:00 PM The Power and The Piety: The World of Medieval and Renaissance Europe Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Teddy Cruz/The Architect's Work 9 Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Creatures Small and Great Edgewood Gallery

9:30 AM-3:00 PM Time, Again Time: Works by Ana Tiscornia Point of Contact Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Reflection and Identity: Works by W. Michelle Harris and Michael Roman Community Folk Art Center (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-9:00 PM Academic Art...teachers that do Eureka Crafts

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Pastoral: Landscape Photos by Alexander Gronsky Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Wounding the Black Male Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Creativity through Exhibition Design II Syracuse University School of Art and Design

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Educational Toys by Roy Wilson Syracuse University School of Art and Design

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Illusionistic Szozda Gallery

11:00 AM-6:00 PM Kala Stein: Form & Plenty Gandee Gallery

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Reliquaries: New Work by Drew Goerlitz Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM CNY Art Showcase: Juried Preview of Live Auction Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-6:00 PM The Photographer as Child: Memories of Guatemala La Casita Cultural Center

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Noriko Ambe: Inner Water The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-6:00 PM I Like America and America Likes Me XL Projects

6:00 PM-9:00 PM Opening: The Black Series Echo

6:30 PM Avenue Q (School Edition) Fowler High School

6:45 PM Lombardi: More Than Just the Game CNY Playhouse (Read a review!)

7:00 PM Poets Lynn Domina and Yvonne Murphy Downtown Writer's Center

7:30 PM Spoken Word Poetry Institute Verbal Blend

7:30 PM The King and I Christian Brothers Academy

7:30 PM Verdi Requiem Syracuse Orchestra (formerly Symphoria), featuring Mihoko Kinoshita, soprano; Sarah Heltzel, mezzo-soprano; Jonathan Howell, tenor; Marc Webster, bass

7:30 PM-11:00 PM William Wegman: Flo Flow (2011) Urban Video Project

7:30 PM-12:00 AM For Syracuse, 2010: Selections of Truisms and Survival Urban Video Project

7:30 PM Unplugged. Uncovered. Unsung. Words and Music Songwriter Showcase

8:00 PM Twelfth Night Redhouse (Read a review!)

8:00 PM-10:30 PM Death March of the Penguins Syracuse Improv Collective

8:00 PM Quilters Syracuse University Drama Department (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Bright Young Thing 2 Twist Cabaret Theatre, featuring Erika Clement, vocals; Josh Smith, piano

8:00 PM Hot Day at the Zoo, with Woodworks Westcott Theater

Events for Saturday, March 31, 2012

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Windows Project: Chaz Griffin: The History of Silence The Warehouse Gallery

7:30 AM-10:00 PM The Reflections Series: Works by Nevin Mercede Redhouse

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Artisan & Craft Show Jordan-Elbridge High School Literary & Arts Magazine

10:00 AM-2:00 PM Creatures Small and Great Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-9:00 PM Academic Art...teachers that do Eureka Crafts

10:00 AM-5:00 PM CNY Art Showcase: Juried Preview of Live Auction Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Reliquaries: New Work by Drew Goerlitz Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Interpreting Nature Baltimore Woods Art Gallery

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Illusionistic Szozda Gallery

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Reflection and Identity: Works by W. Michelle Harris and Michael Roman Community Folk Art Center (Read a review!)

11:00 AM-4:00 PM The Black Series Echo

11:00 AM-6:00 PM Kala Stein: Form & Plenty Gandee Gallery

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Noriko Ambe: Inner Water The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-6:00 PM I Like America and America Likes Me XL Projects

12:30 PM The Little Mermaid Magic Circle Children's Theatre (Read a review!)

1:30 PM-4:00 PM Spring Fine Arts Show CNY Art Guild

2:00 PM Dave Ruch Erie Canal Museum

2:00 PM Curator Lecture Everson Museum of Art, featuring Valerie Ann Leeds

2:00 PM Senior Flute Recital Syracuse University Setnor School of Music, featuring Christie Glaser, flute

6:00 PM-9:00 PM Opening: RESOURCED/response: The Art of the Justseeds Artists Cooperative and SU Fiber Arts ArtRage Gallery

6:30 PM Avenue Q (School Edition) Fowler High School

6:45 PM Lombardi: More Than Just the Game CNY Playhouse (Read a review!)

7:00 PM-10:00 PM Legends of Folk Night Kellish Hill Farm

7:00 PM Andrew and Noah Band, Loren Barrigar, Mark Mazengarb

7:30 PM Spoken Word Poetry Institute Verbal Blend

7:30 PM The King and I Christian Brothers Academy

7:30 PM-11:00 PM William Wegman: Flo Flow (2011) Urban Video Project

7:30 PM-12:00 AM For Syracuse, 2010: Selections of Truisms and Survival Urban Video Project

8:00 PM Twelfth Night Redhouse (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Quilters Syracuse University Drama Department (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Bright Young Thing 2 Twist Cabaret Theatre, featuring Erika Clement, vocals; Josh Smith, piano

9:00 PM DJ Shadow, with special guests Westcott Theater

Events for Sunday, April 1, 2012

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Windows Project: Chaz Griffin: The History of Silence The Warehouse Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Wounding the Black Male Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Pastoral: Landscape Photos by Alexander Gronsky Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Illusionistic Szozda Gallery

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Kala Stein: Form & Plenty Gandee Gallery

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Academic Art...teachers that do Eureka Crafts

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Reliquaries: New Work by Drew Goerlitz Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM CNY Art Showcase: Juried Preview of Live Auction Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-6:00 PM I Like America and America Likes Me XL Projects

12:45 PM Lombardi: More Than Just the Game CNY Playhouse (Read a review!)

1:00 PM-5:00 PM The Reflections Series: Works by Nevin Mercede Redhouse

1:00 PM-4:00 PM Book Eating Party! Szozda Gallery

1:30 PM-4:00 PM Spring Fine Arts Show CNY Art Guild

2:00 PM Lavendar Trio Arts Alive in Liverpool

2:00 PM Quilters Syracuse University Drama Department (Read a review!)

3:00 PM Every Voice Counts! The Syracuse Community Choir: Singing For Peace and Justice University Neighbors Lecture Series, featuring Karen Mihalyi

4:30 PM Spring Concert Syracuse Youth Orchestras

7:00 PM Spring Tour Concert The Hobart and William Smith Colleges Chorale

7:30 PM-12:00 AM For Syracuse, 2010: Selections of Truisms and Survival Urban Video Project

7:30 PM-11:00 PM William Wegman: Flo Flow (2011) Urban Video Project

8:00 PM Chris Webby, with Apache Chief, Guy Harrison Westcott Theater

Events for Monday, April 2, 2012

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Windows Project: Chaz Griffin: The History of Silence The Warehouse Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Interpreting Nature Baltimore Woods Art Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: The Narrative Tradition in the 21st Century: The Art of Randy Elliott and Richard Williams Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-7:00 PM OCC Student Art and Photography Exhibit Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Patently Syracuse Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-5:00 PM The Power and The Piety: The World of Medieval and Renaissance Europe Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Teddy Cruz/The Architect's Work 9 Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:30 AM-3:00 PM Time, Again Time: Works by Ana Tiscornia Point of Contact Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Reflection and Identity: Works by W. Michelle Harris and Michael Roman Community Folk Art Center (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Academic Art...teachers that do Eureka Crafts

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Wounding the Black Male Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Pastoral: Landscape Photos by Alexander Gronsky Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Educational Toys by Roy Wilson Syracuse University School of Art and Design

12:00 PM-6:00 PM The Photographer as Child: Memories of Guatemala La Casita Cultural Center

7:30 PM Laurie R. King Friends of the Central Library Author Series

7:30 PM The Magnificent Dope (1942) Syracuse Cinephile Society

7:30 PM-12:00 AM For Syracuse, 2010: Selections of Truisms and Survival Urban Video Project

Events for Tuesday, April 3, 2012

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Windows Project: Chaz Griffin: The History of Silence The Warehouse Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Interpreting Nature Baltimore Woods Art Gallery

9:00 AM-7:00 PM OCC Student Art and Photography Exhibit Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: The Narrative Tradition in the 21st Century: The Art of Randy Elliott and Richard Williams Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-8:00 PM "Images of Upstate New York" and "Juxtaposed Through Wonderland" SUNY Oswego Metro Center at the Atrium

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Patently Syracuse Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-7:00 PM The Power and The Piety: The World of Medieval and Renaissance Europe Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Teddy Cruz/The Architect's Work 9 Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Creatures Small and Great Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Reflection and Identity: Works by W. Michelle Harris and Michael Roman Community Folk Art Center (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Academic Art...teachers that do Eureka Crafts

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Pastoral: Landscape Photos by Alexander Gronsky Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Wounding the Black Male Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Educational Toys by Roy Wilson Syracuse University School of Art and Design

11:00 AM-3:00 PM Time, Again Time: Works by Ana Tiscornia Point of Contact Gallery

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Reliquaries: New Work by Drew Goerlitz Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM CNY Art Showcase: Juried Preview of Live Auction Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-6:00 PM The Photographer as Child: Memories of Guatemala La Casita Cultural Center

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Noriko Ambe: Inner Water The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)

1:00 PM-6:00 PM The Black Series Echo

5:00 PM Alan Berger Syracuse University School of Architecture

7:00 PM Science and Magic in Film: The Last Wave (1977) Redhouse

7:30 PM-12:00 AM For Syracuse, 2010: Selections of Truisms and Survival Urban Video Project

8:00 PM Riverdance Farewell Tour Onondaga Community College

Events for Wednesday, April 4, 2012

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Windows Project: Chaz Griffin: The History of Silence The Warehouse Gallery

7:30 AM-10:00 PM The Reflections Series: Works by Nevin Mercede Redhouse

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Interpreting Nature Baltimore Woods Art Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: The Narrative Tradition in the 21st Century: The Art of Randy Elliott and Richard Williams Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-7:00 PM OCC Student Art and Photography Exhibit Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-8:00 PM "Images of Upstate New York" and "Juxtaposed Through Wonderland" SUNY Oswego Metro Center at the Atrium

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Patently Syracuse Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

9:00 AM-5:00 PM The Power and The Piety: The World of Medieval and Renaissance Europe Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Teddy Cruz/The Architect's Work 9 Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Creatures Small and Great Edgewood Gallery

9:30 AM-3:00 PM Time, Again Time: Works by Ana Tiscornia Point of Contact Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Reflection and Identity: Works by W. Michelle Harris and Michael Roman Community Folk Art Center (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Academic Art...teachers that do Eureka Crafts

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Wounding the Black Male Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Pastoral: Landscape Photos by Alexander Gronsky Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Educational Toys by Roy Wilson Syracuse University School of Art and Design

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Illusionistic Szozda Gallery

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Reliquaries: New Work by Drew Goerlitz Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM CNY Art Showcase: Juried Preview of Live Auction Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-6:00 PM The Photographer as Child: Memories of Guatemala La Casita Cultural Center

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Noriko Ambe: Inner Water The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-6:00 PM The "Gnome Show" XL Projects

12:30 PM Nicholas Hrynyk, piano Civic Morning Musicals

1:00 PM-6:00 PM The Black Series Echo

2:00 PM-7:00 PM RESOURCED/response: The Art of the Justseeds Artists Cooperative and SU Fiber Arts ArtRage Gallery

5:30 PM-7:30 PM "What If...?" Film Series: Trust: Second Acts in Young Lives Gifford Foundation

5:30 PM Jay Rogoff Raymond Carver Reading Series

6:45 PM Wednesday Film Series: Rear Window Syracuse University School of Architecture

7:30 PM-12:00 AM For Syracuse, 2010: Selections of Truisms and Survival Urban Video Project

8:00 PM Twelfth Night Redhouse (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Quilters Syracuse University Drama Department (Read a review!)

8:00 PM The Frankenstein Brothers Feat: Buckethead & That 1 Guy, with Wolf and Tuba Westcott Theater

Next week  >>>

Wednesday, March 28, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, March 28



Windows Project: Chaz Griffin: The History of Silence
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Chaz Griffin studied at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York and currently resides in Syracuse. For the Window Projects space he will produce a partially-autobiographical collage addressing the issue of youth living in 21st-century urban environments.


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7:30 AM - 10:00 PM, March 28



The Reflections Series: Works by Nevin Mercede
Redhouse

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

These digital prints are composed from photographs taken while traveling in Russia. Conversations with artists, politicians and educators encountered there provide the majority of companion texts. Since 1995 Mercede has woven images with texts reflecting on social, political and educational issues or situations.


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8:00 AM - 2:00 AM, March 28



Being Impossible: Works by Deborah Zlotsky
LeMoyne College

Price: Free
Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College, Syracuse

An exhibition of drawings and paintings by Deborah Zlotsky. In this series, the artist manipulates powdered graphite on sheets of mylar, searching for signs of life in the smears and conjuring up blurred boundaries between documenting nature and inventing nature. Zlotsky is represented by Kathryn Markel Fine Arts in New York and presented a solo exhibition in October 2011. She has been the recipient of numerous residencies, including a residency fellowship at Yaddo in Saratoga Springs, NY, this past summer. She earned a bachelor's degree from Yale University and a master's degree in painting and drawing from the University of Connecticut.

For more information, call 315-445-4153.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 28



Interpreting Nature
Baltimore Woods Art Gallery

Price: Free
Baltimore Woods Nature Center
4007 Bishop Hill Rd., Marcellus

A collection of work by Sharon Bottle Souva, fabric handworks; Wesley Weiss, ceramics; and Jill Newton, watercolors, who work in three distinct media but are united by their shared reference to the natural world.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 28



Gallery Exhibit: The Narrative Tradition in the 21st Century: The Art of Randy Elliott and Richard Williams
Onondaga Community College

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

About Richard Williams:
As a self-taught illustrator I was able to sidestep the many academic pitfalls that plague contemporary artists, such as the belief that drawing skills are not important. My work is steeped in the tradition of craftsmanship and the importance of the narrative. Art in my opinion serves a social function, which can encompass selling a product to the public or making critical commentary on society and culture, and anything in between. To accomplish this, the artist needs to communicate in a simple, clear and powerful way. To do this one needs to have a firm grasp of the basic skills of draftsmanship, color, painting technique and storytelling.

About Randy Elliott:
Randy Elliott began his professional art career in 1988, inking the Dungeons & Dragons, Dragonlance comic book for DC Comics. That job began a career that continues until the present. Over the course of the last twenty-odd years, Randy has inked and/or penciled comic books for DC, Archie, Marvel, Dark Horse, Valiant and a number of smaller publishers. He has also painted images for clients like, Wizards of the Coast, Alderac Entertainment Group, Battlefront Miniatures, Hasbro and others.


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9:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 28



"Images of Upstate New York" and "Juxtaposed Through Wonderland"
SUNY Oswego Metro Center at the Atrium

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

"Images of Upstate New York" features work by Morgan Goodwin and Kate Walseman
"Juxtaposed Through Wonderland" features recent work by KayCie Danniel


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 28



Patently Syracuse
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

A visual exploration of inventions, designs and innovations created in Central New York.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28



The Power and The Piety: The World of Medieval and Renaissance Europe
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

This exhibit, curated by History Professor Chris Kyle with Senior Director of Special Collections Sean Quimby, showcases the library's collection of illuminated manuscripts and early printed works, including a leaf from the Gutenberg Bible.

The title "The Power and The Piety," refers to extraordinary influence that secular monarchies and the Church had on the lives of everyday men and women. Richly illustrated late medieval psalters and books of hours exemplify the painstaking attention that the pious paid to their spiritual well-being. But the printing revolution made it possible for new ideas to spread more rapidly. Printed works like Thomas Hobbes' "Leviathan" (1651) signified the increasing power wielded by kings, queens and other secular authorities. As the Protestant Reformation and Scientific Revolution took hold of Europe, the power of the Catholic Church further waned. "The Power and the Piety" includes such important works as the first King James Bible (1611) and a second printing of Copernicus' "De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium" (1566), which argued in favor of a heliocentric, or sun-centered, universe.

The exhibition is arranged thematically, highlighting the overarching themes of power and piety, as well as English literature, music, architecture, science and fine bindings.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28



Teddy Cruz/The Architect's Work 9
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse


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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 28



Creatures Small and Great
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Dana Blythe Stenson (metalsmith jewelry), Candace Rhea (ceramic and mixed media), Alan Hart (acrylic on board), and Diane Menzies (oil paintings) interpret insects and small animals.


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9:30 AM - 3:00 PM, March 28



Time, Again Time: Works by Ana Tiscornia
Point of Contact Gallery

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

In "Time, again time," the artist reflects on ordered fragments of a disordered world. An activist and renowned Latin American artist, Ana Tiscornia brings a mixed-media installation that curator Pedro Cuperman describes as "the outcome of a tale, where we have a fragmented world, where the pieces are somehow geometrically organic, logical... a kind of architecture of catastrophe. It is about the artist's obsession with organizing her world after having lived through the tragedies of military dictatorships in her home land, and the present catastrophes, wars that we endure in our own time. Ana's work demands from the viewer a sort of reconstruction, reintegration of the work, and our world.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28



Reflection and Identity: Works by W. Michelle Harris and Michael Roman
Community Folk Art Center

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

The exhibition features recent work by Rochester Institute of Technology associate professor and artist W. Michelle Harris and Atlanta-based artist and Syracuse University alum Michael Roman. These two young artists embrace questions of gender, identity, and societal expectations.

While the materials used by each artist sit at the opposite ends of the technological spectrum, both individuals seek to examine topics of an interrelated and highly personal nature.

Read a review!


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 28



Academic Art...teachers that do
Eureka Crafts

Eureka Crafts
210 Walton St., Syracuse

Works of Jamessville-Dewitt art teachers Faith Carapella (charcoal, pen and ink, collage) and Steve Pilcher (soda-fired stoneware, both functional and decorative).


