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Events for Tuesday, March 29, 2011
12:00 AM-11:59 PM
Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Winter Art Show Clayscapes Pottery Gallery
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College (Read a review!)
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-7:00 PM
Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Marcel Breuer and Postwar America Syracuse University School of Architecture
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery
9:30 AM-6:00 PM
Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Amos Kennedy Prints! Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Implements of Mass Construction Erie Canal Museum
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Thilde Jensen: Canaries Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show Redhouse
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
12:00 PM
Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)
3:00 PM
Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
5:30 PM-11:00 PM
Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project (Read a review!)
6:30 PM
Visiting Artist: Ophrah Shemesh Syracuse University School of Art and Design
8:00 PM
Paola Marquez Composition Recital Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
Events for Wednesday, March 30, 2011
12:00 AM-11:59 PM
Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Winter Art Show Clayscapes Pottery Gallery
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College (Read a review!)
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Davidovich in Situ: A Video Art Project Point of Contact Gallery
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery
9:30 AM-6:00 PM
Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Amos Kennedy Prints! Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Implements of Mass Construction Erie Canal Museum
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Thilde Jensen: Canaries Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Toys from the 1970s Onondaga Historical Association
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show Redhouse
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
ID+ Syracuse University School of Art and Design
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Full Circle Szozda Gallery
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
12:00 PM
Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)
12:30 PM
Adam Rothenberg and Isabelle Weir, piano Civic Morning Musicals
2:00 PM-7:00 PM
100 Years of Women Rockin' the World ArtRage Gallery
3:00 PM
Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
5:30 PM-11:00 PM
Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project (Read a review!)
7:00 PM
until when... ArtRage Gallery
7:00 PM
The Pearl Fishers Preview Syracuse Opera
7:30 PM
The Miracle Worker Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
Cornmeal, with Driftwood Westcott Theater
Events for Thursday, March 31, 2011
12:00 AM-11:59 PM
Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College (Read a review!)
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-7:00 PM
Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery
9:30 AM-6:00 PM
Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Amos Kennedy Prints! Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Thilde Jensen: Canaries Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Toys from the 1970s Onondaga Historical Association
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show Redhouse
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
ID+ Syracuse University School of Art and Design
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Full Circle Szozda Gallery
11:00 AM-6:00 PM
Forrest Lesch-Middelton: Recent Work Gandee Gallery
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
12:00 PM
Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)
2:00 PM-7:00 PM
100 Years of Women Rockin' the World ArtRage Gallery
3:00 PM
Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
5:30 PM-11:00 PM
Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project (Read a review!)
6:00 PM
Visiting Speaker: Ronald Jackson II Syracuse University School of Art and Design
6:45 PM
A Wee Bit O' Murder Acme Mystery Company
6:45 PM
The Odd Couple CNY Playhouse (Read a review!)
7:00 PM
South of the Border ArtRage Gallery
7:30 PM
12th Annual Reel Queer Film Festival Syracuse University Open Doors
8:00 PM
Preview: [sic] Redhouse (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
Cantus Novus Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
Events for Friday, April 1, 2011
12:00 AM-11:59 PM
Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery
8:00 AM-8:00 PM
Annual Le Moyne College Student Art Exhibition LeMoyne College
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College (Read a review!)
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Davidovich in Situ: A Video Art Project Point of Contact Gallery
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery
9:30 AM-6:00 PM
Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Amos Kennedy Prints! Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Thilde Jensen: Canaries Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Toys from the 1970s Onondaga Historical Association
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show Redhouse
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
ID+ Syracuse University School of Art and Design
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Full Circle Szozda Gallery
11:00 AM-6:00 PM
Forrest Lesch-Middelton: Recent Work Gandee Gallery
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
11:15 AM
Syracuse University Singers Onondaga Community College
12:00 PM
Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)
2:00 PM-7:00 PM
100 Years of Women Rockin' the World ArtRage Gallery
3:00 PM
Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
5:00 PM-8:00 PM
Opening Self-Portrait Show Gallery 54
5:30 PM-11:00 PM
Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project (Read a review!)
6:45 PM
The Odd Couple CNY Playhouse (Read a review!)
7:00 PM
Spark & The Laws of Healing ArtRage Gallery
7:00 PM
Richard Foerster, poet Downtown Writer's Center
7:00 PM
The Last Five Years Encore Presentations (Read a review!)
7:30 PM
12th Annual Reel Queer Film Festival Syracuse University Open Doors
8:00 PM
Autobahn Black Box Players
8:00 PM
James Keelaghan Folkus Project
8:00 PM
The Marvelous Wonderettes Rarely Done Productions (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
[sic] Redhouse (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
The Miracle Worker Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
Curse of the Starving Class Syracuse University Drama Department (Read a review!)
8:30 PM
Yodapez Salt City Improv Theater
9:00 PM
Daedelus, with special guests Samiyam, Chemicals of Creation Westcott Theater
Events for Saturday, April 2, 2011
12:00 AM-11:59 PM
Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery
9:00 AM-8:00 PM
Annual Le Moyne College Student Art Exhibition LeMoyne College
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Members' Theme Show Associated Artists of Central New York
10:00 AM-2:00 PM
Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Self-Portrait Show Gallery 54
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
ID+ Syracuse University School of Art and Design
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Artist in Attendance: Full Circle Szozda Gallery
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Amos Kennedy Prints! Community Folk Art Center
11:00 AM-6:00 PM
Forrest Lesch-Middelton: Recent Work Gandee Gallery
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Toys from the 1970s Onondaga Historical Association
11:00 AM
Rumplestiltskin Open Hand Theater
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
100 Years of Women Rockin' the World ArtRage Gallery
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)
3:00 PM
The Miracle Worker Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)
5:30 PM-11:00 PM
Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project (Read a review!)
6:45 PM
The Odd Couple CNY Playhouse (Read a review!)
7:00 PM
The Last Five Years Encore Presentations (Read a review!)
7:00 PM
Singer/Songwriter Jess Yoakum First Unitarian Universalist Society Music Series
7:00 PM
Gala Red Carpet Premiere: Pope Joan
7:30 PM
Dick Ward and Carol Bryant Duo Kellish Hill Farm
7:30 PM
Vocal Jazz Fest LeMoyne College
7:30 PM
12th Annual Reel Queer Film Festival Syracuse University Open Doors
8:00 PM
Autobahn Black Box Players
8:00 PM
Dr. Lonnie Smith Trio Onondaga Community College
8:00 PM
The Marvelous Wonderettes Rarely Done Productions (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
[sic] Redhouse (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
Ebène Quartet Syracuse Friends of Chamber Music
8:00 PM
Curse of the Starving Class Syracuse University Drama Department (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
Syracuse Symphony Orchestra Syracuse University Setnor School of Music, featuring Jianan Yu, piano
Events for Sunday, April 3, 2011
12:00 AM-11:59 PM
Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Thilde Jensen: Canaries Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
ID+ Syracuse University School of Art and Design
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Closing: Full Circle Szozda Gallery
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Self-Portrait Show Gallery 54
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Forrest Lesch-Middelton: Recent Work Gandee Gallery
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Toys from the 1970s Onondaga Historical Association
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-2:00 AM
Annual Le Moyne College Student Art Exhibition LeMoyne College
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
Cannonball Press Exhibition Syracuse University School of Art and Design
1:00 PM-5:00 PM
Members' Theme Show Associated Artists of Central New York
1:00 PM
The Last Five Years Encore Presentations (Read a review!)
2:00 PM
Skaneateles Brass Quintet Arts Alive in Liverpool
2:00 PM
Bach and Chopin Piano Recital Onondaga Community College, featuring Kevin Moore
2:00 PM
[sic] Redhouse (Read a review!)
2:00 PM
The Miracle Worker Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)
2:00 PM
Curse of the Starving Class Syracuse University Drama Department (Read a review!)
3:00 PM
Dvorak's Stabat Mater Syracuse Chorale, featuring Steven Uhl, organ
4:00 PM
Lenten Music Program Arts at Assisi
5:30 PM-11:00 PM
Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project (Read a review!)
7:00 PM
Autobahn Black Box Players
8:00 PM
Eytan and the Embassy, with The Tins, The Vanderbuilts, The Fly Westcott Theater
Events for Monday, April 4, 2011
12:00 AM-11:59 PM
Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery
8:00 AM-2:00 AM
Annual Le Moyne College Student Art Exhibition LeMoyne College
9:00 AM-7:00 PM
Student Art and Photography Exhibit Onondaga Community College
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College (Read a review!)
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Davidovich in Situ: A Video Art Project Point of Contact Gallery
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Members' Theme Show Associated Artists of Central New York
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Thilde Jensen: Canaries Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show Redhouse
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Self-Portrait Show Gallery 54
12:00 PM
Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
3:00 PM
Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
5:30 PM-11:00 PM
Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project (Read a review!)
7:00 PM
Film Series: My Favorite Year Temple Society of Concord
7:30 PM
All Through the Night (1942) Syracuse Cinephile Society
Events for Tuesday, April 5, 2011
12:00 AM-11:59 PM
Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery
8:00 AM-2:00 AM
Annual Le Moyne College Student Art Exhibition LeMoyne College
9:00 AM-7:00 PM
Student Art and Photography Exhibit Onondaga Community College
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College (Read a review!)
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
9:00 AM-7:00 PM
Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery
9:30 AM-6:00 PM
Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Members' Theme Show Associated Artists of Central New York
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Thilde Jensen: Canaries Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show Redhouse
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Self-Portrait Show Gallery 54
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
12:00 PM
Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery (Read a review!)
3:00 PM
Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
5:00 PM
Elastic Landscape: Seeding Ecology in Public Space and Urban Infrastructure Syracuse University School of Architecture, featuring Susannah Drake
5:30 PM-11:00 PM
Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project (Read a review!)
6:30 PM
Visiting Artist Lecture: Martin Mazorra and Mike Houston/Cannonball Press Syracuse University School of Art and Design
7:30 PM
The Global Water Crisis and the Coming Battle for the Right to Water University Lectures, featuring Maude Barlow
9:00 PM
Mimosa, with special guests Michal Menert, Cubical Sunrise Westcott Theater
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
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12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, March 29 |
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Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery
The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This spring, both the main gallery and Window Projects feature emerging female artists and celebrate their artistic achievements at a time that coincides with International Women's Day (March 2011). Stephanie Rozene draws upon the fine line between design and the visual arts. Her work is the result of extensive research and gifted craftsmanship. Through the medium of ceramics (and with special attention to specific patterns, ornaments, and forms) she explores the politics of European ceramics and traces international developments in this medium back to the reigns of French kings Louis XV and Louis XVI. This is her first solo museum show.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29 |
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Winter Art Show Clayscapes Pottery Gallery
Clayscapes Pottery Studio
1003 W. Fayette St., Suite L1,
Syracuse
Come in from the cold and enjoy the warmth of friends and the glow of ceramic art made in The Studio at Clayscapes Pottery. Featuring ceramic artwork by Millie St. John, Tim See, Don Seymour, Shawn McGuire, Wes Weiss, and Sarah VanDerVoort as well as many others.
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 29 |
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Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
Takafumi Ide is an interdisciplinary media artist specializing in installation with sound and light. He received his B.A. in graphic design from Tama Art University in Tokyo in 1989, and his M.F.A. in studio art from Stony Brook University in 2007. He has worked for more than 10 years as a graphic designer and an illustrator in Japan and now teaches at Stony Brook University as a lecturer, and Suffolk County Community College as an adjunct instructor. He has received several honors, such as The Sculpture Space Fellowship and Residency (funded by both the Pollock-Krasner Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts), the Strategic Opportunity Stipend Program Grant through the New York Foundation for the Arts, and most recently the Nomura Cultural Foundation's Project Grant, Asahi Shimbun Foundation Project Grant, and the Vermont Studio Center's Partial-Grant and Residency. He has exhibited both nationally and internationally. More recent exhibitions include Sunroom Project Glynder Gallery, Wave Hill, NY, ISE Cultural Foundation in Soho, NY, and AC Institute in Chelsea, NY.
Read a review!
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 29 |
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Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Artists include Fred Zimmerman, David Yaman, Kathy Williams, Carl Steckler, Laurie Seamans, Meg Richardson, Lyla Phillips, Allen Phillips, Joan Niswender, Richard Mitchell, Amy Hnatko, Emily Gibbons, Serry Dans, Kathie Beale, and David Beale.
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9:00 AM - 7:00 PM, March 29 |
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Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
On display will be pulp magazines, notably titles like Weird Tales and Amazing Stories; the typescript of Isaac Asimov's "Strange Playfellow," which introduced readers to one of science fiction's best known characters, Robbie the Robot; and correspondence with figures like Ray Bradbury. Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29 |
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Marcel Breuer and Postwar America Syracuse University School of Architecture
Price: Free Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus,
Syracuse
Drawings from the Marcel Breuer Papers, curated by SU Architecture students, with Barry Bergdoll and Jonathan Massey. The exhibition is the outcome of their work in the extensive Breuer archive at the Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center. It features images of 120 drawings, as well as photographs, documenting thirteen of Breuer’s major postwar buildings and projects. Full-scale reproductions highlight themes that characterized some of Breuer’s lesser-known major work and document his responses to the needs and opportunities of postwar American society. Breuer (1902-1981) was a leading figure among the second generation of modernist architects whose striking designs for furniture, houses, institutions, and commercial buildings helped to set the shape and style of modernity in Europe and the United States, leading “Time” magazine to characterize him as one of the “form givers of the 20th century.” His works include the UNESCO headquarters in Paris and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29 |
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Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery
Price: Free Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
This group exhibit showcases both the artwork of local women artists, as well as artwork with women-focused subjects. Artists will be sharing their personal experiences in a number of areas. The artists from the CNY area and include Maria Rizzo (painting), Amanda Gormley (photography), Patricia Seitz (painting), Suzanne Masters (paint and collage), Sherry Gordon (painting), Kristie Hayes (painting and drawing), Carla Senecal (installation artwork), and Michael Moody (painting and prints).
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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 29 |
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Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd.,
Syracuse
Diana Godfrey: mixed media pastels and acrylic paintings Carmel Nicoletti: bronze reliefs and glass works
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29 |
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Amos Kennedy Prints! Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Focusing on issues of race, violence and community, "Amos Kennedy Prints!" features the hand-printed works of Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr. and will include prints created at CFAC. By transforming the gallery into an active printmaking workshop, Kennedy will collaborate with students from the Syracuse area and Syracuse University to create images and broadsides that reflect issues of race, gender and politics and illustrate the impact of violence in the city on their lives and community. The public is invited to meet Kennedy and to observe and participate in the printmaking process.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 29 |
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Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
That Year of Living features stunning black-and-white photographs by Jeffrey Henson Scales. Diagnosed with cancer in 2008, Scales was forced to, in his words, weigh the possibilities of his own demise, and whether he had achieved what he felt he was put here to do. It was this diagnosis and contemplation, along with the urging of his wife, Meg Henson Scales, which led him to return to making photographs on a daily basis. The images in That Year of Living were made in the year following his cancer diagnosis and surgery. Scales photographed mainly in and around Times Square, depicting the part of New York City that he visited every day going to and from work at The New York Times. The images capture the certain hardness mixed with joy, sadness, determination and bewilderment that is found in the faces of young and old alike in New York City. Created in the months following his own experience with mortality, the photographs explore the journey of life and death found in the faces on the streets of New York.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 29 |
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Thilde Jensen: Canaries Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The images in Canaries, an exhibition of photographs by Thilde Jensen, are a personal account of the life Jensen has lived with multiple chemical sensitivity, and the people she has met who suffer from the same condition. People with this sensitivity have been dubbed "human canaries," and they are the casualties of what Jensen calls a "ubiquitous synthetic chemical culture." Jensen became so sensitive to chemicals in the air that she could not sit in traffic, read a book or sit next to someone wearing perfume. She was forced to wear a gas mask when entering banks, supermarkets and doctor's offices. She left her life in New York City, her husband and her career, and moved to the country, where she lived in a tent away from the regular chemicals such as laundry detergents, pesticides and exhaust fumes.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 29 |
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No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr.,
Fayetteville
Works by Scott Bennett and Michael Matthews. Note: Limestone Art is now in its new location next to Pascale's at 105 Brooklea Dr. in Fayetteville. Scott Bennett's new series of vivid landscape paintings have found their inspiration close to home, or rather at his new home and studio in Jamesville, NY. While continuing his characteristic impasto painting technique, Bennett shares his inspiration with us: "Our property has wonderful woods and views in all directions, and most of these paintings are inspired by the beauty I see everyday when I look out any window or walk out the door." His work has been exhibited in over 40 national exhibitions, and is included in numerous corporate and private collections. This is Bennett's second exhibition at Limestone. Michael Matthews' landscapes are developed from sketchbook watercolors created on site during his travels, at times during below freezing temperatures as ice forms while he paints. Back in the studio, Matthews creates large paintings from a singe sketch or an amalgamation of his watercolors. Michael Matthews lives in Syracuse, NY and in Harrogate, British Columbia. His work is found in over 60 corporate art collections.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29 |
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Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show Redhouse
Price: Free Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
A selection of work from young women at Fowler, Nottingham and IT high schools.
