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Events for Wednesday, September 20, 2017

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Wonder Women: Fourteen Directions in Art Across CNY Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery (Read a review!)

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Nature Observed Edgewood Gallery (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-5:00 PM In Full Color: Mixed Media Collage by Shannon Crandall Gallery 54

10:00 AM-6:00 PM 2017 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, Stephanie Mercedes Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Suné Woods: To Sleep With Terra Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-4:00 PM The War to End All Wars: Onondaga County Encounters World War I Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-4:00 PM All That Jazz: 35 Years of Syracuse Jazz Fest Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Meant to Be Shared: Selections from the Arthur Ross Collection of European Prints at Yale University Art Gallery Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM In Gratitude: The Museum Project Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-2:00 PM Jazz at the Plaza: Dave Solazzo CNY Jazz Arts Foundation

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Focus Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Arise Unique Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM That Day Now: Shadows Cast by Hiroshima Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Monumental Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM TR Ericsson: I Was Born To Bring You Into This World Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Suné Woods: When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Pedro Roth: Aleph Point of Contact Gallery

12:15 PM Women on the Edge Civic Morning Musicals, featuring Elizabeth Bouk, mezzo-soprano; Rami Sarieddine, piano

12:15 PM Lunchtime Lecture: Meant to Be Shared: Spotlight on Honoré Daumier Syracuse University Art Museum

2:00 PM-7:00 PM Seen and Heard: Embracing Our Past, Empowering Our Future ArtRage Gallery (Read a review!)

6:30 PM "What If...?" Film Series: City of Trees Gifford Foundation

7:00 PM The Little Dog Laughed Redhouse (Read a review!)

7:30 PM Preview: The Three Musketeers Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

Events for Thursday, September 21, 2017

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Wonder Women: Fourteen Directions in Art Across CNY Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery (Read a review!)

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Nature Observed Edgewood Gallery (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-5:00 PM In Full Color: Mixed Media Collage by Shannon Crandall Gallery 54

10:00 AM-6:00 PM 2017 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, Stephanie Mercedes Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Suné Woods: To Sleep With Terra Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-4:00 PM All That Jazz: 35 Years of Syracuse Jazz Fest Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-4:00 PM The War to End All Wars: Onondaga County Encounters World War I Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Meant to Be Shared: Selections from the Arthur Ross Collection of European Prints at Yale University Art Gallery Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-8:00 PM In Gratitude: The Museum Project Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-8:00 PM Monumental Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-8:00 PM That Day Now: Shadows Cast by Hiroshima Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-8:00 PM Arise Unique Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-8:00 PM Focus Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-8:00 PM Suné Woods: When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-8:00 PM TR Ericsson: I Was Born To Bring You Into This World Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Pedro Roth: Aleph Point of Contact Gallery

2:00 PM-7:00 PM Seen and Heard: Embracing Our Past, Empowering Our Future ArtRage Gallery (Read a review!)

6:45 PM Montana Smith and the Curse of the Golden Crocodile Acme Mystery Company

7:00 PM The Little Dog Laughed Redhouse (Read a review!)

7:30 PM Preview: The Three Musketeers Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

8:00 PM A Little Night Music Central New York Playhouse (Read a review!)

Events for Friday, September 22, 2017

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Wonder Women: Fourteen Directions in Art Across CNY Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery (Read a review!)

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Nature Observed Edgewood Gallery (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-6:00 PM In Full Color: Mixed Media Collage by Shannon Crandall Gallery 54

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Suné Woods: To Sleep With Terra Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM 2017 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, Stephanie Mercedes Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-4:00 PM The War to End All Wars: Onondaga County Encounters World War I Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-4:00 PM All That Jazz: 35 Years of Syracuse Jazz Fest Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Meant to Be Shared: Selections from the Arthur Ross Collection of European Prints at Yale University Art Gallery Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM In Gratitude: The Museum Project Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Focus Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Arise Unique Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM That Day Now: Shadows Cast by Hiroshima Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Monumental Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM TR Ericsson: I Was Born To Bring You Into This World Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Suné Woods: When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Pedro Roth: Aleph Point of Contact Gallery

2:00 PM-7:00 PM Seen and Heard: Embracing Our Past, Empowering Our Future ArtRage Gallery (Read a review!)