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 28



Pastoral: Landscape Photos by Alexander Gronsky
Light Work Gallery

Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

Alexander Gronsky is a self-described landscape photographer with an uncanny ability to capture scenes in nature as elegant allegories that include rolling hills, spectacular lighting, and far reaching horizons. His skilled use of perspective and composition, reminiscent of centuries-old traditions in European landscape painting, draw the viewer's eye deep into the landscape and generate a sense of awe for each place. The photographs in this exhibit were taken along the outlying areas of Moscow where the human need to find solace away from the city collides with urban sprawl, and the fragility of nature.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 28



Wounding the Black Male
Light Work Gallery

Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition was curated by English Professor Cassandra Jackson and Gallery Director Sarah Cunningham, both from The College of New Jersey (TCNJ). The exhibition was on view in the TCNJ Art Gallery in 2011. The central ideas of the exhibit are rooted in Jackson's most recent book, Violence, Visual Culture, and the Black Male Body (Routledge, 2010). Her book deals with the ways in which the black male body has been visually exploited, and the ways in which contemporary artists have called into question the paradigmatic construction of the black body in American society. The exhibit displays 31 photographs by 19 contemporary artists of African descent, 17 from the United States, two from Britain. Their work comments on the various representations of black bodies in Western visual culture. These artists confront stereotypes about black male appearance, sexuality, violence, and family, and highlight the ways that visual culture has contributed to the marginalization and exclusion of the black community.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28



Creativity through Exhibition Design II
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

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

"Creativity through Exhibition Design II" features computer-aided drawings and 3-dimensional models of the gallery space in the State Tower Building adjacent to Hanover Square. Students gained experience in such areas as color selection, spatial arrangement, lighting techniques, typography and universal design principles to put their individual creativity into an upcoming exhibition they are working on titled "Hidden in Plain Site: Sculpture in Syracuse and the Work of the Public Artist in Residence."

Patrons should enter The Warehouse via the ground-floor door adjacent to the café on W. Fayette St. or the first-floor door on W. Washington St.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28



Educational Toys by Roy Wilson
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

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

Designer Roy Wilson, a 1970 alumnus of Syracuse University's College of Visual and Performing Arts, will exhibit his award-winning educational toy designs. The exhibit features Wilson's work from the Learning Curve Toy Co., including the 1992 Thomas Wooden Railway project and the 1994 Lamaze Infant Development System, which he researched, designed, engineered and manufactured. The exhibition will also include his most recent invention in toys, TRAK2BRIK Adapters. Introduced in February at the American International Toy Fair, TRAK2BRIK is a system of adapters that links wooden railway track to pegged construction bricks and has dozens of slide-on toy accessories.

Wilson's career evolved from an early fascination with mechanical, scientific and electrical products. While at SU studying industrial design, he wrote his graduating thesis on preschool educational developmental toys. He started his own design business, Creative International, in 1967 and decided to remain independent and/or work on long-term contracts. To date, he has won 47 national and international awards for design excellence.

Patrons should enter The Warehouse via the ground-floor door adjacent to the café on West Fayette Street or the first-floor door on West Washington Street. For more information, contact Bradley Hudson at bjhudson@syr.edu.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 28



Illusionistic
Szozda Gallery

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

Painter Kyle Mort's realism and painter Robert Glisson's impressionism are both meant to prompt the viewer's stare. Both Mort and Glisson work with beautiful color, achieved differently in their signature techniques. Mort tends toward extreme realism, bordering on trompe l'oeil in which he is capable of creating a spatial illusion. Glisson's impressionistic pieces, like the styles of those artists who inspire him, create an emotional illusion. Mort leans more toward depicting still life. Glisson endeavors to capture landscapes.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 28



Reliquaries: New Work by Drew Goerlitz
Everson Museum of Art

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

Well-known for his graceful yet imposing steel sculpture, Drew Goerlitz, Associate Professor of Sculpture at the State University of New York Plattsburg, presents a new body of work at the Everson Museum of Art. Reliquaries continues the reoccurring theme of containment, concealment and privacy best described by Goerlitz himself: "My interpretation of reliquary is not to hold a sacred object or relic, but to engage the viewer with the form and tension of the unknown interior. The adornment of these objects relates to architectural details and the idea of facade. Facade is what we are presented with upon first appearance, whether speaking of people or architecture, and it isn't until we look inside that we discover the true structure."


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 28



From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland
Everson Museum of Art

Price: $10 adults, $8 students/seniors, $30 family pack (2 adults, 4 children))
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

"From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland" is the first exhibition to examine the American artist's work focused on the Irish landscape and people, particularly children, created between the time of his first trip to Ireland in 1913 and his last trip there in 1928. Long celebrated as an iconic American artist due to his important early work as a teacher and as the leader of The Eight, Henri's paintings have received less attention on their own. Most projects explored his career as it related to his role as a member of The Eight or in a broadly retrospective manner. Few projects focused on his landscapes, drawings, or foreign portraits.

Henri's Irish portraits constitute his largest focused body of work, and often depict the same sitters year after year. These paintings offer a unique and fascinating window onto the genre about which Henri felt most strongly--portraiture--and also chart his experiments with paint handling and color theories over time. He wrote that the time spent in Ireland was extremely valuable to him (it was the only other place besides New York where he purchased a residence), for only there was he able to focus on his painting without the distractions of life in New York. It is not surprising, then, that the periods Henri spent in Ireland were among his most prolific, and the paintings produced there among his most accomplished. Just before his death, Henri composed a list of his most important paintings; many of the works on this list were his Irish subjects. Forty-one paintings of Irish people and landscapes will be on view in the upcoming exhibition.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 28



CNY Art Showcase: Juried Preview of Live Auction
Everson Museum of Art

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

CNY Arts Showcase: Juried Preview of the Live Auction, presented in conjunction with the Eastwood Rotary Club, highlights the great and diverse artistic talents within our community. The exhibition at the Everson will precede the Eastwood Rotary Club's Annual CNY Art Showcase Live Auction on April 20.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 28



The Photographer as Child: Memories of Guatemala
La Casita Cultural Center

La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St., Syracuse

Born in Guatemala, award-winning photographer Efren Lopez is a student in the Military Photojournalism Program at Syracuse University. He is also an aerial photographer for the U.S. Air Force and the first reservist to be selected to attend Newhouse's Military Photojournalism Program. He now lives in Arizona.

The exhibit features images Lopez captured on a return trip to Guatemala in 2009. "My life began in a bamboo hut at the side of a road in a tiny town named Petaca, Guatemala, in 1966," Lopez writes. "It's a town so small that it is next to impossible to find on most maps of Guatemala, much less Central America."

Lopez has documented real-world situations and the military around the globe and has captured stunning images in Arizona and Guatemala. His work has been featured in various publications, including the book Arizona 24/7, and has been awarded many distinctions, including first place in the Professional Photography category at the 2008 Arizona State Fair, an honorable mention in the pictorial category in the 2009 Military Photographer of the Year competition, and first place in the 2011 Multimedia Team 19th Annual Department of Defense Worldwide Military Photography Workshop.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 28



Noriko Ambe: Inner Water
The Warehouse Gallery

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

In her first US museum solo show, New York City-based Japanese artist Noriko Ambe will create a new site-specific installation in the main gallery reflecting the tragic 2011 events in Japan through the use of video projections and her signature large-scale paper cutouts that evoke waves.

Nature plays an important role in Ambe's work, and it points to larger issues, such as the natural forces determining our global landscape, and the relationship between nature and humans throughout time. A recipient of prestigious awards such as the AICA Award and Pollock-Krasner Foundation, Ambe's work has been exhibited internationally, including at the Museum of Arts and Design and the Japan Society in New York and the Kyoto University of Art and Design in Kyoto, Japan. Her work is also in the collection of the Whitney Museum of Art.

Read a review!


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 28



I Like America and America Likes Me
XL Projects

Price: Free
XL Projects
307-313 S. Clinton St., Syracuse

Artwork of international graduate students in SU's College of Visual and Performing Arts (VPA) will be featured in this exhibition. The graduate students will exhibit work in a variety of media.

For more information, contact Andrew Havenhand at ahavenhand@yahoo.com. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours.


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7:30 PM - 12:00 AM, March 28



For Syracuse, 2010: Selections of Truisms and Survival
Urban Video Project

Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

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

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


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Film
 

6:45 PM, March 28



Wednesday Film Series: Chelovek's Kino-Apparatom
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Auditorium
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

Dziga Vertov, 1929, 68 minutes.


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Music
 

12:30 PM, March 28



Syracuse Chorale Chamber Singers
Civic Morning Musicals

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

Warren Ottey, director. Program to be announced.

Parking available in the OnCenter Garage: maximum $2.50 with CMM stamped ticket.


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8:00 PM, March 28



Zach Deputy
Westcott Theater

Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse


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Poetry/Reading
 

11:10 AM - 12:20 PM, March 28



Poetry Reading & Book Signing
Onondaga Community College
Featuring Elizabeth Twiddy

Price: Free
Mawhinney Hall, Room M345
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse


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Theater
 

6:00 PM - 8:00 PM, March 28



For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Enuf
Onondaga Community College
Michelle Footman, director

Storer Auditorium
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse

Onondaga Community College students present a powerful and enjoyable rendition of the 1975 experimental play by Ntozake Shange.


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7:30 PM, March 28



MythBusters: Behind the Myths
Featuring Adam Savage and Jamie Hyneman

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

The all-new, live stage show "MythBusters Behind the Myths," starring Jamie Hyneman and Adam Savage, co-hosts of the Emmy-nominated Discovery series MythBusters, promises to be an unexpected evening of on-stage experiments, audience participation, rocking video and behind-the-scenes stories. For the first time ever, fans will join Jamie and Adam on stage and assist in their mind-twisting and not always orthodox approach to science.

"MythBusters Behind the Myths" brings you face-to-face with the curious world of Jamie and Adam as the duo matches wits on stage with each other and members of the audience.

Tickets available online through Ticketmaster or in person at the OnCenter Box Office.


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Thursday, March 29, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, March 29



Windows Project: Chaz Griffin: The History of Silence
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Chaz Griffin studied at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York and currently resides in Syracuse. For the Window Projects space he will produce a partially-autobiographical collage addressing the issue of youth living in 21st-century urban environments.


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7:30 AM - 10:00 PM, March 29



The Reflections Series: Works by Nevin Mercede
Redhouse

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

These digital prints are composed from photographs taken while traveling in Russia. Conversations with artists, politicians and educators encountered there provide the majority of companion texts. Since 1995 Mercede has woven images with texts reflecting on social, political and educational issues or situations.


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8:00 AM - 2:00 AM, March 29



Being Impossible: Works by Deborah Zlotsky
LeMoyne College

Price: Free
Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College, Syracuse

An exhibition of drawings and paintings by Deborah Zlotsky. In this series, the artist manipulates powdered graphite on sheets of mylar, searching for signs of life in the smears and conjuring up blurred boundaries between documenting nature and inventing nature. Zlotsky is represented by Kathryn Markel Fine Arts in New York and presented a solo exhibition in October 2011. She has been the recipient of numerous residencies, including a residency fellowship at Yaddo in Saratoga Springs, NY, this past summer. She earned a bachelor's degree from Yale University and a master's degree in painting and drawing from the University of Connecticut.

For more information, call 315-445-4153.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 29



Interpreting Nature
Baltimore Woods Art Gallery

Price: Free
Baltimore Woods Nature Center
4007 Bishop Hill Rd., Marcellus

A collection of work by Sharon Bottle Souva, fabric handworks; Wesley Weiss, ceramics; and Jill Newton, watercolors, who work in three distinct media but are united by their shared reference to the natural world.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 29



Gallery Exhibit: The Narrative Tradition in the 21st Century: The Art of Randy Elliott and Richard Williams
Onondaga Community College

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

About Richard Williams:
As a self-taught illustrator I was able to sidestep the many academic pitfalls that plague contemporary artists, such as the belief that drawing skills are not important. My work is steeped in the tradition of craftsmanship and the importance of the narrative. Art in my opinion serves a social function, which can encompass selling a product to the public or making critical commentary on society and culture, and anything in between. To accomplish this, the artist needs to communicate in a simple, clear and powerful way. To do this one needs to have a firm grasp of the basic skills of draftsmanship, color, painting technique and storytelling.

About Randy Elliott:
Randy Elliott began his professional art career in 1988, inking the Dungeons & Dragons, Dragonlance comic book for DC Comics. That job began a career that continues until the present. Over the course of the last twenty-odd years, Randy has inked and/or penciled comic books for DC, Archie, Marvel, Dark Horse, Valiant and a number of smaller publishers. He has also painted images for clients like, Wizards of the Coast, Alderac Entertainment Group, Battlefront Miniatures, Hasbro and others.


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9:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 29



"Images of Upstate New York" and "Juxtaposed Through Wonderland"
SUNY Oswego Metro Center at the Atrium

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

"Images of Upstate New York" features work by Morgan Goodwin and Kate Walseman
"Juxtaposed Through Wonderland" features recent work by KayCie Danniel


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 29



Patently Syracuse
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

A visual exploration of inventions, designs and innovations created in Central New York.


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9:00 AM - 7:00 PM, March 29



The Power and The Piety: The World of Medieval and Renaissance Europe
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

This exhibit, curated by History Professor Chris Kyle with Senior Director of Special Collections Sean Quimby, showcases the library's collection of illuminated manuscripts and early printed works, including a leaf from the Gutenberg Bible.

The title "The Power and The Piety," refers to extraordinary influence that secular monarchies and the Church had on the lives of everyday men and women. Richly illustrated late medieval psalters and books of hours exemplify the painstaking attention that the pious paid to their spiritual well-being. But the printing revolution made it possible for new ideas to spread more rapidly. Printed works like Thomas Hobbes' "Leviathan" (1651) signified the increasing power wielded by kings, queens and other secular authorities. As the Protestant Reformation and Scientific Revolution took hold of Europe, the power of the Catholic Church further waned. "The Power and the Piety" includes such important works as the first King James Bible (1611) and a second printing of Copernicus' "De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium" (1566), which argued in favor of a heliocentric, or sun-centered, universe.

The exhibition is arranged thematically, highlighting the overarching themes of power and piety, as well as English literature, music, architecture, science and fine bindings.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29



Teddy Cruz/The Architect's Work 9
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse


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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 29



Creatures Small and Great
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Dana Blythe Stenson (metalsmith jewelry), Candace Rhea (ceramic and mixed media), Alan Hart (acrylic on board), and Diane Menzies (oil paintings) interpret insects and small animals.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29



Reflection and Identity: Works by W. Michelle Harris and Michael Roman
Community Folk Art Center

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

The exhibition features recent work by Rochester Institute of Technology associate professor and artist W. Michelle Harris and Atlanta-based artist and Syracuse University alum Michael Roman. These two young artists embrace questions of gender, identity, and societal expectations.

While the materials used by each artist sit at the opposite ends of the technological spectrum, both individuals seek to examine topics of an interrelated and highly personal nature.

Read a review!


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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 29



Academic Art...teachers that do
Eureka Crafts

Eureka Crafts
210 Walton St., Syracuse

Works of Jamessville-Dewitt art teachers Faith Carapella (charcoal, pen and ink, collage) and Steve Pilcher (soda-fired stoneware, both functional and decorative).


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 29



Wounding the Black Male
Light Work Gallery

Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition was curated by English Professor Cassandra Jackson and Gallery Director Sarah Cunningham, both from The College of New Jersey (TCNJ). The exhibition was on view in the TCNJ Art Gallery in 2011. The central ideas of the exhibit are rooted in Jackson's most recent book, Violence, Visual Culture, and the Black Male Body (Routledge, 2010). Her book deals with the ways in which the black male body has been visually exploited, and the ways in which contemporary artists have called into question the paradigmatic construction of the black body in American society. The exhibit displays 31 photographs by 19 contemporary artists of African descent, 17 from the United States, two from Britain. Their work comments on the various representations of black bodies in Western visual culture. These artists confront stereotypes about black male appearance, sexuality, violence, and family, and highlight the ways that visual culture has contributed to the marginalization and exclusion of the black community.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 29



Pastoral: Landscape Photos by Alexander Gronsky
Light Work Gallery

Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

Alexander Gronsky is a self-described landscape photographer with an uncanny ability to capture scenes in nature as elegant allegories that include rolling hills, spectacular lighting, and far reaching horizons. His skilled use of perspective and composition, reminiscent of centuries-old traditions in European landscape painting, draw the viewer's eye deep into the landscape and generate a sense of awe for each place. The photographs in this exhibit were taken along the outlying areas of Moscow where the human need to find solace away from the city collides with urban sprawl, and the fragility of nature.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29



Creativity through Exhibition Design II
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

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

"Creativity through Exhibition Design II" features computer-aided drawings and 3-dimensional models of the gallery space in the State Tower Building adjacent to Hanover Square. Students gained experience in such areas as color selection, spatial arrangement, lighting techniques, typography and universal design principles to put their individual creativity into an upcoming exhibition they are working on titled "Hidden in Plain Site: Sculpture in Syracuse and the Work of the Public Artist in Residence."

Patrons should enter The Warehouse via the ground-floor door adjacent to the café on W. Fayette St. or the first-floor door on W. Washington St.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29



Educational Toys by Roy Wilson
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

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

Designer Roy Wilson, a 1970 alumnus of Syracuse University's College of Visual and Performing Arts, will exhibit his award-winning educational toy designs. The exhibit features Wilson's work from the Learning Curve Toy Co., including the 1992 Thomas Wooden Railway project and the 1994 Lamaze Infant Development System, which he researched, designed, engineered and manufactured. The exhibition will also include his most recent invention in toys, TRAK2BRIK Adapters. Introduced in February at the American International Toy Fair, TRAK2BRIK is a system of adapters that links wooden railway track to pegged construction bricks and has dozens of slide-on toy accessories.