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 29 |
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Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
A profile of pulp artist Norman Saunders (1907-1989), including 10 lush and dramatic Saunders paintings from the university collection. Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 29 |
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Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art
Price: $5 suggested donation Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In 2008, Ah Leon envisioned a monumental ceramic installation showcasing dozens of stoneware desks and chairs in neat rows like the classrooms of our youth. It began with a small grouping called Memories of Elementary School first exhibited in August 2008 at The Taipei Gallery Exposition and in 2009 at the Phoenix Art Museum in conjunction with the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) annual conference. Ah Leon continued to make more desks which were exhibited at the American Museum of Ceramic Art (AMOCA) in 2010. Another year has passed and Ah Leon has completed the 20 sets of desks and chairs which will be showcased in this exhibition. His original idea was to create a classroom environment that would “lead audiences to remember their childhood stories.” Ah Leon studied elementary school desks, determined that his creations would be authentic, revealing memories through carved initials, scratches and drawings on their worn surfaces. His classroom would preserve the stories of our childhood as if they were “frozen in the museum space.” The first two rows of tables and chairs appear new. They become progressively more dilapidated--some broken, some leaning--until the last rows where the furniture is falling over and ultimately only chips and severed parts remain on the floor. In one area the desks are arranged as if a teacher reads to a group of children. The impact of the scene is immediate: viewers are taken back to their own childhood classroom and long forgotten memories drift to the surface.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 29 |
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Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art
Price: $5 suggested donation Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The 2011 exhibition program will continue to highlight the talented artists of New York State through a series of focused exhibitions. The season opens with Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds, an exhibition featuring more than 100 original works of art that are seriously hilarious. The small-scale drawings depicting the comedic daily lives of humans and animals alike are all rendered by hand in a variety of media, an approach that is becoming increasing rare in a world of computer-generated images. Dan Reynolds began drawing cartoons in 1989, when he was 30. As a youth center instructor, Reynolds was surrounded by youthful energy and creative minds. He was an avid follower of popular cartoons of the time, such as Gary Larson's Far Side and Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes. A native of Brewerton, NY, Reynolds was inspired by his Central New York surroundings, a place where snow is abundant and cows can be found just minutes from anywhere. From the beginning, Reynolds has used farm animals as messengers of humor, particularly cows, pigs and chickens, a series that was immediately accepted by Reader's Digest in 1989. A new cartoon has appeared in every issue since then. Reynolds' cartoons have also appeared in thematic Reynolds Unwrapped book compilations featuring everything from sports to holiday special editions. American Greetings and Recycled Greeting Cards also feature Reynolds cartoons on greeting cards for every occasion. In 2008, Reynolds was diagnosed with testicular cancer and subsequently received months of chemotherapy. While he was in treatment, he began drawing cartoons about cancer and his personal experience which he found was shared by his fellow patients. He shared the cartoons with the staff and patients at the facility and discovered the power of art to bring humor to an otherwise humorless situation.
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 29 |
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Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
The young female Swiss designer duo, Sarah Kueng and Lovis Caputo, will install a hotel in the Warehouse Gallery. The main gallery will be transformed into small ephemeral rooms where the visitor is invited to take a break from reality and to take a mini-vacation complete with a number of very simple, inexpensive and joyful elements. When seated or lying down, the public's focus is drawn to the interior space and lighting. The idea for a temporary hotel goes back to Kueng's and Caputo's 72 Hours Hotel, which was initially developed in 2006 for the train station in Zurich, Switzerland. Both artists have been widely exhibited. This is their first museum solo show in the U.S.
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Film |
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5:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 29 |
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Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project
Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Internationally renowned artist Jenny Holzer created a site-specific installation that streams across the façade of Syracuse Stage on an LED curtain. The installation features 272 aphorisms from her celebrated series "Truisms" and "Survival" that challenge viewers' 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 Times 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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History |
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29 |
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Implements of Mass Construction Erie Canal Museum
Price: Free Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
The Erie Canal was built by thousands of untrained men during the 19th century, before the United States had any civil engineering professionals. So how did they construct a canal across the entire state of New York? Come by the Erie Canal Museum and see the tools that made it possible. The 16 items on view were used for construction or industry along the Erie Canal in the 19th century. Visit the Museum's second floor gallery to try to guess what each instrument is. Tools similar to some of the implements on display are still used today, but others will require some guesswork. Come visit today to guess for yourself!
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12:00 PM, March 29 |
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Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Free Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total) Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.
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3:00 PM, March 29 |
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Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Free Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total) Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.
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Lecture |
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6:30 PM, March 29 |
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Visiting Artist: Ophrah Shemesh Syracuse University School of Art and Design
Price: Free Shemin Auditorium, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Israeli-born, New York-based painter Ophrah Shemesh will present a lecture. Shemesh's fleshy figures are rendered with loose, dry brushstrokes and expressionistically activated by their consistently powerful distortions. Her theme of sexual awakening, which has been explored by Balthus, among other artists, is one that never grows old. She depicts frankly sexual situations without judgment or shame; her images are anything but lurid. In each work she manages to convey a sweet yet unsentimental feeling of innocence. Parking is available for $4 in Booth Garage; mention event to obtain rate. For more information, contact Stephen Zaima, 315-443-9400 or szaima@syr.edu.
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Music |
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8:00 PM, March 29 |
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Paola Marquez Composition Recital Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
Price: Free Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Musicians from the School of Music will present works by student composer Paola Marquez. The program will include contemporary music for soloists, ensembles, and orchestra. Parking is available in the Irving Garage.
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Wednesday, March 30, 2011
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Art |
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12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, March 30 |
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Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery
The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This spring, both the main gallery and Window Projects feature emerging female artists and celebrate their artistic achievements at a time that coincides with International Women's Day (March 2011). Stephanie Rozene draws upon the fine line between design and the visual arts. Her work is the result of extensive research and gifted craftsmanship. Through the medium of ceramics (and with special attention to specific patterns, ornaments, and forms) she explores the politics of European ceramics and traces international developments in this medium back to the reigns of French kings Louis XV and Louis XVI. This is her first solo museum show.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30 |
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Winter Art Show Clayscapes Pottery Gallery
Clayscapes Pottery Studio
1003 W. Fayette St., Suite L1,
Syracuse
Come in from the cold and enjoy the warmth of friends and the glow of ceramic art made in The Studio at Clayscapes Pottery. Featuring ceramic artwork by Millie St. John, Tim See, Don Seymour, Shawn McGuire, Wes Weiss, and Sarah VanDerVoort as well as many others.
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 30 |
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Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
Takafumi Ide is an interdisciplinary media artist specializing in installation with sound and light. He received his B.A. in graphic design from Tama Art University in Tokyo in 1989, and his M.F.A. in studio art from Stony Brook University in 2007. He has worked for more than 10 years as a graphic designer and an illustrator in Japan and now teaches at Stony Brook University as a lecturer, and Suffolk County Community College as an adjunct instructor. He has received several honors, such as The Sculpture Space Fellowship and Residency (funded by both the Pollock-Krasner Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts), the Strategic Opportunity Stipend Program Grant through the New York Foundation for the Arts, and most recently the Nomura Cultural Foundation's Project Grant, Asahi Shimbun Foundation Project Grant, and the Vermont Studio Center's Partial-Grant and Residency. He has exhibited both nationally and internationally. More recent exhibitions include Sunroom Project Glynder Gallery, Wave Hill, NY, ISE Cultural Foundation in Soho, NY, and AC Institute in Chelsea, NY.
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 30 |
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Davidovich in Situ: A Video Art Project Point of Contact Gallery
Price: Free Point of Contact Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Argentine video artist Jaime Davidovich returns to Syracuse University after an amazing year of grand-scale museum exhibitions worldwide, to work on site at The Point of Contact Gallery. Davidovich will present a series of his classic videos along with collage, photography, and a new series of paintings that he will produce on site. Davidovich, on Painting and Video Art: "My paintings are hybrids combining the tactile sensation of painting with the electronic pulse of video. The works are small in scale and intimate in nature. I want to do an art that speaks on a one-to-one basis with the viewer, no actors or story line, just a scale for human dialogue. In a time of video as spectacle, my work is indeed conflictive. I am interested in establishing a link (no pun intended) between Morandi and the Internet; the personal gesture and digital reproduction. These are the opposites that attract me. I use video because it is intimate, personal. I use the brush because is my gestural DNA."
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 30 |
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Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Artists include Fred Zimmerman, David Yaman, Kathy Williams, Carl Steckler, Laurie Seamans, Meg Richardson, Lyla Phillips, Allen Phillips, Joan Niswender, Richard Mitchell, Amy Hnatko, Emily Gibbons, Serry Dans, Kathie Beale, and David Beale.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30 |
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Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
On display will be pulp magazines, notably titles like Weird Tales and Amazing Stories; the typescript of Isaac Asimov's "Strange Playfellow," which introduced readers to one of science fiction's best known characters, Robbie the Robot; and correspondence with figures like Ray Bradbury. Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30 |
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Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery
Price: Free Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
This group exhibit showcases both the artwork of local women artists, as well as artwork with women-focused subjects. Artists will be sharing their personal experiences in a number of areas. The artists from the CNY area and include Maria Rizzo (painting), Amanda Gormley (photography), Patricia Seitz (painting), Suzanne Masters (paint and collage), Sherry Gordon (painting), Kristie Hayes (painting and drawing), Carla Senecal (installation artwork), and Michael Moody (painting and prints).
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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 30 |
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Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd.,
Syracuse
Diana Godfrey: mixed media pastels and acrylic paintings Carmel Nicoletti: bronze reliefs and glass works
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30 |
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Amos Kennedy Prints! Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Focusing on issues of race, violence and community, "Amos Kennedy Prints!" features the hand-printed works of Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr. and will include prints created at CFAC. By transforming the gallery into an active printmaking workshop, Kennedy will collaborate with students from the Syracuse area and Syracuse University to create images and broadsides that reflect issues of race, gender and politics and illustrate the impact of violence in the city on their lives and community. The public is invited to meet Kennedy and to observe and participate in the printmaking process.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 30 |
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Thilde Jensen: Canaries Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The images in Canaries, an exhibition of photographs by Thilde Jensen, are a personal account of the life Jensen has lived with multiple chemical sensitivity, and the people she has met who suffer from the same condition. People with this sensitivity have been dubbed "human canaries," and they are the casualties of what Jensen calls a "ubiquitous synthetic chemical culture." Jensen became so sensitive to chemicals in the air that she could not sit in traffic, read a book or sit next to someone wearing perfume. She was forced to wear a gas mask when entering banks, supermarkets and doctor's offices. She left her life in New York City, her husband and her career, and moved to the country, where she lived in a tent away from the regular chemicals such as laundry detergents, pesticides and exhaust fumes.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 30 |
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Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
That Year of Living features stunning black-and-white photographs by Jeffrey Henson Scales. Diagnosed with cancer in 2008, Scales was forced to, in his words, weigh the possibilities of his own demise, and whether he had achieved what he felt he was put here to do. It was this diagnosis and contemplation, along with the urging of his wife, Meg Henson Scales, which led him to return to making photographs on a daily basis. The images in That Year of Living were made in the year following his cancer diagnosis and surgery. Scales photographed mainly in and around Times Square, depicting the part of New York City that he visited every day going to and from work at The New York Times. The images capture the certain hardness mixed with joy, sadness, determination and bewilderment that is found in the faces of young and old alike in New York City. Created in the months following his own experience with mortality, the photographs explore the journey of life and death found in the faces on the streets of New York.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 30 |
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No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr.,
Fayetteville
Works by Scott Bennett and Michael Matthews. Note: Limestone Art is now in its new location next to Pascale's at 105 Brooklea Dr. in Fayetteville. Scott Bennett's new series of vivid landscape paintings have found their inspiration close to home, or rather at his new home and studio in Jamesville, NY. While continuing his characteristic impasto painting technique, Bennett shares his inspiration with us: "Our property has wonderful woods and views in all directions, and most of these paintings are inspired by the beauty I see everyday when I look out any window or walk out the door." His work has been exhibited in over 40 national exhibitions, and is included in numerous corporate and private collections. This is Bennett's second exhibition at Limestone. Michael Matthews' landscapes are developed from sketchbook watercolors created on site during his travels, at times during below freezing temperatures as ice forms while he paints. Back in the studio, Matthews creates large paintings from a singe sketch or an amalgamation of his watercolors. Michael Matthews lives in Syracuse, NY and in Harrogate, British Columbia. His work is found in over 60 corporate art collections.
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 30 |
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Toys from the 1970s Onondaga Historical Association
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
This year's version will feature toys from the 1970s. Do you remember playing Pong on Atari, getting your first Luke Skywalker figure, or just wishing to have your own Malibu Barbie? Then you won't want to miss this journey into the decade of Charlie's Angels, Richard Nixon and a gallon of gasoline at fifty cents.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30 |
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Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show Redhouse
Price: Free Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
A selection of work from young women at Fowler, Nottingham and IT high schools.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30 |
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ID+ Syracuse University School of Art and Design
Price: Free Genet Design Gallery
The Warehouse, 350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Industrial and interaction design students will present ID+, a show of work done outside their major. ID+ will include art, film, painting, stand-up comedy, performance art and more. Within their major, VPA's industrial and interaction design students typically focus on designing products, environments, exhibitions and packaging. For more information, contact Julia Byron at jbyron@syr.edu.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 30 |
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Full Circle Szozda Gallery
Szozda Gallery
Delavan Center, 501 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Linda Esterley: mixed media collage Lynette Blake: oil paintings Elizabeth Moldenhauer: felted vessels
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, March 30 |
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Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
A profile of pulp artist Norman Saunders (1907-1989), including 10 lush and dramatic Saunders paintings from the university collection. Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 30 |
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Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art
Price: $5 suggested donation Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In 2008, Ah Leon envisioned a monumental ceramic installation showcasing dozens of stoneware desks and chairs in neat rows like the classrooms of our youth. It began with a small grouping called Memories of Elementary School first exhibited in August 2008 at The Taipei Gallery Exposition and in 2009 at the Phoenix Art Museum in conjunction with the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) annual conference. Ah Leon continued to make more desks which were exhibited at the American Museum of Ceramic Art (AMOCA) in 2010. Another year has passed and Ah Leon has completed the 20 sets of desks and chairs which will be showcased in this exhibition. His original idea was to create a classroom environment that would “lead audiences to remember their childhood stories.” Ah Leon studied elementary school desks, determined that his creations would be authentic, revealing memories through carved initials, scratches and drawings on their worn surfaces. His classroom would preserve the stories of our childhood as if they were “frozen in the museum space.” The first two rows of tables and chairs appear new. They become progressively more dilapidated--some broken, some leaning--until the last rows where the furniture is falling over and ultimately only chips and severed parts remain on the floor. In one area the desks are arranged as if a teacher reads to a group of children. The impact of the scene is immediate: viewers are taken back to their own childhood classroom and long forgotten memories drift to the surface.
Read a review!
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Back to list |
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 30 |
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Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art
Price: $5 suggested donation Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The 2011 exhibition program will continue to highlight the talented artists of New York State through a series of focused exhibitions. The season opens with Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds, an exhibition featuring more than 100 original works of art that are seriously hilarious. The small-scale drawings depicting the comedic daily lives of humans and animals alike are all rendered by hand in a variety of media, an approach that is becoming increasing rare in a world of computer-generated images. Dan Reynolds began drawing cartoons in 1989, when he was 30. As a youth center instructor, Reynolds was surrounded by youthful energy and creative minds. He was an avid follower of popular cartoons of the time, such as Gary Larson's Far Side and Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes. A native of Brewerton, NY, Reynolds was inspired by his Central New York surroundings, a place where snow is abundant and cows can be found just minutes from anywhere. From the beginning, Reynolds has used farm animals as messengers of humor, particularly cows, pigs and chickens, a series that was immediately accepted by Reader's Digest in 1989. A new cartoon has appeared in every issue since then. Reynolds' cartoons have also appeared in thematic Reynolds Unwrapped book compilations featuring everything from sports to holiday special editions. American Greetings and Recycled Greeting Cards also feature Reynolds cartoons on greeting cards for every occasion. In 2008, Reynolds was diagnosed with testicular cancer and subsequently received months of chemotherapy. While he was in treatment, he began drawing cartoons about cancer and his personal experience which he found was shared by his fellow patients. He shared the cartoons with the staff and patients at the facility and discovered the power of art to bring humor to an otherwise humorless situation.
Read a review!
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 30 |
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Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
The young female Swiss designer duo, Sarah Kueng and Lovis Caputo, will install a hotel in the Warehouse Gallery. The main gallery will be transformed into small ephemeral rooms where the visitor is invited to take a break from reality and to take a mini-vacation complete with a number of very simple, inexpensive and joyful elements. When seated or lying down, the public's focus is drawn to the interior space and lighting. The idea for a temporary hotel goes back to Kueng's and Caputo's 72 Hours Hotel, which was initially developed in 2006 for the train station in Zurich, Switzerland. Both artists have been widely exhibited. This is their first museum solo show in the U.S.
Read a review!
