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Events for Monday, March 11, 2024
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Unveiled Echoes: Works by Jalen Law Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Sophia Chai: Character Space Light Work Gallery
Events for Tuesday, March 12, 2024
9:30 AM-6:00 PM
Implication Edgewood Gallery
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Unveiled Echoes: Works by Jalen Law Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Sophia Chai: Character Space Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Assembly: Syracuse University Voices on Art and Ecology Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Art Wall Project: Nona Faustine, My Country Syracuse University Art Museum
6:00 PM-9:00 PM
Jazz at Timber Banks: Kirsten Tegtmeyer with ESP CNY Jazz Arts Foundation
Events for Wednesday, March 13, 2024
9:30 AM-6:00 PM
Implication Edgewood Gallery
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Unveiled Echoes: Works by Jalen Law Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Sophia Chai: Character Space Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Art Wall Project: Nona Faustine, My Country Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Assembly: Syracuse University Voices on Art and Ecology Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
David Edward Johnson: No Roses in December Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Pick and Mix Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Off the Rack Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Sana Musasama: Returning to Ourselves Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Janet Biggs: Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape Everson Museum of Art
2:00 PM-6:00 PM
Mahtab Hussain: Muslims in America: Syracuse Edition ArtRage Gallery
7:00 PM
Halo Rider The 443 Social Club
7:30 PM
Preview: Murder on the Orient Express Syracuse Stage
Events for Thursday, March 14, 2024
9:30 AM-6:00 PM
Implication Edgewood Gallery
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Unveiled Echoes: Works by Jalen Law Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Sophia Chai: Character Space Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Assembly: Syracuse University Voices on Art and Ecology Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Art Wall Project: Nona Faustine, My Country Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
David Edward Johnson: No Roses in December Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
Off the Rack Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
Pick and Mix Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
Janet Biggs: Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
Sana Musasama: Returning to Ourselves Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Crossing Space and Time: Figurative Ceramics by Jee Eun Lee Gandee Gallery
2:00 PM-6:00 PM
Mahtab Hussain: Muslims in America: Syracuse Edition ArtRage Gallery
6:30 PM
Molly Hatchet Show Palace Theatre
7:00 PM
The Dangerous Variety Acme Mystery Company
7:00 PM
Le Winston Band The 443 Social Club
7:30 PM
Preview: Murder on the Orient Express Syracuse Stage
Events for Friday, March 15, 2024
9:30 AM-6:00 PM
Implication Edgewood Gallery
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Unveiled Echoes: Works by Jalen Law Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Sophia Chai: Character Space Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Art Wall Project: Nona Faustine, My Country Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Assembly: Syracuse University Voices on Art and Ecology Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
David Edward Johnson: No Roses in December Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Pick and Mix Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Off the Rack Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Sana Musasama: Returning to Ourselves Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Janet Biggs: Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Crossing Space and Time: Figurative Ceramics by Jee Eun Lee Gandee Gallery
12:00 PM-8:00 PM
Central NY Watercolor Society Exhibit Art in the Atrium
2:00 PM-6:00 PM
Mahtab Hussain: Muslims in America: Syracuse Edition ArtRage Gallery
7:00 PM
Will Hoge The 443 Social Club
7:30 PM
Humours of Whisky NYS Baroque
7:30 PM
Opening: Murder on the Orient Express Syracuse Stage
8:00 PM
Louise Mosrie Coombe Folkus Project
Events for Saturday, March 16, 2024
10:00 AM-2:00 PM
Implication Edgewood Gallery
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Janet Biggs: Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Sana Musasama: Returning to Ourselves Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
David Edward Johnson: No Roses in December Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Off the Rack Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Pick and Mix Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Crossing Space and Time: Figurative Ceramics by Jee Eun Lee Gandee Gallery
11:30 AM-3:30 PM
Unveiled Echoes: Works by Jalen Law Community Folk Art Center
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
Central NY Watercolor Society Exhibit Art in the Atrium
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
Mahtab Hussain: Muslims in America: Syracuse Edition ArtRage Gallery
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
Assembly: Syracuse University Voices on Art and Ecology Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
Art Wall Project: Nona Faustine, My Country Syracuse University Art Museum
1:00 PM-9:00 PM
Sophia Chai: Character Space Light Work Gallery
2:00 PM
Murder on the Orient Express Syracuse Stage
7:00 PM
Alice Howe and Freebo The 443 Social Club
7:30 PM
Murder on the Orient Express Syracuse Stage
Events for Sunday, March 17, 2024
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
David Edward Johnson: No Roses in December Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Pick and Mix Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Off the Rack Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Sana Musasama: Returning to Ourselves Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Janet Biggs: Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Crossing Space and Time: Figurative Ceramics by Jee Eun Lee Gandee Gallery
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
Central NY Watercolor Society Exhibit Art in the Atrium
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
Art Wall Project: Nona Faustine, My Country Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
Assembly: Syracuse University Voices on Art and Ecology Syracuse University Art Museum
1:00 PM-9:00 PM
Sophia Chai: Character Space Light Work Gallery
2:00 PM
Murder on the Orient Express Syracuse Stage
3:00 PM
Epic Grandeur Onondaga Civic Symphony Orchestra, featuring Gregory Wood, cello
4:00 PM
March Classics Concert MasterWorks Chorale
4:00 PM
Symphonic Motets Schola Cantorum of Syracuse
6:00 PM
Liz Longley The 443 Social Club
7:30 PM
Murder on the Orient Express Syracuse Stage
Events for Monday, March 18, 2024
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Sophia Chai: Character Space Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Highlights from the Light Work Collection: Dawoud Bey Light Work Gallery
7:00 PM
The Devil and Miss Jones (1941) Syracuse Cinephile Society
Monday, March 11, 2024
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Art |
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 11 |
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Unveiled Echoes: Works by Jalen Law Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
This visionary exhibition made up of 22 artworks harmonizes traditional art, digital innovation, and augmented reality (AR) to resurrect the forgotten narratives of Buffalo and the Erie Canal.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 11 |
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Sophia Chai: Character Space Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
In 1987, Chai immigrated to New York City from South Korea as a teenager without knowing English. Looking back, she has described that experience as feeling untethered to any internal compass that she could use to navigate her place in a new country with a new language. She visually explains these experiences to us by reinterpreting the Korean language's characters in photographs that enable us to see the contradictions of visual and verbal communication. Her images rest in the space between intellect and intuition. Chai's curiosity about the interior space of her tool — the large format camera, comparable to the interior space of a mouth — leads to the idea of the camera obscura, a darkened room with a small opening to the world.
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Tuesday, March 12, 2024
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Art |
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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 12 |
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Implication Edgewood Gallery
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd.,
Syracuse
Abstract(ed) paintings by Penny Santy and Barb Vural, with glass marbles and pendants by Doug Williams and natural-elelments jewelry by Esperanza Tielbaard
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 12 |
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Unveiled Echoes: Works by Jalen Law Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
This visionary exhibition made up of 22 artworks harmonizes traditional art, digital innovation, and augmented reality (AR) to resurrect the forgotten narratives of Buffalo and the Erie Canal.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 12 |
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Sophia Chai: Character Space Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
In 1987, Chai immigrated to New York City from South Korea as a teenager without knowing English. Looking back, she has described that experience as feeling untethered to any internal compass that she could use to navigate her place in a new country with a new language. She visually explains these experiences to us by reinterpreting the Korean language's characters in photographs that enable us to see the contradictions of visual and verbal communication. Her images rest in the space between intellect and intuition. Chai's curiosity about the interior space of her tool — the large format camera, comparable to the interior space of a mouth — leads to the idea of the camera obscura, a darkened room with a small opening to the world.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 12 |
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Assembly: Syracuse University Voices on Art and Ecology Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"Assembly" features artworks made by Syracuse University faculty and recent alumni that contribute to emergent forms of ecological understanding. By placing these works in dialogue with objects from the Museum's collection, the installation considers a broad cultural evolution from an environmentalism of the sublime to an ecology of intimacy.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 12 |
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Art Wall Project: Nona Faustine, My Country Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The Art Wall Project features photographs and silk-screen prints made by Nona Faustine, a Brooklyn-based photographer. Faustine will consider the legacy of monuments in the United States and explore how, as she has described, "history is turned around. What is left out, what is included, what are the lies. And who gets celebrated." The Syracuse University Art Museum's new Art Wall initiative is dedicated to site-specific works by emerging and leading contemporary artists, commissioned annually.