Wilson's career evolved from an early fascination with mechanical, scientific and electrical products. While at SU studying industrial design, he wrote his graduating thesis on preschool educational developmental toys. He started his own design business, Creative International, in 1967 and decided to remain independent and/or work on long-term contracts. To date, he has won 47 national and international awards for design excellence.

Patrons should enter The Warehouse via the ground-floor door adjacent to the café on West Fayette Street or the first-floor door on West Washington Street. For more information, contact Bradley Hudson at bjhudson@syr.edu.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 29



Illusionistic
Szozda Gallery

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

Painter Kyle Mort's realism and painter Robert Glisson's impressionism are both meant to prompt the viewer's stare. Both Mort and Glisson work with beautiful color, achieved differently in their signature techniques. Mort tends toward extreme realism, bordering on trompe l'oeil in which he is capable of creating a spatial illusion. Glisson's impressionistic pieces, like the styles of those artists who inspire him, create an emotional illusion. Mort leans more toward depicting still life. Glisson endeavors to capture landscapes.


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11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 29



Kala Stein: Form & Plenty
Gandee Gallery

Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St., Fabius

Kala Stein's exhibition Form and Plenty showcases her innovative ceramics based on archetypal utilitarian forms, like vases, bottles, and cups. By manipulating clay primarily though the slip casting of molds, she creates sculptural silhouettes, which merge multiple forms and planes into a single vessel. Stein says of her work, "Filtering the forms through abstraction, simplification and a limited color palette allows me to make compositional arrangements that depart from the symbol of the object itself."

Stein received her Master of Fine Arts at New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University where she currently is a visiting instructor. She shows her work nationally and maintains her home and studio in Canadice, NY.


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11:00 AM - 3:00 PM, March 29



Time, Again Time: Works by Ana Tiscornia
Point of Contact Gallery

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

In "Time, again time," the artist reflects on ordered fragments of a disordered world. An activist and renowned Latin American artist, Ana Tiscornia brings a mixed-media installation that curator Pedro Cuperman describes as "the outcome of a tale, where we have a fragmented world, where the pieces are somehow geometrically organic, logical... a kind of architecture of catastrophe. It is about the artist's obsession with organizing her world after having lived through the tragedies of military dictatorships in her home land, and the present catastrophes, wars that we endure in our own time. Ana's work demands from the viewer a sort of reconstruction, reintegration of the work, and our world.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 29



Reliquaries: New Work by Drew Goerlitz
Everson Museum of Art

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

Well-known for his graceful yet imposing steel sculpture, Drew Goerlitz, Associate Professor of Sculpture at the State University of New York Plattsburg, presents a new body of work at the Everson Museum of Art. Reliquaries continues the reoccurring theme of containment, concealment and privacy best described by Goerlitz himself: "My interpretation of reliquary is not to hold a sacred object or relic, but to engage the viewer with the form and tension of the unknown interior. The adornment of these objects relates to architectural details and the idea of facade. Facade is what we are presented with upon first appearance, whether speaking of people or architecture, and it isn't until we look inside that we discover the true structure."


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 29



CNY Art Showcase: Juried Preview of Live Auction
Everson Museum of Art

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

CNY Arts Showcase: Juried Preview of the Live Auction, presented in conjunction with the Eastwood Rotary Club, highlights the great and diverse artistic talents within our community. The exhibition at the Everson will precede the Eastwood Rotary Club's Annual CNY Art Showcase Live Auction on April 20.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 29



From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland
Everson Museum of Art

Price: $10 adults, $8 students/seniors, $30 family pack (2 adults, 4 children))
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

"From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland" is the first exhibition to examine the American artist's work focused on the Irish landscape and people, particularly children, created between the time of his first trip to Ireland in 1913 and his last trip there in 1928. Long celebrated as an iconic American artist due to his important early work as a teacher and as the leader of The Eight, Henri's paintings have received less attention on their own. Most projects explored his career as it related to his role as a member of The Eight or in a broadly retrospective manner. Few projects focused on his landscapes, drawings, or foreign portraits.

Henri's Irish portraits constitute his largest focused body of work, and often depict the same sitters year after year. These paintings offer a unique and fascinating window onto the genre about which Henri felt most strongly--portraiture--and also chart his experiments with paint handling and color theories over time. He wrote that the time spent in Ireland was extremely valuable to him (it was the only other place besides New York where he purchased a residence), for only there was he able to focus on his painting without the distractions of life in New York. It is not surprising, then, that the periods Henri spent in Ireland were among his most prolific, and the paintings produced there among his most accomplished. Just before his death, Henri composed a list of his most important paintings; many of the works on this list were his Irish subjects. Forty-one paintings of Irish people and landscapes will be on view in the upcoming exhibition.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 29



The Photographer as Child: Memories of Guatemala
La Casita Cultural Center

La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St., Syracuse

Born in Guatemala, award-winning photographer Efren Lopez is a student in the Military Photojournalism Program at Syracuse University. He is also an aerial photographer for the U.S. Air Force and the first reservist to be selected to attend Newhouse's Military Photojournalism Program. He now lives in Arizona.

The exhibit features images Lopez captured on a return trip to Guatemala in 2009. "My life began in a bamboo hut at the side of a road in a tiny town named Petaca, Guatemala, in 1966," Lopez writes. "It's a town so small that it is next to impossible to find on most maps of Guatemala, much less Central America."

Lopez has documented real-world situations and the military around the globe and has captured stunning images in Arizona and Guatemala. His work has been featured in various publications, including the book Arizona 24/7, and has been awarded many distinctions, including first place in the Professional Photography category at the 2008 Arizona State Fair, an honorable mention in the pictorial category in the 2009 Military Photographer of the Year competition, and first place in the 2011 Multimedia Team 19th Annual Department of Defense Worldwide Military Photography Workshop.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 29



Noriko Ambe: Inner Water
The Warehouse Gallery

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

In her first US museum solo show, New York City-based Japanese artist Noriko Ambe will create a new site-specific installation in the main gallery reflecting the tragic 2011 events in Japan through the use of video projections and her signature large-scale paper cutouts that evoke waves.

Nature plays an important role in Ambe's work, and it points to larger issues, such as the natural forces determining our global landscape, and the relationship between nature and humans throughout time. A recipient of prestigious awards such as the AICA Award and Pollock-Krasner Foundation, Ambe's work has been exhibited internationally, including at the Museum of Arts and Design and the Japan Society in New York and the Kyoto University of Art and Design in Kyoto, Japan. Her work is also in the collection of the Whitney Museum of Art.

Read a review!


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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, March 29



I Like America and America Likes Me
XL Projects

Price: Free
XL Projects
307-313 S. Clinton St., Syracuse

There will be a reception this evening 6:00-8:00 pm.

Artwork of international graduate students in SU's College of Visual and Performing Arts (VPA) will be featured in this exhibition. The graduate students will exhibit work in a variety of media.

For more information, contact Andrew Havenhand at ahavenhand@yahoo.com. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours.


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7:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 29



William Wegman: Flo Flow (2011)
Urban Video Project

Everson Museum of Art Plaza
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

The video "Flo Flow" is William Wegman's latest in a long line of human-canid collaborations. It was while he was in Long Beach in the 1970s that Wegman got his dog, Man Ray, with whom he began a fruitful collaboration of many years. Man Ray, known in the art world and beyond for his endearing deadpan presence, became a central figure in Wegman's photographs and videotapes. Ever since, Weimaraner-actors have peopled Wegman's uncanny imaginative universe, a reflection on both the human-ness of "animals" and the strangeness of humans.

William Wegman lives in New York and Maine where he continues to make videos, to take photographs and to make drawings and paintings.


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7:30 PM - 12:00 AM, March 29



For Syracuse, 2010: Selections of Truisms and Survival
Urban Video Project

Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

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

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


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Film
 

5:00 PM - 7:30 PM, March 29



Iron Jawed Angels
Onondaga Community College

Mawhinney Hall, Second Floor, Room 245
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse

Directed by Katja Von Garnier. Discussion led by Professor Michael O'Connor.


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Lecture
 

7:00 PM, March 29



Images of Sexual Crime and Punishment in Medieval and Early Modern Europe
Syracuse University College of Arts and Sciences
Ray Smith Symposium
Featuring Diane Wolfthal, art historian

Price: Free
Heroy Auditorium, Heroy Geology Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Diane Wolfthal is on the faculty of Rice University, where she holds the David and Caroline Minter Endowed Chair in the Humanities, and serves as professor of art history. Wolfthal's presentation will focus on rape, homosexuality and adultery -- sexual practices that historically have been of interest to the church and state. "I will show how these acts, considered crimes in medieval and early modern Europe, were represented and punished. I will also compare past attitudes [about them] with today's cultural debates," she says.

Wolfthal will draw from two of her books: In and Out of the Marital Bed: Seeing Sex in Late Medieval and Early Modern Art (Yale University Press, 2010), which demonstrates how illicit forms of sexuality were linked to the "chaste sexuality" of marriage, and Images of Rape: The 'Heroic' Tradition and Its Alternatives (Cambridge University Press, 1999), considered the first in-depth exploration of rape, as portrayed in European art from the 1100s-1600s.

In addition to being an art historian, Wolfthal is an expert in feminist and Jewish studies; the history of sexuality; and the intersection of money, values and culture. Also, she is a prolific author and scholar, as evidenced by her role as founding co-editor of Early Modern Women (University of Miami), the only journal devoted to the interdisciplinary and global study of women and gender from the 1400s-1700s.


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7:30 PM, March 29



The Writer As Witness
University Lectures
Featuring Terry Tempest Williams, environmentalist and author

Price: Free
Hendricks Chapel
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Terry Tempest Williams has been called "a citizen writer," a writer who speaks, and speaks out eloquently, on behalf of an ethical stance toward life. A naturalist and fierce advocate for freedom of speech, she has consistently shown us how environmental issues are social issues that ultimately become matters of justice. Williams, like her writing, cannot be categorized.


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Music
 

8:00 PM, March 29



Bill Horrace Trio with jazz vocalists

Price: No cover charge
Phoebe's Garden Cafe
900 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Students from Syracuse University's Department of Drama join the Bill Horrace Trio (Bill Horrace, bass; Dave Solazzo, piano; Tom Bronzetti, guitar) in jazz standards


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8:00 PM, March 29



Dirty South
Westcott Theater

Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse


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Theater
 

6:30 PM, March 29



Avenue Q (School Edition)
Fowler High School

Price: $5 presale, $8 at the door
Fowler High School
227 Magnolia St., Syracuse

Avenue Q -- School Edition, winner of the 2004 Tony Award for Best Musical, is a coming-of-age tale that addresses and satirizes anxieties and issues associated with approaching and entering adulthood with a cast both human and puppet alike. The laugh-out-loud musical tells the timeless story of a recent college grad named Princeton who moves into a shabby New York apartment all the way out on Avenue Q. He soon discovers that although the residents seem nice, it's clear that this is not your ordinary neighborhood. Together, Princeton and his new-found friends struggle to find jobs, dates and their ever-elusive purpose in life. Music and lyrics by Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx, book by Jeff Whitty.

Mary McCrone, director; Matt Rossi, music director; Eric Williams, scenic director; Jamie Gartner, choreographer


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6:45 PM, March 29



Death Takes a Bow
Acme Mystery Company

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

All the world's a stage, but some stages are worth more than others. Welcome to the historic White Tulip, the seediest theater in London yet one which everyone seems to want. Tonight, a tycoon temptress and her tawdry toady take on a territorial thespian and his trollop of a treasurer in a tussle for title to this theatrical tenement. What valuable secrets lie behind the scenes and how far will someone go to unearth them? Let the buyer beware: at this showplace, greed steals every scene and dying on stage could be more than a figure of speech.


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8:00 PM, March 29



Twelfth Night
Redhouse
Stephen Svoboda, director

Price: $25 regular, $15 members
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

In this unique and jazz-filled production of Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, audiences will be transported to a 4th of July garden party in the late 1950s Hamptons. Martinis in hand, the well-heeled guests in tuxes and gowns fall in and out of love as live music keeps the beat for this tuneful, topsy-turvy tale of mistaken identities and thwarted lovers. When the Rat Pack meets the Bard, it's very funny, very romantic, and very cool. Way cool.

The cast is primarily local and includes Katie Gibson, Darian Sundberg, Binaifer Dabu, Todd Quick, Jan Coombs, Donnie Williams, William Edward White, Karis Wiggins, Krystal Scott, Grace Allyn, Gabe Digenova, Marguerite Mitchell, Jordan Hornstein, Nathan Faudree, and Adam Perabo, with pianist Dan Williams.

Read a Review!


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Friday, March 30, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, March 30



Windows Project: Chaz Griffin: The History of Silence
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Chaz Griffin studied at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York and currently resides in Syracuse. For the Window Projects space he will produce a partially-autobiographical collage addressing the issue of youth living in 21st-century urban environments.


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7:30 AM - 10:00 PM, March 30



The Reflections Series: Works by Nevin Mercede
Redhouse

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

These digital prints are composed from photographs taken while traveling in Russia. Conversations with artists, politicians and educators encountered there provide the majority of companion texts. Since 1995 Mercede has woven images with texts reflecting on social, political and educational issues or situations.


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



Being Impossible: Works by Deborah Zlotsky
LeMoyne College

Price: Free
Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College, Syracuse

An exhibition of drawings and paintings by Deborah Zlotsky. In this series, the artist manipulates powdered graphite on sheets of mylar, searching for signs of life in the smears and conjuring up blurred boundaries between documenting nature and inventing nature. Zlotsky is represented by Kathryn Markel Fine Arts in New York and presented a solo exhibition in October 2011. She has been the recipient of numerous residencies, including a residency fellowship at Yaddo in Saratoga Springs, NY, this past summer. She earned a bachelor's degree from Yale University and a master's degree in painting and drawing from the University of Connecticut.

For more information, call 315-445-4153.


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



Interpreting Nature
Baltimore Woods Art Gallery

Price: Free
Baltimore Woods Nature Center
4007 Bishop Hill Rd., Marcellus

A collection of work by Sharon Bottle Souva, fabric handworks; Wesley Weiss, ceramics; and Jill Newton, watercolors, who work in three distinct media but are united by their shared reference to the natural world.


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



Gallery Exhibit: The Narrative Tradition in the 21st Century: The Art of Randy Elliott and Richard Williams
Onondaga Community College

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

About Richard Williams:
As a self-taught illustrator I was able to sidestep the many academic pitfalls that plague contemporary artists, such as the belief that drawing skills are not important. My work is steeped in the tradition of craftsmanship and the importance of the narrative. Art in my opinion serves a social function, which can encompass selling a product to the public or making critical commentary on society and culture, and anything in between. To accomplish this, the artist needs to communicate in a simple, clear and powerful way. To do this one needs to have a firm grasp of the basic skills of draftsmanship, color, painting technique and storytelling.

About Randy Elliott:
Randy Elliott began his professional art career in 1988, inking the Dungeons & Dragons, Dragonlance comic book for DC Comics. That job began a career that continues until the present. Over the course of the last twenty-odd years, Randy has inked and/or penciled comic books for DC, Archie, Marvel, Dark Horse, Valiant and a number of smaller publishers. He has also painted images for clients like, Wizards of the Coast, Alderac Entertainment Group, Battlefront Miniatures, Hasbro and others.


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



"Images of Upstate New York" and "Juxtaposed Through Wonderland"
SUNY Oswego Metro Center at the Atrium

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

"Images of Upstate New York" features work by Morgan Goodwin and Kate Walseman
"Juxtaposed Through Wonderland" features recent work by KayCie Danniel


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



Patently Syracuse
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

A visual exploration of inventions, designs and innovations created in Central New York.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30



The Power and The Piety: The World of Medieval and Renaissance Europe
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

This exhibit, curated by History Professor Chris Kyle with Senior Director of Special Collections Sean Quimby, showcases the library's collection of illuminated manuscripts and early printed works, including a leaf from the Gutenberg Bible.

The title "The Power and The Piety," refers to extraordinary influence that secular monarchies and the Church had on the lives of everyday men and women. Richly illustrated late medieval psalters and books of hours exemplify the painstaking attention that the pious paid to their spiritual well-being. But the printing revolution made it possible for new ideas to spread more rapidly. Printed works like Thomas Hobbes' "Leviathan" (1651) signified the increasing power wielded by kings, queens and other secular authorities. As the Protestant Reformation and Scientific Revolution took hold of Europe, the power of the Catholic Church further waned. "The Power and the Piety" includes such important works as the first King James Bible (1611) and a second printing of Copernicus' "De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium" (1566), which argued in favor of a heliocentric, or sun-centered, universe.

The exhibition is arranged thematically, highlighting the overarching themes of power and piety, as well as English literature, music, architecture, science and fine bindings.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30



Teddy Cruz/The Architect's Work 9
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse


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



Creatures Small and Great
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Dana Blythe Stenson (metalsmith jewelry), Candace Rhea (ceramic and mixed media), Alan Hart (acrylic on board), and Diane Menzies (oil paintings) interpret insects and small animals.


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9:30 AM - 3:00 PM, March 30



Time, Again Time: Works by Ana Tiscornia
Point of Contact Gallery

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

In "Time, again time," the artist reflects on ordered fragments of a disordered world. An activist and renowned Latin American artist, Ana Tiscornia brings a mixed-media installation that curator Pedro Cuperman describes as "the outcome of a tale, where we have a fragmented world, where the pieces are somehow geometrically organic, logical... a kind of architecture of catastrophe. It is about the artist's obsession with organizing her world after having lived through the tragedies of military dictatorships in her home land, and the present catastrophes, wars that we endure in our own time. Ana's work demands from the viewer a sort of reconstruction, reintegration of the work, and our world.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30



Reflection and Identity: Works by W. Michelle Harris and Michael Roman
Community Folk Art Center

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

The exhibition features recent work by Rochester Institute of Technology associate professor and artist W. Michelle Harris and Atlanta-based artist and Syracuse University alum Michael Roman. These two young artists embrace questions of gender, identity, and societal expectations.