5:00 PM-8:00 PM Opening: Fire Marks Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

7:00 PM Poet Chen Chen Downtown Writer's Center

7:00 PM An Intimate Evening with SCB Syracuse City Ballet

8:00 PM Noises Off Baldwinsville Theatre Guild

8:00 PM A Little Night Music Central New York Playhouse (Read a review!)

8:00 PM An Act of God Rarely Done Productions (Read a review!)

8:00 PM The Little Dog Laughed Redhouse (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Masterworks Series: From the New World Syracuse Orchestra (formerly Symphoria), featuring Anne Akiko Meyers, violin

8:00 PM Opening: The Three Musketeers Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

Events for Saturday, September 23, 2017

9:00 AM-1:00 PM Fire Marks Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Suné Woods: When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM TR Ericsson: I Was Born To Bring You Into This World Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Monumental Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM That Day Now: Shadows Cast by Hiroshima Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Arise Unique Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Focus Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-6:00 PM In Full Color: Mixed Media Collage by Shannon Crandall Gallery 54

11:00 AM-4:00 PM All That Jazz: 35 Years of Syracuse Jazz Fest Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:00 PM The War to End All Wars: Onondaga County Encounters World War I Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Meant to Be Shared: Selections from the Arthur Ross Collection of European Prints at Yale University Art Gallery Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM In Gratitude: The Museum Project Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-4:00 PM Seen and Heard: Embracing Our Past, Empowering Our Future ArtRage Gallery (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Pedro Roth: Aleph Point of Contact Gallery

12:30 PM Snow White Magic Circle Children's Theatre

3:00 PM The Three Musketeers Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

7:30 PM The Atta Boys Steeple Coffee House

8:00 PM Noises Off Baldwinsville Theatre Guild

8:00 PM A Little Night Music Central New York Playhouse (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Paul McCartney (Read a review!)

8:00 PM An Act of God Rarely Done Productions (Read a review!)

8:00 PM The Little Dog Laughed Redhouse (Read a review!)

8:00 PM The Three Musketeers Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

Events for Sunday, September 24, 2017

10:00 AM-5:00 PM In Full Color: Mixed Media Collage by Shannon Crandall Gallery 54

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Suné Woods: To Sleep With Terra Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM 2017 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, Stephanie Mercedes Light Work Gallery

11:00 AM-4:00 PM The War to End All Wars: Onondaga County Encounters World War I Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:00 PM All That Jazz: 35 Years of Syracuse Jazz Fest Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Meant to Be Shared: Selections from the Arthur Ross Collection of European Prints at Yale University Art Gallery Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM In Gratitude: The Museum Project Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Focus Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Arise Unique Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM That Day Now: Shadows Cast by Hiroshima Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Monumental Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM TR Ericsson: I Was Born To Bring You Into This World Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Suné Woods: When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter Everson Museum of Art

2:00 PM-5:00 PM Jazz on Tap: Ronnie Leigh & Marcus Curry CNY Jazz Arts Foundation

2:00 PM CMM In Recital Live! Affairs of the Heart Civic Morning Musicals, featuring The Finger Lakes Trio: Sonya Stith Williams, violin; Heidi Hoffman, cello; Robert Auler, piano

2:00 PM The Little Dog Laughed Redhouse (Read a review!)