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Back to list |
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Music |
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6:00 PM - 9:00 PM, March 12 |
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Jazz at Timber Banks: Kirsten Tegtmeyer with ESP CNY Jazz Arts Foundation
Price: No cover Persimmons
3536 Timber Banks Pkwy.,
Baldwinsville
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Back to list |
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Wednesday, March 13, 2024
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Art |
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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 13 |
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Implication Edgewood Gallery
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd.,
Syracuse
Abstract(ed) paintings by Penny Santy and Barb Vural, with glass marbles and pendants by Doug Williams and natural-elelments jewelry by Esperanza Tielbaard
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 13 |
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Unveiled Echoes: Works by Jalen Law Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
This visionary exhibition made up of 22 artworks harmonizes traditional art, digital innovation, and augmented reality (AR) to resurrect the forgotten narratives of Buffalo and the Erie Canal.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 13 |
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Sophia Chai: Character Space Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
In 1987, Chai immigrated to New York City from South Korea as a teenager without knowing English. Looking back, she has described that experience as feeling untethered to any internal compass that she could use to navigate her place in a new country with a new language. She visually explains these experiences to us by reinterpreting the Korean language's characters in photographs that enable us to see the contradictions of visual and verbal communication. Her images rest in the space between intellect and intuition. Chai's curiosity about the interior space of her tool — the large format camera, comparable to the interior space of a mouth — leads to the idea of the camera obscura, a darkened room with a small opening to the world.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 13 |
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Art Wall Project: Nona Faustine, My Country Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The Art Wall Project features photographs and silk-screen prints made by Nona Faustine, a Brooklyn-based photographer. Faustine will consider the legacy of monuments in the United States and explore how, as she has described, "history is turned around. What is left out, what is included, what are the lies. And who gets celebrated." The Syracuse University Art Museum's new Art Wall initiative is dedicated to site-specific works by emerging and leading contemporary artists, commissioned annually.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 13 |
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Assembly: Syracuse University Voices on Art and Ecology Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"Assembly" features artworks made by Syracuse University faculty and recent alumni that contribute to emergent forms of ecological understanding. By placing these works in dialogue with objects from the Museum's collection, the installation considers a broad cultural evolution from an environmentalism of the sublime to an ecology of intimacy.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 13 |
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David Edward Johnson: No Roses in December Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Based in Skaneateles, David Edward Johnson creates mixed media assemblages that address belief systems, the birth and death of the American Dream, and the effects of loss at a personal level. No Roses in December features a series of works in which Johnson explores his father's diagnosis of and descent into dementia. Johnson pairs his own photographs of bleak West Texas vistas and abandoned adobe dwellings with abstract mixed media painting, vintage papers, found objects, and other ephemera as a way to evoke fragmented shards of memory that mimic his father's state of mind. The series title references a poem by Geoffrey Anketell Studdert-Kennedy that was popularized in a speech about courage by Peter Pan author JM Barrie: "God gave us memory so that we might have roses in December." Without memories, we have no blooms in the chill of the December of life. David Edward Johnson: No Roses in December is part of the Everson CNY Artist Initiative, an exhibition program that celebrates the multi-faceted talents of regional artists.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 13 |
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Pick and Mix Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Spring 2023 marks the beginning of a massive project that will convert an area adjacent to the ceramics gallery, which previously held paintings and prints, into dedicated ceramics storage. To accomplish this, we will close a portion of the ceramics gallery to make room for all the sorting and organizing that is to come. More than 200 paintings will come out of storage and hang salon-style in the Everson's upstairs galleries for the exhibition, Off the Rack. In the face of space limitations like these, most museums would offer you less art—but that is not the Everson way. Instead, we offer you "Pick & Mix," a cornucopia of five fabulous exhibitions under one banner. Pick & Mix highlights the vitality of the Museum's mission to gather works that document the ways that artists draw inspiration from their cultures, as well as the ways that artists give back. Ceramics are an ideal lens to examine the gender roles, politics, and material culture of any given moment. The Turner's Prize: Art Pottery from the Bill and Dorothy Paul Collection As the keeper of potter Adelaide Alsop Robineau's legacy, the Everson has a heavy investment in American Art Pottery of the early and mid-20th century. The Turner's Prize highlights the extraordinary collection of Athens, Georgia-based Bill Paul. Instead of following mainstream collectors and market trends, Paul and his late wife Dorothy spent decades gathering rare and exotic works from the Art Pottery era that highlight hand-turned forms and experimental glazes. Holding Space, Holding Pattern: Radical Decoration Strikes Back Holding Space, Holding Pattern springs from a moment in the 1970s when pattern became a political and cultural weapon in the hands of feminist artists like Judy Chicago and Miriam Shapiro. The Pattern and Decoration movement kicked open the doors for women to move past the Japanese-inspired stonewares and muscular abstract sculptures that dominated ceramics throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Natural Synthesis: African Stoneware from the Ramage Collection Natural Synthesis tells the story of a group of talented Nigerian potters who apprenticed at a colonial British pottery school led by Michael Cardew. Potters like Danlami Aliyu and Ladi Kwali blended British forms and firing techniques with motifs and functional elements from their own aesthetic heritage, then opened their own studios and handed down their legacy to their own students. Feelies Over a career that spanned more than seven decades, Arizona-based potter Rose Cabat perfected the Feelie, a matte-glazed pottery form that begs to be held and touched. Feelies brings together more than 100 of Cabat's pots in a show-stopping array highlighting her mastery of glaze and form. Cosmic Pipes: Pipes from the Clayton and Betty Bailey Collection The Everson's recently acquired collection of Cosmic Pipes from the late 1960s joins other clay pipes from Indigenous and European cultures in the permanent collection. Ceramist Clayton Bailey created these pipes along with friends Roy De Forest, David Gilhooly, and Maija Peeples-Bright in 1969. Legend has it that Bailey's wife, Betty, an artist in her own right, encouraged the group to make what she called "paranoid pipes" in the form of everyday objects like ice cream cones and flowers to disguise their purpose and blend into their surroundings.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 13 |
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Off the Rack Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
"Off the Rack" is the happy by-product of a major renovation of the Everson's on-site art storage. As hundreds of paintings and framed works are displaced from their racks while renovations take place, the public has an unprecedented opportunity to view objects that have been in deep storage for years, never-before-seen recent acquisitions, and some perennial favorites — all hung together salon-style in our exhibition galleries. This smorgasbord of paintings and works on paper showcases the breadth and depth of the Museum's collections and provides a glimpse into the world of collections management and care.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 13 |
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Sana Musasama: Returning to Ourselves Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Throughout her career, Queens-based artist Sana Musasama has drawn inspiration from travel and research into global cultures. "Returning to Ourselves" centers around a series of dolls that Musasama produced that mirror African-American topsy-turvy dolls containing a white doll whose skirt can be flipped up to transform it into a Black doll. Musasama uses this formal structure to juxtapose different figures drawn from the global Black diaspora. "Returning to Ourselves" is rounded out by a series of ceramic houses Musasama began early in her career but returned to during the pandemic to combat looming depression.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 13 |
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Janet Biggs: Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In 2009 and 2010, Janet Biggs traveled to the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard with a crew of artists and scientists to document the changing Arctic landscape. As the subject of centuries of exploration, the Arctic was once seen as indifferent to human enterprise, so vast and inhospitable as to be immune to any imposition. Today, scientists expect climate change to leave Arctic summers ice-free as early as the next decade, and Svalbard, located halfway between Europe and the North Pole, finds itself at the epicenter of this metamorphoses. Using footage compiled on her voyages north, Biggs explores this history and the alarming consequences of human enterprise in three videos: Warning Shot (2016), Brightness All Around (2011), and Fade to White (2010). Shown together, these works are a clarion call for a heroic landscape that will completely transform within our lifetimes.