While the materials used by each artist sit at the opposite ends of the technological spectrum, both individuals seek to examine topics of an interrelated and highly personal nature.

Read a review!


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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 30



Academic Art...teachers that do
Eureka Crafts

Eureka Crafts
210 Walton St., Syracuse

Works of Jamessville-Dewitt art teachers Faith Carapella (charcoal, pen and ink, collage) and Steve Pilcher (soda-fired stoneware, both functional and decorative).


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 30



Pastoral: Landscape Photos by Alexander Gronsky
Light Work Gallery

Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

Alexander Gronsky is a self-described landscape photographer with an uncanny ability to capture scenes in nature as elegant allegories that include rolling hills, spectacular lighting, and far reaching horizons. His skilled use of perspective and composition, reminiscent of centuries-old traditions in European landscape painting, draw the viewer's eye deep into the landscape and generate a sense of awe for each place. The photographs in this exhibit were taken along the outlying areas of Moscow where the human need to find solace away from the city collides with urban sprawl, and the fragility of nature.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 30



Wounding the Black Male
Light Work Gallery

Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition was curated by English Professor Cassandra Jackson and Gallery Director Sarah Cunningham, both from The College of New Jersey (TCNJ). The exhibition was on view in the TCNJ Art Gallery in 2011. The central ideas of the exhibit are rooted in Jackson's most recent book, Violence, Visual Culture, and the Black Male Body (Routledge, 2010). Her book deals with the ways in which the black male body has been visually exploited, and the ways in which contemporary artists have called into question the paradigmatic construction of the black body in American society. The exhibit displays 31 photographs by 19 contemporary artists of African descent, 17 from the United States, two from Britain. Their work comments on the various representations of black bodies in Western visual culture. These artists confront stereotypes about black male appearance, sexuality, violence, and family, and highlight the ways that visual culture has contributed to the marginalization and exclusion of the black community.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30



Creativity through Exhibition Design II
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

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

"Creativity through Exhibition Design II" features computer-aided drawings and 3-dimensional models of the gallery space in the State Tower Building adjacent to Hanover Square. Students gained experience in such areas as color selection, spatial arrangement, lighting techniques, typography and universal design principles to put their individual creativity into an upcoming exhibition they are working on titled "Hidden in Plain Site: Sculpture in Syracuse and the Work of the Public Artist in Residence."

Patrons should enter The Warehouse via the ground-floor door adjacent to the café on W. Fayette St. or the first-floor door on W. Washington St.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30



Educational Toys by Roy Wilson
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

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

Designer Roy Wilson, a 1970 alumnus of Syracuse University's College of Visual and Performing Arts, will exhibit his award-winning educational toy designs. The exhibit features Wilson's work from the Learning Curve Toy Co., including the 1992 Thomas Wooden Railway project and the 1994 Lamaze Infant Development System, which he researched, designed, engineered and manufactured. The exhibition will also include his most recent invention in toys, TRAK2BRIK Adapters. Introduced in February at the American International Toy Fair, TRAK2BRIK is a system of adapters that links wooden railway track to pegged construction bricks and has dozens of slide-on toy accessories.

Wilson's career evolved from an early fascination with mechanical, scientific and electrical products. While at SU studying industrial design, he wrote his graduating thesis on preschool educational developmental toys. He started his own design business, Creative International, in 1967 and decided to remain independent and/or work on long-term contracts. To date, he has won 47 national and international awards for design excellence.

Patrons should enter The Warehouse via the ground-floor door adjacent to the café on West Fayette Street or the first-floor door on West Washington Street. For more information, contact Bradley Hudson at bjhudson@syr.edu.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 30



Illusionistic
Szozda Gallery

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

Painter Kyle Mort's realism and painter Robert Glisson's impressionism are both meant to prompt the viewer's stare. Both Mort and Glisson work with beautiful color, achieved differently in their signature techniques. Mort tends toward extreme realism, bordering on trompe l'oeil in which he is capable of creating a spatial illusion. Glisson's impressionistic pieces, like the styles of those artists who inspire him, create an emotional illusion. Mort leans more toward depicting still life. Glisson endeavors to capture landscapes.


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



Kala Stein: Form & Plenty
Gandee Gallery

Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St., Fabius

Kala Stein's exhibition Form and Plenty showcases her innovative ceramics based on archetypal utilitarian forms, like vases, bottles, and cups. By manipulating clay primarily though the slip casting of molds, she creates sculptural silhouettes, which merge multiple forms and planes into a single vessel. Stein says of her work, "Filtering the forms through abstraction, simplification and a limited color palette allows me to make compositional arrangements that depart from the symbol of the object itself."

Stein received her Master of Fine Arts at New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University where she currently is a visiting instructor. She shows her work nationally and maintains her home and studio in Canadice, NY.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 30



Reliquaries: New Work by Drew Goerlitz
Everson Museum of Art

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

Well-known for his graceful yet imposing steel sculpture, Drew Goerlitz, Associate Professor of Sculpture at the State University of New York Plattsburg, presents a new body of work at the Everson Museum of Art. Reliquaries continues the reoccurring theme of containment, concealment and privacy best described by Goerlitz himself: "My interpretation of reliquary is not to hold a sacred object or relic, but to engage the viewer with the form and tension of the unknown interior. The adornment of these objects relates to architectural details and the idea of facade. Facade is what we are presented with upon first appearance, whether speaking of people or architecture, and it isn't until we look inside that we discover the true structure."


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 30



From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland
Everson Museum of Art

Price: $10 adults, $8 students/seniors, $30 family pack (2 adults, 4 children))
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

"From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland" is the first exhibition to examine the American artist's work focused on the Irish landscape and people, particularly children, created between the time of his first trip to Ireland in 1913 and his last trip there in 1928. Long celebrated as an iconic American artist due to his important early work as a teacher and as the leader of The Eight, Henri's paintings have received less attention on their own. Most projects explored his career as it related to his role as a member of The Eight or in a broadly retrospective manner. Few projects focused on his landscapes, drawings, or foreign portraits.

Henri's Irish portraits constitute his largest focused body of work, and often depict the same sitters year after year. These paintings offer a unique and fascinating window onto the genre about which Henri felt most strongly--portraiture--and also chart his experiments with paint handling and color theories over time. He wrote that the time spent in Ireland was extremely valuable to him (it was the only other place besides New York where he purchased a residence), for only there was he able to focus on his painting without the distractions of life in New York. It is not surprising, then, that the periods Henri spent in Ireland were among his most prolific, and the paintings produced there among his most accomplished. Just before his death, Henri composed a list of his most important paintings; many of the works on this list were his Irish subjects. Forty-one paintings of Irish people and landscapes will be on view in the upcoming exhibition.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 30



CNY Art Showcase: Juried Preview of Live Auction
Everson Museum of Art

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

CNY Arts Showcase: Juried Preview of the Live Auction, presented in conjunction with the Eastwood Rotary Club, highlights the great and diverse artistic talents within our community. The exhibition at the Everson will precede the Eastwood Rotary Club's Annual CNY Art Showcase Live Auction on April 20.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 30



The Photographer as Child: Memories of Guatemala
La Casita Cultural Center

La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St., Syracuse

Born in Guatemala, award-winning photographer Efren Lopez is a student in the Military Photojournalism Program at Syracuse University. He is also an aerial photographer for the U.S. Air Force and the first reservist to be selected to attend Newhouse's Military Photojournalism Program. He now lives in Arizona.

The exhibit features images Lopez captured on a return trip to Guatemala in 2009. "My life began in a bamboo hut at the side of a road in a tiny town named Petaca, Guatemala, in 1966," Lopez writes. "It's a town so small that it is next to impossible to find on most maps of Guatemala, much less Central America."

Lopez has documented real-world situations and the military around the globe and has captured stunning images in Arizona and Guatemala. His work has been featured in various publications, including the book Arizona 24/7, and has been awarded many distinctions, including first place in the Professional Photography category at the 2008 Arizona State Fair, an honorable mention in the pictorial category in the 2009 Military Photographer of the Year competition, and first place in the 2011 Multimedia Team 19th Annual Department of Defense Worldwide Military Photography Workshop.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 30



Noriko Ambe: Inner Water
The Warehouse Gallery

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

In her first US museum solo show, New York City-based Japanese artist Noriko Ambe will create a new site-specific installation in the main gallery reflecting the tragic 2011 events in Japan through the use of video projections and her signature large-scale paper cutouts that evoke waves.

Nature plays an important role in Ambe's work, and it points to larger issues, such as the natural forces determining our global landscape, and the relationship between nature and humans throughout time. A recipient of prestigious awards such as the AICA Award and Pollock-Krasner Foundation, Ambe's work has been exhibited internationally, including at the Museum of Arts and Design and the Japan Society in New York and the Kyoto University of Art and Design in Kyoto, Japan. Her work is also in the collection of the Whitney Museum of Art.

Read a review!


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 30



I Like America and America Likes Me
XL Projects

Price: Free
XL Projects
307-313 S. Clinton St., Syracuse

Artwork of international graduate students in SU's College of Visual and Performing Arts (VPA) will be featured in this exhibition. The graduate students will exhibit work in a variety of media.

For more information, contact Andrew Havenhand at ahavenhand@yahoo.com. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours.


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



Opening: The Black Series
Echo

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

There will be an opening reception this evening 6:00-9:00 pm.

Photography by Amanda Zackem. On display will be 17 silver-gelatin prints and a short film.


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7:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 30



William Wegman: Flo Flow (2011)
Urban Video Project

Everson Museum of Art Plaza
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

The video "Flo Flow" is William Wegman's latest in a long line of human-canid collaborations. It was while he was in Long Beach in the 1970s that Wegman got his dog, Man Ray, with whom he began a fruitful collaboration of many years. Man Ray, known in the art world and beyond for his endearing deadpan presence, became a central figure in Wegman's photographs and videotapes. Ever since, Weimaraner-actors have peopled Wegman's uncanny imaginative universe, a reflection on both the human-ness of "animals" and the strangeness of humans.

William Wegman lives in New York and Maine where he continues to make videos, to take photographs and to make drawings and paintings.


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7:30 PM - 12:00 AM, March 30



For Syracuse, 2010: Selections of Truisms and Survival
Urban Video Project

Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

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

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


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Comedy
 

8:00 PM - 10:30 PM, March 30



Death March of the Penguins
Syracuse Improv Collective

Price: $5
The Vault
451 S. Warren St., Syracuse

A night of improvisational comedy and hardcore ukulele music.

8:00 pm: The SIC workshop graduates
8:40 pm: Zamboni Revolution, Syracuse University's only improv comedy troupe
9:30 pm: Fugulele, an all-ukulele Fugazi cover band
10:00 pm: Oregon Fail (long form improv)


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Music
 

7:30 PM, March 30



Verdi Requiem
Syracuse Orchestra (formerly Symphoria)
Syracuse University Oratorio Society
Daniel Hege, conductor
Featuring Mihoko Kinoshita, soprano; Sarah Heltzel, mezzo-soprano; Jonathan Howell, tenor; Marc Webster, bass

Price: $20 adults, $10 students
Goldstein Auditorium, Schine Student Center
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Tickets are available from the Syracuse Opera Box Office, 315-476-7372, www.syracuseopera.com.

Free parking at Booth Garage (Waverly & Comstock), University Avenue Garage (University Avenue between Harrison & Comstock), and in the Waverly and Marion Lots.


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7:30 PM, March 30



Unplugged. Uncovered. Unsung.
Words and Music Songwriter Showcase

Price: $10
Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St., Syracuse

Join Colleen Kattau, Dana "Short Order" Cooke, and Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers for an evening of music and songwriting.


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8:00 PM, March 30



Bright Young Thing 2
Twist Cabaret Theatre
Featuring Erika Clement, vocals; Josh Smith, piano

Price: $15
Twist Ultra Lounge
252 W. Genesee St., Syracuse

This is the second showcase of swing, jazz and cabaret, written by Josh Smith, musical director,
with Erika Clement. She will perform songs from Broadway shows and some popular songs of eras gone by.


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8:00 PM, March 30



Hot Day at the Zoo, with Woodworks
Westcott Theater

Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse


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Poetry/Reading
 

7:00 PM, March 30



Poets Lynn Domina and Yvonne Murphy
Downtown Writer's Center

Price: Free
YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Lynn Domina is the author of two collections of poetry, Corporal Works and Framed in Silence, and the editor of a collection of essays, Poets on the Psalms. Her work appears in the New England Review, Prairie Schooner, the Southern Review, the Valparaiso Poetry Review, and several other periodicals.She currently lives in the western Catskill region of New York.

Yvonne C. Murphy's first book of poetry, Aviaries, was published in March 2011, by Carolina Wren Press. An Associate Professor of The Arts at SUNY Empire State College in East Syracuse, NY, she has a Ph.D. in Creative Writing and Literature and has worked as an editor, publications writer, journalist, library clerk, storyteller, researcher and artist-in residence in public schools, community organizations, hospitals and art museums.


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7:30 PM, March 30



Spoken Word Poetry Institute
Verbal Blend

Price: Free
Schine Student Center, room 304
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

Verbal Blend, a spoken-word poetry program coordinated by SU's Office of Multicultural Affairs within the Division of Student Affairs, will premiere the Spoken Word Poetry Institute, examining the dynamic of written and performance poetry in the 21st century.

This event includes a panel discussion, themed "Lift Every Voice & Sing," along with mini-readings by acclaimed poets Joshua Bennett, Tara Betts and Lemon Andersen.

Lemon Andersen is an original cast member of the Tony Award-winning Russell Simmons' "Def Poetry Jam" on Broadway and has been seen on HBO's "Def Poetry Jam" eight times in six seasons. He has traveled the spoken-word and theater scene for the last decade, performing and selling out venues such as the Nuyorican Poets Café, Apollo Theater, Chicago Theater and Hollywood KODAK. He has recently acted in films by Spike Lee, including "Sucker Free City," "She Hate Me," and "Inside Man," where Andersen starred opposite Denzel Washington.

Betts is the author of "Arc and Hue" (Aquarius Press, 2009) and a Cave Canem Fellow, who has appeared on HBO's "Def Poetry Jam."

Bennett is an award-winning performance poet who has recited his poems at events such as the Sundance Film Festival, NAACP Image Awards and President Obama's Evening of Poetry and Music at the White House.

For more information, contact Cedric Bolton at 315-443-9676 or ctbolton@syr.edu.


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Theater
 

6:30 PM, March 30



Avenue Q (School Edition)
Fowler High School

Price: $5 presale, $8 at the door
Fowler High School
227 Magnolia St., Syracuse

Avenue Q -- School Edition, winner of the 2004 Tony Award for Best Musical, is a coming-of-age tale that addresses and satirizes anxieties and issues associated with approaching and entering adulthood with a cast both human and puppet alike. The laugh-out-loud musical tells the timeless story of a recent college grad named Princeton who moves into a shabby New York apartment all the way out on Avenue Q. He soon discovers that although the residents seem nice, it's clear that this is not your ordinary neighborhood. Together, Princeton and his new-found friends struggle to find jobs, dates and their ever-elusive purpose in life. Music and lyrics by Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx, book by Jeff Whitty.

Mary McCrone, director; Matt Rossi, music director; Eric Williams, scenic director; Jamie Gartner, choreographer


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6:45 PM, March 30



Lombardi: More Than Just the Game
CNY Playhouse
Dustin M. Czarny, director

Price: Dinner theater: $35 single; $65 couple. Show only: $25 (limited availability)
Fire and Ice Banquet Hall, The Locker Room
528 Hiawatha Blvd., Syracuse

Dinner at 6:45 pm, followed by show at 8:00 pm.

Winners never quit and quitters never win.

A new play by Eric Simonsen. Sport produces great human drama and there is no greater sports icon to bring to theatrical life than Hall of Fame football coach Vince Lombardi, unquestionably one of the most inspirational and quotable personalities of all time. Though football's Super Bowl trophy is named for him, few know the real story of Lombardi the man and his inspirations, his passions and ability to drive people to achieve what they never thought possible.

Starring Stephfond Brunson, Anne Fitzgerald, Jordan Glaski, Matt Nilsen, Dan Rowlands, and Roy Van Norstrand as Lombardi.

Read a Review!


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7:30 PM, March 30



The King and I
Christian Brothers Academy

Price: $8
Nottingham High School
3100 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Two very different cultures meet when an English widow becomes a tutor for the children of the King of Siam. Set in Bangkok in 1862, both the widow and the king grow to appreciate how vast differences can lead to an understanding of the shared hopes and dreams in all of the family of man. Music by Richard Rodgers; book and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein III.

Eugene Moretti, director; Robert Caraher, music director; Christina Ciereck, choreographer.

Tickets will be available at CBA starting March 23 from any cast member, or at the door.


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8:00 PM, March 30



Twelfth Night
Redhouse
Stephen Svoboda, director

Price: $25 regular, $15 members
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

In this unique and jazz-filled production of Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, audiences will be transported to a 4th of July garden party in the late 1950s Hamptons. Martinis in hand, the well-heeled guests in tuxes and gowns fall in and out of love as live music keeps the beat for this tuneful, topsy-turvy tale of mistaken identities and thwarted lovers. When the Rat Pack meets the Bard, it's very funny, very romantic, and very cool. Way cool.

The cast is primarily local and includes Katie Gibson, Darian Sundberg, Binaifer Dabu, Todd Quick, Jan Coombs, Donnie Williams, William Edward White, Karis Wiggins, Krystal Scott, Grace Allyn, Gabe Digenova, Marguerite Mitchell, Jordan Hornstein, Nathan Faudree, and Adam Perabo, with pianist Dan Williams.