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2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, March 30 |
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100 Years of Women Rockin' the World ArtRage Gallery
Price: Free ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave.,
Syracuse
This exhibition features the art of 35 women artists -- nine local to Syracuse, and the rest from communities across the country. These women, in keeping with the mission of ArtRage, are also activists and their work expresses a whole range of issues important to both women and the community of concerned people worldwide: self-image, hunger, collective action, war, children, the status of women, immigration, environmental crisis, alternative lifestyles and self-discovery. Participating artists include Arlene Abend, Amy Bartell, Ellen Blalock, Marlena Buczek, Elizabeth Carter, Jen Cartwright, the Chicago Women's Graphic Collective, Sue Coe, Erin Currier, Jane Evershed, Raina Gentry, Susan Grabel, Sharon Lee Hart, Robin Hewlett, Gail Hoffman, Nancy Hom, Katherine Hughes, Lahib Jaddo, Mollie Kellogg, Kate Luscher, Dierdre Luzwick, Sofia Perez, Ruth Putter, Favianna Rodriguez, Gazelle Samizay, Nicole Schulman, Sarah Walroth, Anita Welych and Oceans Unraveled project with artists: Aviva Alter, Mary Buczek, Mary Ellen Croteau.
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Film |
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5:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 30 |
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Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project
Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Internationally renowned artist Jenny Holzer created a site-specific installation that streams across the façade of Syracuse Stage on an LED curtain. The installation features 272 aphorisms from her celebrated series "Truisms" and "Survival" that challenge viewers' 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 Times 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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7:00 PM, March 30 |
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until when... ArtRage Gallery
Price: Free ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave.,
Syracuse
March 30 is an annual day of commemoration for Palestinians all over the world. It is known as Land Day. On this date in 1976 the Israeli government announced a plan to expropriate thousands of dunams of land for "security and settlement purposes." In response, Palestinians organized a general strike and marches throughout their land. Six Palestinians were killed, about 100 wounded, and hundreds arrested in confrontations with the Israeli army and police. Land Day is recognized as a pivotal event in the struggle over land and the relationship Palestinians to the State of Israel. To commemorate this day and continue our work of understanding the conflict between these two peoples, CNY Working for a Just Peace in Palestine and Israel will show the video, until when..., by Dahna Abourahme, an in-depth portrait of Palestinian lives under occupation. It is set during the Second Intifada and follows four Palestinian families living in Dheisheh Refugee Camp near Bethlehem. This period of intensified Palestinian-Israeli violence began in late September 2000. The death toll, including both military and civilian, is estimated to be 6500 Palestinians and over 1100 Israelis, as well as 64 foreigners. There was no clear cut end to this period. The death of Arafat in 2004, the dispute between Palestinians factions (Fatah and Hamas) that followed his death, and the Israeli disengagement from Gaza in 2005 are all cited as bringing about the end to the 2nd Intifada.
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History |
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 30 |
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Implements of Mass Construction Erie Canal Museum
Price: Free Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
The Erie Canal was built by thousands of untrained men during the 19th century, before the United States had any civil engineering professionals. So how did they construct a canal across the entire state of New York? Come by the Erie Canal Museum and see the tools that made it possible. The 16 items on view were used for construction or industry along the Erie Canal in the 19th century. Visit the Museum's second floor gallery to try to guess what each instrument is. Tools similar to some of the implements on display are still used today, but others will require some guesswork. Come visit today to guess for yourself!
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12:00 PM, March 30 |
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Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Free Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total) Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.
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3:00 PM, March 30 |
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Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Free Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total) Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.
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Music |
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12:30 PM, March 30 |
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Adam Rothenberg and Isabelle Weir, piano Civic Morning Musicals
Price: Free Hosmer Auditorium, Everson Museum
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
CMM proudly presents two outstanding young pianists of the Syracuse area: Adam Rothenburg, student of Steven Rosenfeld, and Isabelle Weir, student of Patricia DeAngeles and Steven Rosenfeld. They will play the Mozart D Major Sonata for four hands as well as works by Schumann, Chopin, and others.
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8:00 PM, March 30 |
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Cornmeal, with Driftwood Westcott Theater
Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St.,
Syracuse
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Opera |
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7:00 PM, March 30 |
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The Pearl Fishers Preview Syracuse Opera
Price: Free Jewish Community Center
5655 Thompson Rd.,
Dewitt
The previews feature mainstage artists, chorus members, or our Resident Artists performing music from the upcoming opera, along with insights to the composer and score as well as costuming and staging. For more information, phone 315-475-5915.
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Theater |
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7:30 PM, March 30 |
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The Miracle Worker Syracuse Stage Paul Barnes, director
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
"Once I knew only darkness and stillness... my life was without past or future... but a little word from the fingers of another fell into my hand that clutched at emptiness, and my heart leaped to the rapture of living." In her own words, Helen Keller captures the inspirational heart of William Gibson's classic American play. Between the emptiness and the rapture, though, came a fierce struggle of wills, with Helen, in her darkness and stillness, on one side, and the determined Annie Sullivan on the other, a young woman who had endured a lifetime of pain in just 20 years. Gibson's text is unsparing and unflinching in its depiction of their confrontation and mutual triumph. The hearts that will be leaping will be ours.
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Thursday, March 31, 2011
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Art |
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12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, March 31 |
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Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery
The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This spring, both the main gallery and Window Projects feature emerging female artists and celebrate their artistic achievements at a time that coincides with International Women's Day (March 2011). Stephanie Rozene draws upon the fine line between design and the visual arts. Her work is the result of extensive research and gifted craftsmanship. Through the medium of ceramics (and with special attention to specific patterns, ornaments, and forms) she explores the politics of European ceramics and traces international developments in this medium back to the reigns of French kings Louis XV and Louis XVI. This is her first solo museum show.
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 31 |
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Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
Takafumi Ide is an interdisciplinary media artist specializing in installation with sound and light. He received his B.A. in graphic design from Tama Art University in Tokyo in 1989, and his M.F.A. in studio art from Stony Brook University in 2007. He has worked for more than 10 years as a graphic designer and an illustrator in Japan and now teaches at Stony Brook University as a lecturer, and Suffolk County Community College as an adjunct instructor. He has received several honors, such as The Sculpture Space Fellowship and Residency (funded by both the Pollock-Krasner Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts), the Strategic Opportunity Stipend Program Grant through the New York Foundation for the Arts, and most recently the Nomura Cultural Foundation's Project Grant, Asahi Shimbun Foundation Project Grant, and the Vermont Studio Center's Partial-Grant and Residency. He has exhibited both nationally and internationally. More recent exhibitions include Sunroom Project Glynder Gallery, Wave Hill, NY, ISE Cultural Foundation in Soho, NY, and AC Institute in Chelsea, NY.
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 31 |
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Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Artists include Fred Zimmerman, David Yaman, Kathy Williams, Carl Steckler, Laurie Seamans, Meg Richardson, Lyla Phillips, Allen Phillips, Joan Niswender, Richard Mitchell, Amy Hnatko, Emily Gibbons, Serry Dans, Kathie Beale, and David Beale.
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9:00 AM - 7:00 PM, March 31 |
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Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
On display will be pulp magazines, notably titles like Weird Tales and Amazing Stories; the typescript of Isaac Asimov's "Strange Playfellow," which introduced readers to one of science fiction's best known characters, Robbie the Robot; and correspondence with figures like Ray Bradbury. Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 31 |
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Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery
Price: Free Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
This group exhibit showcases both the artwork of local women artists, as well as artwork with women-focused subjects. Artists will be sharing their personal experiences in a number of areas. The artists from the CNY area and include Maria Rizzo (painting), Amanda Gormley (photography), Patricia Seitz (painting), Suzanne Masters (paint and collage), Sherry Gordon (painting), Kristie Hayes (painting and drawing), Carla Senecal (installation artwork), and Michael Moody (painting and prints).
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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 31 |
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Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd.,
Syracuse
Diana Godfrey: mixed media pastels and acrylic paintings Carmel Nicoletti: bronze reliefs and glass works
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 31 |
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Amos Kennedy Prints! Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Focusing on issues of race, violence and community, "Amos Kennedy Prints!" features the hand-printed works of Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr. and will include prints created at CFAC. By transforming the gallery into an active printmaking workshop, Kennedy will collaborate with students from the Syracuse area and Syracuse University to create images and broadsides that reflect issues of race, gender and politics and illustrate the impact of violence in the city on their lives and community. The public is invited to meet Kennedy and to observe and participate in the printmaking process.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 31 |
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Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
That Year of Living features stunning black-and-white photographs by Jeffrey Henson Scales. Diagnosed with cancer in 2008, Scales was forced to, in his words, weigh the possibilities of his own demise, and whether he had achieved what he felt he was put here to do. It was this diagnosis and contemplation, along with the urging of his wife, Meg Henson Scales, which led him to return to making photographs on a daily basis. The images in That Year of Living were made in the year following his cancer diagnosis and surgery. Scales photographed mainly in and around Times Square, depicting the part of New York City that he visited every day going to and from work at The New York Times. The images capture the certain hardness mixed with joy, sadness, determination and bewilderment that is found in the faces of young and old alike in New York City. Created in the months following his own experience with mortality, the photographs explore the journey of life and death found in the faces on the streets of New York.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 31 |
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Thilde Jensen: Canaries Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The images in Canaries, an exhibition of photographs by Thilde Jensen, are a personal account of the life Jensen has lived with multiple chemical sensitivity, and the people she has met who suffer from the same condition. People with this sensitivity have been dubbed "human canaries," and they are the casualties of what Jensen calls a "ubiquitous synthetic chemical culture." Jensen became so sensitive to chemicals in the air that she could not sit in traffic, read a book or sit next to someone wearing perfume. She was forced to wear a gas mask when entering banks, supermarkets and doctor's offices. She left her life in New York City, her husband and her career, and moved to the country, where she lived in a tent away from the regular chemicals such as laundry detergents, pesticides and exhaust fumes.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 31 |
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No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr.,
Fayetteville
Works by Scott Bennett and Michael Matthews. Note: Limestone Art is now in its new location next to Pascale's at 105 Brooklea Dr. in Fayetteville. Scott Bennett's new series of vivid landscape paintings have found their inspiration close to home, or rather at his new home and studio in Jamesville, NY. While continuing his characteristic impasto painting technique, Bennett shares his inspiration with us: "Our property has wonderful woods and views in all directions, and most of these paintings are inspired by the beauty I see everyday when I look out any window or walk out the door." His work has been exhibited in over 40 national exhibitions, and is included in numerous corporate and private collections. This is Bennett's second exhibition at Limestone. Michael Matthews' landscapes are developed from sketchbook watercolors created on site during his travels, at times during below freezing temperatures as ice forms while he paints. Back in the studio, Matthews creates large paintings from a singe sketch or an amalgamation of his watercolors. Michael Matthews lives in Syracuse, NY and in Harrogate, British Columbia. His work is found in over 60 corporate art collections.
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 31 |
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Toys from the 1970s Onondaga Historical Association
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
This year's version will feature toys from the 1970s. Do you remember playing Pong on Atari, getting your first Luke Skywalker figure, or just wishing to have your own Malibu Barbie? Then you won't want to miss this journey into the decade of Charlie's Angels, Richard Nixon and a gallon of gasoline at fifty cents.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 31 |
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Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show Redhouse
Price: Free Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
A selection of work from young women at Fowler, Nottingham and IT high schools.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 31 |
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ID+ Syracuse University School of Art and Design
Price: Free Genet Design Gallery
The Warehouse, 350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Industrial and interaction design students will present ID+, a show of work done outside their major. ID+ will include art, film, painting, stand-up comedy, performance art and more. Within their major, VPA's industrial and interaction design students typically focus on designing products, environments, exhibitions and packaging. For more information, contact Julia Byron at jbyron@syr.edu.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 31 |
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Full Circle Szozda Gallery
Szozda Gallery
Delavan Center, 501 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Linda Esterley: mixed media collage Lynette Blake: oil paintings Elizabeth Moldenhauer: felted vessels
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11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, March 31 |
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Forrest Lesch-Middelton: Recent Work Gandee Gallery
Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St.,
Fabius
Forrest Lesch-Middelton's pottery combines historic patterns with modern-day technology. The resulting work creates a subtle narrative that references the cross-cultural influences that impact every facet of daily life. Pottery is used as a metaphor to illustrate this phenomenon. To achieve the intricate patterns, Lesch-Middelton uses silkscreen and embossment transfer techniques. He says of his artwork, "By blending form, pattern, and surface, my goal is to create an object that simultaneously elicits a visceral and intellectual response, followed by a contemplation of my work as a whole." Lesch-Middelton received his MFA in Ceramics from Utah State University in 2006 and a BFA in Ceramics from New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University in 1998. He is currently the Ceramics Program Coordinator at the Sonoma Community Center in Sonoma, California and teaches at Santa Rosa Jr. College and Solano College in the San Francisco Bay area. His artwork has been shown in many venues nationally, including the Baltimore Clayworks (MD), Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts (TN), and Santa Fe Clay Center (NM). He currently lives with his wife and two daughters in Northern California.
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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 31 |
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Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
A profile of pulp artist Norman Saunders (1907-1989), including 10 lush and dramatic Saunders paintings from the university collection. Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 31 |
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Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art
Price: $5 suggested donation Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The 2011 exhibition program will continue to highlight the talented artists of New York State through a series of focused exhibitions. The season opens with Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds, an exhibition featuring more than 100 original works of art that are seriously hilarious. The small-scale drawings depicting the comedic daily lives of humans and animals alike are all rendered by hand in a variety of media, an approach that is becoming increasing rare in a world of computer-generated images. Dan Reynolds began drawing cartoons in 1989, when he was 30. As a youth center instructor, Reynolds was surrounded by youthful energy and creative minds. He was an avid follower of popular cartoons of the time, such as Gary Larson's Far Side and Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes. A native of Brewerton, NY, Reynolds was inspired by his Central New York surroundings, a place where snow is abundant and cows can be found just minutes from anywhere. From the beginning, Reynolds has used farm animals as messengers of humor, particularly cows, pigs and chickens, a series that was immediately accepted by Reader's Digest in 1989. A new cartoon has appeared in every issue since then. Reynolds' cartoons have also appeared in thematic Reynolds Unwrapped book compilations featuring everything from sports to holiday special editions. American Greetings and Recycled Greeting Cards also feature Reynolds cartoons on greeting cards for every occasion. In 2008, Reynolds was diagnosed with testicular cancer and subsequently received months of chemotherapy. While he was in treatment, he began drawing cartoons about cancer and his personal experience which he found was shared by his fellow patients. He shared the cartoons with the staff and patients at the facility and discovered the power of art to bring humor to an otherwise humorless situation.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 31 |
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Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art
Price: $5 suggested donation Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In 2008, Ah Leon envisioned a monumental ceramic installation showcasing dozens of stoneware desks and chairs in neat rows like the classrooms of our youth. It began with a small grouping called Memories of Elementary School first exhibited in August 2008 at The Taipei Gallery Exposition and in 2009 at the Phoenix Art Museum in conjunction with the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) annual conference. Ah Leon continued to make more desks which were exhibited at the American Museum of Ceramic Art (AMOCA) in 2010. Another year has passed and Ah Leon has completed the 20 sets of desks and chairs which will be showcased in this exhibition. His original idea was to create a classroom environment that would “lead audiences to remember their childhood stories.” Ah Leon studied elementary school desks, determined that his creations would be authentic, revealing memories through carved initials, scratches and drawings on their worn surfaces. His classroom would preserve the stories of our childhood as if they were “frozen in the museum space.” The first two rows of tables and chairs appear new. They become progressively more dilapidated--some broken, some leaning--until the last rows where the furniture is falling over and ultimately only chips and severed parts remain on the floor. In one area the desks are arranged as if a teacher reads to a group of children. The impact of the scene is immediate: viewers are taken back to their own childhood classroom and long forgotten memories drift to the surface.
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 31 |
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Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
The young female Swiss designer duo, Sarah Kueng and Lovis Caputo, will install a hotel in the Warehouse Gallery. The main gallery will be transformed into small ephemeral rooms where the visitor is invited to take a break from reality and to take a mini-vacation complete with a number of very simple, inexpensive and joyful elements. When seated or lying down, the public's focus is drawn to the interior space and lighting. The idea for a temporary hotel goes back to Kueng's and Caputo's 72 Hours Hotel, which was initially developed in 2006 for the train station in Zurich, Switzerland. Both artists have been widely exhibited. This is their first museum solo show in the U.S.
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2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, March 31 |
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100 Years of Women Rockin' the World ArtRage Gallery
Price: Free ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave.,
Syracuse
This exhibition features the art of 35 women artists -- nine local to Syracuse, and the rest from communities across the country. These women, in keeping with the mission of ArtRage, are also activists and their work expresses a whole range of issues important to both women and the community of concerned people worldwide: self-image, hunger, collective action, war, children, the status of women, immigration, environmental crisis, alternative lifestyles and self-discovery. Participating artists include Arlene Abend, Amy Bartell, Ellen Blalock, Marlena Buczek, Elizabeth Carter, Jen Cartwright, the Chicago Women's Graphic Collective, Sue Coe, Erin Currier, Jane Evershed, Raina Gentry, Susan Grabel, Sharon Lee Hart, Robin Hewlett, Gail Hoffman, Nancy Hom, Katherine Hughes, Lahib Jaddo, Mollie Kellogg, Kate Luscher, Dierdre Luzwick, Sofia Perez, Ruth Putter, Favianna Rodriguez, Gazelle Samizay, Nicole Schulman, Sarah Walroth, Anita Welych and Oceans Unraveled project with artists: Aviva Alter, Mary Buczek, Mary Ellen Croteau.