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2:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 13 |
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Mahtab Hussain: Muslims in America: Syracuse Edition ArtRage Gallery
Price: Free ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave.,
Syracuse
British photographer Mahtab Hussain is creating a major new body of work about the Muslim experience in America. In October, ArtRage hosted Hussain for a two-week residency to photograph Syracuse's Muslim community; the resulting work will be shared in this exhibition. The work created in Syracuse will join his work from New York City, Los Angeles, Baltimore, and other U.S. cities yet to be visited, and will be published as an artist book and a touring museum exhibition in 2026. Hussain uses photography to explore the important relationship between identity, heritage, and displacement. His themes develop through long-term research articulating a visual language that challenges the prevailing concepts of multiculturalism. His work has been widely exhibited in the UK and North America and is in many collections including the Brooklyn Museum and the Scottish National Portrait Gallery.
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Music |
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7:00 PM, March 13 |
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Halo Rider The 443 Social Club
The 443 Social Club
443 Burnet Ave.,
Syracuse
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Theater |
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7:30 PM, March 13 |
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Preview: Murder on the Orient Express Syracuse Stage Robert Hupp, director
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Wherever Agatha Christie's famed detective Hercule Poirot goes, murder is never far behind! On his journey home from Istanbul to London on the luxurious Orient Express, an avalanche stops the train and Poirot must interrogate the parade of passengers, solve the murder, and save the reputation of the famous train before the killer strikes again. The ultimate whodunit! Adapted by Ken Ludwig.
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Thursday, March 14, 2024
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Art |
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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 14 |
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Implication Edgewood Gallery
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd.,
Syracuse
Abstract(ed) paintings by Penny Santy and Barb Vural, with glass marbles and pendants by Doug Williams and natural-elelments jewelry by Esperanza Tielbaard
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 14 |
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Unveiled Echoes: Works by Jalen Law Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
This visionary exhibition made up of 22 artworks harmonizes traditional art, digital innovation, and augmented reality (AR) to resurrect the forgotten narratives of Buffalo and the Erie Canal.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 14 |
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Sophia Chai: Character Space Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
In 1987, Chai immigrated to New York City from South Korea as a teenager without knowing English. Looking back, she has described that experience as feeling untethered to any internal compass that she could use to navigate her place in a new country with a new language. She visually explains these experiences to us by reinterpreting the Korean language's characters in photographs that enable us to see the contradictions of visual and verbal communication. Her images rest in the space between intellect and intuition. Chai's curiosity about the interior space of her tool — the large format camera, comparable to the interior space of a mouth — leads to the idea of the camera obscura, a darkened room with a small opening to the world.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 14 |
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Assembly: Syracuse University Voices on Art and Ecology Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"Assembly" features artworks made by Syracuse University faculty and recent alumni that contribute to emergent forms of ecological understanding. By placing these works in dialogue with objects from the Museum's collection, the installation considers a broad cultural evolution from an environmentalism of the sublime to an ecology of intimacy.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 14 |
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Art Wall Project: Nona Faustine, My Country Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The Art Wall Project features photographs and silk-screen prints made by Nona Faustine, a Brooklyn-based photographer. Faustine will consider the legacy of monuments in the United States and explore how, as she has described, "history is turned around. What is left out, what is included, what are the lies. And who gets celebrated." The Syracuse University Art Museum's new Art Wall initiative is dedicated to site-specific works by emerging and leading contemporary artists, commissioned annually.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 14 |
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David Edward Johnson: No Roses in December Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Based in Skaneateles, David Edward Johnson creates mixed media assemblages that address belief systems, the birth and death of the American Dream, and the effects of loss at a personal level. No Roses in December features a series of works in which Johnson explores his father's diagnosis of and descent into dementia. Johnson pairs his own photographs of bleak West Texas vistas and abandoned adobe dwellings with abstract mixed media painting, vintage papers, found objects, and other ephemera as a way to evoke fragmented shards of memory that mimic his father's state of mind. The series title references a poem by Geoffrey Anketell Studdert-Kennedy that was popularized in a speech about courage by Peter Pan author JM Barrie: "God gave us memory so that we might have roses in December." Without memories, we have no blooms in the chill of the December of life. David Edward Johnson: No Roses in December is part of the Everson CNY Artist Initiative, an exhibition program that celebrates the multi-faceted talents of regional artists.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 14 |
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Off the Rack Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
"Off the Rack" is the happy by-product of a major renovation of the Everson's on-site art storage. As hundreds of paintings and framed works are displaced from their racks while renovations take place, the public has an unprecedented opportunity to view objects that have been in deep storage for years, never-before-seen recent acquisitions, and some perennial favorites — all hung together salon-style in our exhibition galleries. This smorgasbord of paintings and works on paper showcases the breadth and depth of the Museum's collections and provides a glimpse into the world of collections management and care.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 14 |
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Pick and Mix Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Spring 2023 marks the beginning of a massive project that will convert an area adjacent to the ceramics gallery, which previously held paintings and prints, into dedicated ceramics storage. To accomplish this, we will close a portion of the ceramics gallery to make room for all the sorting and organizing that is to come. More than 200 paintings will come out of storage and hang salon-style in the Everson's upstairs galleries for the exhibition, Off the Rack. In the face of space limitations like these, most museums would offer you less art—but that is not the Everson way. Instead, we offer you "Pick & Mix," a cornucopia of five fabulous exhibitions under one banner. Pick & Mix highlights the vitality of the Museum's mission to gather works that document the ways that artists draw inspiration from their cultures, as well as the ways that artists give back. Ceramics are an ideal lens to examine the gender roles, politics, and material culture of any given moment. The Turner's Prize: Art Pottery from the Bill and Dorothy Paul Collection As the keeper of potter Adelaide Alsop Robineau's legacy, the Everson has a heavy investment in American Art Pottery of the early and mid-20th century. The Turner's Prize highlights the extraordinary collection of Athens, Georgia-based Bill Paul. Instead of following mainstream collectors and market trends, Paul and his late wife Dorothy spent decades gathering rare and exotic works from the Art Pottery era that highlight hand-turned forms and experimental glazes. Holding Space, Holding Pattern: Radical Decoration Strikes Back Holding Space, Holding Pattern springs from a moment in the 1970s when pattern became a political and cultural weapon in the hands of feminist artists like Judy Chicago and Miriam Shapiro. The Pattern and Decoration movement kicked open the doors for women to move past the Japanese-inspired stonewares and muscular abstract sculptures that dominated ceramics throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Natural Synthesis: African Stoneware from the Ramage Collection Natural Synthesis tells the story of a group of talented Nigerian potters who apprenticed at a colonial British pottery school led by Michael Cardew. Potters like Danlami Aliyu and Ladi Kwali blended British forms and firing techniques with motifs and functional elements from their own aesthetic heritage, then opened their own studios and handed down their legacy to their own students. Feelies Over a career that spanned more than seven decades, Arizona-based potter Rose Cabat perfected the Feelie, a matte-glazed pottery form that begs to be held and touched. Feelies brings together more than 100 of Cabat's pots in a show-stopping array highlighting her mastery of glaze and form. Cosmic Pipes: Pipes from the Clayton and Betty Bailey Collection The Everson's recently acquired collection of Cosmic Pipes from the late 1960s joins other clay pipes from Indigenous and European cultures in the permanent collection. Ceramist Clayton Bailey created these pipes along with friends Roy De Forest, David Gilhooly, and Maija Peeples-Bright in 1969. Legend has it that Bailey's wife, Betty, an artist in her own right, encouraged the group to make what she called "paranoid pipes" in the form of everyday objects like ice cream cones and flowers to disguise their purpose and blend into their surroundings.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 14 |
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Janet Biggs: Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In 2009 and 2010, Janet Biggs traveled to the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard with a crew of artists and scientists to document the changing Arctic landscape. As the subject of centuries of exploration, the Arctic was once seen as indifferent to human enterprise, so vast and inhospitable as to be immune to any imposition. Today, scientists expect climate change to leave Arctic summers ice-free as early as the next decade, and Svalbard, located halfway between Europe and the North Pole, finds itself at the epicenter of this metamorphoses. Using footage compiled on her voyages north, Biggs explores this history and the alarming consequences of human enterprise in three videos: Warning Shot (2016), Brightness All Around (2011), and Fade to White (2010). Shown together, these works are a clarion call for a heroic landscape that will completely transform within our lifetimes.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 14 |
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Sana Musasama: Returning to Ourselves Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Throughout her career, Queens-based artist Sana Musasama has drawn inspiration from travel and research into global cultures. "Returning to Ourselves" centers around a series of dolls that Musasama produced that mirror African-American topsy-turvy dolls containing a white doll whose skirt can be flipped up to transform it into a Black doll. Musasama uses this formal structure to juxtapose different figures drawn from the global Black diaspora. "Returning to Ourselves" is rounded out by a series of ceramic houses Musasama began early in her career but returned to during the pandemic to combat looming depression.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 14 |
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Crossing Space and Time: Figurative Ceramics by Jee Eun Lee Gandee Gallery
Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St.,
Fabius
Jee Eun Lee is a Professor of Art at Northern Kentucky University and received an MFA from Syracuse University and from Ewha Women's University in Seoul, Korea. Her ethereal figurative ceramics are inspired by nature, memory, and dreams. Through her artwork, Lee aims to communicate "a calm, serene moment of meditation during our chaotic times."