Read a Review!


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8:00 PM, March 30



Quilters
Syracuse University Drama Department
Patdro Harris, director

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

The memories, hopes, dreams and prayers of the indomitable women of the American frontier enliven this hauntingly beautiful musical. Based on oral histories from the pioneers of the prairie states, Quilters celebrates with unassuming honesty and simplicity the fears, joys, loves and tribulations of these remarkable women as they move from girlhood through family life and confront hardships as settlers in a sometimes harsh land. With a folk-inspired score and a hearty dose of humor, Quilters offers a tender and moving theatrical experience. Book by Molly Newman and Barbara Damashek, music and lyrics by Barbara Damashek.

Read a Review!


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Saturday, March 31, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, March 31



Windows Project: Chaz Griffin: The History of Silence
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Chaz Griffin studied at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York and currently resides in Syracuse. For the Window Projects space he will produce a partially-autobiographical collage addressing the issue of youth living in 21st-century urban environments.


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7:30 AM - 10:00 PM, March 31



The Reflections Series: Works by Nevin Mercede
Redhouse

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

These digital prints are composed from photographs taken while traveling in Russia. Conversations with artists, politicians and educators encountered there provide the majority of companion texts. Since 1995 Mercede has woven images with texts reflecting on social, political and educational issues or situations.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 31



Artisan & Craft Show
Jordan-Elbridge High School Literary & Arts Magazine

Price: Free
Elbridge Elementary School
130 E. Main St., Elbridge

Over 40 local artisan and craft booths will be present, along with concessions, and the Easter bunny for photos. Parking is free.

For more information, contact Caron Dunbar at 72cuda@twcny.rr.com or phone 315-558-3408.


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10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, March 31



Creatures Small and Great
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Dana Blythe Stenson (metalsmith jewelry), Candace Rhea (ceramic and mixed media), Alan Hart (acrylic on board), and Diane Menzies (oil paintings) interpret insects and small animals.


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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 31



Academic Art...teachers that do
Eureka Crafts

Eureka Crafts
210 Walton St., Syracuse

Works of Jamessville-Dewitt art teachers Faith Carapella (charcoal, pen and ink, collage) and Steve Pilcher (soda-fired stoneware, both functional and decorative).


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 31



CNY Art Showcase: Juried Preview of Live Auction
Everson Museum of Art

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

CNY Arts Showcase: Juried Preview of the Live Auction, presented in conjunction with the Eastwood Rotary Club, highlights the great and diverse artistic talents within our community. The exhibition at the Everson will precede the Eastwood Rotary Club's Annual CNY Art Showcase Live Auction on April 20.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 31



From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland
Everson Museum of Art

Price: $10 adults, $8 students/seniors, $30 family pack (2 adults, 4 children))
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

"From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland" is the first exhibition to examine the American artist's work focused on the Irish landscape and people, particularly children, created between the time of his first trip to Ireland in 1913 and his last trip there in 1928. Long celebrated as an iconic American artist due to his important early work as a teacher and as the leader of The Eight, Henri's paintings have received less attention on their own. Most projects explored his career as it related to his role as a member of The Eight or in a broadly retrospective manner. Few projects focused on his landscapes, drawings, or foreign portraits.

Henri's Irish portraits constitute his largest focused body of work, and often depict the same sitters year after year. These paintings offer a unique and fascinating window onto the genre about which Henri felt most strongly--portraiture--and also chart his experiments with paint handling and color theories over time. He wrote that the time spent in Ireland was extremely valuable to him (it was the only other place besides New York where he purchased a residence), for only there was he able to focus on his painting without the distractions of life in New York. It is not surprising, then, that the periods Henri spent in Ireland were among his most prolific, and the paintings produced there among his most accomplished. Just before his death, Henri composed a list of his most important paintings; many of the works on this list were his Irish subjects. Forty-one paintings of Irish people and landscapes will be on view in the upcoming exhibition.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 31



Reliquaries: New Work by Drew Goerlitz
Everson Museum of Art

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

Well-known for his graceful yet imposing steel sculpture, Drew Goerlitz, Associate Professor of Sculpture at the State University of New York Plattsburg, presents a new body of work at the Everson Museum of Art. Reliquaries continues the reoccurring theme of containment, concealment and privacy best described by Goerlitz himself: "My interpretation of reliquary is not to hold a sacred object or relic, but to engage the viewer with the form and tension of the unknown interior. The adornment of these objects relates to architectural details and the idea of facade. Facade is what we are presented with upon first appearance, whether speaking of people or architecture, and it isn't until we look inside that we discover the true structure."


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 31



Interpreting Nature
Baltimore Woods Art Gallery

Price: Free
Baltimore Woods Nature Center
4007 Bishop Hill Rd., Marcellus

A collection of work by Sharon Bottle Souva, fabric handworks; Wesley Weiss, ceramics; and Jill Newton, watercolors, who work in three distinct media but are united by their shared reference to the natural world.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 31



Illusionistic
Szozda Gallery

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

Painter Kyle Mort's realism and painter Robert Glisson's impressionism are both meant to prompt the viewer's stare. Both Mort and Glisson work with beautiful color, achieved differently in their signature techniques. Mort tends toward extreme realism, bordering on trompe l'oeil in which he is capable of creating a spatial illusion. Glisson's impressionistic pieces, like the styles of those artists who inspire him, create an emotional illusion. Mort leans more toward depicting still life. Glisson endeavors to capture landscapes.


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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 31



Reflection and Identity: Works by W. Michelle Harris and Michael Roman
Community Folk Art Center

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

The exhibition features recent work by Rochester Institute of Technology associate professor and artist W. Michelle Harris and Atlanta-based artist and Syracuse University alum Michael Roman. These two young artists embrace questions of gender, identity, and societal expectations.

While the materials used by each artist sit at the opposite ends of the technological spectrum, both individuals seek to examine topics of an interrelated and highly personal nature.

Read a review!


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 31



The Black Series
Echo

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

Photography by Amanda Zackem. On display will be 17 silver-gelatin prints and a short film.


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11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 31



Kala Stein: Form & Plenty
Gandee Gallery

Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St., Fabius

Kala Stein's exhibition Form and Plenty showcases her innovative ceramics based on archetypal utilitarian forms, like vases, bottles, and cups. By manipulating clay primarily though the slip casting of molds, she creates sculptural silhouettes, which merge multiple forms and planes into a single vessel. Stein says of her work, "Filtering the forms through abstraction, simplification and a limited color palette allows me to make compositional arrangements that depart from the symbol of the object itself."

Stein received her Master of Fine Arts at New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University where she currently is a visiting instructor. She shows her work nationally and maintains her home and studio in Canadice, NY.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 31



Noriko Ambe: Inner Water
The Warehouse Gallery

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

In her first US museum solo show, New York City-based Japanese artist Noriko Ambe will create a new site-specific installation in the main gallery reflecting the tragic 2011 events in Japan through the use of video projections and her signature large-scale paper cutouts that evoke waves.

Nature plays an important role in Ambe's work, and it points to larger issues, such as the natural forces determining our global landscape, and the relationship between nature and humans throughout time. A recipient of prestigious awards such as the AICA Award and Pollock-Krasner Foundation, Ambe's work has been exhibited internationally, including at the Museum of Arts and Design and the Japan Society in New York and the Kyoto University of Art and Design in Kyoto, Japan. Her work is also in the collection of the Whitney Museum of Art.

Read a review!


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 31



I Like America and America Likes Me
XL Projects

Price: Free
XL Projects
307-313 S. Clinton St., Syracuse

Artwork of international graduate students in SU's College of Visual and Performing Arts (VPA) will be featured in this exhibition. The graduate students will exhibit work in a variety of media.

For more information, contact Andrew Havenhand at ahavenhand@yahoo.com. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours.


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1:30 PM - 4:00 PM, March 31



Spring Fine Arts Show
CNY Art Guild

Price: Free
Aspen House, Radisson
8550 N. Entry Rd., Baldwinsville

The show is juried for awards. Refreshments available. There will be a raffle of member's work to support Edgewood Gallery's exhibition of high school students' art.


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6:00 PM - 9:00 PM, March 31



Opening: RESOURCED/response: The Art of the Justseeds Artists Cooperative and SU Fiber Arts
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

Meet the artists at 6:00 pm, followed by an opening reception 7:00-9:00 pm.

This exhibition is a look into the environmental devastation that plagues the earth and its beings. It is also a look into the environmental justice movement that works to correct and heal the destruction. RESOURCED is a portfolio of hand-produced prints organized and created by the Justseeds Artists' Cooperative in 2010, focusing on resource extraction and climate issues, which will be used to help ask important questions about our environment. At the beginning of the spring semester 2012, students from the introduction to fibers course at Syracuse University viewed images from RESOURCED.

Students selected the poster that held most significance to them, either for the visual content of the work or the environmental issue it addressed. Then each student created a hand-dyed textile in response to the original work, using a variety of dye techniques, relief printing techniques and methods of stitching. These were both applied traditionally and adapted to suit the students' intentions and individual visual language.


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7:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 31



William Wegman: Flo Flow (2011)
Urban Video Project

Everson Museum of Art Plaza
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

The video "Flo Flow" is William Wegman's latest in a long line of human-canid collaborations. It was while he was in Long Beach in the 1970s that Wegman got his dog, Man Ray, with whom he began a fruitful collaboration of many years. Man Ray, known in the art world and beyond for his endearing deadpan presence, became a central figure in Wegman's photographs and videotapes. Ever since, Weimaraner-actors have peopled Wegman's uncanny imaginative universe, a reflection on both the human-ness of "animals" and the strangeness of humans.

William Wegman lives in New York and Maine where he continues to make videos, to take photographs and to make drawings and paintings.


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7:30 PM - 12:00 AM, March 31



For Syracuse, 2010: Selections of Truisms and Survival
Urban Video Project

Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

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

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


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Lecture
 

2:00 PM, March 31



Curator Lecture
Everson Museum of Art
Featuring Valerie Ann Leeds

Price: Free
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Join us for a talk with Valerie Ann Leeds, guest curator of "From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland." Valerie will present an illustrated talk providing insight into the artist's life, explore what inspired Henri's deep love of Ireland and what motivated him to paint the rugged Irish landscape and children of the small town of Dooagh.


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Music
 

2:00 PM, March 31



Dave Ruch
Erie Canal Museum

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

Family concert with the singer-guitarist.


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2:00 PM, March 31



Senior Flute Recital
Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
Featuring Christie Glaser, flute

Price: Free
Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Christie Glaser will perform works by Prokofiev, Reinecke, Sancan, Devienne, and Persichetti. The concert will feature guest artist Leigh Bergman on viola and accompanist Maryna Mazhukhova.

Free parking is available in the Irving Garage; parking for patrons with disabilities is available in the Q1 lot. Patrons should mention that they are attending the concert.


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7:00 PM - 10:00 PM, March 31



Legends of Folk Night
Kellish Hill Farm

Price: Suggested donation: $5 or more
Kellish Hill Farm
3192 Pompey Center Rd., Pompey

Part of our series featuring songs of musicians we love, performed by our local musicians. Gather round and enjoy the music of Bob Dylan; Simon and Garfunkel; Peter, Paul and Mary; and of course, Joan Baez. Time limited to 15 minutes or 3 songs. A sign up board will be in use this night to track order of playing. Please contact Kathy Kellish at kmkrahfarm@windstream.net to guarantee playing time.


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7:00 PM, March 31



Andrew and Noah Band, Loren Barrigar, Mark Mazengarb

Price: $15 adults, $12 students
Palace Theater
2384 James St., Syracuse

Don't miss the opportunity to hear two of Central New York's hottest acts coming together for one great show.

Andrew and Noah VanNorstrand are two of the finest musicians, singers, and songwriters in the area. They have recently recorded a brand new album with their seven-piece band tittled "Andrew and Noah Band." The concert will celebrate the release of this exciting new album.

Loren Barrigar and Mark Mazengarb perform stunning guitar duets and songs which feature their world-class guitar talent, tasteful musicality and creative interaction. Together the pair has a big sound and wide appeal with original and arranged music in the veins of Bluegrass, Jazz and old-time country. Loren and Mark have recently toured in France and Germany and this concert will be their first since returning to the US.


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8:00 PM, March 31



Bright Young Thing 2
Twist Cabaret Theatre
Featuring Erika Clement, vocals; Josh Smith, piano

Price: $15
Twist Ultra Lounge
252 W. Genesee St., Syracuse

This is the second showcase of swing, jazz and cabaret, written by Josh Smith, musical director,
with Erika Clement. She will perform songs from Broadway shows and some popular songs of eras gone by.


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9:00 PM, March 31



DJ Shadow, with special guests
Westcott Theater

Price: $25
Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse


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Poetry/Reading
 

7:30 PM, March 31



Spoken Word Poetry Institute
Verbal Blend
Featuring Lemon Andersen

Price: Free, but tickets required
Hergenhan Auditorium, Newhouse 3
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Verbal Blend, a spoken-word poetry program coordinated by SU's Office of Multicultural Affairs within the Division of Student Affairs, will premiere the Spoken Word Poetry Institute, examining the dynamic of written and performance poetry in the 21st century.

Lemon Andersen is an original cast member of the Tony Award-winning Russell Simmons' "Def Poetry Jam" on Broadway and has been seen on HBO's "Def Poetry Jam" eight times in six seasons. He has traveled the spoken-word and theater scene for the last decade, performing and selling out venues such as the Nuyorican Poets Café, Apollo Theater, Chicago Theater and Hollywood KODAK. He has recently acted in films by Spike Lee, including "Sucker Free City," "She Hate Me," and "Inside Man," where Andersen starred opposite Denzel Washington.

For more information, contact Cedric Bolton at 315-443-9676 or ctbolton@syr.edu.

Tickets are available at the Schine Box Office.


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Theater
 

12:30 PM, March 31



The Little Mermaid
Magic Circle Children's Theatre

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

Interactive adaptation of the children's classic.

Read a review!


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6:30 PM, March 31



Avenue Q (School Edition)
Fowler High School

Price: $5 presale, $8 at the door
Fowler High School
227 Magnolia St., Syracuse

Avenue Q -- School Edition, winner of the 2004 Tony Award for Best Musical, is a coming-of-age tale that addresses and satirizes anxieties and issues associated with approaching and entering adulthood with a cast both human and puppet alike. The laugh-out-loud musical tells the timeless story of a recent college grad named Princeton who moves into a shabby New York apartment all the way out on Avenue Q. He soon discovers that although the residents seem nice, it's clear that this is not your ordinary neighborhood. Together, Princeton and his new-found friends struggle to find jobs, dates and their ever-elusive purpose in life. Music and lyrics by Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx, book by Jeff Whitty.

Mary McCrone, director; Matt Rossi, music director; Eric Williams, scenic director; Jamie Gartner, choreographer


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6:45 PM, March 31



Lombardi: More Than Just the Game
CNY Playhouse
Dustin M. Czarny, director

Price: Dinner theater: $35 single; $65 couple. Show only: $25 (limited availability)
Fire and Ice Banquet Hall, The Locker Room
528 Hiawatha Blvd., Syracuse

Dinner at 6:45 pm, followed by show at 8:00 pm.

Winners never quit and quitters never win.

A new play by Eric Simonsen. Sport produces great human drama and there is no greater sports icon to bring to theatrical life than Hall of Fame football coach Vince Lombardi, unquestionably one of the most inspirational and quotable personalities of all time. Though football's Super Bowl trophy is named for him, few know the real story of Lombardi the man and his inspirations, his passions and ability to drive people to achieve what they never thought possible.

Starring Stephfond Brunson, Anne Fitzgerald, Jordan Glaski, Matt Nilsen, Dan Rowlands, and Roy Van Norstrand as Lombardi.

Read a Review!


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7:30 PM, March 31



The King and I
Christian Brothers Academy

Price: $8
Nottingham High School
3100 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Two very different cultures meet when an English widow becomes a tutor for the children of the King of Siam. Set in Bangkok in 1862, both the widow and the king grow to appreciate how vast differences can lead to an understanding of the shared hopes and dreams in all of the family of man. Music by Richard Rodgers; book and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein III.

Eugene Moretti, director; Robert Caraher, music director; Christina Ciereck, choreographer.

Tickets will be available at CBA starting March 23 from any cast member, or at the door.


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, March 31



Twelfth Night
Redhouse
Stephen Svoboda, director

Price: $25 regular, $15 members
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

In this unique and jazz-filled production of Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, audiences will be transported to a 4th of July garden party in the late 1950s Hamptons. Martinis in hand, the well-heeled guests in tuxes and gowns fall in and out of love as live music keeps the beat for this tuneful, topsy-turvy tale of mistaken identities and thwarted lovers. When the Rat Pack meets the Bard, it's very funny, very romantic, and very cool. Way cool.

The cast is primarily local and includes Katie Gibson, Darian Sundberg, Binaifer Dabu, Todd Quick, Jan Coombs, Donnie Williams, William Edward White, Karis Wiggins, Krystal Scott, Grace Allyn, Gabe Digenova, Marguerite Mitchell, Jordan Hornstein, Nathan Faudree, and Adam Perabo, with pianist Dan Williams.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, March 31



Quilters
Syracuse University Drama Department
Patdro Harris, director

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

The memories, hopes, dreams and prayers of the indomitable women of the American frontier enliven this hauntingly beautiful musical. Based on oral histories from the pioneers of the prairie states, Quilters celebrates with unassuming honesty and simplicity the fears, joys, loves and tribulations of these remarkable women as they move from girlhood through family life and confront hardships as settlers in a sometimes harsh land. With a folk-inspired score and a hearty dose of humor, Quilters offers a tender and moving theatrical experience. Book by Molly Newman and Barbara Damashek, music and lyrics by Barbara Damashek.