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Film |
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5:30 PM - 11:00 PM, March 31 |
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Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project
Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Internationally renowned artist Jenny Holzer created a site-specific installation that streams across the façade of Syracuse Stage on an LED curtain. The installation features 272 aphorisms from her celebrated series "Truisms" and "Survival" that challenge viewers' 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 Times 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.
Read a review!
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7:00 PM, March 31 |
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South of the Border ArtRage Gallery
Price: Free ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave.,
Syracuse
A film by Oliver Stone. Sponsored by The CNY Caribbean/Latin America Coalition There's a revolution underway in South America, but most of the world doesn't know it. Oliver Stone sets out on a road trip across five countries to explore the social and political movements as well as the mainstream media's misperception of South America while interviewing seven of its elected presidents. In casual conversations with Presidents Hugo Chávez (Venezuela), Evo Morales (Bolivia), Lula da Silva (Brazil), Cristina Kirchner (Argentina), as well as her husband and ex-President Nestor Kirchner, Fernando Lugo (Paraguay), Rafael Correa (Ecuador), and Raúl Castro (Cuba), Stone gains unprecedented access and sheds new light upon the exciting transformations in the region. The film will be followed by a brief presentation on how the US is increasing militarization of the region in response to popular movements which threaten its influence. This event is sponsored by The CNY Caribbean/Latin America Coalition which is made up of several local Latin America solidarity organizations and works in partnership with the Syracuse Peace Council and in coalition with other area and national groups.
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7:30 PM, March 31 |
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12th Annual Reel Queer Film Festival Syracuse University Open Doors
Price: Free Hall of Languages, Room 207
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Fourplay (USA, 2010, 27 min.) In Fourplay: San Fracisco, a transvestite sex worker faces a challenging assignment in Marin Country. As the pressure mounts, an awakening begins. To Comfort You (USA, 2009, 15 min.) A daily phone call between Angela (Golden Globe winner Susan Blakely) and her lesbian daughter living with HIV/AIDS (Pauley Perrette, NCIS) reveals some unexpected news. Off and Running (USA, 2009, 76 min.) With white Jewish lesbians for parents and two adopted brothers -- one mixed-race and one Korean-Brooklyn teen -- Avery grew up in a unique and loving household. But when her curiosity about her African-American roots grows, she decides to contact her birth mother. This choice propels Avery into her own complicated exploration of race, identity, and family that threatens to distance her from the parents she's always known. She begins staying away from home, starts skipping school, and risks losing her shot at the college track career she had always dreamed of. But when Avery decides to pick up the pieces of her life and make sense of her identity, the results are inspiring.
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History |
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12:00 PM, March 31 |
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Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Free Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total) Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.
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3:00 PM, March 31 |
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Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Free Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total) Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.
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Lecture |
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6:00 PM, March 31 |
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Visiting Speaker: Ronald Jackson II Syracuse University School of Art and Design
Price: Free Watson Theater, Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave. (Syracuse University),
Syracuse
Parking is available in Booth Garage. For more information, contact the Department of Communication and Rhetorical Studies, 315-443-2308.
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Music |
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8:00 PM, March 31 |
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Cantus Novus Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
Price: Free Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Cantus Novus will feature the SU Concerti Ensemble lead by Jon English in the premieres of two student works, as well as additional chamber works premiered by student musicians.
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Theater |
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6:45 PM, March 31 |
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A Wee Bit O' Murder Acme Mystery Company
Price: $32.50 plus tax and gratuities (includes meal and show) Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St.,
Syracuse
Holy St. Patrick on a stick! Someone has stolen the pot of gold and now you and all the other leprechauns of Clover Union Local Number 7 have your little tails in a spin. The president of your local, Jimmy Jack Daniels O'Toole is demanding that you get your wee bottoms over to the pub as fast as your little feet can go. If the International Fellowship of Little Knickers finds out about this, you'll all be turned into garden gnomes! For reservations, phone 315-475-1807, or email syracuse@meatballs.com.
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6:45 PM, March 31 |
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The Odd Couple CNY Playhouse Daniel & Steve Rowlands, director
Price: Dinner theater: $29 single; $55 couple. Show only: $20 (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. A Slob, A Neatnick, and a Big Mess. Oscar Madison is one of the highest paid sports writers in the east. He's also one of the most unreliable, undependable, and irresponsible slobs in the world. It's no wonder that six months ago his wife took their kids and left Oscar all alone in their big, 8-room apartment. Now Oscar is free to drink, smoke, and have his weekly poker game with his buddies. But Oscar's happy, dirty little world gets turned upside down when his best friend, the excessively neurotic, and obsessively neat Felix Ungar, is thrown out by his wife, and is forced to move in with Oscar. Now their friendship is put to the test as these two unlikely roommates drive each other literally insane. This star-studded cast includes J. Brazil as Oscar and Gerrit VanderWerff Jr. as Felix. Anne Freund, Greg J. Hipius, Alan Stillman, Jim Uva, and Wendy Viggiano round out the cast.
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8:00 PM, March 31 |
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Preview: [sic] Redhouse Anton Briones, director
Price: Pay what you can Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
A fragmented comedy celebrating the insanity of friendship by Melissa James Gibson, [sic] explores the relationship of three neighbors as they struggle to survive in the big city. Between love affairs, writer's block, tongue twisters and a corpse, these off-the-wall characters embrace the fun in their dysfunction, illuminating the [sic] in us all. Redhouse is thrilled to introduce New York City Director Anton Briones and Scenic/Costume Designer, Timothy Brown to the Syracuse theatre scene. In this production, the creative team will be pushing the envelope by exploring new ways to use video, music and theatricality to bring this contemporary play to life. The cast includes John Bixler, Laura Austin, and Binaifer Dabu, who recently appeared in Odysseus DOA at Redhouse. Also featured in the cast are Matt Chiorini, Navroz Dabu, and Mary Ellen Dowling. Redhouse Technical Director, John Czajkowski completes the creative team.
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Friday, April 1, 2011
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Art |
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12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, April 1 |
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Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery
The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This spring, both the main gallery and Window Projects feature emerging female artists and celebrate their artistic achievements at a time that coincides with International Women's Day (March 2011). Stephanie Rozene draws upon the fine line between design and the visual arts. Her work is the result of extensive research and gifted craftsmanship. Through the medium of ceramics (and with special attention to specific patterns, ornaments, and forms) she explores the politics of European ceramics and traces international developments in this medium back to the reigns of French kings Louis XV and Louis XVI. This is her first solo museum show.
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8:00 AM - 8:00 PM, April 1 |
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Annual Le Moyne College Student Art Exhibition LeMoyne College
Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College,
Syracuse
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 1 |
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Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
Takafumi Ide is an interdisciplinary media artist specializing in installation with sound and light. He received his B.A. in graphic design from Tama Art University in Tokyo in 1989, and his M.F.A. in studio art from Stony Brook University in 2007. He has worked for more than 10 years as a graphic designer and an illustrator in Japan and now teaches at Stony Brook University as a lecturer, and Suffolk County Community College as an adjunct instructor. He has received several honors, such as The Sculpture Space Fellowship and Residency (funded by both the Pollock-Krasner Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts), the Strategic Opportunity Stipend Program Grant through the New York Foundation for the Arts, and most recently the Nomura Cultural Foundation's Project Grant, Asahi Shimbun Foundation Project Grant, and the Vermont Studio Center's Partial-Grant and Residency. He has exhibited both nationally and internationally. More recent exhibitions include Sunroom Project Glynder Gallery, Wave Hill, NY, ISE Cultural Foundation in Soho, NY, and AC Institute in Chelsea, NY.
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 1 |
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Davidovich in Situ: A Video Art Project Point of Contact Gallery
Price: Free Point of Contact Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Argentine video artist Jaime Davidovich returns to Syracuse University after an amazing year of grand-scale museum exhibitions worldwide, to work on site at The Point of Contact Gallery. Davidovich will present a series of his classic videos along with collage, photography, and a new series of paintings that he will produce on site. Davidovich, on Painting and Video Art: "My paintings are hybrids combining the tactile sensation of painting with the electronic pulse of video. The works are small in scale and intimate in nature. I want to do an art that speaks on a one-to-one basis with the viewer, no actors or story line, just a scale for human dialogue. In a time of video as spectacle, my work is indeed conflictive. I am interested in establishing a link (no pun intended) between Morandi and the Internet; the personal gesture and digital reproduction. These are the opposites that attract me. I use video because it is intimate, personal. I use the brush because is my gestural DNA."
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 1 |
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Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Artists include Fred Zimmerman, David Yaman, Kathy Williams, Carl Steckler, Laurie Seamans, Meg Richardson, Lyla Phillips, Allen Phillips, Joan Niswender, Richard Mitchell, Amy Hnatko, Emily Gibbons, Serry Dans, Kathie Beale, and David Beale.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 1 |
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Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
On display will be pulp magazines, notably titles like Weird Tales and Amazing Stories; the typescript of Isaac Asimov's "Strange Playfellow," which introduced readers to one of science fiction's best known characters, Robbie the Robot; and correspondence with figures like Ray Bradbury. Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 1 |
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Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery
Price: Free Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
This group exhibit showcases both the artwork of local women artists, as well as artwork with women-focused subjects. Artists will be sharing their personal experiences in a number of areas. The artists from the CNY area and include Maria Rizzo (painting), Amanda Gormley (photography), Patricia Seitz (painting), Suzanne Masters (paint and collage), Sherry Gordon (painting), Kristie Hayes (painting and drawing), Carla Senecal (installation artwork), and Michael Moody (painting and prints).
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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, April 1 |
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Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd.,
Syracuse
Diana Godfrey: mixed media pastels and acrylic paintings Carmel Nicoletti: bronze reliefs and glass works
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 1 |
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Amos Kennedy Prints! Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Focusing on issues of race, violence and community, "Amos Kennedy Prints!" features the hand-printed works of Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr. and will include prints created at CFAC. By transforming the gallery into an active printmaking workshop, Kennedy will collaborate with students from the Syracuse area and Syracuse University to create images and broadsides that reflect issues of race, gender and politics and illustrate the impact of violence in the city on their lives and community. The public is invited to meet Kennedy and to observe and participate in the printmaking process.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 1 |
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Thilde Jensen: Canaries Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The images in Canaries, an exhibition of photographs by Thilde Jensen, are a personal account of the life Jensen has lived with multiple chemical sensitivity, and the people she has met who suffer from the same condition. People with this sensitivity have been dubbed "human canaries," and they are the casualties of what Jensen calls a "ubiquitous synthetic chemical culture." Jensen became so sensitive to chemicals in the air that she could not sit in traffic, read a book or sit next to someone wearing perfume. She was forced to wear a gas mask when entering banks, supermarkets and doctor's offices. She left her life in New York City, her husband and her career, and moved to the country, where she lived in a tent away from the regular chemicals such as laundry detergents, pesticides and exhaust fumes.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 1 |
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Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
That Year of Living features stunning black-and-white photographs by Jeffrey Henson Scales. Diagnosed with cancer in 2008, Scales was forced to, in his words, weigh the possibilities of his own demise, and whether he had achieved what he felt he was put here to do. It was this diagnosis and contemplation, along with the urging of his wife, Meg Henson Scales, which led him to return to making photographs on a daily basis. The images in That Year of Living were made in the year following his cancer diagnosis and surgery. Scales photographed mainly in and around Times Square, depicting the part of New York City that he visited every day going to and from work at The New York Times. The images capture the certain hardness mixed with joy, sadness, determination and bewilderment that is found in the faces of young and old alike in New York City. Created in the months following his own experience with mortality, the photographs explore the journey of life and death found in the faces on the streets of New York.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 1 |
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No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr.,
Fayetteville
Works by Scott Bennett and Michael Matthews. Note: Limestone Art is now in its new location next to Pascale's at 105 Brooklea Dr. in Fayetteville. Scott Bennett's new series of vivid landscape paintings have found their inspiration close to home, or rather at his new home and studio in Jamesville, NY. While continuing his characteristic impasto painting technique, Bennett shares his inspiration with us: "Our property has wonderful woods and views in all directions, and most of these paintings are inspired by the beauty I see everyday when I look out any window or walk out the door." His work has been exhibited in over 40 national exhibitions, and is included in numerous corporate and private collections. This is Bennett's second exhibition at Limestone. Michael Matthews' landscapes are developed from sketchbook watercolors created on site during his travels, at times during below freezing temperatures as ice forms while he paints. Back in the studio, Matthews creates large paintings from a singe sketch or an amalgamation of his watercolors. Michael Matthews lives in Syracuse, NY and in Harrogate, British Columbia. His work is found in over 60 corporate art collections.
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 1 |
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Toys from the 1970s Onondaga Historical Association
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
This year's version will feature toys from the 1970s. Do you remember playing Pong on Atari, getting your first Luke Skywalker figure, or just wishing to have your own Malibu Barbie? Then you won't want to miss this journey into the decade of Charlie's Angels, Richard Nixon and a gallon of gasoline at fifty cents.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 1 |
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Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show Redhouse
Price: Free Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
A selection of work from young women at Fowler, Nottingham and IT high schools.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 1 |
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ID+ Syracuse University School of Art and Design
Price: Free Genet Design Gallery
The Warehouse, 350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Industrial and interaction design students will present ID+, a show of work done outside their major. ID+ will include art, film, painting, stand-up comedy, performance art and more. Within their major, VPA's industrial and interaction design students typically focus on designing products, environments, exhibitions and packaging. For more information, contact Julia Byron at jbyron@syr.edu.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 1 |
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Full Circle Szozda Gallery
Szozda Gallery
Delavan Center, 501 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Linda Esterley: mixed media collage Lynette Blake: oil paintings Elizabeth Moldenhauer: felted vessels
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11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 1 |
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Forrest Lesch-Middelton: Recent Work Gandee Gallery
Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St.,
Fabius
Forrest Lesch-Middelton's pottery combines historic patterns with modern-day technology. The resulting work creates a subtle narrative that references the cross-cultural influences that impact every facet of daily life. Pottery is used as a metaphor to illustrate this phenomenon. To achieve the intricate patterns, Lesch-Middelton uses silkscreen and embossment transfer techniques. He says of his artwork, "By blending form, pattern, and surface, my goal is to create an object that simultaneously elicits a visceral and intellectual response, followed by a contemplation of my work as a whole." Lesch-Middelton received his MFA in Ceramics from Utah State University in 2006 and a BFA in Ceramics from New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University in 1998. He is currently the Ceramics Program Coordinator at the Sonoma Community Center in Sonoma, California and teaches at Santa Rosa Jr. College and Solano College in the San Francisco Bay area. His artwork has been shown in many venues nationally, including the Baltimore Clayworks (MD), Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts (TN), and Santa Fe Clay Center (NM). He currently lives with his wife and two daughters in Northern California.
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, April 1 |
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Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
A profile of pulp artist Norman Saunders (1907-1989), including 10 lush and dramatic Saunders paintings from the university collection. Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 1 |
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Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art
Price: $5 suggested donation Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The 2011 exhibition program will continue to highlight the talented artists of New York State through a series of focused exhibitions. The season opens with Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds, an exhibition featuring more than 100 original works of art that are seriously hilarious. The small-scale drawings depicting the comedic daily lives of humans and animals alike are all rendered by hand in a variety of media, an approach that is becoming increasing rare in a world of computer-generated images. Dan Reynolds began drawing cartoons in 1989, when he was 30. As a youth center instructor, Reynolds was surrounded by youthful energy and creative minds. He was an avid follower of popular cartoons of the time, such as Gary Larson's Far Side and Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes. A native of Brewerton, NY, Reynolds was inspired by his Central New York surroundings, a place where snow is abundant and cows can be found just minutes from anywhere. From the beginning, Reynolds has used farm animals as messengers of humor, particularly cows, pigs and chickens, a series that was immediately accepted by Reader's Digest in 1989. A new cartoon has appeared in every issue since then. Reynolds' cartoons have also appeared in thematic Reynolds Unwrapped book compilations featuring everything from sports to holiday special editions. American Greetings and Recycled Greeting Cards also feature Reynolds cartoons on greeting cards for every occasion. In 2008, Reynolds was diagnosed with testicular cancer and subsequently received months of chemotherapy. While he was in treatment, he began drawing cartoons about cancer and his personal experience which he found was shared by his fellow patients. He shared the cartoons with the staff and patients at the facility and discovered the power of art to bring humor to an otherwise humorless situation.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 1 |
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Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art
Price: $5 suggested donation Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In 2008, Ah Leon envisioned a monumental ceramic installation showcasing dozens of stoneware desks and chairs in neat rows like the classrooms of our youth. It began with a small grouping called Memories of Elementary School first exhibited in August 2008 at The Taipei Gallery Exposition and in 2009 at the Phoenix Art Museum in conjunction with the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) annual conference. Ah Leon continued to make more desks which were exhibited at the American Museum of Ceramic Art (AMOCA) in 2010. Another year has passed and Ah Leon has completed the 20 sets of desks and chairs which will be showcased in this exhibition. His original idea was to create a classroom environment that would “lead audiences to remember their childhood stories.” Ah Leon studied elementary school desks, determined that his creations would be authentic, revealing memories through carved initials, scratches and drawings on their worn surfaces. His classroom would preserve the stories of our childhood as if they were “frozen in the museum space.” The first two rows of tables and chairs appear new. They become progressively more dilapidated--some broken, some leaning--until the last rows where the furniture is falling over and ultimately only chips and severed parts remain on the floor. In one area the desks are arranged as if a teacher reads to a group of children. The impact of the scene is immediate: viewers are taken back to their own childhood classroom and long forgotten memories drift to the surface.