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Back to list |
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2:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 14 |
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Mahtab Hussain: Muslims in America: Syracuse Edition ArtRage Gallery
Price: Free ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave.,
Syracuse
British photographer Mahtab Hussain is creating a major new body of work about the Muslim experience in America. In October, ArtRage hosted Hussain for a two-week residency to photograph Syracuse's Muslim community; the resulting work will be shared in this exhibition. The work created in Syracuse will join his work from New York City, Los Angeles, Baltimore, and other U.S. cities yet to be visited, and will be published as an artist book and a touring museum exhibition in 2026. Hussain uses photography to explore the important relationship between identity, heritage, and displacement. His themes develop through long-term research articulating a visual language that challenges the prevailing concepts of multiculturalism. His work has been widely exhibited in the UK and North America and is in many collections including the Brooklyn Museum and the Scottish National Portrait Gallery.
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Music |
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6:30 PM, March 14 |
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Molly Hatchet Show Palace Theatre
Palace Theater
2384 James St.,
Syracuse
The Legendary southern rock band Molly Hatchet is celebrating the release of their new album with a world tour and you can see them at The Palace Theatre in Syracuse! With hits like "Flirtin' with Disaster" and "Dreams I'll Never See," Molly Hatchet has been entertaining audiences for over four decades with their signature sound and high-energy performances. Opening band (TBA) will go on at 6:30pm, Molly Hatchet will be going on at 8pm.
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7:00 PM, March 14 |
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Le Winston Band The 443 Social Club
The 443 Social Club
443 Burnet Ave.,
Syracuse
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Theater |
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7:00 PM, March 14 |
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The Dangerous Variety Acme Mystery Company
Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St.,
Syracuse
Welcome to 1961 and Club Polska where tonight local radio station WSKI will be recording their popular variety show The Hunky Dory Hour! You plan to laugh it up like always but the manager of the sausage factory where you work has mysteriously died and rumors flying around Kielbasi Park say it might be the notorious Pierogi Killer! But they're just rumors, right? You're not worried. The Impressive Sausage Company is sending their best man and if you can't trust a corporate fixer, who can you trust?
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7:30 PM, March 14 |
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Preview: Murder on the Orient Express Syracuse Stage Robert Hupp, director
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Wherever Agatha Christie's famed detective Hercule Poirot goes, murder is never far behind! On his journey home from Istanbul to London on the luxurious Orient Express, an avalanche stops the train and Poirot must interrogate the parade of passengers, solve the murder, and save the reputation of the famous train before the killer strikes again. The ultimate whodunit! Adapted by Ken Ludwig.
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Back to list |
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Friday, March 15, 2024
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Art |
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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 15 |
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Implication Edgewood Gallery
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd.,
Syracuse
Abstract(ed) paintings by Penny Santy and Barb Vural, with glass marbles and pendants by Doug Williams and natural-elelments jewelry by Esperanza Tielbaard
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 15 |
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Unveiled Echoes: Works by Jalen Law Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
This visionary exhibition made up of 22 artworks harmonizes traditional art, digital innovation, and augmented reality (AR) to resurrect the forgotten narratives of Buffalo and the Erie Canal.
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 15 |
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Sophia Chai: Character Space Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
In 1987, Chai immigrated to New York City from South Korea as a teenager without knowing English. Looking back, she has described that experience as feeling untethered to any internal compass that she could use to navigate her place in a new country with a new language. She visually explains these experiences to us by reinterpreting the Korean language's characters in photographs that enable us to see the contradictions of visual and verbal communication. Her images rest in the space between intellect and intuition. Chai's curiosity about the interior space of her tool — the large format camera, comparable to the interior space of a mouth — leads to the idea of the camera obscura, a darkened room with a small opening to the world.
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 15 |
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Art Wall Project: Nona Faustine, My Country Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The Art Wall Project features photographs and silk-screen prints made by Nona Faustine, a Brooklyn-based photographer. Faustine will consider the legacy of monuments in the United States and explore how, as she has described, "history is turned around. What is left out, what is included, what are the lies. And who gets celebrated." The Syracuse University Art Museum's new Art Wall initiative is dedicated to site-specific works by emerging and leading contemporary artists, commissioned annually.