Read a Review!


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Sunday, April 1, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, April 1



Windows Project: Chaz Griffin: The History of Silence
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Chaz Griffin studied at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York and currently resides in Syracuse. For the Window Projects space he will produce a partially-autobiographical collage addressing the issue of youth living in 21st-century urban environments.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 1



Wounding the Black Male
Light Work Gallery

Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition was curated by English Professor Cassandra Jackson and Gallery Director Sarah Cunningham, both from The College of New Jersey (TCNJ). The exhibition was on view in the TCNJ Art Gallery in 2011. The central ideas of the exhibit are rooted in Jackson's most recent book, Violence, Visual Culture, and the Black Male Body (Routledge, 2010). Her book deals with the ways in which the black male body has been visually exploited, and the ways in which contemporary artists have called into question the paradigmatic construction of the black body in American society. The exhibit displays 31 photographs by 19 contemporary artists of African descent, 17 from the United States, two from Britain. Their work comments on the various representations of black bodies in Western visual culture. These artists confront stereotypes about black male appearance, sexuality, violence, and family, and highlight the ways that visual culture has contributed to the marginalization and exclusion of the black community.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 1



Pastoral: Landscape Photos by Alexander Gronsky
Light Work Gallery

Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

Alexander Gronsky is a self-described landscape photographer with an uncanny ability to capture scenes in nature as elegant allegories that include rolling hills, spectacular lighting, and far reaching horizons. His skilled use of perspective and composition, reminiscent of centuries-old traditions in European landscape painting, draw the viewer's eye deep into the landscape and generate a sense of awe for each place. The photographs in this exhibit were taken along the outlying areas of Moscow where the human need to find solace away from the city collides with urban sprawl, and the fragility of nature.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 1



Illusionistic
Szozda Gallery

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

Painter Kyle Mort's realism and painter Robert Glisson's impressionism are both meant to prompt the viewer's stare. Both Mort and Glisson work with beautiful color, achieved differently in their signature techniques. Mort tends toward extreme realism, bordering on trompe l'oeil in which he is capable of creating a spatial illusion. Glisson's impressionistic pieces, like the styles of those artists who inspire him, create an emotional illusion. Mort leans more toward depicting still life. Glisson endeavors to capture landscapes.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 1



Kala Stein: Form & Plenty
Gandee Gallery

Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St., Fabius

Kala Stein's exhibition Form and Plenty showcases her innovative ceramics based on archetypal utilitarian forms, like vases, bottles, and cups. By manipulating clay primarily though the slip casting of molds, she creates sculptural silhouettes, which merge multiple forms and planes into a single vessel. Stein says of her work, "Filtering the forms through abstraction, simplification and a limited color palette allows me to make compositional arrangements that depart from the symbol of the object itself."

Stein received her Master of Fine Arts at New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University where she currently is a visiting instructor. She shows her work nationally and maintains her home and studio in Canadice, NY.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 1



Academic Art...teachers that do
Eureka Crafts

Eureka Crafts
210 Walton St., Syracuse

Works of Jamessville-Dewitt art teachers Faith Carapella (charcoal, pen and ink, collage) and Steve Pilcher (soda-fired stoneware, both functional and decorative).


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 1



Reliquaries: New Work by Drew Goerlitz
Everson Museum of Art

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

Well-known for his graceful yet imposing steel sculpture, Drew Goerlitz, Associate Professor of Sculpture at the State University of New York Plattsburg, presents a new body of work at the Everson Museum of Art. Reliquaries continues the reoccurring theme of containment, concealment and privacy best described by Goerlitz himself: "My interpretation of reliquary is not to hold a sacred object or relic, but to engage the viewer with the form and tension of the unknown interior. The adornment of these objects relates to architectural details and the idea of facade. Facade is what we are presented with upon first appearance, whether speaking of people or architecture, and it isn't until we look inside that we discover the true structure."


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 1



From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland
Everson Museum of Art

Price: $10 adults, $8 students/seniors, $30 family pack (2 adults, 4 children))
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

"From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland" is the first exhibition to examine the American artist's work focused on the Irish landscape and people, particularly children, created between the time of his first trip to Ireland in 1913 and his last trip there in 1928. Long celebrated as an iconic American artist due to his important early work as a teacher and as the leader of The Eight, Henri's paintings have received less attention on their own. Most projects explored his career as it related to his role as a member of The Eight or in a broadly retrospective manner. Few projects focused on his landscapes, drawings, or foreign portraits.

Henri's Irish portraits constitute his largest focused body of work, and often depict the same sitters year after year. These paintings offer a unique and fascinating window onto the genre about which Henri felt most strongly--portraiture--and also chart his experiments with paint handling and color theories over time. He wrote that the time spent in Ireland was extremely valuable to him (it was the only other place besides New York where he purchased a residence), for only there was he able to focus on his painting without the distractions of life in New York. It is not surprising, then, that the periods Henri spent in Ireland were among his most prolific, and the paintings produced there among his most accomplished. Just before his death, Henri composed a list of his most important paintings; many of the works on this list were his Irish subjects. Forty-one paintings of Irish people and landscapes will be on view in the upcoming exhibition.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 1



CNY Art Showcase: Juried Preview of Live Auction
Everson Museum of Art

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

CNY Arts Showcase: Juried Preview of the Live Auction, presented in conjunction with the Eastwood Rotary Club, highlights the great and diverse artistic talents within our community. The exhibition at the Everson will precede the Eastwood Rotary Club's Annual CNY Art Showcase Live Auction on April 20.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, April 1



I Like America and America Likes Me
XL Projects

Price: Free
XL Projects
307-313 S. Clinton St., Syracuse

Artwork of international graduate students in SU's College of Visual and Performing Arts (VPA) will be featured in this exhibition. The graduate students will exhibit work in a variety of media.

For more information, contact Andrew Havenhand at ahavenhand@yahoo.com. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours.


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1:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 1



The Reflections Series: Works by Nevin Mercede
Redhouse

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

These digital prints are composed from photographs taken while traveling in Russia. Conversations with artists, politicians and educators encountered there provide the majority of companion texts. Since 1995 Mercede has woven images with texts reflecting on social, political and educational issues or situations.


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1:00 PM - 4:00 PM, April 1



Book Eating Party!
Szozda Gallery
Salt City Book Arts

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

Yes, it's April Fool's Day, but this is not an April Fool's joke!

A book eating party?! What kind of madness is this, you may ask. More commonly known as an edible book festival, this is actually a very popular annual event amongst cuisine-inspired bibliophiles and book-loving gourmets. Since its first incarnation in 1990, more and more people have gotten the urge to create books and book-themed sculptures with eatables such as bread, graham crackers, kale, chocolate, pretzels, etc. Come join us on April Fool's Day as we celebrate nourishing books and food in ways that are silly, sublime, creative, witty, delicious and great fun! Be prepared for a wonderfully unique event with fabulous raffle items, a make-your-own edible book station, thrilling refreshments, genteel friends and so much more.

If you would like to submit your own creation, bring it to the gallery at 1:00 pm along with a sheet that has your name, the book title, and all ingredients listed. Entries may be book shaped such as a codex, accordion, scroll, tablet, etc. They may also be based on a pun of a book title or depict a particular book cover that is displayed next to the piece.

2:00 pm: Short poetry reading by Underground Poetry Spot.
3:00 pm: Eating of the book displays and drawing of raffle prizes.

For more information, please visit saltcitybookarts.blogspot.com.


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1:30 PM - 4:00 PM, April 1



Spring Fine Arts Show
CNY Art Guild

Price: Free
Aspen House, Radisson
8550 N. Entry Rd., Baldwinsville

The show is juried for awards. Refreshments available. There will be a raffle of member's work to support Edgewood Gallery's exhibition of high school students' art.


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7:30 PM - 12:00 AM, April 1



For Syracuse, 2010: Selections of Truisms and Survival
Urban Video Project

Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

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

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


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7:30 PM - 11:00 PM, April 1



William Wegman: Flo Flow (2011)
Urban Video Project

Everson Museum of Art Plaza
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

The video "Flo Flow" is William Wegman's latest in a long line of human-canid collaborations. It was while he was in Long Beach in the 1970s that Wegman got his dog, Man Ray, with whom he began a fruitful collaboration of many years. Man Ray, known in the art world and beyond for his endearing deadpan presence, became a central figure in Wegman's photographs and videotapes. Ever since, Weimaraner-actors have peopled Wegman's uncanny imaginative universe, a reflection on both the human-ness of "animals" and the strangeness of humans.

William Wegman lives in New York and Maine where he continues to make videos, to take photographs and to make drawings and paintings.


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Lecture
 

3:00 PM, April 1



Every Voice Counts! The Syracuse Community Choir: Singing For Peace and Justice
University Neighbors Lecture Series
Featuring Karen Mihalyi

Price: $10 regular, $5 with student ID
Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St., Syracuse

In 1985, Karen Mihalyi traveled to Nicaragua and witnessed people creating a revolution that was framed and inspired by the arts. Motivated by this vision, and prompted by a Peace Day Concert at Thornden Park, she put out a call for singers. Eighty people, young and old, with different abilities, showed up for the first rehearsal, and the Syracuse Community Choir was born. For 25 years, she has led the choir, sharing the core values of peace and justice, and putting into practice the ideas that everyone matters and everyone can sing! It has been a sacred and moving journey.


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Music
 

2:00 PM, April 1



Lavendar Trio
Arts Alive in Liverpool

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

Elizabeth Carville Evans, flute; Judy Marchione, bassoon; Heather Johnsen, clarinet, performing works by Nigel Hess, Monk Rowe, and Mozart.


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4:30 PM, April 1



Spring Concert
Syracuse Youth Orchestras

Price: $10 regular, $5 children ages 16 and under
West Genesee High School
5201 W. Genesee St., Syracuse

Under the direction of James R. Tapia, the Syracuse Youth Orchestra will perform works by Chabrier, Hindemith, Dragonetti, Hummel and Tchaikovsky.

Under the direction of Muriel Bodley, the Syracuse Youth String Orchestra will perform works by Bach and Shostakovich.


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7:00 PM, April 1



Spring Tour Concert
The Hobart and William Smith Colleges Chorale
Robert Cowles, conductor

Price: Free (donations accepted)
May Memorial Unitarian Society
3800 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Music from the Spanish Renaissance, anthems by George Frideric Handel, Celtic arrangements, and a newly commissioned work by Chicago-based composer Stacy Garrop.

For more information, phone 315-781-3404.


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8:00 PM, April 1



Chris Webby, with Apache Chief, Guy Harrison
Westcott Theater

Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse


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Theater
 

12:45 PM, April 1



Lombardi: More Than Just the Game
CNY Playhouse
Dustin M. Czarny, director

Price: Dinner theater: $35 single; $65 couple. Show only: $25 (limited availability)
Fire and Ice Banquet Hall, The Locker Room
528 Hiawatha Blvd., Syracuse

Dinner at 12:45 pm, followed by show at 2:00 pm.

Winners never quit and quitters never win.

A new play by Eric Simonsen. Sport produces great human drama and there is no greater sports icon to bring to theatrical life than Hall of Fame football coach Vince Lombardi, unquestionably one of the most inspirational and quotable personalities of all time. Though football's Super Bowl trophy is named for him, few know the real story of Lombardi the man and his inspirations, his passions and ability to drive people to achieve what they never thought possible.

Starring Stephfond Brunson, Anne Fitzgerald, Jordan Glaski, Matt Nilsen, Dan Rowlands, and Roy Van Norstrand as Lombardi.

Read a Review!


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2:00 PM, April 1



Quilters
Syracuse University Drama Department
Patdro Harris, director

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

The memories, hopes, dreams and prayers of the indomitable women of the American frontier enliven this hauntingly beautiful musical. Based on oral histories from the pioneers of the prairie states, Quilters celebrates with unassuming honesty and simplicity the fears, joys, loves and tribulations of these remarkable women as they move from girlhood through family life and confront hardships as settlers in a sometimes harsh land. With a folk-inspired score and a hearty dose of humor, Quilters offers a tender and moving theatrical experience. Book by Molly Newman and Barbara Damashek, music and lyrics by Barbara Damashek.

Read a Review!


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Monday, April 2, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, April 2



Windows Project: Chaz Griffin: The History of Silence
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Chaz Griffin studied at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York and currently resides in Syracuse. For the Window Projects space he will produce a partially-autobiographical collage addressing the issue of youth living in 21st-century urban environments.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 2



Interpreting Nature
Baltimore Woods Art Gallery

Price: Free
Baltimore Woods Nature Center
4007 Bishop Hill Rd., Marcellus

A collection of work by Sharon Bottle Souva, fabric handworks; Wesley Weiss, ceramics; and Jill Newton, watercolors, who work in three distinct media but are united by their shared reference to the natural world.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 2



Gallery Exhibit: The Narrative Tradition in the 21st Century: The Art of Randy Elliott and Richard Williams
Onondaga Community College

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

About Richard Williams:
As a self-taught illustrator I was able to sidestep the many academic pitfalls that plague contemporary artists, such as the belief that drawing skills are not important. My work is steeped in the tradition of craftsmanship and the importance of the narrative. Art in my opinion serves a social function, which can encompass selling a product to the public or making critical commentary on society and culture, and anything in between. To accomplish this, the artist needs to communicate in a simple, clear and powerful way. To do this one needs to have a firm grasp of the basic skills of draftsmanship, color, painting technique and storytelling.

About Randy Elliott:
Randy Elliott began his professional art career in 1988, inking the Dungeons & Dragons, Dragonlance comic book for DC Comics. That job began a career that continues until the present. Over the course of the last twenty-odd years, Randy has inked and/or penciled comic books for DC, Archie, Marvel, Dark Horse, Valiant and a number of smaller publishers. He has also painted images for clients like, Wizards of the Coast, Alderac Entertainment Group, Battlefront Miniatures, Hasbro and others.


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9:00 AM - 7:00 PM, April 2



OCC Student Art and Photography Exhibit
Onondaga Community College

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

A juried showcase of art and photography by Onondaga Community College students.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 2



Patently Syracuse
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

A visual exploration of inventions, designs and innovations created in Central New York.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 2



The Power and The Piety: The World of Medieval and Renaissance Europe
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

This exhibit, curated by History Professor Chris Kyle with Senior Director of Special Collections Sean Quimby, showcases the library's collection of illuminated manuscripts and early printed works, including a leaf from the Gutenberg Bible.

The title "The Power and The Piety," refers to extraordinary influence that secular monarchies and the Church had on the lives of everyday men and women. Richly illustrated late medieval psalters and books of hours exemplify the painstaking attention that the pious paid to their spiritual well-being. But the printing revolution made it possible for new ideas to spread more rapidly. Printed works like Thomas Hobbes' "Leviathan" (1651) signified the increasing power wielded by kings, queens and other secular authorities. As the Protestant Reformation and Scientific Revolution took hold of Europe, the power of the Catholic Church further waned. "The Power and the Piety" includes such important works as the first King James Bible (1611) and a second printing of Copernicus' "De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium" (1566), which argued in favor of a heliocentric, or sun-centered, universe.

The exhibition is arranged thematically, highlighting the overarching themes of power and piety, as well as English literature, music, architecture, science and fine bindings.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 2



Teddy Cruz/The Architect's Work 9
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse


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9:30 AM - 3:00 PM, April 2



Time, Again Time: Works by Ana Tiscornia
Point of Contact Gallery

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

In "Time, again time," the artist reflects on ordered fragments of a disordered world. An activist and renowned Latin American artist, Ana Tiscornia brings a mixed-media installation that curator Pedro Cuperman describes as "the outcome of a tale, where we have a fragmented world, where the pieces are somehow geometrically organic, logical... a kind of architecture of catastrophe. It is about the artist's obsession with organizing her world after having lived through the tragedies of military dictatorships in her home land, and the present catastrophes, wars that we endure in our own time. Ana's work demands from the viewer a sort of reconstruction, reintegration of the work, and our world.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 2



Reflection and Identity: Works by W. Michelle Harris and Michael Roman
Community Folk Art Center

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

The exhibition features recent work by Rochester Institute of Technology associate professor and artist W. Michelle Harris and Atlanta-based artist and Syracuse University alum Michael Roman. These two young artists embrace questions of gender, identity, and societal expectations.

While the materials used by each artist sit at the opposite ends of the technological spectrum, both individuals seek to examine topics of an interrelated and highly personal nature.

Read a review!


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 2



Academic Art...teachers that do
Eureka Crafts

Eureka Crafts
210 Walton St., Syracuse

Works of Jamessville-Dewitt art teachers Faith Carapella (charcoal, pen and ink, collage) and Steve Pilcher (soda-fired stoneware, both functional and decorative).


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 2



Wounding the Black Male
Light Work Gallery

Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition was curated by English Professor Cassandra Jackson and Gallery Director Sarah Cunningham, both from The College of New Jersey (TCNJ). The exhibition was on view in the TCNJ Art Gallery in 2011. The central ideas of the exhibit are rooted in Jackson's most recent book, Violence, Visual Culture, and the Black Male Body (Routledge, 2010). Her book deals with the ways in which the black male body has been visually exploited, and the ways in which contemporary artists have called into question the paradigmatic construction of the black body in American society. The exhibit displays 31 photographs by 19 contemporary artists of African descent, 17 from the United States, two from Britain. Their work comments on the various representations of black bodies in Western visual culture. These artists confront stereotypes about black male appearance, sexuality, violence, and family, and highlight the ways that visual culture has contributed to the marginalization and exclusion of the black community.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 2



Pastoral: Landscape Photos by Alexander Gronsky
Light Work Gallery

Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

Alexander Gronsky is a self-described landscape photographer with an uncanny ability to capture scenes in nature as elegant allegories that include rolling hills, spectacular lighting, and far reaching horizons. His skilled use of perspective and composition, reminiscent of centuries-old traditions in European landscape painting, draw the viewer's eye deep into the landscape and generate a sense of awe for each place. The photographs in this exhibit were taken along the outlying areas of Moscow where the human need to find solace away from the city collides with urban sprawl, and the fragility of nature.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 2



Educational Toys by Roy Wilson
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

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

Designer Roy Wilson, a 1970 alumnus of Syracuse University's College of Visual and Performing Arts, will exhibit his award-winning educational toy designs. The exhibit features Wilson's work from the Learning Curve Toy Co., including the 1992 Thomas Wooden Railway project and the 1994 Lamaze Infant Development System, which he researched, designed, engineered and manufactured. The exhibition will also include his most recent invention in toys, TRAK2BRIK Adapters. Introduced in February at the American International Toy Fair, TRAK2BRIK is a system of adapters that links wooden railway track to pegged construction bricks and has dozens of slide-on toy accessories.