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, April 1 |
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Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
The young female Swiss designer duo, Sarah Kueng and Lovis Caputo, will install a hotel in the Warehouse Gallery. The main gallery will be transformed into small ephemeral rooms where the visitor is invited to take a break from reality and to take a mini-vacation complete with a number of very simple, inexpensive and joyful elements. When seated or lying down, the public's focus is drawn to the interior space and lighting. The idea for a temporary hotel goes back to Kueng's and Caputo's 72 Hours Hotel, which was initially developed in 2006 for the train station in Zurich, Switzerland. Both artists have been widely exhibited. This is their first museum solo show in the U.S.
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2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, April 1 |
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100 Years of Women Rockin' the World ArtRage Gallery
Price: Free ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave.,
Syracuse
This exhibition features the art of 35 women artists -- nine local to Syracuse, and the rest from communities across the country. These women, in keeping with the mission of ArtRage, are also activists and their work expresses a whole range of issues important to both women and the community of concerned people worldwide: self-image, hunger, collective action, war, children, the status of women, immigration, environmental crisis, alternative lifestyles and self-discovery. Participating artists include Arlene Abend, Amy Bartell, Ellen Blalock, Marlena Buczek, Elizabeth Carter, Jen Cartwright, the Chicago Women's Graphic Collective, Sue Coe, Erin Currier, Jane Evershed, Raina Gentry, Susan Grabel, Sharon Lee Hart, Robin Hewlett, Gail Hoffman, Nancy Hom, Katherine Hughes, Lahib Jaddo, Mollie Kellogg, Kate Luscher, Dierdre Luzwick, Sofia Perez, Ruth Putter, Favianna Rodriguez, Gazelle Samizay, Nicole Schulman, Sarah Walroth, Anita Welych and Oceans Unraveled project with artists: Aviva Alter, Mary Buczek, Mary Ellen Croteau.
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5:00 PM - 8:00 PM, April 1 |
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Opening Self-Portrait Show Gallery 54
Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St.,
Skaneateles
Celebrate spring -- come to our first First Friday of the year! Meet the artists, enter drawing for a $25 gift certificate, and enjoy refreshments. The April show features self portraits by gallery members in a variety of mediums.
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Comedy |
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8:30 PM, April 1 |
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Yodapez Salt City Improv Theater
Price: $6 Salt City Improv Theatre
Shoppingtown Mall, Sears Wing,
Dewitt
There's no better way to celebrate April Fool's Day then by having some laughs at others' expense. Yodapez, the team from Hamilton College, is jest what you need.
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Film |
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5:30 PM - 11:00 PM, April 1 |
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Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project
Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Internationally renowned artist Jenny Holzer created a site-specific installation that streams across the façade of Syracuse Stage on an LED curtain. The installation features 272 aphorisms from her celebrated series "Truisms" and "Survival" that challenge viewers' 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 Times 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, April 1 |
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12th Annual Reel Queer Film Festival Syracuse University Open Doors
Price: Free Hall of Languages, Room 207
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Everyday to Stay (Canada, 2010, 21 min.) Everyday to Stay is a gritty and vulnerable glimpse at the lives of two couples as they navigate love, identity and commitment through one partner's transition. Beyond Better: A Manifesto for Queer Youth (Syracuse University, USA, 2010, 3 min.) Syracuse University English Professor Margaret Himmely and her Queer Writing class provide inspiring statements about the future for LGBTQA youth. Bear Nation (USA, 2010, 82 min.) Director Malcolm Ingram introduces us to gay men who dig big dudes who are stockier and hairier than the airbrushed ideal served by up lifestyle magazines and underwear ads. From 'bear runs' -- the circuit parties of the ursine -- to men proudly accepting their own bodies (and the beer bellies they want to cuddle), Bear Nation proves love really does come in all shapes and sizes.
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History |
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12:00 PM, April 1 |
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Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Free Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total) Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.
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3:00 PM, April 1 |
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Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Free Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total) Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.
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Music |
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11:15 AM, April 1 |
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Syracuse University Singers Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Storer Auditorium
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
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8:00 PM, April 1 |
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James Keelaghan Folkus Project
Price: $15 May Memorial Unitarian Society
3800 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Known as one of Canada's finest singer-songwriters, James Keelaghan is an artist who has proven to be a man for all seasons. For almost a quarter of a century, this poet laureate of the folk and roots music world has gone about his work with a combination of passion and curiosity. Always on the lookout for a good story idea, Keelaghan forges his pieces with brilliant craftsmanship and artistic vision, making him one of the most distinctive and readily identifiable voices on both the Canadian and international singer-songwriter scenes. Many of his songs, such as "Kiri's Piano", about the internment of Japanese Canadians, and "Cold Missouri Waters," about the Mann Gulch Fire, are inspired by events and figures in history.
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9:00 PM, April 1 |
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Daedelus, with special guests Samiyam, Chemicals of Creation Westcott Theater
Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St.,
Syracuse
Must be 16+ to be admitted.
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Poetry/Reading |
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7:00 PM, April 1 |
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Richard Foerster, poet Downtown Writer's Center
Price: Free YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
Richard Foerster has worked as a lexicographer, educational writer, typesetter, teacher and as the editor of the literary magazines Chelsea and Chautauqua Literary Journal. He is the author of six poetry collections, including The Burning of Troy, which received the 2007 Maine Literary Award for Poetry, and Penetralia, which was published by Texas Review Press earlier this year. Poems from this book earned him his second Poetry Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. Other honors include the "Discovery"/The Nation Award, Poetry magazine's Bess Hokin Prize, a fellowship from the Maine Arts Commission, and the Amy Lowell Poetry Travelling Scholarship. He lives in Cape Neddick, Maine.
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Theater |
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6:45 PM, April 1 |
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The Odd Couple CNY Playhouse Daniel & Steve Rowlands, director
Price: Dinner theater: $29 single; $55 couple. Show only: $20 (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. A Slob, A Neatnick, and a Big Mess. Oscar Madison is one of the highest paid sports writers in the east. He's also one of the most unreliable, undependable, and irresponsible slobs in the world. It's no wonder that six months ago his wife took their kids and left Oscar all alone in their big, 8-room apartment. Now Oscar is free to drink, smoke, and have his weekly poker game with his buddies. But Oscar's happy, dirty little world gets turned upside down when his best friend, the excessively neurotic, and obsessively neat Felix Ungar, is thrown out by his wife, and is forced to move in with Oscar. Now their friendship is put to the test as these two unlikely roommates drive each other literally insane. This star-studded cast includes J. Brazil as Oscar and Gerrit VanderWerff Jr. as Felix. Anne Freund, Greg J. Hipius, Alan Stillman, Jim Uva, and Wendy Viggiano round out the cast.
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7:00 PM, April 1 |
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Spark & The Laws of Healing ArtRage Gallery
Price: $5-$10 sliding scale suggested donation ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave.,
Syracuse
A one woman show by Mona de Vestel, Spark and The Laws of Healing is a spoken word performance and artistic collaboration with talented composer Leo Crandall. Spark is a poignant musical odyssey centered around the theme of healing and finding a way back to a life rooted in wholeness. Join us in a rare intimate celebration of one woman's transformative power over breast cancer. Spark's unusual approach to spoken word utilizes music, rhythmic narration, and movement. Mona de Vestel is an Assistant Professor of Writing and New Media at SUNY Institute of Technology in Utica. She is the author of The Color of Exile, a memoir recounting the effects of colonialism on her Belgian/African family. She is also at work on a novel One String Guitar about the Rwandan genocide. Mona was also recently a cast member in director Ping Chong's latest Undesirable Elements play on the Congo, Cry for Peace: Voices from the Congo. These plays are "community-specific oral history theater works that examine the lives of people born in one culture but currently living in another, either by choice or by circumstance." The script developed for the play is based on real-life personal and historical narrative from the participants, including Mona. Mona grew up in Brussels, Belgium and now lives in Syracuse. This event is supported by Poets & Writers.
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7:00 PM, April 1 |
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The Last Five Years Encore Presentations
Price: $37.25 dinner theater (includes tax and tip); $20 show only Glen Loch Restaurant
4626 North St.,
Jamesville
Dinner at 7:00 pm; show follows at 8:00 pm. The Last Five Years by Jason Robert Brown, starring Molly Brown and Robert G. Searle For tickets, phone 315-469-6969.
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8:00 PM, April 1 |
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Autobahn Black Box Players Jenny Leon, director
Price: Free Loft Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Autobahn by Neil LaBute
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8:00 PM, April 1 |
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The Marvelous Wonderettes Rarely Done Productions Dan Tursi, director
Price: $25 Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St.,
Syracuse
The story is set at the 1958 Springfield High School prom where we meet the Wonderettes — Betty Jean, Cindy Lou, Missy, and Suzy, four girls with hopes and dreams as big as their crinoline skirts and voices to match! As we learn about their lives and loves, we are treated to the girls performing classic 50s and 60s songs. Written by Roger Bean.
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8:00 PM, April 1 |
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[sic] Redhouse Anton Briones, director
Price: $25 regular; $20 students/seniors Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
A fragmented comedy celebrating the insanity of friendship by Melissa James Gibson, [sic] explores the relationship of three neighbors as they struggle to survive in the big city. Between love affairs, writer's block, tongue twisters and a corpse, these off-the-wall characters embrace the fun in their dysfunction, illuminating the [sic] in us all. Redhouse is thrilled to introduce New York City Director Anton Briones and Scenic/Costume Designer, Timothy Brown to the Syracuse theatre scene. In this production, the creative team will be pushing the envelope by exploring new ways to use video, music and theatricality to bring this contemporary play to life. The cast includes John Bixler, Laura Austin, and Binaifer Dabu, who recently appeared in Odysseus DOA at Redhouse. Also featured in the cast are Matt Chiorini, Navroz Dabu, and Mary Ellen Dowling. Redhouse Technical Director, John Czajkowski completes the creative team.
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8:00 PM, April 1 |
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The Miracle Worker Syracuse Stage Paul Barnes, director
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
"Once I knew only darkness and stillness... my life was without past or future... but a little word from the fingers of another fell into my hand that clutched at emptiness, and my heart leaped to the rapture of living." In her own words, Helen Keller captures the inspirational heart of William Gibson's classic American play. Between the emptiness and the rapture, though, came a fierce struggle of wills, with Helen, in her darkness and stillness, on one side, and the determined Annie Sullivan on the other, a young woman who had endured a lifetime of pain in just 20 years. Gibson's text is unsparing and unflinching in its depiction of their confrontation and mutual triumph. The hearts that will be leaping will be ours.
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8:00 PM, April 1 |
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Curse of the Starving Class Syracuse University Drama Department Gerardine Clark, director
Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Pulitzer Prize winner Sam Shepard's 1978, excoriating comedy has never seemed timelier. "The whole thing is geared to invisible money," laments Weston, the chronically soused patriarch of a family in serious financial and psychological disarray. The refrigerator's empty, the house is crumbling, the creditors are baying, and that much longed-for American idyll is unattainable. Shepard's savage fantasy on America's voraciousness only gets better with age. Premiering at the New York Shakespeare Festival in 1978, Curse won the Obie Award for Best New American Play. Academy Award winner Olympia Dukakis (cousin of presidential candidate Michael Dukakis) played the matriarch Ella in the premiere. In the 1994 film version, another Academy Award winner, Kathy Bates, took on the role. Shepard, who won a Pulitzer Prize for drama for his subsequent play Buried Child, is also an Academy Award nominated actor for his supporting role in The Right Stuff (1983).
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Saturday, April 2, 2011
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Art |
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12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, April 2 |
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Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery
The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This spring, both the main gallery and Window Projects feature emerging female artists and celebrate their artistic achievements at a time that coincides with International Women's Day (March 2011). Stephanie Rozene draws upon the fine line between design and the visual arts. Her work is the result of extensive research and gifted craftsmanship. Through the medium of ceramics (and with special attention to specific patterns, ornaments, and forms) she explores the politics of European ceramics and traces international developments in this medium back to the reigns of French kings Louis XV and Louis XVI. This is her first solo museum show.
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9:00 AM - 8:00 PM, April 2 |
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Annual Le Moyne College Student Art Exhibition LeMoyne College
Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College,
Syracuse
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 2 |
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Members' Theme Show Associated Artists of Central New York
Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr.,
Manlius
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10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, April 2 |
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Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd.,
Syracuse
Diana Godfrey: mixed media pastels and acrylic paintings Carmel Nicoletti: bronze reliefs and glass works
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 2 |
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Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art
Price: $5 suggested donation Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The 2011 exhibition program will continue to highlight the talented artists of New York State through a series of focused exhibitions. The season opens with Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds, an exhibition featuring more than 100 original works of art that are seriously hilarious. The small-scale drawings depicting the comedic daily lives of humans and animals alike are all rendered by hand in a variety of media, an approach that is becoming increasing rare in a world of computer-generated images. Dan Reynolds began drawing cartoons in 1989, when he was 30. As a youth center instructor, Reynolds was surrounded by youthful energy and creative minds. He was an avid follower of popular cartoons of the time, such as Gary Larson's Far Side and Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes. A native of Brewerton, NY, Reynolds was inspired by his Central New York surroundings, a place where snow is abundant and cows can be found just minutes from anywhere. From the beginning, Reynolds has used farm animals as messengers of humor, particularly cows, pigs and chickens, a series that was immediately accepted by Reader's Digest in 1989. A new cartoon has appeared in every issue since then. Reynolds' cartoons have also appeared in thematic Reynolds Unwrapped book compilations featuring everything from sports to holiday special editions. American Greetings and Recycled Greeting Cards also feature Reynolds cartoons on greeting cards for every occasion. In 2008, Reynolds was diagnosed with testicular cancer and subsequently received months of chemotherapy. While he was in treatment, he began drawing cartoons about cancer and his personal experience which he found was shared by his fellow patients. He shared the cartoons with the staff and patients at the facility and discovered the power of art to bring humor to an otherwise humorless situation.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 2 |
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Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art
Price: $5 suggested donation Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In 2008, Ah Leon envisioned a monumental ceramic installation showcasing dozens of stoneware desks and chairs in neat rows like the classrooms of our youth. It began with a small grouping called Memories of Elementary School first exhibited in August 2008 at The Taipei Gallery Exposition and in 2009 at the Phoenix Art Museum in conjunction with the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) annual conference. Ah Leon continued to make more desks which were exhibited at the American Museum of Ceramic Art (AMOCA) in 2010. Another year has passed and Ah Leon has completed the 20 sets of desks and chairs which will be showcased in this exhibition. His original idea was to create a classroom environment that would “lead audiences to remember their childhood stories.” Ah Leon studied elementary school desks, determined that his creations would be authentic, revealing memories through carved initials, scratches and drawings on their worn surfaces. His classroom would preserve the stories of our childhood as if they were “frozen in the museum space.” The first two rows of tables and chairs appear new. They become progressively more dilapidated--some broken, some leaning--until the last rows where the furniture is falling over and ultimately only chips and severed parts remain on the floor. In one area the desks are arranged as if a teacher reads to a group of children. The impact of the scene is immediate: viewers are taken back to their own childhood classroom and long forgotten memories drift to the surface.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 2 |
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Self-Portrait Show Gallery 54
Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St.,
Skaneateles
The April show features self portraits by gallery members in a variety of mediums.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 2 |
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ID+ Syracuse University School of Art and Design
Price: Free Genet Design Gallery
The Warehouse, 350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Industrial and interaction design students will present ID+, a show of work done outside their major. ID+ will include art, film, painting, stand-up comedy, performance art and more. Within their major, VPA's industrial and interaction design students typically focus on designing products, environments, exhibitions and packaging. For more information, contact Julia Byron at jbyron@syr.edu.
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 2 |
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Artist in Attendance: Full Circle Szozda Gallery
Szozda Gallery
Delavan Center, 501 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Elizabeth Moldenhauer will be in attendance doing a demonstration on felting today from 11:00 am-4:00 pm. Linda Esterley: mixed media collage Lynette Blake: oil paintings Elizabeth Moldenhauer: felted vessels
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 2 |
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Amos Kennedy Prints! Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Focusing on issues of race, violence and community, "Amos Kennedy Prints!" features the hand-printed works of Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr. and will include prints created at CFAC. By transforming the gallery into an active printmaking workshop, Kennedy will collaborate with students from the Syracuse area and Syracuse University to create images and broadsides that reflect issues of race, gender and politics and illustrate the impact of violence in the city on their lives and community. The public is invited to meet Kennedy and to observe and participate in the printmaking process.