2:00 PM The Three Musketeers Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

4:00 PM Reason Gone Mad: Hausmann String Quartet Malmgren Concert Series

4:30 PM Honors Youth Wind Ensemble and Symphonic Band Concert Syracuse University Setnor School of Music

7:00 PM The Three Musketeers Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

Events for Monday, September 25, 2017

10:00 AM-5:00 PM In Full Color: Mixed Media Collage by Shannon Crandall Gallery 54

10:00 AM-6:00 PM 2017 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, Stephanie Mercedes Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Suné Woods: To Sleep With Terra Light Work Gallery

7:30 PM The Mayor of Hell (1933) Syracuse Cinephile Society

Events for Tuesday, September 26, 2017

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Fire Marks Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM In Full Color: Mixed Media Collage by Shannon Crandall Gallery 54

10:00 AM-6:00 PM 2017 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, Stephanie Mercedes Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Suné Woods: To Sleep With Terra Light Work Gallery

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM In Gratitude: The Museum Project Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Meant to Be Shared: Selections from the Arthur Ross Collection of European Prints at Yale University Art Gallery Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Pedro Roth: Aleph Point of Contact Gallery

7:00 PM Poetry and Belonging: A Reading by Poets Janice Harrington and Oliver de la Paz Downtown Writer's Center

7:30 PM The Three Musketeers Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Mbira Music Syracuse University Setnor School of Music

Events for Wednesday, September 27, 2017

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Fire Marks Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM In Full Color: Mixed Media Collage by Shannon Crandall Gallery 54

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Suné Woods: To Sleep With Terra Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM 2017 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, Stephanie Mercedes Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-4:00 PM All That Jazz: 35 Years of Syracuse Jazz Fest Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-4:00 PM The War to End All Wars: Onondaga County Encounters World War I Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Meant to Be Shared: Selections from the Arthur Ross Collection of European Prints at Yale University Art Gallery Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM In Gratitude: The Museum Project Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-2:00 PM Jazz at the Plaza: LuBossa CNY Jazz Arts Foundation

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Monumental Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM That Day Now: Shadows Cast by Hiroshima Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Arise Unique Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Focus Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Suné Woods: When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM TR Ericsson: I Was Born To Bring You Into This World Everson Museum of Art (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Pedro Roth: Aleph Point of Contact Gallery

12:15 PM Beloved Opera Arias ... and more! Civic Morning Musicals, featuring Phil Eisenman, bass; Maryna Mazhukhova, piano

2:00 PM-7:00 PM Seen and Heard: Embracing Our Past, Empowering Our Future ArtRage Gallery (Read a review!)

2:00 PM The Three Musketeers Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

7:30 PM Russian Grand Ballet's Swan Lake

7:30 PM The Three Musketeers Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

Next week  >>>

Wednesday, September 20, 2017


Art
 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 20



Wonder Women: Fourteen Directions in Art Across CNY
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

Featuring recent works by Constance Avery, Diana Bukowski, Arianna Coursen, Erin Davies, Renee Fair, Karmin Schafer Hansen, Prudence Haze, Eva M. Hunter, Caroline A. Locatelli, Alexandra Mailtais, Maria Janina Rizzo, Allison Sarenski, Melissa Zawacki, and Sarah Allam.

The exhibit was co-curated by Sofía Márquez Paniagua from the Below 40 Public Arts Task Force and Steve Nyland, the Tech Garden's Artist in Residence.

Read a review!


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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, September 20



Nature Observed
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Bob Ripley: Finely detailed watercolors depicting imagery where people and nature meet
Alan Hart: Photo-realistic acrylic wildlife paintings on illustration board
Steve Fland: Detailed wood sculpture of birds involving their habitat or behavior
Judi Witkin: Nature-themed beaded jewelry

Read a review!