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 15 |
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Assembly: Syracuse University Voices on Art and Ecology Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"Assembly" features artworks made by Syracuse University faculty and recent alumni that contribute to emergent forms of ecological understanding. By placing these works in dialogue with objects from the Museum's collection, the installation considers a broad cultural evolution from an environmentalism of the sublime to an ecology of intimacy.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 15 |
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David Edward Johnson: No Roses in December Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Based in Skaneateles, David Edward Johnson creates mixed media assemblages that address belief systems, the birth and death of the American Dream, and the effects of loss at a personal level. No Roses in December features a series of works in which Johnson explores his father's diagnosis of and descent into dementia. Johnson pairs his own photographs of bleak West Texas vistas and abandoned adobe dwellings with abstract mixed media painting, vintage papers, found objects, and other ephemera as a way to evoke fragmented shards of memory that mimic his father's state of mind. The series title references a poem by Geoffrey Anketell Studdert-Kennedy that was popularized in a speech about courage by Peter Pan author JM Barrie: "God gave us memory so that we might have roses in December." Without memories, we have no blooms in the chill of the December of life. David Edward Johnson: No Roses in December is part of the Everson CNY Artist Initiative, an exhibition program that celebrates the multi-faceted talents of regional artists.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 15 |
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Pick and Mix Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Spring 2023 marks the beginning of a massive project that will convert an area adjacent to the ceramics gallery, which previously held paintings and prints, into dedicated ceramics storage. To accomplish this, we will close a portion of the ceramics gallery to make room for all the sorting and organizing that is to come. More than 200 paintings will come out of storage and hang salon-style in the Everson's upstairs galleries for the exhibition, Off the Rack. In the face of space limitations like these, most museums would offer you less art—but that is not the Everson way. Instead, we offer you "Pick & Mix," a cornucopia of five fabulous exhibitions under one banner. Pick & Mix highlights the vitality of the Museum's mission to gather works that document the ways that artists draw inspiration from their cultures, as well as the ways that artists give back. Ceramics are an ideal lens to examine the gender roles, politics, and material culture of any given moment. The Turner's Prize: Art Pottery from the Bill and Dorothy Paul Collection As the keeper of potter Adelaide Alsop Robineau's legacy, the Everson has a heavy investment in American Art Pottery of the early and mid-20th century. The Turner's Prize highlights the extraordinary collection of Athens, Georgia-based Bill Paul. Instead of following mainstream collectors and market trends, Paul and his late wife Dorothy spent decades gathering rare and exotic works from the Art Pottery era that highlight hand-turned forms and experimental glazes. Holding Space, Holding Pattern: Radical Decoration Strikes Back Holding Space, Holding Pattern springs from a moment in the 1970s when pattern became a political and cultural weapon in the hands of feminist artists like Judy Chicago and Miriam Shapiro. The Pattern and Decoration movement kicked open the doors for women to move past the Japanese-inspired stonewares and muscular abstract sculptures that dominated ceramics throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Natural Synthesis: African Stoneware from the Ramage Collection Natural Synthesis tells the story of a group of talented Nigerian potters who apprenticed at a colonial British pottery school led by Michael Cardew. Potters like Danlami Aliyu and Ladi Kwali blended British forms and firing techniques with motifs and functional elements from their own aesthetic heritage, then opened their own studios and handed down their legacy to their own students. Feelies Over a career that spanned more than seven decades, Arizona-based potter Rose Cabat perfected the Feelie, a matte-glazed pottery form that begs to be held and touched. Feelies brings together more than 100 of Cabat's pots in a show-stopping array highlighting her mastery of glaze and form. Cosmic Pipes: Pipes from the Clayton and Betty Bailey Collection The Everson's recently acquired collection of Cosmic Pipes from the late 1960s joins other clay pipes from Indigenous and European cultures in the permanent collection. Ceramist Clayton Bailey created these pipes along with friends Roy De Forest, David Gilhooly, and Maija Peeples-Bright in 1969. Legend has it that Bailey's wife, Betty, an artist in her own right, encouraged the group to make what she called "paranoid pipes" in the form of everyday objects like ice cream cones and flowers to disguise their purpose and blend into their surroundings.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 15 |
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Off the Rack Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
"Off the Rack" is the happy by-product of a major renovation of the Everson's on-site art storage. As hundreds of paintings and framed works are displaced from their racks while renovations take place, the public has an unprecedented opportunity to view objects that have been in deep storage for years, never-before-seen recent acquisitions, and some perennial favorites — all hung together salon-style in our exhibition galleries. This smorgasbord of paintings and works on paper showcases the breadth and depth of the Museum's collections and provides a glimpse into the world of collections management and care.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 15 |
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Sana Musasama: Returning to Ourselves Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Throughout her career, Queens-based artist Sana Musasama has drawn inspiration from travel and research into global cultures. "Returning to Ourselves" centers around a series of dolls that Musasama produced that mirror African-American topsy-turvy dolls containing a white doll whose skirt can be flipped up to transform it into a Black doll. Musasama uses this formal structure to juxtapose different figures drawn from the global Black diaspora. "Returning to Ourselves" is rounded out by a series of ceramic houses Musasama began early in her career but returned to during the pandemic to combat looming depression.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 15 |
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Janet Biggs: Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In 2009 and 2010, Janet Biggs traveled to the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard with a crew of artists and scientists to document the changing Arctic landscape. As the subject of centuries of exploration, the Arctic was once seen as indifferent to human enterprise, so vast and inhospitable as to be immune to any imposition. Today, scientists expect climate change to leave Arctic summers ice-free as early as the next decade, and Svalbard, located halfway between Europe and the North Pole, finds itself at the epicenter of this metamorphoses. Using footage compiled on her voyages north, Biggs explores this history and the alarming consequences of human enterprise in three videos: Warning Shot (2016), Brightness All Around (2011), and Fade to White (2010). Shown together, these works are a clarion call for a heroic landscape that will completely transform within our lifetimes.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 15 |
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Crossing Space and Time: Figurative Ceramics by Jee Eun Lee Gandee Gallery
Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St.,
Fabius
Jee Eun Lee is a Professor of Art at Northern Kentucky University and received an MFA from Syracuse University and from Ewha Women's University in Seoul, Korea. Her ethereal figurative ceramics are inspired by nature, memory, and dreams. Through her artwork, Lee aims to communicate "a calm, serene moment of meditation during our chaotic times."
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Back to list |
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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, March 15 |
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Central NY Watercolor Society Exhibit Art in the Atrium
Price: Free City Hall Commons Atrium
201 East Washington St.,
Syracuse
The Central New York Watercolor Society was formed in February 1982 with fourteen charter members from the central New York State region. The Central New York Watercolor Society promotes the joy of watercolor painting through annual exhibitions, workshops, watercolor and water media demonstrations, and other educational outreach.
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Back to list |
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2:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 15 |
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Mahtab Hussain: Muslims in America: Syracuse Edition ArtRage Gallery
Price: Free ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave.,
Syracuse
British photographer Mahtab Hussain is creating a major new body of work about the Muslim experience in America. In October, ArtRage hosted Hussain for a two-week residency to photograph Syracuse's Muslim community; the resulting work will be shared in this exhibition. The work created in Syracuse will join his work from New York City, Los Angeles, Baltimore, and other U.S. cities yet to be visited, and will be published as an artist book and a touring museum exhibition in 2026. Hussain uses photography to explore the important relationship between identity, heritage, and displacement. His themes develop through long-term research articulating a visual language that challenges the prevailing concepts of multiculturalism. His work has been widely exhibited in the UK and North America and is in many collections including the Brooklyn Museum and the Scottish National Portrait Gallery.
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Back to list |
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Music |
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7:00 PM, March 15 |
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Will Hoge The 443 Social Club
The 443 Social Club
443 Burnet Ave.,
Syracuse
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Back to list |
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7:30 PM, March 15 |
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Humours of Whisky NYS Baroque
Price: $30 regular, $10 student/low income Pebble Hill Presbyterian Church
5299 Jamesville Rd.,
Dewitt
Baroque meets traditional! Historical fiddling from the British Isles, and music of O'Carolan, Purcell, and Geminiani. Back by popular demand, the Berwick Fiddle Consort, with Joëlla Becker, cello; Christa Patton, harp; Deborah Fox, lutes. The concert will be preceded by a pre-concert talk at 6:45 pm.
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8:00 PM, March 15 |
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Louise Mosrie Coombe Folkus Project
Price: $18 regular, $15 Folkus members May Memorial Unitarian Society
3800 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
"Like listening to Patty Griffin and Susan Tedeschi at the same time" Louise Mosrie Coombe grew up riding horses and writing poetry on a cattle farm in McEwen, Tennessee. She began writing songs after college, while working in TV/radio in Knoxville. In 2004, she moved back to the Nashville area and began co-writing with country, bluegrass, and folk artists and writers. Louise had a major creative breakthrough in 2007 when she had a fortuitous co-writing session with famed Americana producer and writer, Ray Kennedy—they wrote the song Doubling Back for a documentary film called "My Vietnam, Your Iraq" which was broadcast nationwide on PBS.