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11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 2 |
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Forrest Lesch-Middelton: Recent Work Gandee Gallery
Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St.,
Fabius
Forrest Lesch-Middelton's pottery combines historic patterns with modern-day technology. The resulting work creates a subtle narrative that references the cross-cultural influences that impact every facet of daily life. Pottery is used as a metaphor to illustrate this phenomenon. To achieve the intricate patterns, Lesch-Middelton uses silkscreen and embossment transfer techniques. He says of his artwork, "By blending form, pattern, and surface, my goal is to create an object that simultaneously elicits a visceral and intellectual response, followed by a contemplation of my work as a whole." Lesch-Middelton received his MFA in Ceramics from Utah State University in 2006 and a BFA in Ceramics from New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University in 1998. He is currently the Ceramics Program Coordinator at the Sonoma Community Center in Sonoma, California and teaches at Santa Rosa Jr. College and Solano College in the San Francisco Bay area. His artwork has been shown in many venues nationally, including the Baltimore Clayworks (MD), Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts (TN), and Santa Fe Clay Center (NM). He currently lives with his wife and two daughters in Northern California.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 2 |
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Toys from the 1970s Onondaga Historical Association
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
This year's version will feature toys from the 1970s. Do you remember playing Pong on Atari, getting your first Luke Skywalker figure, or just wishing to have your own Malibu Barbie? Then you won't want to miss this journey into the decade of Charlie's Angels, Richard Nixon and a gallon of gasoline at fifty cents.
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, April 2 |
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Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
A profile of pulp artist Norman Saunders (1907-1989), including 10 lush and dramatic Saunders paintings from the university collection. Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."
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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, April 2 |
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100 Years of Women Rockin' the World ArtRage Gallery
Price: Free ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave.,
Syracuse
This exhibition features the art of 35 women artists -- nine local to Syracuse, and the rest from communities across the country. These women, in keeping with the mission of ArtRage, are also activists and their work expresses a whole range of issues important to both women and the community of concerned people worldwide: self-image, hunger, collective action, war, children, the status of women, immigration, environmental crisis, alternative lifestyles and self-discovery. Participating artists include Arlene Abend, Amy Bartell, Ellen Blalock, Marlena Buczek, Elizabeth Carter, Jen Cartwright, the Chicago Women's Graphic Collective, Sue Coe, Erin Currier, Jane Evershed, Raina Gentry, Susan Grabel, Sharon Lee Hart, Robin Hewlett, Gail Hoffman, Nancy Hom, Katherine Hughes, Lahib Jaddo, Mollie Kellogg, Kate Luscher, Dierdre Luzwick, Sofia Perez, Ruth Putter, Favianna Rodriguez, Gazelle Samizay, Nicole Schulman, Sarah Walroth, Anita Welych and Oceans Unraveled project with artists: Aviva Alter, Mary Buczek, Mary Ellen Croteau.
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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, April 2 |
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No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr.,
Fayetteville
Works by Scott Bennett and Michael Matthews. Note: Limestone Art is now in its new location next to Pascale's at 105 Brooklea Dr. in Fayetteville. Scott Bennett's new series of vivid landscape paintings have found their inspiration close to home, or rather at his new home and studio in Jamesville, NY. While continuing his characteristic impasto painting technique, Bennett shares his inspiration with us: "Our property has wonderful woods and views in all directions, and most of these paintings are inspired by the beauty I see everyday when I look out any window or walk out the door." His work has been exhibited in over 40 national exhibitions, and is included in numerous corporate and private collections. This is Bennett's second exhibition at Limestone. Michael Matthews' landscapes are developed from sketchbook watercolors created on site during his travels, at times during below freezing temperatures as ice forms while he paints. Back in the studio, Matthews creates large paintings from a singe sketch or an amalgamation of his watercolors. Michael Matthews lives in Syracuse, NY and in Harrogate, British Columbia. His work is found in over 60 corporate art collections.
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, April 2 |
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Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
The young female Swiss designer duo, Sarah Kueng and Lovis Caputo, will install a hotel in the Warehouse Gallery. The main gallery will be transformed into small ephemeral rooms where the visitor is invited to take a break from reality and to take a mini-vacation complete with a number of very simple, inexpensive and joyful elements. When seated or lying down, the public's focus is drawn to the interior space and lighting. The idea for a temporary hotel goes back to Kueng's and Caputo's 72 Hours Hotel, which was initially developed in 2006 for the train station in Zurich, Switzerland. Both artists have been widely exhibited. This is their first museum solo show in the U.S.
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Film |
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5:30 PM - 11:00 PM, April 2 |
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Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project
Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Internationally renowned artist Jenny Holzer created a site-specific installation that streams across the façade of Syracuse Stage on an LED curtain. The installation features 272 aphorisms from her celebrated series "Truisms" and "Survival" that challenge viewers' 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 Times 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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7:00 PM, April 2 |
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Gala Red Carpet Premiere: Pope Joan
Price: $30 basic, $90 VIP Palace Theater
2384 James St.,
Syracuse
Based on the international bestseller by Donna Woolfolk Cross. Red Carpet premiere -- one night only! For 1200 years, her existence has been denied. She is the legend that will not die -- the only woman ever to sit on the throne of St. Peter. Now on the big screen, see this dramatic story of a woman whose courage makes her a heroine for every age. Basic ticket includes introduction to the film by Donna Woolfolk Cross, question and answer with Donna immediately following the screening, book signing, opportunity to meet actress Barbara Rosenblat, the brilliant voice artist who recorded the audiobook edition of Pope Joan. Dubbed "The Meryl Streep" of audio actresses, Barbara has received more awards than any other voice artist in the world. Proceeds benefit the Matilda Joslyn Gage Foundation. For more information, visit www.popejoan.com.
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7:30 PM, April 2 |
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12th Annual Reel Queer Film Festival Syracuse University Open Doors
Price: Free Hall of Languages, Room 207
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Animal Drill (USA, 2010, 24 min.) A son must prove his manhood to his father by trying out for his high school’s basketball team. Despite pressure from his washed-up father and the intense tactics of his coach, he fights through many kinds of pain to affirm his true self. Loop-da-Loop and Giuseppe (USA, 2009, 17 min.) Loop-da-Loop is a Victorian transvestite prostitute who escapes from his pimp with the help of his lover, Brooklyn Police Captain Guiseppe Baldi, in this silent film with an outstanding piano score. Drifting Flowers (Taiwan, 2008, 99 min.) TeddyAward-winning Director Zero Chou (Spider Lilies) weaves three poetic tales as the lesbians in Drifting Flowers seek their true identity. In the first story, Jing, a blind singer, falls in love with her band's tomboy accordionist Diego. In another time and place, Lily, an elderly lesbian, and Yen, her gay friend, create an unexpected bond and support each other in a time of crisis. Finally, we see Diego before she joined the band, when as a teenager she came to grips with her identity.
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Music |
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7:00 PM, April 2 |
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Singer/Songwriter Jess Yoakum First Unitarian Universalist Society Music Series
Price: $10 First Unitarian Universalist Society of Syracuse
109 Waring Rd. (at the corner of Nottingham Rd.),
Dewitt
Singer/songwriter Jess Yoakum will perform in support of her sophomore album, This Quiet Mile. The latest album has garnered positive reviews, "Beautiful...How can you not listen?" (Minor 7th) and "Jess has a beautiful, expressive voice." (Modern Acoustic). Chicago Acoustic Underground describes it as, "backed by impeccable talent and studio quality... sparse without being modest, and direct without being brash..." Yoakum recorded This Quiet Mile at Truself Music in her new hometown of Chicago, IL, and is excited to bring her latest work back to the east coast.
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7:30 PM, April 2 |
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Dick Ward and Carol Bryant Duo Kellish Hill Farm
Price: $6 Kellish Hill Farm
3192 Pompey Center Rd.,
Pompey
Elbridge singer-songwriter-guitarist Dick Ward and his wife singer Carol Bryant will grace Kellish Hill Farm's stage on this Saturday night. Refreshments and snacks will be available. A fun time will be had by all. Bring your musical instruments for a jam after the concert.
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7:30 PM, April 2 |
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Vocal Jazz Fest LeMoyne College
Price: Free James Commons
Le Moyne College,
Syracuse
Following a day-long festival working in collaboration with guest clinician Matt Falker, the Jazzuits and area high school vocal ensembles will present an evening concert.
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8:00 PM, April 2 |
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Dr. Lonnie Smith Trio Onondaga Community College
Price: Free (tickets required) Storer Auditorium
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
They call him "The Turbanator" because of his colorful, dapper and omnipresent headgear. But Dr. Lonnie Smith is an authentic master of the Hammond B3 organ who for more than five decades, on over 70 albums, has made his name synonymous with the instrument worldwide. Jazz Times magazine recently described him as "a riddle wrapped in an enigma wrapped in a turban," a description that suggests the level of complexity he exhibits in his music and the pure amazement that it elicits. He was selected as Organ Keyboardist of the Year by the Jazz Journalist Association in 2003, 2004, 2005, 2008 and 2009. Born in Buffalo, NY, Smith gained an exposure to gospel, blues and jazz through his mother at an early age. When questioned about his consistent interest in music some consider outside the jazz mainstream, Smith says, "Jazz is American Classical, and this music is a reflection of what's happening at the time." His inspired interpretation of an eclectic sampling of musical types explains in part his broad appeal and why he has been in constant demand from his earliest gigs to his most recent club appearances. Revered throughout the world and popular among many disparate groups, his unique style and prolific output have elevated him to the status of living musical icon. For ticket information regarding the Legends of Jazz Series, phone 315-498-2787. Tickets are limited and are on a first come first serve basis.
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8:00 PM, April 2 |
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Ebène Quartet Syracuse Friends of Chamber Music
Price: $25 regular, $15 senior, $10 student, children under 13 free Lincoln Middle School
1613 James St.,
Syracuse
This young French ensemble deserves the reputation it has already gained in Europe. The Ebène received rave reviews in all the major U.S. cities on their debut tour last spring. Since their dramatic 2004 triumph at Munich's ARD international competition, the Ebène have gone on to be one of the foremost quartets on the international scene. Recently they won the Gramophone 2009 Record of the Year Award. Acclaimed for their performances of Debussy, Ravel and Fauré, the Ebène play jazz with equal facility. "...a rare degree of expressive subtlety, blended sonorities and electrifying joy." -- The Times, London. Mozart String Quartet in C Major, K.465 "Dissonance" Bartók String Quartet No.3 Debussy String Quartet in G minor, Op.10
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8:00 PM, April 2 |
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Syracuse University Setnor School of Music Syracuse Symphony Orchestra Daniel Hege, conductor Featuring Jianan Yu, piano
Price: Free Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The Syracuse Symphony Orchestra (SSO) will perform a free concert as part of the expanded partnership between the SSO and SU, which supports the SSO's 2010-11 season (the orchestra's 50th anniversary) and enhances the orchestra's engagement with SU faculty and students. The concert program features guest pianist Jianan Yu, a VPA graduate student. Selections include Rossini's Overture to "Semiramide", Tchaikovsky's Concerto No.1 in B-flat minor for piano and orchestra, Op.23, and Beethoven's Symphony No. 6 in F Major, Op. 68, "Pastoral". Yu is one of the winners of the 2011 Concerto and Aria Competition sponsored by the Setnor School of Music, in collaboration with the SSO. The competition consisted of 18 competing soloists and ensembles that performed in Setnor Auditorium on March 1. A panel of Setnor School faculty, including Hege, judged the competitors; five were chosen as winners and have been invited to perform in concerts this spring. Four of the winners have been invited to perform with the SU Symphony Orchestra on April 26. They are senior Jill Brenner and graduate student Juliette Sabbah, piano and voice; graduate student Jillian Bushnell, bassoon; senior Trevor Roche, clarinet; and senior Stephen Ryck, cello. Patrons may park for free in the Irving Garage. The concert is presented in conjunction with SU’s College of Visual and Performing Arts (VPA) and the Office of the University Arts Presenter.
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Theater |
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11:00 AM, April 2 |
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Rumplestiltskin Open Hand Theater Puppets with Pizazz
Price: $8 adults, $6 children International Mask and Puppet Museum
518 Prospect Ave.,
Syracuse
Nancy Sanders always promises a hilarious twist on the old tales. Unlike the original version, where a baby is traded for spun gold, in this version our heroine trades her dog's puppy (the pick of the litter) because she thinks her dog is a boy. OOPS... Her "boy" has a puppy, and the audience must help her discover the evil dwarf's name. Everyone will be rolling with laughter by the end of this performance.
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3:00 PM, April 2 |
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The Miracle Worker Syracuse Stage Paul Barnes, director
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
"Once I knew only darkness and stillness... my life was without past or future... but a little word from the fingers of another fell into my hand that clutched at emptiness, and my heart leaped to the rapture of living." In her own words, Helen Keller captures the inspirational heart of William Gibson's classic American play. Between the emptiness and the rapture, though, came a fierce struggle of wills, with Helen, in her darkness and stillness, on one side, and the determined Annie Sullivan on the other, a young woman who had endured a lifetime of pain in just 20 years. Gibson's text is unsparing and unflinching in its depiction of their confrontation and mutual triumph. The hearts that will be leaping will be ours.
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6:45 PM, April 2 |
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The Odd Couple CNY Playhouse Daniel & Steve Rowlands, director
Price: Dinner theater: $29 single; $55 couple. Show only: $20 (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. A Slob, A Neatnick, and a Big Mess. Oscar Madison is one of the highest paid sports writers in the east. He's also one of the most unreliable, undependable, and irresponsible slobs in the world. It's no wonder that six months ago his wife took their kids and left Oscar all alone in their big, 8-room apartment. Now Oscar is free to drink, smoke, and have his weekly poker game with his buddies. But Oscar's happy, dirty little world gets turned upside down when his best friend, the excessively neurotic, and obsessively neat Felix Ungar, is thrown out by his wife, and is forced to move in with Oscar. Now their friendship is put to the test as these two unlikely roommates drive each other literally insane. This star-studded cast includes J. Brazil as Oscar and Gerrit VanderWerff Jr. as Felix. Anne Freund, Greg J. Hipius, Alan Stillman, Jim Uva, and Wendy Viggiano round out the cast.
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7:00 PM, April 2 |
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The Last Five Years Encore Presentations
Price: $37.25 dinner theater (includes tax and tip); $20 show only Glen Loch Restaurant
4626 North St.,
Jamesville
Dinner at 7:00 pm; show follows at 8:00 pm. The Last Five Years by Jason Robert Brown, starring Molly Brown and Robert G. Searle For tickets, phone 315-469-6969.
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8:00 PM, April 2 |
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Autobahn Black Box Players Jenny Leon, director
Price: Free Loft Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Autobahn by Neil LaBute
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8:00 PM, April 2 |
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The Marvelous Wonderettes Rarely Done Productions Dan Tursi, director
Price: $20 Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St.,
Syracuse
The story is set at the 1958 Springfield High School prom where we meet the Wonderettes — Betty Jean, Cindy Lou, Missy, and Suzy, four girls with hopes and dreams as big as their crinoline skirts and voices to match! As we learn about their lives and loves, we are treated to the girls performing classic 50s and 60s songs. Written by Roger Bean.
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8:00 PM, April 2 |
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[sic] Redhouse Anton Briones, director
Price: $25 regular; $20 students/seniors Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
A fragmented comedy celebrating the insanity of friendship by Melissa James Gibson, [sic] explores the relationship of three neighbors as they struggle to survive in the big city. Between love affairs, writer's block, tongue twisters and a corpse, these off-the-wall characters embrace the fun in their dysfunction, illuminating the [sic] in us all. Redhouse is thrilled to introduce New York City Director Anton Briones and Scenic/Costume Designer, Timothy Brown to the Syracuse theatre scene. In this production, the creative team will be pushing the envelope by exploring new ways to use video, music and theatricality to bring this contemporary play to life. The cast includes John Bixler, Laura Austin, and Binaifer Dabu, who recently appeared in Odysseus DOA at Redhouse. Also featured in the cast are Matt Chiorini, Navroz Dabu, and Mary Ellen Dowling. Redhouse Technical Director, John Czajkowski completes the creative team.
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8:00 PM, April 2 |
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Curse of the Starving Class Syracuse University Drama Department Gerardine Clark, director
Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Pulitzer Prize winner Sam Shepard's 1978, excoriating comedy has never seemed timelier. "The whole thing is geared to invisible money," laments Weston, the chronically soused patriarch of a family in serious financial and psychological disarray. The refrigerator's empty, the house is crumbling, the creditors are baying, and that much longed-for American idyll is unattainable. Shepard's savage fantasy on America's voraciousness only gets better with age. Premiering at the New York Shakespeare Festival in 1978, Curse won the Obie Award for Best New American Play. Academy Award winner Olympia Dukakis (cousin of presidential candidate Michael Dukakis) played the matriarch Ella in the premiere. In the 1994 film version, another Academy Award winner, Kathy Bates, took on the role. Shepard, who won a Pulitzer Prize for drama for his subsequent play Buried Child, is also an Academy Award nominated actor for his supporting role in The Right Stuff (1983).