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 20



In Full Color: Mixed Media Collage by Shannon Crandall
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

Twenty years ago, Shannon Crandall began experimenting with acrylic and collage. She loved the intuitive nature of the art. Today she lets the various elements reveal themselves as she creates many layers of acrylic paint and collage.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 20



2017 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, Stephanie Mercedes
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

Light Work is pleased to announce a group exhibition of works by recipients of the 43rd annual Light Work Grants in Photography. The 2017 recipients are Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, and Stephanie Mercedes. The Light Work Grants in Photography program is part of Light Work's ongoing effort to provide support and encouragement to artists working in photography.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 20



Suné Woods: To Sleep With Terra
Light Work Gallery

Price: free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

In the exhibition, "To Sleep with Terra," Los Angeles-based artist Suné Woods uses a variety of source material from books, magazines, and news media to create three-dimensional collages and video. Together, this body of work challenges our notions of photography and explores the terror of a technological society spinning out of control. Woods created this work in 2015 during a period of extreme racial violence, police brutality, and mass shootings.

Woods says 2015 was no more violent than previous years, but what shifted was growing documentation by citizen journalists that undermined the public's denial and disbelief. For the artist, the process of tearing, crumpling, layering, and recombining photographic imagery was "the best way for me to articulate the complicated sensations that were arising while processing these streamed documentations of violence, ecological disaster, and a desire to understand more deeply how seemingly disparate things relate when they are mashed up in a visual conversation."

This mash-up of imagery is reminiscent of how we consume information every day?sometimes minute by minute?as we scroll through a frenetic onslaught of global disasters, degradation, and violence.

Suné Woods' collage work makes art of the ordinary ephemera in our daily lives and clarifies and reveals a truth just beneath its surface. Unafraid to confront us with the brutality that surrounds us, her work only grows in relevance and urgency.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 20



The War to End All Wars: Onondaga County Encounters World War I
Onondaga Historical Association

Price: Free
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the United States' entry into World War I, Onondaga Historical Association will present an exhibit on Onondaga County's role in the Great War.

The exhibit will feature photographs, posters, uniforms, gas masks, helmets and other military accoutrements, war souvenirs, home-front conservation items, letters, diaries, and other archival material and objects. These items will illustrate the impact World War I had on Onondaga County and the world at large. The exhibit will focus on the people, places, and events at home and abroad including military personnel and units, the nurse corps, Camp Syracuse, food conservation, the Split Rock munitions explosion, and the Spanish Influenza epidemic.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 20



All That Jazz: 35 Years of Syracuse Jazz Fest
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Recognizing 35 successful years of Syracuse Jazz Fest, OHA offers a visual exhibit on the history of Jazz Fest. OHA's visual exhibit will feature highlights of the musical festival, from the different venues, to music industry superstars and jazz legends, as well as some of our own homegrown musical talent.

With help from Jazz Fest founder and executive director, Frank Malfitano, the exhibit will be a walk down memory lane for some die-hard local music fans: Dizzy Gillespie's bulging cheeks while playing trumpet, Jean Luc Ponty's electrifying violin, B.B. King's guitar Lucille, Buckwheat Zydeco's accordion, Wynton Marsalis' big band style orchestra, or Kenny G's saxophone; or maybe singing to the songs of Aretha Franklin, the Doobie Brothers, Boz Scaggs, Natalie Cole, or Smokey Robinson. Whatever musical tastes exist in Central New York, Syracuse Jazz Fest has touched almost all of them.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 20



Meant to Be Shared: Selections from the Arthur Ross Collection of European Prints at Yale University Art Gallery
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Beginning in the late 1970s, philanthropist Arthur Ross (1910-2007) avidly collected for his eponymous foundation works of art by some of the most renowned printmakers of the last several centuries. The Arthur Ross Collection eventually came to comprise more than 1,200 17th- to 20th-century Italian, Spanish, and French prints of exceptional quality. Highlights include works by Francisco Goya, the first artist whom Ross collected; Giovanni Battista Piranesi's views of 18th-century and ancient Rome, which reflect Ross's love of classicism and the Eternal City; and Édouard Manet's illustrations for Edgar Allan Poe's famous poem The Raven.

From the collection's early years, The Arthur Ross Foundation frequently lent to academic institutions, museums, and cultural organizations, such that for three decades, some portion of the collection was accessible to the public.