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Theater |
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7:30 PM, March 15 |
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Opening: Murder on the Orient Express Syracuse Stage Robert Hupp, director
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Wherever Agatha Christie's famed detective Hercule Poirot goes, murder is never far behind! On his journey home from Istanbul to London on the luxurious Orient Express, an avalanche stops the train and Poirot must interrogate the parade of passengers, solve the murder, and save the reputation of the famous train before the killer strikes again. The ultimate whodunit! Adapted by Ken Ludwig.
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Back to list |
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Saturday, March 16, 2024
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Art |
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10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, March 16 |
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Implication Edgewood Gallery
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd.,
Syracuse
Abstract(ed) paintings by Penny Santy and Barb Vural, with glass marbles and pendants by Doug Williams and natural-elelments jewelry by Esperanza Tielbaard
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 16 |
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Janet Biggs: Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In 2009 and 2010, Janet Biggs traveled to the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard with a crew of artists and scientists to document the changing Arctic landscape. As the subject of centuries of exploration, the Arctic was once seen as indifferent to human enterprise, so vast and inhospitable as to be immune to any imposition. Today, scientists expect climate change to leave Arctic summers ice-free as early as the next decade, and Svalbard, located halfway between Europe and the North Pole, finds itself at the epicenter of this metamorphoses. Using footage compiled on her voyages north, Biggs explores this history and the alarming consequences of human enterprise in three videos: Warning Shot (2016), Brightness All Around (2011), and Fade to White (2010). Shown together, these works are a clarion call for a heroic landscape that will completely transform within our lifetimes.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 16 |
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Sana Musasama: Returning to Ourselves Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Throughout her career, Queens-based artist Sana Musasama has drawn inspiration from travel and research into global cultures. "Returning to Ourselves" centers around a series of dolls that Musasama produced that mirror African-American topsy-turvy dolls containing a white doll whose skirt can be flipped up to transform it into a Black doll. Musasama uses this formal structure to juxtapose different figures drawn from the global Black diaspora. "Returning to Ourselves" is rounded out by a series of ceramic houses Musasama began early in her career but returned to during the pandemic to combat looming depression.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 16 |
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David Edward Johnson: No Roses in December Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Based in Skaneateles, David Edward Johnson creates mixed media assemblages that address belief systems, the birth and death of the American Dream, and the effects of loss at a personal level. No Roses in December features a series of works in which Johnson explores his father's diagnosis of and descent into dementia. Johnson pairs his own photographs of bleak West Texas vistas and abandoned adobe dwellings with abstract mixed media painting, vintage papers, found objects, and other ephemera as a way to evoke fragmented shards of memory that mimic his father's state of mind. The series title references a poem by Geoffrey Anketell Studdert-Kennedy that was popularized in a speech about courage by Peter Pan author JM Barrie: "God gave us memory so that we might have roses in December." Without memories, we have no blooms in the chill of the December of life. David Edward Johnson: No Roses in December is part of the Everson CNY Artist Initiative, an exhibition program that celebrates the multi-faceted talents of regional artists.
|
Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 16 |
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Off the Rack Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
"Off the Rack" is the happy by-product of a major renovation of the Everson's on-site art storage. As hundreds of paintings and framed works are displaced from their racks while renovations take place, the public has an unprecedented opportunity to view objects that have been in deep storage for years, never-before-seen recent acquisitions, and some perennial favorites — all hung together salon-style in our exhibition galleries. This smorgasbord of paintings and works on paper showcases the breadth and depth of the Museum's collections and provides a glimpse into the world of collections management and care.
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Back to list |
|
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|
10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 16 |
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Pick and Mix Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Spring 2023 marks the beginning of a massive project that will convert an area adjacent to the ceramics gallery, which previously held paintings and prints, into dedicated ceramics storage. To accomplish this, we will close a portion of the ceramics gallery to make room for all the sorting and organizing that is to come. More than 200 paintings will come out of storage and hang salon-style in the Everson's upstairs galleries for the exhibition, Off the Rack. In the face of space limitations like these, most museums would offer you less art—but that is not the Everson way. Instead, we offer you "Pick & Mix," a cornucopia of five fabulous exhibitions under one banner. Pick & Mix highlights the vitality of the Museum's mission to gather works that document the ways that artists draw inspiration from their cultures, as well as the ways that artists give back. Ceramics are an ideal lens to examine the gender roles, politics, and material culture of any given moment. The Turner's Prize: Art Pottery from the Bill and Dorothy Paul Collection As the keeper of potter Adelaide Alsop Robineau's legacy, the Everson has a heavy investment in American Art Pottery of the early and mid-20th century. The Turner's Prize highlights the extraordinary collection of Athens, Georgia-based Bill Paul. Instead of following mainstream collectors and market trends, Paul and his late wife Dorothy spent decades gathering rare and exotic works from the Art Pottery era that highlight hand-turned forms and experimental glazes. Holding Space, Holding Pattern: Radical Decoration Strikes Back Holding Space, Holding Pattern springs from a moment in the 1970s when pattern became a political and cultural weapon in the hands of feminist artists like Judy Chicago and Miriam Shapiro. The Pattern and Decoration movement kicked open the doors for women to move past the Japanese-inspired stonewares and muscular abstract sculptures that dominated ceramics throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Natural Synthesis: African Stoneware from the Ramage Collection Natural Synthesis tells the story of a group of talented Nigerian potters who apprenticed at a colonial British pottery school led by Michael Cardew. Potters like Danlami Aliyu and Ladi Kwali blended British forms and firing techniques with motifs and functional elements from their own aesthetic heritage, then opened their own studios and handed down their legacy to their own students. Feelies Over a career that spanned more than seven decades, Arizona-based potter Rose Cabat perfected the Feelie, a matte-glazed pottery form that begs to be held and touched. Feelies brings together more than 100 of Cabat's pots in a show-stopping array highlighting her mastery of glaze and form. Cosmic Pipes: Pipes from the Clayton and Betty Bailey Collection The Everson's recently acquired collection of Cosmic Pipes from the late 1960s joins other clay pipes from Indigenous and European cultures in the permanent collection. Ceramist Clayton Bailey created these pipes along with friends Roy De Forest, David Gilhooly, and Maija Peeples-Bright in 1969. Legend has it that Bailey's wife, Betty, an artist in her own right, encouraged the group to make what she called "paranoid pipes" in the form of everyday objects like ice cream cones and flowers to disguise their purpose and blend into their surroundings.
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Back to list |
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|
11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 16 |
|
|
|
Crossing Space and Time: Figurative Ceramics by Jee Eun Lee Gandee Gallery
Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St.,
Fabius
Jee Eun Lee is a Professor of Art at Northern Kentucky University and received an MFA from Syracuse University and from Ewha Women's University in Seoul, Korea. Her ethereal figurative ceramics are inspired by nature, memory, and dreams. Through her artwork, Lee aims to communicate "a calm, serene moment of meditation during our chaotic times."
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Back to list |
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11:30 AM - 3:30 PM, March 16 |
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Unveiled Echoes: Works by Jalen Law Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
This visionary exhibition made up of 22 artworks harmonizes traditional art, digital innovation, and augmented reality (AR) to resurrect the forgotten narratives of Buffalo and the Erie Canal.
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Back to list |
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 16 |
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Central NY Watercolor Society Exhibit Art in the Atrium
Price: Free City Hall Commons Atrium
201 East Washington St.,
Syracuse
The Central New York Watercolor Society was formed in February 1982 with fourteen charter members from the central New York State region. The Central New York Watercolor Society promotes the joy of watercolor painting through annual exhibitions, workshops, watercolor and water media demonstrations, and other educational outreach.