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Sunday, April 3, 2011
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Art |
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12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, April 3 |
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Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery
The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This spring, both the main gallery and Window Projects feature emerging female artists and celebrate their artistic achievements at a time that coincides with International Women's Day (March 2011). Stephanie Rozene draws upon the fine line between design and the visual arts. Her work is the result of extensive research and gifted craftsmanship. Through the medium of ceramics (and with special attention to specific patterns, ornaments, and forms) she explores the politics of European ceramics and traces international developments in this medium back to the reigns of French kings Louis XV and Louis XVI. This is her first solo museum show.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 3 |
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Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
That Year of Living features stunning black-and-white photographs by Jeffrey Henson Scales. Diagnosed with cancer in 2008, Scales was forced to, in his words, weigh the possibilities of his own demise, and whether he had achieved what he felt he was put here to do. It was this diagnosis and contemplation, along with the urging of his wife, Meg Henson Scales, which led him to return to making photographs on a daily basis. The images in That Year of Living were made in the year following his cancer diagnosis and surgery. Scales photographed mainly in and around Times Square, depicting the part of New York City that he visited every day going to and from work at The New York Times. The images capture the certain hardness mixed with joy, sadness, determination and bewilderment that is found in the faces of young and old alike in New York City. Created in the months following his own experience with mortality, the photographs explore the journey of life and death found in the faces on the streets of New York.
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 3 |
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Thilde Jensen: Canaries Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The images in Canaries, an exhibition of photographs by Thilde Jensen, are a personal account of the life Jensen has lived with multiple chemical sensitivity, and the people she has met who suffer from the same condition. People with this sensitivity have been dubbed "human canaries," and they are the casualties of what Jensen calls a "ubiquitous synthetic chemical culture." Jensen became so sensitive to chemicals in the air that she could not sit in traffic, read a book or sit next to someone wearing perfume. She was forced to wear a gas mask when entering banks, supermarkets and doctor's offices. She left her life in New York City, her husband and her career, and moved to the country, where she lived in a tent away from the regular chemicals such as laundry detergents, pesticides and exhaust fumes.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 3 |
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ID+ Syracuse University School of Art and Design
Price: Free Genet Design Gallery
The Warehouse, 350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Industrial and interaction design students will present ID+, a show of work done outside their major. ID+ will include art, film, painting, stand-up comedy, performance art and more. Within their major, VPA's industrial and interaction design students typically focus on designing products, environments, exhibitions and packaging. For more information, contact Julia Byron at jbyron@syr.edu.
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 3 |
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Closing: Full Circle Szozda Gallery
Szozda Gallery
Delavan Center, 501 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Linda Esterley: mixed media collage Lynette Blake: oil paintings Elizabeth Moldenhauer: felted vessels
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 3 |
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Self-Portrait Show Gallery 54
Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St.,
Skaneateles
The April show features self portraits by gallery members in a variety of mediums.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 3 |
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Forrest Lesch-Middelton: Recent Work Gandee Gallery
Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St.,
Fabius
Forrest Lesch-Middelton's pottery combines historic patterns with modern-day technology. The resulting work creates a subtle narrative that references the cross-cultural influences that impact every facet of daily life. Pottery is used as a metaphor to illustrate this phenomenon. To achieve the intricate patterns, Lesch-Middelton uses silkscreen and embossment transfer techniques. He says of his artwork, "By blending form, pattern, and surface, my goal is to create an object that simultaneously elicits a visceral and intellectual response, followed by a contemplation of my work as a whole." Lesch-Middelton received his MFA in Ceramics from Utah State University in 2006 and a BFA in Ceramics from New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University in 1998. He is currently the Ceramics Program Coordinator at the Sonoma Community Center in Sonoma, California and teaches at Santa Rosa Jr. College and Solano College in the San Francisco Bay area. His artwork has been shown in many venues nationally, including the Baltimore Clayworks (MD), Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts (TN), and Santa Fe Clay Center (NM). He currently lives with his wife and two daughters in Northern California.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 3 |
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Toys from the 1970s Onondaga Historical Association
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
This year's version will feature toys from the 1970s. Do you remember playing Pong on Atari, getting your first Luke Skywalker figure, or just wishing to have your own Malibu Barbie? Then you won't want to miss this journey into the decade of Charlie's Angels, Richard Nixon and a gallon of gasoline at fifty cents.
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, April 3 |
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Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
A profile of pulp artist Norman Saunders (1907-1989), including 10 lush and dramatic Saunders paintings from the university collection. Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 3 |
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Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art
Price: $5 suggested donation Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In 2008, Ah Leon envisioned a monumental ceramic installation showcasing dozens of stoneware desks and chairs in neat rows like the classrooms of our youth. It began with a small grouping called Memories of Elementary School first exhibited in August 2008 at The Taipei Gallery Exposition and in 2009 at the Phoenix Art Museum in conjunction with the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) annual conference. Ah Leon continued to make more desks which were exhibited at the American Museum of Ceramic Art (AMOCA) in 2010. Another year has passed and Ah Leon has completed the 20 sets of desks and chairs which will be showcased in this exhibition. His original idea was to create a classroom environment that would “lead audiences to remember their childhood stories.” Ah Leon studied elementary school desks, determined that his creations would be authentic, revealing memories through carved initials, scratches and drawings on their worn surfaces. His classroom would preserve the stories of our childhood as if they were “frozen in the museum space.” The first two rows of tables and chairs appear new. They become progressively more dilapidated--some broken, some leaning--until the last rows where the furniture is falling over and ultimately only chips and severed parts remain on the floor. In one area the desks are arranged as if a teacher reads to a group of children. The impact of the scene is immediate: viewers are taken back to their own childhood classroom and long forgotten memories drift to the surface.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 3 |
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Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art
Price: $5 suggested donation Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The 2011 exhibition program will continue to highlight the talented artists of New York State through a series of focused exhibitions. The season opens with Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds, an exhibition featuring more than 100 original works of art that are seriously hilarious. The small-scale drawings depicting the comedic daily lives of humans and animals alike are all rendered by hand in a variety of media, an approach that is becoming increasing rare in a world of computer-generated images. Dan Reynolds began drawing cartoons in 1989, when he was 30. As a youth center instructor, Reynolds was surrounded by youthful energy and creative minds. He was an avid follower of popular cartoons of the time, such as Gary Larson's Far Side and Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes. A native of Brewerton, NY, Reynolds was inspired by his Central New York surroundings, a place where snow is abundant and cows can be found just minutes from anywhere. From the beginning, Reynolds has used farm animals as messengers of humor, particularly cows, pigs and chickens, a series that was immediately accepted by Reader's Digest in 1989. A new cartoon has appeared in every issue since then. Reynolds' cartoons have also appeared in thematic Reynolds Unwrapped book compilations featuring everything from sports to holiday special editions. American Greetings and Recycled Greeting Cards also feature Reynolds cartoons on greeting cards for every occasion. In 2008, Reynolds was diagnosed with testicular cancer and subsequently received months of chemotherapy. While he was in treatment, he began drawing cartoons about cancer and his personal experience which he found was shared by his fellow patients. He shared the cartoons with the staff and patients at the facility and discovered the power of art to bring humor to an otherwise humorless situation.
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12:00 PM - 2:00 AM, April 3 |
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Annual Le Moyne College Student Art Exhibition LeMoyne College
Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College,
Syracuse
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, April 3 |
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Cannonball Press Exhibition Syracuse University School of Art and Design
Price: Free XL Projects
307-313 S. Clinton St.,
Syracuse
Cannonball Press, the Brooklyn-based alternative pirate press co-founded by artists Martin Mazorra and Mike Houston, will present an exhibition, which includes new, large-scale graphic works, installations and sculpture. As Cannonball Press, Mazorra and Houston publish and sell limited-run editions of emerging artists' work and display it on their website, as well as at shows and festivals. The venture seeks to invite talented artists to explore the medium and make affordable, high-quality editions. Artists represented include Drew Iwaniw, Katy Seals, Joseph Velasquez, John Hitchcock, Derrick Riley, Meghan O'Connor, and Dusty Herbig, assistant professor of printmaking at VPA. For more information, contact Dusty Herbig, 315-443-4519 or dtherbig@syr.edu, or XL Projects (during gallery hours), 315-443-2542.
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1:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 3 |
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Members' Theme Show Associated Artists of Central New York
Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr.,
Manlius
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Film |
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5:30 PM - 11:00 PM, April 3 |
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Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project
Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Internationally renowned artist Jenny Holzer created a site-specific installation that streams across the façade of Syracuse Stage on an LED curtain. The installation features 272 aphorisms from her celebrated series "Truisms" and "Survival" that challenge viewers' 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 Times 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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Music |
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2:00 PM, April 3 |
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Skaneateles Brass Quintet Arts Alive in Liverpool
Price: Free Liverpool Public Library
310 Tulip St.,
Liverpool
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2:00 PM, April 3 |
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Bach and Chopin Piano Recital Onondaga Community College Featuring Kevin Moore
Price: Free Storer Auditorium
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
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3:00 PM, April 3 |
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Dvorak's Stabat Mater Syracuse Chorale Warren Ottey, conductor Featuring Steven Uhl, organ
St. Paul's Syracuse
220 E. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Dvorak's greatest choral masterpiece for solo quartet, chorus, and organ.
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4:00 PM, April 3 |
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Lenten Music Program Arts at Assisi
Price: Free (donations accepted) Assumption Church
812 N. Salina St.,
Syracuse
Louis Vierne Messe Solennelle Thomas Ludovicus Victoria Vere Langoures Heinrich Schutz Ehre sei dir, Christe Performed by the Assumption Church Choir with guest vocalists and instrumentalists.
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8:00 PM, April 3 |
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Eytan and the Embassy, with The Tins, The Vanderbuilts, The Fly Westcott Theater
Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St.,
Syracuse
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Theater |
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1:00 PM, April 3 |
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The Last Five Years Encore Presentations
Price: $37.25 dinner theater (includes tax and tip); $20 show only Glen Loch Restaurant
4626 North St.,
Jamesville
Dinner at 1:00 pm; show follows at 2:00 pm. The Last Five Years by Jason Robert Brown, starring Molly Brown and Robert G. Searle For tickets, phone 315-469-6969.
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2:00 PM, April 3 |
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[sic] Redhouse Anton Briones, director
Price: $25 regular; $20 students/seniors Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
A fragmented comedy celebrating the insanity of friendship by Melissa James Gibson, [sic] explores the relationship of three neighbors as they struggle to survive in the big city. Between love affairs, writer's block, tongue twisters and a corpse, these off-the-wall characters embrace the fun in their dysfunction, illuminating the [sic] in us all. Redhouse is thrilled to introduce New York City Director Anton Briones and Scenic/Costume Designer, Timothy Brown to the Syracuse theatre scene. In this production, the creative team will be pushing the envelope by exploring new ways to use video, music and theatricality to bring this contemporary play to life. The cast includes John Bixler, Laura Austin, and Binaifer Dabu, who recently appeared in Odysseus DOA at Redhouse. Also featured in the cast are Matt Chiorini, Navroz Dabu, and Mary Ellen Dowling. Redhouse Technical Director, John Czajkowski completes the creative team.
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2:00 PM, April 3 |
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The Miracle Worker Syracuse Stage Paul Barnes, director
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
"Once I knew only darkness and stillness... my life was without past or future... but a little word from the fingers of another fell into my hand that clutched at emptiness, and my heart leaped to the rapture of living." In her own words, Helen Keller captures the inspirational heart of William Gibson's classic American play. Between the emptiness and the rapture, though, came a fierce struggle of wills, with Helen, in her darkness and stillness, on one side, and the determined Annie Sullivan on the other, a young woman who had endured a lifetime of pain in just 20 years. Gibson's text is unsparing and unflinching in its depiction of their confrontation and mutual triumph. The hearts that will be leaping will be ours.
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2:00 PM, April 3 |
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Curse of the Starving Class Syracuse University Drama Department Gerardine Clark, director
Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Pulitzer Prize winner Sam Shepard's 1978, excoriating comedy has never seemed timelier. "The whole thing is geared to invisible money," laments Weston, the chronically soused patriarch of a family in serious financial and psychological disarray. The refrigerator's empty, the house is crumbling, the creditors are baying, and that much longed-for American idyll is unattainable. Shepard's savage fantasy on America's voraciousness only gets better with age. Premiering at the New York Shakespeare Festival in 1978, Curse won the Obie Award for Best New American Play. Academy Award winner Olympia Dukakis (cousin of presidential candidate Michael Dukakis) played the matriarch Ella in the premiere. In the 1994 film version, another Academy Award winner, Kathy Bates, took on the role. Shepard, who won a Pulitzer Prize for drama for his subsequent play Buried Child, is also an Academy Award nominated actor for his supporting role in The Right Stuff (1983).
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7:00 PM, April 3 |
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Autobahn Black Box Players Jenny Leon, director
Price: Free Loft Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Autobahn by Neil LaBute
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Monday, April 4, 2011
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Art |
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12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, April 4 |
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Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery
The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This spring, both the main gallery and Window Projects feature emerging female artists and celebrate their artistic achievements at a time that coincides with International Women's Day (March 2011). Stephanie Rozene draws upon the fine line between design and the visual arts. Her work is the result of extensive research and gifted craftsmanship. Through the medium of ceramics (and with special attention to specific patterns, ornaments, and forms) she explores the politics of European ceramics and traces international developments in this medium back to the reigns of French kings Louis XV and Louis XVI. This is her first solo museum show.
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8:00 AM - 2:00 AM, April 4 |
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Annual Le Moyne College Student Art Exhibition LeMoyne College
Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College,
Syracuse
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9:00 AM - 7:00 PM, April 4 |
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Student Art and Photography Exhibit Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Whitney Applied Technology Center
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 4 |
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Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
Takafumi Ide is an interdisciplinary media artist specializing in installation with sound and light. He received his B.A. in graphic design from Tama Art University in Tokyo in 1989, and his M.F.A. in studio art from Stony Brook University in 2007. He has worked for more than 10 years as a graphic designer and an illustrator in Japan and now teaches at Stony Brook University as a lecturer, and Suffolk County Community College as an adjunct instructor. He has received several honors, such as The Sculpture Space Fellowship and Residency (funded by both the Pollock-Krasner Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts), the Strategic Opportunity Stipend Program Grant through the New York Foundation for the Arts, and most recently the Nomura Cultural Foundation's Project Grant, Asahi Shimbun Foundation Project Grant, and the Vermont Studio Center's Partial-Grant and Residency. He has exhibited both nationally and internationally. More recent exhibitions include Sunroom Project Glynder Gallery, Wave Hill, NY, ISE Cultural Foundation in Soho, NY, and AC Institute in Chelsea, NY.
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 4 |
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Davidovich in Situ: A Video Art Project Point of Contact Gallery
Price: Free Point of Contact Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
Argentine video artist Jaime Davidovich returns to Syracuse University after an amazing year of grand-scale museum exhibitions worldwide, to work on site at The Point of Contact Gallery. Davidovich will present a series of his classic videos along with collage, photography, and a new series of paintings that he will produce on site. Davidovich, on Painting and Video Art: "My paintings are hybrids combining the tactile sensation of painting with the electronic pulse of video. The works are small in scale and intimate in nature. I want to do an art that speaks on a one-to-one basis with the viewer, no actors or story line, just a scale for human dialogue. In a time of video as spectacle, my work is indeed conflictive. I am interested in establishing a link (no pun intended) between Morandi and the Internet; the personal gesture and digital reproduction. These are the opposites that attract me. I use video because it is intimate, personal. I use the brush because is my gestural DNA."
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 4 |
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Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Artists include Fred Zimmerman, David Yaman, Kathy Williams, Carl Steckler, Laurie Seamans, Meg Richardson, Lyla Phillips, Allen Phillips, Joan Niswender, Richard Mitchell, Amy Hnatko, Emily Gibbons, Serry Dans, Kathie Beale, and David Beale.
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 4 |
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Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
On display will be pulp magazines, notably titles like Weird Tales and Amazing Stories; the typescript of Isaac Asimov's "Strange Playfellow," which introduced readers to one of science fiction's best known characters, Robbie the Robot; and correspondence with figures like Ray Bradbury. Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 4 |
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Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery
Price: Free Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
This group exhibit showcases both the artwork of local women artists, as well as artwork with women-focused subjects. Artists will be sharing their personal experiences in a number of areas. The artists from the CNY area and include Maria Rizzo (painting), Amanda Gormley (photography), Patricia Seitz (painting), Suzanne Masters (paint and collage), Sherry Gordon (painting), Kristie Hayes (painting and drawing), Carla Senecal (installation artwork), and Michael Moody (painting and prints).
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, April 4 |
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Members' Theme Show Associated Artists of Central New York
Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr.,
Manlius
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 4 |
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Thilde Jensen: Canaries Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The images in Canaries, an exhibition of photographs by Thilde Jensen, are a personal account of the life Jensen has lived with multiple chemical sensitivity, and the people she has met who suffer from the same condition. People with this sensitivity have been dubbed "human canaries," and they are the casualties of what Jensen calls a "ubiquitous synthetic chemical culture." Jensen became so sensitive to chemicals in the air that she could not sit in traffic, read a book or sit next to someone wearing perfume. She was forced to wear a gas mask when entering banks, supermarkets and doctor's offices. She left her life in New York City, her husband and her career, and moved to the country, where she lived in a tent away from the regular chemicals such as laundry detergents, pesticides and exhaust fumes.
Read a review!