Organized by the Yale University Art Gallery, and made possible by the Ross Foundation, Syracuse University Art Galleries is the final venue for this touring exhibition.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 20



In Gratitude: The Museum Project
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

"In Gratitude: The Museum Project," on display in the Photography Study Gallery, examines the Museum Project, an artist collective formed by over a dozen preeminent American artists seeking a way to express their gratitude for the institutional support of, and commitment to, photography as an art form. This exhibition, curated by exhibition and collection manager Emily Dittman, features a multitude of contemporary perspectives and a rich diversity of styles, concepts, and photographic materials as it explores the recent donation of artwork to the SU Art Collection.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 20



Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

"Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints," curated by SUArt Galleries director Domenic Iacono, presents six prints by James McNeill Whistler from this period, placing them alongside the work of other Americans who were practicing in Italy in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The juxtaposition of these works allows the viewer to appreciate Whistler's innovations and his effect on the artists who followed him. Artists such as Mortimer Menpes, Frank Duveneck, Otto Bacher, and Joseph Pennell owe much to Whistler's innovative style and approach and, in turn, their work had an impact on the artists who made prints of Venice during the 20th century.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 20



Focus
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

A new exhibition series at the Everson, "FOCUS" presents a few selected works from the Museum's collection in order to spark dialogue about how objects relate to one another across time, medium, and subject matter. For its first iteration, Adelaide Alsop Robineau's Cinerary Urn is paired with 19th-century paintings.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 20



Arise Unique
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Coordinated by Arise, a non-profit agency based in Syracuse, Unique celebrates the artistic talents of Central New Yorkers living with disabilities. The works included in this exhibition eloquently speak to the myriad thoughts, ideas, and feelings that all humans share, regardless of individual ability or circumstance. The annual competition invites submissions of art and literature which are then selected for display by a panel of judges, and the works are exhibited in several venues throughout CNY.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 20



That Day Now: Shadows Cast by Hiroshima
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

A changing project room of curated objects and original works

On August 6, 1945, the United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, killing as many as 200,000 people, severely injuring countless more, and immediately raising the specter, still with us, of total annihilation. Three days later Nagasaki, Japan, suffered the same fate. The impact of these bombings on the way we view the world cannot be understated. Historian Robert Jay Lifton has written: "You cannot understand the twentieth century without Hiroshima."

Yet, how exactly do we regard Hiroshima (understood not only as referring collectively to both the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but also all such possible catastrophes to come), particularly as it fades in cultural memory? How can we find its present urgency? This exhibition is one humble attempt to grapple with this difficult question. It takes the form of a project room that will undergo three transformations between August 19 and November 26.

For the first phase of the exhibition (August 19-October 18), Syracuse University Professors Yutaka Sho, Susannah Sayler, and Edward Morris have curated images and objects from Syracuse University and Everson collections that were created in 1945, the year that bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. None of these images and objects were made with Hiroshima specifically in mind. Some of them relate directly to the war; some of them do not. Together, however, they form a montage made from the artifacts of history and bear upon the spirit of the times in a way that could not be accomplished by a direct or literal treatment. The montage needs to be activated with reflection.

Students in a studio class taught by Professors Sho and Morris will continue to transform the exhibition in two additional phases, opening on October 18 and November 16 respectively.

The exhibition is part of a larger program at Syracuse University and other locations in the city that centers around a visit in October of one survivor from Hiroshima, Keiko Ogura. Ms. Ogura was eight years old when the bomb fell, and she has since become the official A-bomb storyteller for the city of Hiroshima and tireless advocate for peace and nuclear nonproliferation issues that have gained an unexpected urgency in recent months.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 20



Monumental
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

The Everson's expansive exhibition spaces, designed by I.M. Pei, allow the Museum to acquire and display monumentally-sized artwork. With this opportunity comes the unique challenges of caring for and exhibiting oversized work. Monumental features rarely seen large-scale pieces by
John de Andrea, Harmony Hammond, Sadashi Inuzuka, Sol LeWitt, Dennis Oppenheim, and Arnie Zimmerman, drawn from the Everson's collection, in order to foster a community conversation about the benefits and challenges associated with displaying oversized work.