Wilson's career evolved from an early fascination with mechanical, scientific and electrical products. While at SU studying industrial design, he wrote his graduating thesis on preschool educational developmental toys. He started his own design business, Creative International, in 1967 and decided to remain independent and/or work on long-term contracts. To date, he has won 47 national and international awards for design excellence.

Patrons should enter The Warehouse via the ground-floor door adjacent to the café on West Fayette Street or the first-floor door on West Washington Street. For more information, contact Bradley Hudson at bjhudson@syr.edu.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, April 2



The Photographer as Child: Memories of Guatemala
La Casita Cultural Center

La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St., Syracuse

Born in Guatemala, award-winning photographer Efren Lopez is a student in the Military Photojournalism Program at Syracuse University. He is also an aerial photographer for the U.S. Air Force and the first reservist to be selected to attend Newhouse's Military Photojournalism Program. He now lives in Arizona.

The exhibit features images Lopez captured on a return trip to Guatemala in 2009. "My life began in a bamboo hut at the side of a road in a tiny town named Petaca, Guatemala, in 1966," Lopez writes. "It's a town so small that it is next to impossible to find on most maps of Guatemala, much less Central America."

Lopez has documented real-world situations and the military around the globe and has captured stunning images in Arizona and Guatemala. His work has been featured in various publications, including the book Arizona 24/7, and has been awarded many distinctions, including first place in the Professional Photography category at the 2008 Arizona State Fair, an honorable mention in the pictorial category in the 2009 Military Photographer of the Year competition, and first place in the 2011 Multimedia Team 19th Annual Department of Defense Worldwide Military Photography Workshop.


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7:30 PM - 12:00 AM, April 2



For Syracuse, 2010: Selections of Truisms and Survival
Urban Video Project

Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

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

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


Back to list
 


Film
 

7:30 PM, April 2



The Magnificent Dope (1942)
Syracuse Cinephile Society

Price: $3.50 non-members, $3 members
Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St., Syracuse

Directed by Walter Lang. Cast includes Henry Fonda, Don Ameche, Lynn Bari, Edward Everett Horton, George Barbier.

A slick motivational speaker (Ameche) tries to increase enrollment of his seminars by converting an unambitious small-town bumpkin (Fonda) into an aggressive go-getter. Lots of fun and a great cast in this snappy comedy.


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Lecture
 

7:30 PM, April 2



Laurie R. King
Friends of the Central Library Author Series

Price: $25
Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Laurie R. King is a third generation Northern Californian living near Monterey Bay. King's academic background includes a BA in Comparative Religion from UC Santa Cruz, a MA in Old Testament Theology from Berkeley's Graduate Theological Union, and an honorary doctorate, also from the GTU. King's first novel, A Grave Talent won the First Novel Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America and the Creasey Dagger from Britain's Crime Writers' Association. The Beekeeper's Apprentice was chosen as one of the century's best crime novels by the IMBA and her books appear regularly on bestseller lists that include the Independent Booksellers Associations and the New York Times. In 2010, she was inducted into the Baker Street Irregulars, and was appointed Guest of Honor at the annual mystery convention, BoucherCon. She continues to write in two series and standalone novels.


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Tuesday, April 3, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, April 3



Windows Project: Chaz Griffin: The History of Silence
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Chaz Griffin studied at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York and currently resides in Syracuse. For the Window Projects space he will produce a partially-autobiographical collage addressing the issue of youth living in 21st-century urban environments.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 3



Interpreting Nature
Baltimore Woods Art Gallery

Price: Free
Baltimore Woods Nature Center
4007 Bishop Hill Rd., Marcellus

A collection of work by Sharon Bottle Souva, fabric handworks; Wesley Weiss, ceramics; and Jill Newton, watercolors, who work in three distinct media but are united by their shared reference to the natural world.


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9:00 AM - 7:00 PM, April 3



OCC Student Art and Photography Exhibit
Onondaga Community College

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

A juried showcase of art and photography by Onondaga Community College students.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 3



Gallery Exhibit: The Narrative Tradition in the 21st Century: The Art of Randy Elliott and Richard Williams
Onondaga Community College

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

About Richard Williams:
As a self-taught illustrator I was able to sidestep the many academic pitfalls that plague contemporary artists, such as the belief that drawing skills are not important. My work is steeped in the tradition of craftsmanship and the importance of the narrative. Art in my opinion serves a social function, which can encompass selling a product to the public or making critical commentary on society and culture, and anything in between. To accomplish this, the artist needs to communicate in a simple, clear and powerful way. To do this one needs to have a firm grasp of the basic skills of draftsmanship, color, painting technique and storytelling.

About Randy Elliott:
Randy Elliott began his professional art career in 1988, inking the Dungeons & Dragons, Dragonlance comic book for DC Comics. That job began a career that continues until the present. Over the course of the last twenty-odd years, Randy has inked and/or penciled comic books for DC, Archie, Marvel, Dark Horse, Valiant and a number of smaller publishers. He has also painted images for clients like, Wizards of the Coast, Alderac Entertainment Group, Battlefront Miniatures, Hasbro and others.


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9:00 AM - 8:00 PM, April 3



"Images of Upstate New York" and "Juxtaposed Through Wonderland"
SUNY Oswego Metro Center at the Atrium

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

"Images of Upstate New York" features work by Morgan Goodwin and Kate Walseman
"Juxtaposed Through Wonderland" features recent work by KayCie Danniel


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 3



Patently Syracuse
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

A visual exploration of inventions, designs and innovations created in Central New York.


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9:00 AM - 7:00 PM, April 3



The Power and The Piety: The World of Medieval and Renaissance Europe
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

This exhibit, curated by History Professor Chris Kyle with Senior Director of Special Collections Sean Quimby, showcases the library's collection of illuminated manuscripts and early printed works, including a leaf from the Gutenberg Bible.

The title "The Power and The Piety," refers to extraordinary influence that secular monarchies and the Church had on the lives of everyday men and women. Richly illustrated late medieval psalters and books of hours exemplify the painstaking attention that the pious paid to their spiritual well-being. But the printing revolution made it possible for new ideas to spread more rapidly. Printed works like Thomas Hobbes' "Leviathan" (1651) signified the increasing power wielded by kings, queens and other secular authorities. As the Protestant Reformation and Scientific Revolution took hold of Europe, the power of the Catholic Church further waned. "The Power and the Piety" includes such important works as the first King James Bible (1611) and a second printing of Copernicus' "De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium" (1566), which argued in favor of a heliocentric, or sun-centered, universe.

The exhibition is arranged thematically, highlighting the overarching themes of power and piety, as well as English literature, music, architecture, science and fine bindings.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 3



Teddy Cruz/The Architect's Work 9
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse


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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, April 3



Creatures Small and Great
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Dana Blythe Stenson (metalsmith jewelry), Candace Rhea (ceramic and mixed media), Alan Hart (acrylic on board), and Diane Menzies (oil paintings) interpret insects and small animals.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 3



Reflection and Identity: Works by W. Michelle Harris and Michael Roman
Community Folk Art Center

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

The exhibition features recent work by Rochester Institute of Technology associate professor and artist W. Michelle Harris and Atlanta-based artist and Syracuse University alum Michael Roman. These two young artists embrace questions of gender, identity, and societal expectations.

While the materials used by each artist sit at the opposite ends of the technological spectrum, both individuals seek to examine topics of an interrelated and highly personal nature.

Read a review!


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 3



Academic Art...teachers that do
Eureka Crafts

Eureka Crafts
210 Walton St., Syracuse

Works of Jamessville-Dewitt art teachers Faith Carapella (charcoal, pen and ink, collage) and Steve Pilcher (soda-fired stoneware, both functional and decorative).


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 3



Pastoral: Landscape Photos by Alexander Gronsky
Light Work Gallery

Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

Alexander Gronsky is a self-described landscape photographer with an uncanny ability to capture scenes in nature as elegant allegories that include rolling hills, spectacular lighting, and far reaching horizons. His skilled use of perspective and composition, reminiscent of centuries-old traditions in European landscape painting, draw the viewer's eye deep into the landscape and generate a sense of awe for each place. The photographs in this exhibit were taken along the outlying areas of Moscow where the human need to find solace away from the city collides with urban sprawl, and the fragility of nature.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 3



Wounding the Black Male
Light Work Gallery

Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition was curated by English Professor Cassandra Jackson and Gallery Director Sarah Cunningham, both from The College of New Jersey (TCNJ). The exhibition was on view in the TCNJ Art Gallery in 2011. The central ideas of the exhibit are rooted in Jackson's most recent book, Violence, Visual Culture, and the Black Male Body (Routledge, 2010). Her book deals with the ways in which the black male body has been visually exploited, and the ways in which contemporary artists have called into question the paradigmatic construction of the black body in American society. The exhibit displays 31 photographs by 19 contemporary artists of African descent, 17 from the United States, two from Britain. Their work comments on the various representations of black bodies in Western visual culture. These artists confront stereotypes about black male appearance, sexuality, violence, and family, and highlight the ways that visual culture has contributed to the marginalization and exclusion of the black community.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 3



Educational Toys by Roy Wilson
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

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

Designer Roy Wilson, a 1970 alumnus of Syracuse University's College of Visual and Performing Arts, will exhibit his award-winning educational toy designs. The exhibit features Wilson's work from the Learning Curve Toy Co., including the 1992 Thomas Wooden Railway project and the 1994 Lamaze Infant Development System, which he researched, designed, engineered and manufactured. The exhibition will also include his most recent invention in toys, TRAK2BRIK Adapters. Introduced in February at the American International Toy Fair, TRAK2BRIK is a system of adapters that links wooden railway track to pegged construction bricks and has dozens of slide-on toy accessories.

Wilson's career evolved from an early fascination with mechanical, scientific and electrical products. While at SU studying industrial design, he wrote his graduating thesis on preschool educational developmental toys. He started his own design business, Creative International, in 1967 and decided to remain independent and/or work on long-term contracts. To date, he has won 47 national and international awards for design excellence.

Patrons should enter The Warehouse via the ground-floor door adjacent to the café on West Fayette Street or the first-floor door on West Washington Street. For more information, contact Bradley Hudson at bjhudson@syr.edu.


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11:00 AM - 3:00 PM, April 3



Time, Again Time: Works by Ana Tiscornia
Point of Contact Gallery

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

In "Time, again time," the artist reflects on ordered fragments of a disordered world. An activist and renowned Latin American artist, Ana Tiscornia brings a mixed-media installation that curator Pedro Cuperman describes as "the outcome of a tale, where we have a fragmented world, where the pieces are somehow geometrically organic, logical... a kind of architecture of catastrophe. It is about the artist's obsession with organizing her world after having lived through the tragedies of military dictatorships in her home land, and the present catastrophes, wars that we endure in our own time. Ana's work demands from the viewer a sort of reconstruction, reintegration of the work, and our world.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 3



Reliquaries: New Work by Drew Goerlitz
Everson Museum of Art

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

Well-known for his graceful yet imposing steel sculpture, Drew Goerlitz, Associate Professor of Sculpture at the State University of New York Plattsburg, presents a new body of work at the Everson Museum of Art. Reliquaries continues the reoccurring theme of containment, concealment and privacy best described by Goerlitz himself: "My interpretation of reliquary is not to hold a sacred object or relic, but to engage the viewer with the form and tension of the unknown interior. The adornment of these objects relates to architectural details and the idea of facade. Facade is what we are presented with upon first appearance, whether speaking of people or architecture, and it isn't until we look inside that we discover the true structure."


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 3



CNY Art Showcase: Juried Preview of Live Auction
Everson Museum of Art

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

CNY Arts Showcase: Juried Preview of the Live Auction, presented in conjunction with the Eastwood Rotary Club, highlights the great and diverse artistic talents within our community. The exhibition at the Everson will precede the Eastwood Rotary Club's Annual CNY Art Showcase Live Auction on April 20.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 3



From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland
Everson Museum of Art

Price: $10 adults, $8 students/seniors, $30 family pack (2 adults, 4 children))
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

"From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland" is the first exhibition to examine the American artist's work focused on the Irish landscape and people, particularly children, created between the time of his first trip to Ireland in 1913 and his last trip there in 1928. Long celebrated as an iconic American artist due to his important early work as a teacher and as the leader of The Eight, Henri's paintings have received less attention on their own. Most projects explored his career as it related to his role as a member of The Eight or in a broadly retrospective manner. Few projects focused on his landscapes, drawings, or foreign portraits.

Henri's Irish portraits constitute his largest focused body of work, and often depict the same sitters year after year. These paintings offer a unique and fascinating window onto the genre about which Henri felt most strongly--portraiture--and also chart his experiments with paint handling and color theories over time. He wrote that the time spent in Ireland was extremely valuable to him (it was the only other place besides New York where he purchased a residence), for only there was he able to focus on his painting without the distractions of life in New York. It is not surprising, then, that the periods Henri spent in Ireland were among his most prolific, and the paintings produced there among his most accomplished. Just before his death, Henri composed a list of his most important paintings; many of the works on this list were his Irish subjects. Forty-one paintings of Irish people and landscapes will be on view in the upcoming exhibition.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, April 3



The Photographer as Child: Memories of Guatemala
La Casita Cultural Center

La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St., Syracuse

Born in Guatemala, award-winning photographer Efren Lopez is a student in the Military Photojournalism Program at Syracuse University. He is also an aerial photographer for the U.S. Air Force and the first reservist to be selected to attend Newhouse's Military Photojournalism Program. He now lives in Arizona.

The exhibit features images Lopez captured on a return trip to Guatemala in 2009. "My life began in a bamboo hut at the side of a road in a tiny town named Petaca, Guatemala, in 1966," Lopez writes. "It's a town so small that it is next to impossible to find on most maps of Guatemala, much less Central America."

Lopez has documented real-world situations and the military around the globe and has captured stunning images in Arizona and Guatemala. His work has been featured in various publications, including the book Arizona 24/7, and has been awarded many distinctions, including first place in the Professional Photography category at the 2008 Arizona State Fair, an honorable mention in the pictorial category in the 2009 Military Photographer of the Year competition, and first place in the 2011 Multimedia Team 19th Annual Department of Defense Worldwide Military Photography Workshop.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, April 3



Noriko Ambe: Inner Water
The Warehouse Gallery

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

In her first US museum solo show, New York City-based Japanese artist Noriko Ambe will create a new site-specific installation in the main gallery reflecting the tragic 2011 events in Japan through the use of video projections and her signature large-scale paper cutouts that evoke waves.

Nature plays an important role in Ambe's work, and it points to larger issues, such as the natural forces determining our global landscape, and the relationship between nature and humans throughout time. A recipient of prestigious awards such as the AICA Award and Pollock-Krasner Foundation, Ambe's work has been exhibited internationally, including at the Museum of Arts and Design and the Japan Society in New York and the Kyoto University of Art and Design in Kyoto, Japan. Her work is also in the collection of the Whitney Museum of Art.

Read a review!


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1:00 PM - 6:00 PM, April 3



The Black Series
Echo

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

Photography by Amanda Zackem. On display will be 17 silver-gelatin prints and a short film.


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7:30 PM - 12:00 AM, April 3



For Syracuse, 2010: Selections of Truisms and Survival
Urban Video Project

Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

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

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


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Film
 

7:00 PM, April 3



Science and Magic in Film: The Last Wave (1977)
Redhouse
Syracuse International Film Festival

Price: $8 regular, $5 members
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

Film and discussion with guest Owen Shapiro, professor and filmmaker at Syracuse University.

Directed by Peter Weir, "The Last Wave" is about a white Australian lawyer whose seemingly normal life is disrupted after he takes on a murder case for Aborigine defendants.


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Lecture
 

5:00 PM, April 3



Alan Berger
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Auditorium
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

Alan Berger is Associate Professor, MIT Department of Urban Studies and Planning Director, P-REX


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Theater
 

8:00 PM, April 3



Riverdance Farewell Tour
Onondaga Community College

Price: $32-$62
SRC Arena and Events Center
Onondaga Community College campus, Syracuse

Riverdance is a theatrical show that features traditional Irish step-dancing, brought to a whole new level. Known for its musical spectacle, artistic culture, and rapid leg movements perfectly in sync, the show that started it all, Riverdance, has been performing in the United States since March 1996 when it had its U.S. premiere at Radio City Music Hall in New York. Since then, the show has tapped its way onto the world stage thrilling millions of people around the globe. While the touring production in the U.S. will close on June 17, 2012, productions of Riverdance will continue to tour the world.

Of all the performances to emerge from Ireland in the past decade, nothing can compare to the energy, the sensuality and the spectacle of Riverdance. An innovative and exciting blend of dance, music and song, Riverdance draws on Irish traditions and the combined talents of the performers propel Irish dancing and music to the present day capturing the imagination of audiences across all ages and cultures. This extraordinarily unique show features an international company all performing to the magic of Bill Whelan's music.