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 4 |
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Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
That Year of Living features stunning black-and-white photographs by Jeffrey Henson Scales. Diagnosed with cancer in 2008, Scales was forced to, in his words, weigh the possibilities of his own demise, and whether he had achieved what he felt he was put here to do. It was this diagnosis and contemplation, along with the urging of his wife, Meg Henson Scales, which led him to return to making photographs on a daily basis. The images in That Year of Living were made in the year following his cancer diagnosis and surgery. Scales photographed mainly in and around Times Square, depicting the part of New York City that he visited every day going to and from work at The New York Times. The images capture the certain hardness mixed with joy, sadness, determination and bewilderment that is found in the faces of young and old alike in New York City. Created in the months following his own experience with mortality, the photographs explore the journey of life and death found in the faces on the streets of New York.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 4 |
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Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show Redhouse
Price: Free Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
A selection of work from young women at Fowler, Nottingham and IT high schools.
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 4 |
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Self-Portrait Show Gallery 54
Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St.,
Skaneateles
The April show features self portraits by gallery members in a variety of mediums.
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Film |
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5:30 PM - 11:00 PM, April 4 |
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Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project
Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Internationally renowned artist Jenny Holzer created a site-specific installation that streams across the façade of Syracuse Stage on an LED curtain. The installation features 272 aphorisms from her celebrated series "Truisms" and "Survival" that challenge viewers' 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 Times 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.
Read a review!
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7:00 PM, April 4 |
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Film Series: My Favorite Year Temple Society of Concord
Temple Society of Concord
910 Madison St.,
Syracuse
Peter O'Toole delivers a sensational knockout performance as Alan Swann, a booze-loving matinee idol -- and a has-been through and through -- who's forced into making a live variety show appearance to appease the Internal Revenue Service after they nail him for back taxes. Joseph Bologna (modeled after Sid Caesar from "Your Show of Shows") is equally memorable as the show's tempestuous star.
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7:30 PM, April 4 |
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All Through the Night (1942) Syracuse Cinephile Society
Price: $3 regular, $2.50 members Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St.,
Syracuse
Director: Vincent Sherman. Cast: Humphrey Bogart, Kaaren Verne, Peter Lorre, Conrad Veidt, Judith Anderson, Jackie Gleason, Phil Silvers, William Demarest, Frank McHugh, Jane Darwell, Barton MacLane. Wartime comedy-drama with Bogart, a New York gambler, trying to subvert the machinations of a Nazi spy ring headed by Veidt, Lorre and Anderson, with Verne supplying the romantic interest.
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History |
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12:00 PM, April 4 |
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Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Free Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total) Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.
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3:00 PM, April 4 |
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Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Free Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total) Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.
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Tuesday, April 5, 2011
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Art |
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12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, April 5 |
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Window Project: Stephanie Rozene--The Politics of Porcelain The Warehouse Gallery
The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
This spring, both the main gallery and Window Projects feature emerging female artists and celebrate their artistic achievements at a time that coincides with International Women's Day (March 2011). Stephanie Rozene draws upon the fine line between design and the visual arts. Her work is the result of extensive research and gifted craftsmanship. Through the medium of ceramics (and with special attention to specific patterns, ornaments, and forms) she explores the politics of European ceramics and traces international developments in this medium back to the reigns of French kings Louis XV and Louis XVI. This is her first solo museum show.
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8:00 AM - 2:00 AM, April 5 |
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Annual Le Moyne College Student Art Exhibition LeMoyne College
Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College,
Syracuse
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9:00 AM - 7:00 PM, April 5 |
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Student Art and Photography Exhibit Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Whitney Applied Technology Center
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 5 |
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Takafumi Ide Gallery Exhibit Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
Takafumi Ide is an interdisciplinary media artist specializing in installation with sound and light. He received his B.A. in graphic design from Tama Art University in Tokyo in 1989, and his M.F.A. in studio art from Stony Brook University in 2007. He has worked for more than 10 years as a graphic designer and an illustrator in Japan and now teaches at Stony Brook University as a lecturer, and Suffolk County Community College as an adjunct instructor. He has received several honors, such as The Sculpture Space Fellowship and Residency (funded by both the Pollock-Krasner Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts), the Strategic Opportunity Stipend Program Grant through the New York Foundation for the Arts, and most recently the Nomura Cultural Foundation's Project Grant, Asahi Shimbun Foundation Project Grant, and the Vermont Studio Center's Partial-Grant and Residency. He has exhibited both nationally and internationally. More recent exhibitions include Sunroom Project Glynder Gallery, Wave Hill, NY, ISE Cultural Foundation in Soho, NY, and AC Institute in Chelsea, NY.
Read a review!
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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 5 |
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Cortland County Art Exhibit Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery
Price: Free Syracuse Technology Garden
235 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Artists include Fred Zimmerman, David Yaman, Kathy Williams, Carl Steckler, Laurie Seamans, Meg Richardson, Lyla Phillips, Allen Phillips, Joan Niswender, Richard Mitchell, Amy Hnatko, Emily Gibbons, Serry Dans, Kathie Beale, and David Beale.
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9:00 AM - 7:00 PM, April 5 |
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Orange Pulp: The Pulp Magazine & Contemporary Culture Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Bird Library, 6th Floor
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
On display will be pulp magazines, notably titles like Weird Tales and Amazing Stories; the typescript of Isaac Asimov's "Strange Playfellow," which introduced readers to one of science fiction's best known characters, Robbie the Robot; and correspondence with figures like Ray Bradbury. Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."
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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 5 |
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Celebrating CNY Women in Art: 100th Anniversary of International Women's Day Westcott Community Art Gallery
Price: Free Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
This group exhibit showcases both the artwork of local women artists, as well as artwork with women-focused subjects. Artists will be sharing their personal experiences in a number of areas. The artists from the CNY area and include Maria Rizzo (painting), Amanda Gormley (photography), Patricia Seitz (painting), Suzanne Masters (paint and collage), Sherry Gordon (painting), Kristie Hayes (painting and drawing), Carla Senecal (installation artwork), and Michael Moody (painting and prints).
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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, April 5 |
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Tonal Gestures Edgewood Gallery
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd.,
Syracuse
Diana Godfrey: mixed media pastels and acrylic paintings Carmel Nicoletti: bronze reliefs and glass works
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, April 5 |
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Members' Theme Show Associated Artists of Central New York
Manlius Village Library
Manlius Village Center, 1 Arkie Albanese Dr.,
Manlius
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 5 |
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Jeffrey Henson Scales: That Year of Living Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
That Year of Living features stunning black-and-white photographs by Jeffrey Henson Scales. Diagnosed with cancer in 2008, Scales was forced to, in his words, weigh the possibilities of his own demise, and whether he had achieved what he felt he was put here to do. It was this diagnosis and contemplation, along with the urging of his wife, Meg Henson Scales, which led him to return to making photographs on a daily basis. The images in That Year of Living were made in the year following his cancer diagnosis and surgery. Scales photographed mainly in and around Times Square, depicting the part of New York City that he visited every day going to and from work at The New York Times. The images capture the certain hardness mixed with joy, sadness, determination and bewilderment that is found in the faces of young and old alike in New York City. Created in the months following his own experience with mortality, the photographs explore the journey of life and death found in the faces on the streets of New York.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 5 |
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Thilde Jensen: Canaries Light Work Gallery
Price: Free Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The images in Canaries, an exhibition of photographs by Thilde Jensen, are a personal account of the life Jensen has lived with multiple chemical sensitivity, and the people she has met who suffer from the same condition. People with this sensitivity have been dubbed "human canaries," and they are the casualties of what Jensen calls a "ubiquitous synthetic chemical culture." Jensen became so sensitive to chemicals in the air that she could not sit in traffic, read a book or sit next to someone wearing perfume. She was forced to wear a gas mask when entering banks, supermarkets and doctor's offices. She left her life in New York City, her husband and her career, and moved to the country, where she lived in a tent away from the regular chemicals such as laundry detergents, pesticides and exhaust fumes.
Read a review!
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, April 5 |
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No Boundaries: Color & Landscape Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
Limestone Art and Framing Gallery
105 Brooklea Dr.,
Fayetteville
Works by Scott Bennett and Michael Matthews. Note: Limestone Art is now in its new location next to Pascale's at 105 Brooklea Dr. in Fayetteville. Scott Bennett's new series of vivid landscape paintings have found their inspiration close to home, or rather at his new home and studio in Jamesville, NY. While continuing his characteristic impasto painting technique, Bennett shares his inspiration with us: "Our property has wonderful woods and views in all directions, and most of these paintings are inspired by the beauty I see everyday when I look out any window or walk out the door." His work has been exhibited in over 40 national exhibitions, and is included in numerous corporate and private collections. This is Bennett's second exhibition at Limestone. Michael Matthews' landscapes are developed from sketchbook watercolors created on site during his travels, at times during below freezing temperatures as ice forms while he paints. Back in the studio, Matthews creates large paintings from a singe sketch or an amalgamation of his watercolors. Michael Matthews lives in Syracuse, NY and in Harrogate, British Columbia. His work is found in over 60 corporate art collections.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 5 |
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Emerging Women of CNY: Student Gallery Show Redhouse
Price: Free Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
A selection of work from young women at Fowler, Nottingham and IT high schools.
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 5 |
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Self-Portrait Show Gallery 54
Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St.,
Skaneateles
The April show features self portraits by gallery members in a variety of mediums.
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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, April 5 |
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Orange Pulp: Works by Norman Saunders Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
A profile of pulp artist Norman Saunders (1907-1989), including 10 lush and dramatic Saunders paintings from the university collection. Named for the cheap and abundant wood pulp that publishers after 1850 began using to print reading materials for a mass audience, pulp magazines sported eye-catching covers and included detective, adventure, western, horror, romance, and science fiction stories. According to co-curator Sean Quimby, director of SCRC, "This was literature tailored to specific tastes, intended to entertain in predictable ways." He notes that "even while the form of the pulp magazine died by 1960, the concept of pulp lives on in glossy photo-dense magazines, paperback novels, comic books, and film." Quimby maintains that pulp magazines, with their intensely involved readership, "helped make possible contemporary interactive media culture."
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 5 |
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Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds Everson Museum of Art
Price: $5 suggested donation Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The 2011 exhibition program will continue to highlight the talented artists of New York State through a series of focused exhibitions. The season opens with Reynolds Unwrapped: The Cartoon Art of Dan Reynolds, an exhibition featuring more than 100 original works of art that are seriously hilarious. The small-scale drawings depicting the comedic daily lives of humans and animals alike are all rendered by hand in a variety of media, an approach that is becoming increasing rare in a world of computer-generated images. Dan Reynolds began drawing cartoons in 1989, when he was 30. As a youth center instructor, Reynolds was surrounded by youthful energy and creative minds. He was an avid follower of popular cartoons of the time, such as Gary Larson's Far Side and Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes. A native of Brewerton, NY, Reynolds was inspired by his Central New York surroundings, a place where snow is abundant and cows can be found just minutes from anywhere. From the beginning, Reynolds has used farm animals as messengers of humor, particularly cows, pigs and chickens, a series that was immediately accepted by Reader's Digest in 1989. A new cartoon has appeared in every issue since then. Reynolds' cartoons have also appeared in thematic Reynolds Unwrapped book compilations featuring everything from sports to holiday special editions. American Greetings and Recycled Greeting Cards also feature Reynolds cartoons on greeting cards for every occasion. In 2008, Reynolds was diagnosed with testicular cancer and subsequently received months of chemotherapy. While he was in treatment, he began drawing cartoons about cancer and his personal experience which he found was shared by his fellow patients. He shared the cartoons with the staff and patients at the facility and discovered the power of art to bring humor to an otherwise humorless situation.
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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, April 5 |
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Ah Leon: Memories of Elementary School Everson Museum of Art
Price: $5 suggested donation Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In 2008, Ah Leon envisioned a monumental ceramic installation showcasing dozens of stoneware desks and chairs in neat rows like the classrooms of our youth. It began with a small grouping called Memories of Elementary School first exhibited in August 2008 at The Taipei Gallery Exposition and in 2009 at the Phoenix Art Museum in conjunction with the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) annual conference. Ah Leon continued to make more desks which were exhibited at the American Museum of Ceramic Art (AMOCA) in 2010. Another year has passed and Ah Leon has completed the 20 sets of desks and chairs which will be showcased in this exhibition. His original idea was to create a classroom environment that would “lead audiences to remember their childhood stories.” Ah Leon studied elementary school desks, determined that his creations would be authentic, revealing memories through carved initials, scratches and drawings on their worn surfaces. His classroom would preserve the stories of our childhood as if they were “frozen in the museum space.” The first two rows of tables and chairs appear new. They become progressively more dilapidated--some broken, some leaning--until the last rows where the furniture is falling over and ultimately only chips and severed parts remain on the floor. In one area the desks are arranged as if a teacher reads to a group of children. The impact of the scene is immediate: viewers are taken back to their own childhood classroom and long forgotten memories drift to the surface.
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, April 5 |
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Kueng Caputo: The Quadrangular Cloud The Warehouse Gallery
Price: Free The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
The young female Swiss designer duo, Sarah Kueng and Lovis Caputo, will install a hotel in the Warehouse Gallery. The main gallery will be transformed into small ephemeral rooms where the visitor is invited to take a break from reality and to take a mini-vacation complete with a number of very simple, inexpensive and joyful elements. When seated or lying down, the public's focus is drawn to the interior space and lighting. The idea for a temporary hotel goes back to Kueng's and Caputo's 72 Hours Hotel, which was initially developed in 2006 for the train station in Zurich, Switzerland. Both artists have been widely exhibited. This is their first museum solo show in the U.S.
Read a review!
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Film |
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5:30 PM - 11:00 PM, April 5 |
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Jenny Holzer installation Urban Video Project
Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Internationally renowned artist Jenny Holzer created a site-specific installation that streams across the façade of Syracuse Stage on an LED curtain. The installation features 272 aphorisms from her celebrated series "Truisms" and "Survival" that challenge viewers' 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 Times 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.
Read a review!
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Back to list |
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History |
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12:00 PM, April 5 |
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Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Free Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total) Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.
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3:00 PM, April 5 |
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Heartland Passage: The Oral History of the Erie Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Free Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
"Heartland Passage" is a set of nine high-definition videos -- six of them newly produced and three drawn from the New York State Museum -- that each profile a person who grew up along or worked on the Erie Canal. (24 minutes total) Dr. Daniel Ward, Erie Canal Museum curator, will introduce the nine videos and provide some history about the project.
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Lecture |
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5:00 PM, April 5 |
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Elastic Landscape: Seeding Ecology in Public Space and Urban Infrastructure Syracuse University School of Architecture Featuring Susannah Drake
Price: Free Slocum Hall Auditorium
Syracuse University campus,
Syracuse
Susannah Drake, dland studio.
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6:30 PM, April 5 |
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Visiting Artist Lecture: Martin Mazorra and Mike Houston/Cannonball Press Syracuse University School of Art and Design
Price: Free Shemin Auditorium, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
As Cannonball Press, Martin Mazorra and Mike Houston publish and sell limited-run editions of emerging artists' work and display it on their website, as well as at shows and festivals. The venture seeks to invite talented artists to explore the medium and make affordable, high-quality editions. Artists represented include Drew Iwaniw, Katy Seals, Joseph Velasquez, John Hitchcock, Derrick Riley, Meghan O'Connor and Dusty Herbig, assistant professor of printmaking at VPA. Mazorra is a master printmaker who teaches at Parsons The New School for Design and SUNY New Paltz. His work explores his love for bold, voluptuous design and strong graphic images--a passion that comes from a rich cross- and sub-cultural source. He has collaborated with such artists as Rudy Burkhart, Stephen Westfall, Michael Mazur, Melissa Meyer, Joan Snyder, Brian Wood, Mary Frank, Mary Heilmann, Jacqueline Humpheries, Elena Sisto, Charlie Hewitt and Yoshishige Furukawa. Houston works in various media, including painting, printmaking, instrument building, film and video. His style of punk surrealism revolves around a steadily growing stable of images that tread the line between abstract and representational. Inanimate products of industry, twisted science and fantasy are brought to life and collide on vinyl scrolls, aluminum panels, ink drawings, woodcuts and silkscreen prints. His awards include residencies at the Saltonstall Arts Colony, the MacDowell Colony, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts and the Vermont Studio Center, as well as grants from Rauschenberg's Change, Inc., and the Experimental Television Center. This talk is held in conjunction with the Cannonball Press exhibit currently on view at XL Gallery.
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7:30 PM, April 5 |
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The Global Water Crisis and the Coming Battle for the Right to Water University Lectures Featuring Maude Barlow
Price: Free Hendricks Chapel
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Maude Barlow is considered by many to be one of the world's leading experts on water issues. "This notion that we'll have water forever is wrong. California is running out. It's got 20-some years of water," she says. Barlow talks about how our misuse of water may actually be changing the hydrological cycle and contributing to global warming. In 2008, she was appointed as the United Nations' first senior adviser on water issues, a role she hopes to use to establish water as a human right. She is also the co-founder of the Blue Planet Project, a group that works to protect fresh water from trade and privatization around the world. Barlow chairs the board of the Washington-based Food & Water Watch and is also an executive member of the San Francisco-based International Forum on Globalization. She is the recipient of the Right Livelihood Award for her work on global water justice. Barlow holds several honorary doctorates and has written or co-written 16 books including the international best seller Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and The Coming Battle for the Right to Water. Reduced-rate parking for the event is available in the Irving Avenue parking garage.
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Music |
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9:00 PM, April 5 |
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Mimosa, with special guests Michal Menert, Cubical Sunrise Westcott Theater
Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St.,
Syracuse
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