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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 20



TR Ericsson: I Was Born To Bring You Into This World
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

TR Ericsson uses the story of his mother to present a searing, soft, and complex portrait of post-industrial life in America. Ericsson constructs his work using traditional art materials such as canvas, bronze, photography, and clay as well as video, found objects, and heirlooms taken from his family archives. This exhibition is a specific reinterpretation of Crackle & Drag, Ericsson's ongoing project started during the years following his mother's suicide in 2003.

"I Was Born To Bring You Into This World" begins as an intimate encounter with an artist's family archive and becomes a potent opportunity to reflect and scrutinize the trials and tribulations of our own lives.

Read a review!


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 20



Suné Woods: When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Based in Los Angeles, Suné Woods works in multi-channel video installations, photography, and collage. Presenting intimate vignettes of couples or solitary actions of individuals in two video installations, "When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter" is a vulnerable exploration of desire, forgiveness, and resilience.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 20



Pedro Roth: Aleph
Point of Contact Gallery

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

Born in Budapest and raised in Buenos Aires, where he currently lives, Roth has exhibited extensively between Prague and Buenos Aires in venues such as the Laura Haber Gallery, Centro Cultural Borges and the Wussman Gallery, among others. His works can be found in collections of the Museo de Arte Moderno de Buenos Aires (MAMBA), Museo de Arte Contemporaneo Latinoamericano, La Plata (MACLA); Jewish Museum of Prague; Museo de Bellas Artes de Azul, Provincia de Buenos Aires, Museo Contemporaneo de Santa Fe (MAC); and the Jewish Museum of Buenos Aires. In 2010, he was recognized as a Distinguished Citizen of the Culture by the City Council of Buenos Aires.


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2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, September 20



Seen and Heard: Embracing Our Past, Empowering Our Future
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

This fall marks the 100th anniversary of New York State signing women's suffrage into law. As we mark the historic milestone of our ancestors' activism we recognize that the struggle for gender equality is far from over and today's women know it.

In collaboration with the Everson Museum's exhibition of the same title, ArtRage will feature the work of CNY women artists who use their art to speak out about issues still facing women in 2017. Exhibiting Artists: Suzanne Gaffney Beason, Lisa Brasier, Christine Chin, Anne Cofer, Mary Giehl, Denise Harrington, Gail Hoffman, Joyce Day Homan, Vanessa Johnson, Laurie Oot Leonard, Judy Lieblein, Emily Luther, Lorena Molina, Candace Rhea, Sharon Bottle Souva, Cherie Spara and Mary Stanley.

Read a review!


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Film
 

6:30 PM, September 20



"What If...?" Film Series: City of Trees
Gifford Foundation

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

Since 1990, nonprofit Washington Parks & People has tried to reduce poverty and violence in Washington, DC, neighborhoods by improving parks. At the height of the recession, the organization received a stimulus grant to create a "green" job-training program in communities hardest hit. They had two years to help unemployed people find jobs and care for parks in their neighborhoods.

Steve Coleman, a grassroots environmental activist who directs the organization, must hire 150 unemployed residents to plant several thousand trees and provide training in the soft skills required to get a job. For Charles Holcomb, the paycheck offers a chance to give his newborn daughter the life he never had. For Michael Samuels, the job training is a first step forward after a drug conviction marred his employment record. For James Magruder, the program offers a chance to prove that his neighborhood roots position him as an unsung leader.

What sounds like a simple goal—putting people back to work by planting trees—becomes complicated by community tensions and a fast-approaching deadline before the grant money runs out. Filmed in an unflinching and compelling verité approach over the course of more than two years, City of Trees thrusts viewers into the inspiring but messy world of job training and the paradoxes changemakers face in urban communities everyday.