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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 16 |
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Mahtab Hussain: Muslims in America: Syracuse Edition ArtRage Gallery
Price: Free ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave.,
Syracuse
British photographer Mahtab Hussain is creating a major new body of work about the Muslim experience in America. In October, ArtRage hosted Hussain for a two-week residency to photograph Syracuse's Muslim community; the resulting work will be shared in this exhibition. The work created in Syracuse will join his work from New York City, Los Angeles, Baltimore, and other U.S. cities yet to be visited, and will be published as an artist book and a touring museum exhibition in 2026. Hussain uses photography to explore the important relationship between identity, heritage, and displacement. His themes develop through long-term research articulating a visual language that challenges the prevailing concepts of multiculturalism. His work has been widely exhibited in the UK and North America and is in many collections including the Brooklyn Museum and the Scottish National Portrait Gallery.
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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 16 |
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Assembly: Syracuse University Voices on Art and Ecology Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"Assembly" features artworks made by Syracuse University faculty and recent alumni that contribute to emergent forms of ecological understanding. By placing these works in dialogue with objects from the Museum's collection, the installation considers a broad cultural evolution from an environmentalism of the sublime to an ecology of intimacy.
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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 16 |
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Art Wall Project: Nona Faustine, My Country Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The Art Wall Project features photographs and silk-screen prints made by Nona Faustine, a Brooklyn-based photographer. Faustine will consider the legacy of monuments in the United States and explore how, as she has described, "history is turned around. What is left out, what is included, what are the lies. And who gets celebrated." The Syracuse University Art Museum's new Art Wall initiative is dedicated to site-specific works by emerging and leading contemporary artists, commissioned annually.
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1:00 PM - 9:00 PM, March 16 |
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Sophia Chai: Character Space Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
In 1987, Chai immigrated to New York City from South Korea as a teenager without knowing English. Looking back, she has described that experience as feeling untethered to any internal compass that she could use to navigate her place in a new country with a new language. She visually explains these experiences to us by reinterpreting the Korean language's characters in photographs that enable us to see the contradictions of visual and verbal communication. Her images rest in the space between intellect and intuition. Chai's curiosity about the interior space of her tool — the large format camera, comparable to the interior space of a mouth — leads to the idea of the camera obscura, a darkened room with a small opening to the world.
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Music |
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7:00 PM, March 16 |
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Alice Howe and Freebo The 443 Social Club
The 443 Social Club
443 Burnet Ave.,
Syracuse
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Theater |
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2:00 PM, March 16 |
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Murder on the Orient Express Syracuse Stage Robert Hupp, director
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Wherever Agatha Christie's famed detective Hercule Poirot goes, murder is never far behind! On his journey home from Istanbul to London on the luxurious Orient Express, an avalanche stops the train and Poirot must interrogate the parade of passengers, solve the murder, and save the reputation of the famous train before the killer strikes again. The ultimate whodunit! Adapted by Ken Ludwig.
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7:30 PM, March 16 |
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Murder on the Orient Express Syracuse Stage Robert Hupp, director
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Wherever Agatha Christie's famed detective Hercule Poirot goes, murder is never far behind! On his journey home from Istanbul to London on the luxurious Orient Express, an avalanche stops the train and Poirot must interrogate the parade of passengers, solve the murder, and save the reputation of the famous train before the killer strikes again. The ultimate whodunit! Adapted by Ken Ludwig.
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Sunday, March 17, 2024
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Art |
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 17 |
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David Edward Johnson: No Roses in December Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Based in Skaneateles, David Edward Johnson creates mixed media assemblages that address belief systems, the birth and death of the American Dream, and the effects of loss at a personal level. No Roses in December features a series of works in which Johnson explores his father's diagnosis of and descent into dementia. Johnson pairs his own photographs of bleak West Texas vistas and abandoned adobe dwellings with abstract mixed media painting, vintage papers, found objects, and other ephemera as a way to evoke fragmented shards of memory that mimic his father's state of mind. The series title references a poem by Geoffrey Anketell Studdert-Kennedy that was popularized in a speech about courage by Peter Pan author JM Barrie: "God gave us memory so that we might have roses in December." Without memories, we have no blooms in the chill of the December of life. David Edward Johnson: No Roses in December is part of the Everson CNY Artist Initiative, an exhibition program that celebrates the multi-faceted talents of regional artists.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 17 |
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Pick and Mix Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Spring 2023 marks the beginning of a massive project that will convert an area adjacent to the ceramics gallery, which previously held paintings and prints, into dedicated ceramics storage. To accomplish this, we will close a portion of the ceramics gallery to make room for all the sorting and organizing that is to come. More than 200 paintings will come out of storage and hang salon-style in the Everson's upstairs galleries for the exhibition, Off the Rack. In the face of space limitations like these, most museums would offer you less art—but that is not the Everson way. Instead, we offer you "Pick & Mix," a cornucopia of five fabulous exhibitions under one banner. Pick & Mix highlights the vitality of the Museum's mission to gather works that document the ways that artists draw inspiration from their cultures, as well as the ways that artists give back. Ceramics are an ideal lens to examine the gender roles, politics, and material culture of any given moment. The Turner's Prize: Art Pottery from the Bill and Dorothy Paul Collection As the keeper of potter Adelaide Alsop Robineau's legacy, the Everson has a heavy investment in American Art Pottery of the early and mid-20th century. The Turner's Prize highlights the extraordinary collection of Athens, Georgia-based Bill Paul. Instead of following mainstream collectors and market trends, Paul and his late wife Dorothy spent decades gathering rare and exotic works from the Art Pottery era that highlight hand-turned forms and experimental glazes. Holding Space, Holding Pattern: Radical Decoration Strikes Back Holding Space, Holding Pattern springs from a moment in the 1970s when pattern became a political and cultural weapon in the hands of feminist artists like Judy Chicago and Miriam Shapiro. The Pattern and Decoration movement kicked open the doors for women to move past the Japanese-inspired stonewares and muscular abstract sculptures that dominated ceramics throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Natural Synthesis: African Stoneware from the Ramage Collection Natural Synthesis tells the story of a group of talented Nigerian potters who apprenticed at a colonial British pottery school led by Michael Cardew. Potters like Danlami Aliyu and Ladi Kwali blended British forms and firing techniques with motifs and functional elements from their own aesthetic heritage, then opened their own studios and handed down their legacy to their own students. Feelies Over a career that spanned more than seven decades, Arizona-based potter Rose Cabat perfected the Feelie, a matte-glazed pottery form that begs to be held and touched. Feelies brings together more than 100 of Cabat's pots in a show-stopping array highlighting her mastery of glaze and form. Cosmic Pipes: Pipes from the Clayton and Betty Bailey Collection The Everson's recently acquired collection of Cosmic Pipes from the late 1960s joins other clay pipes from Indigenous and European cultures in the permanent collection. Ceramist Clayton Bailey created these pipes along with friends Roy De Forest, David Gilhooly, and Maija Peeples-Bright in 1969. Legend has it that Bailey's wife, Betty, an artist in her own right, encouraged the group to make what she called "paranoid pipes" in the form of everyday objects like ice cream cones and flowers to disguise their purpose and blend into their surroundings.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 17 |
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Off the Rack Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
"Off the Rack" is the happy by-product of a major renovation of the Everson's on-site art storage. As hundreds of paintings and framed works are displaced from their racks while renovations take place, the public has an unprecedented opportunity to view objects that have been in deep storage for years, never-before-seen recent acquisitions, and some perennial favorites — all hung together salon-style in our exhibition galleries. This smorgasbord of paintings and works on paper showcases the breadth and depth of the Museum's collections and provides a glimpse into the world of collections management and care.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 17 |
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Sana Musasama: Returning to Ourselves Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Throughout her career, Queens-based artist Sana Musasama has drawn inspiration from travel and research into global cultures. "Returning to Ourselves" centers around a series of dolls that Musasama produced that mirror African-American topsy-turvy dolls containing a white doll whose skirt can be flipped up to transform it into a Black doll. Musasama uses this formal structure to juxtapose different figures drawn from the global Black diaspora. "Returning to Ourselves" is rounded out by a series of ceramic houses Musasama began early in her career but returned to during the pandemic to combat looming depression.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 17 |
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Janet Biggs: Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In 2009 and 2010, Janet Biggs traveled to the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard with a crew of artists and scientists to document the changing Arctic landscape. As the subject of centuries of exploration, the Arctic was once seen as indifferent to human enterprise, so vast and inhospitable as to be immune to any imposition. Today, scientists expect climate change to leave Arctic summers ice-free as early as the next decade, and Svalbard, located halfway between Europe and the North Pole, finds itself at the epicenter of this metamorphoses. Using footage compiled on her voyages north, Biggs explores this history and the alarming consequences of human enterprise in three videos: Warning Shot (2016), Brightness All Around (2011), and Fade to White (2010). Shown together, these works are a clarion call for a heroic landscape that will completely transform within our lifetimes.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 17 |
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Crossing Space and Time: Figurative Ceramics by Jee Eun Lee Gandee Gallery
Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St.,
Fabius
Jee Eun Lee is a Professor of Art at Northern Kentucky University and received an MFA from Syracuse University and from Ewha Women's University in Seoul, Korea. Her ethereal figurative ceramics are inspired by nature, memory, and dreams. Through her artwork, Lee aims to communicate "a calm, serene moment of meditation during our chaotic times."