Tickets will go on sale on Fri., Feb. 24. Buy them at www.SRCArena.com, the SRC Arena Box Office on the Onondaga Community College campus, or by calling 315-498-2772. Parking is $5.00 per vehicle.


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Wednesday, April 4, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, April 4



Windows Project: Chaz Griffin: The History of Silence
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

Chaz Griffin studied at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York and currently resides in Syracuse. For the Window Projects space he will produce a partially-autobiographical collage addressing the issue of youth living in 21st-century urban environments.


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7:30 AM - 10:00 PM, April 4



The Reflections Series: Works by Nevin Mercede
Redhouse

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

These digital prints are composed from photographs taken while traveling in Russia. Conversations with artists, politicians and educators encountered there provide the majority of companion texts. Since 1995 Mercede has woven images with texts reflecting on social, political and educational issues or situations.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 4



Interpreting Nature
Baltimore Woods Art Gallery

Price: Free
Baltimore Woods Nature Center
4007 Bishop Hill Rd., Marcellus

A collection of work by Sharon Bottle Souva, fabric handworks; Wesley Weiss, ceramics; and Jill Newton, watercolors, who work in three distinct media but are united by their shared reference to the natural world.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 4



Gallery Exhibit: The Narrative Tradition in the 21st Century: The Art of Randy Elliott and Richard Williams
Onondaga Community College

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

About Richard Williams:
As a self-taught illustrator I was able to sidestep the many academic pitfalls that plague contemporary artists, such as the belief that drawing skills are not important. My work is steeped in the tradition of craftsmanship and the importance of the narrative. Art in my opinion serves a social function, which can encompass selling a product to the public or making critical commentary on society and culture, and anything in between. To accomplish this, the artist needs to communicate in a simple, clear and powerful way. To do this one needs to have a firm grasp of the basic skills of draftsmanship, color, painting technique and storytelling.

About Randy Elliott:
Randy Elliott began his professional art career in 1988, inking the Dungeons & Dragons, Dragonlance comic book for DC Comics. That job began a career that continues until the present. Over the course of the last twenty-odd years, Randy has inked and/or penciled comic books for DC, Archie, Marvel, Dark Horse, Valiant and a number of smaller publishers. He has also painted images for clients like, Wizards of the Coast, Alderac Entertainment Group, Battlefront Miniatures, Hasbro and others.


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9:00 AM - 7:00 PM, April 4



OCC Student Art and Photography Exhibit
Onondaga Community College

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

There will be a reception in Whitney Atrium today 11:00 am-12:00 pm.

A juried showcase of art and photography by Onondaga Community College students.


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9:00 AM - 8:00 PM, April 4



"Images of Upstate New York" and "Juxtaposed Through Wonderland"
SUNY Oswego Metro Center at the Atrium

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

"Images of Upstate New York" features work by Morgan Goodwin and Kate Walseman
"Juxtaposed Through Wonderland" features recent work by KayCie Danniel


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 4



Patently Syracuse
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

A visual exploration of inventions, designs and innovations created in Central New York.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 4



The Power and The Piety: The World of Medieval and Renaissance Europe
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

This exhibit, curated by History Professor Chris Kyle with Senior Director of Special Collections Sean Quimby, showcases the library's collection of illuminated manuscripts and early printed works, including a leaf from the Gutenberg Bible.

The title "The Power and The Piety," refers to extraordinary influence that secular monarchies and the Church had on the lives of everyday men and women. Richly illustrated late medieval psalters and books of hours exemplify the painstaking attention that the pious paid to their spiritual well-being. But the printing revolution made it possible for new ideas to spread more rapidly. Printed works like Thomas Hobbes' "Leviathan" (1651) signified the increasing power wielded by kings, queens and other secular authorities. As the Protestant Reformation and Scientific Revolution took hold of Europe, the power of the Catholic Church further waned. "The Power and the Piety" includes such important works as the first King James Bible (1611) and a second printing of Copernicus' "De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium" (1566), which argued in favor of a heliocentric, or sun-centered, universe.

The exhibition is arranged thematically, highlighting the overarching themes of power and piety, as well as English literature, music, architecture, science and fine bindings.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 4



Teddy Cruz/The Architect's Work 9
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse


Back to list
 

 

9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, April 4



Creatures Small and Great
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Dana Blythe Stenson (metalsmith jewelry), Candace Rhea (ceramic and mixed media), Alan Hart (acrylic on board), and Diane Menzies (oil paintings) interpret insects and small animals.


Back to list
 

 

9:30 AM - 3:00 PM, April 4



Time, Again Time: Works by Ana Tiscornia
Point of Contact Gallery

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

In "Time, again time," the artist reflects on ordered fragments of a disordered world. An activist and renowned Latin American artist, Ana Tiscornia brings a mixed-media installation that curator Pedro Cuperman describes as "the outcome of a tale, where we have a fragmented world, where the pieces are somehow geometrically organic, logical... a kind of architecture of catastrophe. It is about the artist's obsession with organizing her world after having lived through the tragedies of military dictatorships in her home land, and the present catastrophes, wars that we endure in our own time. Ana's work demands from the viewer a sort of reconstruction, reintegration of the work, and our world.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 4



Reflection and Identity: Works by W. Michelle Harris and Michael Roman
Community Folk Art Center

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

The exhibition features recent work by Rochester Institute of Technology associate professor and artist W. Michelle Harris and Atlanta-based artist and Syracuse University alum Michael Roman. These two young artists embrace questions of gender, identity, and societal expectations.

While the materials used by each artist sit at the opposite ends of the technological spectrum, both individuals seek to examine topics of an interrelated and highly personal nature.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 4



Academic Art...teachers that do
Eureka Crafts

Eureka Crafts
210 Walton St., Syracuse

Works of Jamessville-Dewitt art teachers Faith Carapella (charcoal, pen and ink, collage) and Steve Pilcher (soda-fired stoneware, both functional and decorative).


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 4



Wounding the Black Male
Light Work Gallery

Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition was curated by English Professor Cassandra Jackson and Gallery Director Sarah Cunningham, both from The College of New Jersey (TCNJ). The exhibition was on view in the TCNJ Art Gallery in 2011. The central ideas of the exhibit are rooted in Jackson's most recent book, Violence, Visual Culture, and the Black Male Body (Routledge, 2010). Her book deals with the ways in which the black male body has been visually exploited, and the ways in which contemporary artists have called into question the paradigmatic construction of the black body in American society. The exhibit displays 31 photographs by 19 contemporary artists of African descent, 17 from the United States, two from Britain. Their work comments on the various representations of black bodies in Western visual culture. These artists confront stereotypes about black male appearance, sexuality, violence, and family, and highlight the ways that visual culture has contributed to the marginalization and exclusion of the black community.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 4



Pastoral: Landscape Photos by Alexander Gronsky
Light Work Gallery

Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

Alexander Gronsky is a self-described landscape photographer with an uncanny ability to capture scenes in nature as elegant allegories that include rolling hills, spectacular lighting, and far reaching horizons. His skilled use of perspective and composition, reminiscent of centuries-old traditions in European landscape painting, draw the viewer's eye deep into the landscape and generate a sense of awe for each place. The photographs in this exhibit were taken along the outlying areas of Moscow where the human need to find solace away from the city collides with urban sprawl, and the fragility of nature.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 4



Educational Toys by Roy Wilson
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

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

Designer Roy Wilson, a 1970 alumnus of Syracuse University's College of Visual and Performing Arts, will exhibit his award-winning educational toy designs. The exhibit features Wilson's work from the Learning Curve Toy Co., including the 1992 Thomas Wooden Railway project and the 1994 Lamaze Infant Development System, which he researched, designed, engineered and manufactured. The exhibition will also include his most recent invention in toys, TRAK2BRIK Adapters. Introduced in February at the American International Toy Fair, TRAK2BRIK is a system of adapters that links wooden railway track to pegged construction bricks and has dozens of slide-on toy accessories.

Wilson's career evolved from an early fascination with mechanical, scientific and electrical products. While at SU studying industrial design, he wrote his graduating thesis on preschool educational developmental toys. He started his own design business, Creative International, in 1967 and decided to remain independent and/or work on long-term contracts. To date, he has won 47 national and international awards for design excellence.

Patrons should enter The Warehouse via the ground-floor door adjacent to the café on West Fayette Street or the first-floor door on West Washington Street. For more information, contact Bradley Hudson at bjhudson@syr.edu.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 4



Illusionistic
Szozda Gallery

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

Painter Kyle Mort's realism and painter Robert Glisson's impressionism are both meant to prompt the viewer's stare. Both Mort and Glisson work with beautiful color, achieved differently in their signature techniques. Mort tends toward extreme realism, bordering on trompe l'oeil in which he is capable of creating a spatial illusion. Glisson's impressionistic pieces, like the styles of those artists who inspire him, create an emotional illusion. Mort leans more toward depicting still life. Glisson endeavors to capture landscapes.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 4



Reliquaries: New Work by Drew Goerlitz
Everson Museum of Art

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

Well-known for his graceful yet imposing steel sculpture, Drew Goerlitz, Associate Professor of Sculpture at the State University of New York Plattsburg, presents a new body of work at the Everson Museum of Art. Reliquaries continues the reoccurring theme of containment, concealment and privacy best described by Goerlitz himself: "My interpretation of reliquary is not to hold a sacred object or relic, but to engage the viewer with the form and tension of the unknown interior. The adornment of these objects relates to architectural details and the idea of facade. Facade is what we are presented with upon first appearance, whether speaking of people or architecture, and it isn't until we look inside that we discover the true structure."


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 4



From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland
Everson Museum of Art

Price: $10 adults, $8 students/seniors, $30 family pack (2 adults, 4 children))
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

"From New York to Corrymore: Robert Henri and Ireland" is the first exhibition to examine the American artist's work focused on the Irish landscape and people, particularly children, created between the time of his first trip to Ireland in 1913 and his last trip there in 1928. Long celebrated as an iconic American artist due to his important early work as a teacher and as the leader of The Eight, Henri's paintings have received less attention on their own. Most projects explored his career as it related to his role as a member of The Eight or in a broadly retrospective manner. Few projects focused on his landscapes, drawings, or foreign portraits.

Henri's Irish portraits constitute his largest focused body of work, and often depict the same sitters year after year. These paintings offer a unique and fascinating window onto the genre about which Henri felt most strongly--portraiture--and also chart his experiments with paint handling and color theories over time. He wrote that the time spent in Ireland was extremely valuable to him (it was the only other place besides New York where he purchased a residence), for only there was he able to focus on his painting without the distractions of life in New York. It is not surprising, then, that the periods Henri spent in Ireland were among his most prolific, and the paintings produced there among his most accomplished. Just before his death, Henri composed a list of his most important paintings; many of the works on this list were his Irish subjects. Forty-one paintings of Irish people and landscapes will be on view in the upcoming exhibition.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 4



CNY Art Showcase: Juried Preview of Live Auction
Everson Museum of Art

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

CNY Arts Showcase: Juried Preview of the Live Auction, presented in conjunction with the Eastwood Rotary Club, highlights the great and diverse artistic talents within our community. The exhibition at the Everson will precede the Eastwood Rotary Club's Annual CNY Art Showcase Live Auction on April 20.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, April 4



The Photographer as Child: Memories of Guatemala
La Casita Cultural Center

La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St., Syracuse

Born in Guatemala, award-winning photographer Efren Lopez is a student in the Military Photojournalism Program at Syracuse University. He is also an aerial photographer for the U.S. Air Force and the first reservist to be selected to attend Newhouse's Military Photojournalism Program. He now lives in Arizona.

The exhibit features images Lopez captured on a return trip to Guatemala in 2009. "My life began in a bamboo hut at the side of a road in a tiny town named Petaca, Guatemala, in 1966," Lopez writes. "It's a town so small that it is next to impossible to find on most maps of Guatemala, much less Central America."

Lopez has documented real-world situations and the military around the globe and has captured stunning images in Arizona and Guatemala. His work has been featured in various publications, including the book Arizona 24/7, and has been awarded many distinctions, including first place in the Professional Photography category at the 2008 Arizona State Fair, an honorable mention in the pictorial category in the 2009 Military Photographer of the Year competition, and first place in the 2011 Multimedia Team 19th Annual Department of Defense Worldwide Military Photography Workshop.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, April 4



Noriko Ambe: Inner Water
The Warehouse Gallery

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

In her first US museum solo show, New York City-based Japanese artist Noriko Ambe will create a new site-specific installation in the main gallery reflecting the tragic 2011 events in Japan through the use of video projections and her signature large-scale paper cutouts that evoke waves.

Nature plays an important role in Ambe's work, and it points to larger issues, such as the natural forces determining our global landscape, and the relationship between nature and humans throughout time. A recipient of prestigious awards such as the AICA Award and Pollock-Krasner Foundation, Ambe's work has been exhibited internationally, including at the Museum of Arts and Design and the Japan Society in New York and the Kyoto University of Art and Design in Kyoto, Japan. Her work is also in the collection of the Whitney Museum of Art.

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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, April 4



The "Gnome Show"
XL Projects

Price: Free
XL Projects
307-313 S. Clinton St., Syracuse

Each fall, Department of Design faculty members review student projects on display in the department's home at The Warehouse and place a gnome statue next to the most deserving work in a variety of categories. The "Gnome Show" is an exhibition of last fall's gnome-winning projects.

For more information, contact Andrew Havenhand at ahavenhand@yahoo.com. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours.


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1:00 PM - 6:00 PM, April 4



The Black Series
Echo

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

Photography by Amanda Zackem. On display will be 17 silver-gelatin prints and a short film.


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2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, April 4



RESOURCED/response: The Art of the Justseeds Artists Cooperative and SU Fiber Arts
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

This exhibition is a look into the environmental devastation that plagues the earth and its beings. It is also a look into the environmental justice movement that works to correct and heal the destruction. RESOURCED is a portfolio of hand-produced prints organized and created by the Justseeds Artists' Cooperative in 2010, focusing on resource extraction and climate issues, which will be used to help ask important questions about our environment. At the beginning of the spring semester 2012, students from the introduction to fibers course at Syracuse University viewed images from RESOURCED.

Students selected the poster that held most significance to them, either for the visual content of the work or the environmental issue it addressed. Then each student created a hand-dyed textile in response to the original work, using a variety of dye techniques, relief printing techniques and methods of stitching. These were both applied traditionally and adapted to suit the students' intentions and individual visual language.


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7:30 PM - 12:00 AM, April 4



For Syracuse, 2010: Selections of Truisms and Survival
Urban Video Project

Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

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

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


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Film
 

5:30 PM - 7:30 PM, April 4



"What If...?" Film Series: Trust: Second Acts in Young Lives
Gifford Foundation

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

Many who are familiar with Chicago's theater scene know of the Albany Park Theater Project's (APTP) amazing work with youth. Nancy Kelly's formidable new documentary Trust allows us an in-depth look at APTP's story-telling process and how their work helps transform the lives of young people. The story of Marlin, originally from Honduras, is one of sexual violence, separation from her mother, and the harsh realities of immigration. Trust follows her harrowing, personal story that then becomes the basis for an original play. The film captures the respect, support and tenderness that APTP's ensemble members show Marlin and beautifully illustrates the healing power of art and community.


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6:45 PM, April 4



Wednesday Film Series: Rear Window
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Auditorium
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

Alfred Hitchcock, 1954, 112 minutes


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Music
 

12:30 PM, April 4



Nicholas Hrynyk, piano
Civic Morning Musicals

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

Young Eastman star returns with a solo recital: Beethoven Appassionata, Liszt Hungarian Rhapsody, No. 19, Dallapiccola.

Parking available in the OnCenter Garage: maximum $2.50 with CMM stamped ticket.


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8:00 PM, April 4



The Frankenstein Brothers Feat: Buckethead & That 1 Guy, with Wolf and Tuba
Westcott Theater

Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse


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Poetry/Reading
 

5:30 PM, April 4



Jay Rogoff
Raymond Carver Reading Series

Price: Free
Gifford Auditorium, Huntington Beard Crouse Hall
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Jay Rogoff is the author of The Art of Gravity (Louisiana State University Press, 2011) and a lecturer at Skidmore College.

The reading will be preceded by a question and answer session from 3:45-4:30 p.m. Parking is available in Syracuse University's paid lots. For more information, phone 315-443-2174.


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Theater
 

8:00 PM, April 4



Twelfth Night
Redhouse
Stephen Svoboda, director

Price: $25 regular, $15 members
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

In this unique and jazz-filled production of Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, audiences will be transported to a 4th of July garden party in the late 1950s Hamptons. Martinis in hand, the well-heeled guests in tuxes and gowns fall in and out of love as live music keeps the beat for this tuneful, topsy-turvy tale of mistaken identities and thwarted lovers. When the Rat Pack meets the Bard, it's very funny, very romantic, and very cool. Way cool.

The cast is primarily local and includes Katie Gibson, Darian Sundberg, Binaifer Dabu, Todd Quick, Jan Coombs, Donnie Williams, William Edward White, Karis Wiggins, Krystal Scott, Grace Allyn, Gabe Digenova, Marguerite Mitchell, Jordan Hornstein, Nathan Faudree, and Adam Perabo, with pianist Dan Williams.

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8:00 PM, April 4



Quilters
Syracuse University Drama Department
Patdro Harris, director

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

The memories, hopes, dreams and prayers of the indomitable women of the American frontier enliven this hauntingly beautiful musical. Based on oral histories from the pioneers of the prairie states, Quilters celebrates with unassuming honesty and simplicity the fears, joys, loves and tribulations of these remarkable women as they move from girlhood through family life and confront hardships as settlers in a sometimes harsh land. With a folk-inspired score and a hearty dose of humor, Quilters offers a tender and moving theatrical experience. Book by Molly Newman and Barbara Damashek, music and lyrics by Barbara Damashek.

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