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Lecture
 

12:15 PM, September 20



Lunchtime Lecture: Meant to Be Shared: Spotlight on Honoré Daumier
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Join SUArt for a spotlight tour of the Honoré Daumier prints included in the current exhibition "Meant to Be Shared."


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Music
 

12:00 PM - 2:00 PM, September 20



Jazz at the Plaza: Dave Solazzo
CNY Jazz Arts Foundation

Price: Free
LeMoyne Plaza
1135 Salt Springs Rd., Syracuse


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12:15 PM, September 20



Women on the Edge
Civic Morning Musicals
Featuring Elizabeth Bouk, mezzo-soprano; Rami Sarieddine, piano

Price: Free
Grace Episcopal Church
819 Madison St., Syracuse

Thoughtful and provocative music of Benjamin Britten (the opera The Rape of Lucretia and the song cycle A Charm of Lullabies) and Dominick Argento (From the Diaries of Virginia Woolf, 1975).


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Theater
 

7:00 PM, September 20



The Little Dog Laughed
Redhouse

Price: $32
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

Mitchell, an impossibly handsome Hollywood ?lm star, is trying to come of out the closet, while Diane, his impossibly ballsy agent, is trying to keep him in. Don't miss this Tony Award-winning comedy sure to keep you laughing from start to ?nish. Written by Douglas Carter Beane, and starring Instagram sensation Max Emerson.

Note: This production contains nudity and is not appropriate for children or young audiences.

Read a Review!


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7:30 PM, September 20



Preview: The Three Musketeers
Syracuse Stage
Robert Hupp, director

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

It's all for one and fun for all when Alexandre Dumas' legendary tale comes to life on the stage. When a young man arrives in Paris to join the King's musketeers, he soon finds himself caught up in political plots, romance, and of course multiple swordfights. Robert Hupp makes his Syracuse Stage directorial debut in swashbuckling style. En garde!

Co-produced with The Syracuse University Department of Drama.

Read a Review!


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Thursday, September 21, 2017


Art
 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 21



Wonder Women: Fourteen Directions in Art Across CNY
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

Featuring recent works by Constance Avery, Diana Bukowski, Arianna Coursen, Erin Davies, Renee Fair, Karmin Schafer Hansen, Prudence Haze, Eva M. Hunter, Caroline A. Locatelli, Alexandra Mailtais, Maria Janina Rizzo, Allison Sarenski, Melissa Zawacki, and Sarah Allam.

The exhibit was co-curated by Sofía Márquez Paniagua from the Below 40 Public Arts Task Force and Steve Nyland, the Tech Garden's Artist in Residence.

Read a review!


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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, September 21



Nature Observed
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Bob Ripley: Finely detailed watercolors depicting imagery where people and nature meet
Alan Hart: Photo-realistic acrylic wildlife paintings on illustration board
Steve Fland: Detailed wood sculpture of birds involving their habitat or behavior
Judi Witkin: Nature-themed beaded jewelry

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 21



In Full Color: Mixed Media Collage by Shannon Crandall
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

Twenty years ago, Shannon Crandall began experimenting with acrylic and collage. She loved the intuitive nature of the art. Today she lets the various elements reveal themselves as she creates many layers of acrylic paint and collage.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 21



2017 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, Stephanie Mercedes
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

Light Work is pleased to announce a group exhibition of works by recipients of the 43rd annual Light Work Grants in Photography. The 2017 recipients are Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, and Stephanie Mercedes. The Light Work Grants in Photography program is part of Light Work's ongoing effort to provide support and encouragement to artists working in photography.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 21



Suné Woods: To Sleep With Terra
Light Work Gallery

Price: free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

In the exhibition, "To Sleep with Terra," Los Angeles-based artist Suné Woods uses a variety of source material from books, magazines, and news media to create three-dimensional collages and video. Together, this body of work challenges our notions of photography and explores the terror of a technological society spinning out of control. Woods created this work in 2015 during a period of extreme racial violence, police brutality, and mass shootings.