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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 17 |
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Central NY Watercolor Society Exhibit Art in the Atrium
Price: Free City Hall Commons Atrium
201 East Washington St.,
Syracuse
The Central New York Watercolor Society was formed in February 1982 with fourteen charter members from the central New York State region. The Central New York Watercolor Society promotes the joy of watercolor painting through annual exhibitions, workshops, watercolor and water media demonstrations, and other educational outreach.
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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 17 |
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Art Wall Project: Nona Faustine, My Country Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The Art Wall Project features photographs and silk-screen prints made by Nona Faustine, a Brooklyn-based photographer. Faustine will consider the legacy of monuments in the United States and explore how, as she has described, "history is turned around. What is left out, what is included, what are the lies. And who gets celebrated." The Syracuse University Art Museum's new Art Wall initiative is dedicated to site-specific works by emerging and leading contemporary artists, commissioned annually.
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Back to list |
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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 17 |
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Assembly: Syracuse University Voices on Art and Ecology Syracuse University Art Museum
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"Assembly" features artworks made by Syracuse University faculty and recent alumni that contribute to emergent forms of ecological understanding. By placing these works in dialogue with objects from the Museum's collection, the installation considers a broad cultural evolution from an environmentalism of the sublime to an ecology of intimacy.
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1:00 PM - 9:00 PM, March 17 |
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Sophia Chai: Character Space Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
In 1987, Chai immigrated to New York City from South Korea as a teenager without knowing English. Looking back, she has described that experience as feeling untethered to any internal compass that she could use to navigate her place in a new country with a new language. She visually explains these experiences to us by reinterpreting the Korean language's characters in photographs that enable us to see the contradictions of visual and verbal communication. Her images rest in the space between intellect and intuition. Chai's curiosity about the interior space of her tool — the large format camera, comparable to the interior space of a mouth — leads to the idea of the camera obscura, a darkened room with a small opening to the world.
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Music |
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3:00 PM, March 17 |
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Epic Grandeur Onondaga Civic Symphony Orchestra Featuring Gregory Wood, cello
Price: Suggested donation: $15 regular, $10 seniors, $5 college students, children under 18 free St. Cecilia's Church
1001 Woods Rd.,
Syracuse
Rossini L'italiana in Algeri Overture Elgar Cello Concerto Respighi Pines of Rome
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4:00 PM, March 17 |
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March Classics Concert MasterWorks Chorale Micheal Kringer, conductor
First Presbyterian Church of Skaneateles
97 E. Genesee St.,
Skaneateles
Dan Forrest's transcendent 5-movement Requiem for the Living (2013) is inspired by influences across millennia, from the Old Testament to Hubble Space Telescope images. Performed with 20-piece orchestra.
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4:00 PM, March 17 |
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Symphonic Motets Schola Cantorum of Syracuse Barry Torres, conductor
Price: $20 regular, $15 seniors, $10 under age 30, $5 students, children free Pebble Hill Presbyterian Church
5299 Jamesville Rd.,
Dewitt
Monumental multi-movement Renaissance motets. Stolzer Erzurne dich nicht Byrd Infelix ego Josquin Planxit autem David Lasso Domine exaudi orationem meam
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6:00 PM, March 17 |
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Liz Longley The 443 Social Club
The 443 Social Club
443 Burnet Ave.,
Syracuse
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Theater |
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2:00 PM, March 17 |
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Murder on the Orient Express Syracuse Stage Robert Hupp, director
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Wherever Agatha Christie's famed detective Hercule Poirot goes, murder is never far behind! On his journey home from Istanbul to London on the luxurious Orient Express, an avalanche stops the train and Poirot must interrogate the parade of passengers, solve the murder, and save the reputation of the famous train before the killer strikes again. The ultimate whodunit! Adapted by Ken Ludwig.
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Back to list |
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7:30 PM, March 17 |
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Murder on the Orient Express Syracuse Stage Robert Hupp, director
Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Wherever Agatha Christie's famed detective Hercule Poirot goes, murder is never far behind! On his journey home from Istanbul to London on the luxurious Orient Express, an avalanche stops the train and Poirot must interrogate the parade of passengers, solve the murder, and save the reputation of the famous train before the killer strikes again. The ultimate whodunit! Adapted by Ken Ludwig.
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Back to list |
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Monday, March 18, 2024
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Art |
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 18 |
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Sophia Chai: Character Space Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
In 1987, Chai immigrated to New York City from South Korea as a teenager without knowing English. Looking back, she has described that experience as feeling untethered to any internal compass that she could use to navigate her place in a new country with a new language. She visually explains these experiences to us by reinterpreting the Korean language's characters in photographs that enable us to see the contradictions of visual and verbal communication. Her images rest in the space between intellect and intuition. Chai's curiosity about the interior space of her tool — the large format camera, comparable to the interior space of a mouth — leads to the idea of the camera obscura, a darkened room with a small opening to the world.
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, March 18 |
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Highlights from the Light Work Collection: Dawoud Bey Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Curated from our collection, Light Work is pleased to present a selection from two of Dawoud Bey's photographic projects: An American Project and Embracing Eatonville. Black-and-white images from An American Project, made in Syracuse in 1985 during his artist residency, chronicle the community and history of the city. Embracing Eatonville was a photographic survey of Eatonville, FL — the oldest Black-incorporated town in the United States — that featured work by Dawoud Bey, Lonnie Graham, Carrie Mae Weems, and Deborah Willis, and was exhibited at Light Work in 2003. Bey made color photographs of high school students combining their portraits with text sharing personal hopes, fears, and dreams.
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Film |
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7:00 PM, March 18 |
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The Devil and Miss Jones (1941) Syracuse Cinephile Society
Price: $4 non-members, $3.50 members Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St.,
Syracuse
Cast: Jean Arthur, Charles Coburn, Robert Cummings, Spring Byington, Edmund Gwenn, S.Z. Sakall, William Demarest Director: Sam Wood We begin our season with this fun comedy classic in which the wealthy owner of a large department store (Coburn) goes undercover and begins working there as a sales clerk to investigate disgruntled employee complaints. A real treat with an excellent cast! Plus Thelma Todd and Patsy Kelly in their 1934 comedy short Babes in the Goods.
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Next week >>>
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