Woods says 2015 was no more violent than previous years, but what shifted was growing documentation by citizen journalists that undermined the public's denial and disbelief. For the artist, the process of tearing, crumpling, layering, and recombining photographic imagery was "the best way for me to articulate the complicated sensations that were arising while processing these streamed documentations of violence, ecological disaster, and a desire to understand more deeply how seemingly disparate things relate when they are mashed up in a visual conversation."

This mash-up of imagery is reminiscent of how we consume information every day?sometimes minute by minute?as we scroll through a frenetic onslaught of global disasters, degradation, and violence.

Suné Woods' collage work makes art of the ordinary ephemera in our daily lives and clarifies and reveals a truth just beneath its surface. Unafraid to confront us with the brutality that surrounds us, her work only grows in relevance and urgency.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 21



All That Jazz: 35 Years of Syracuse Jazz Fest
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Recognizing 35 successful years of Syracuse Jazz Fest, OHA offers a visual exhibit on the history of Jazz Fest. OHA's visual exhibit will feature highlights of the musical festival, from the different venues, to music industry superstars and jazz legends, as well as some of our own homegrown musical talent.

With help from Jazz Fest founder and executive director, Frank Malfitano, the exhibit will be a walk down memory lane for some die-hard local music fans: Dizzy Gillespie's bulging cheeks while playing trumpet, Jean Luc Ponty's electrifying violin, B.B. King's guitar Lucille, Buckwheat Zydeco's accordion, Wynton Marsalis' big band style orchestra, or Kenny G's saxophone; or maybe singing to the songs of Aretha Franklin, the Doobie Brothers, Boz Scaggs, Natalie Cole, or Smokey Robinson. Whatever musical tastes exist in Central New York, Syracuse Jazz Fest has touched almost all of them.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 21



The War to End All Wars: Onondaga County Encounters World War I
Onondaga Historical Association

Price: Free
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the United States' entry into World War I, Onondaga Historical Association will present an exhibit on Onondaga County's role in the Great War.

The exhibit will feature photographs, posters, uniforms, gas masks, helmets and other military accoutrements, war souvenirs, home-front conservation items, letters, diaries, and other archival material and objects. These items will illustrate the impact World War I had on Onondaga County and the world at large. The exhibit will focus on the people, places, and events at home and abroad including military personnel and units, the nurse corps, Camp Syracuse, food conservation, the Split Rock munitions explosion, and the Spanish Influenza epidemic.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, September 21



Meant to Be Shared: Selections from the Arthur Ross Collection of European Prints at Yale University Art Gallery
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Beginning in the late 1970s, philanthropist Arthur Ross (1910-2007) avidly collected for his eponymous foundation works of art by some of the most renowned printmakers of the last several centuries. The Arthur Ross Collection eventually came to comprise more than 1,200 17th- to 20th-century Italian, Spanish, and French prints of exceptional quality. Highlights include works by Francisco Goya, the first artist whom Ross collected; Giovanni Battista Piranesi's views of 18th-century and ancient Rome, which reflect Ross's love of classicism and the Eternal City; and Édouard Manet's illustrations for Edgar Allan Poe's famous poem The Raven.

From the collection's early years, The Arthur Ross Foundation frequently lent to academic institutions, museums, and cultural organizations, such that for three decades, some portion of the collection was accessible to the public.

Organized by the Yale University Art Gallery, and made possible by the Ross Foundation, Syracuse University Art Galleries is the final venue for this touring exhibition.


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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, September 21



Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

"Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints," curated by SUArt Galleries director Domenic Iacono, presents six prints by James McNeill Whistler from this period, placing them alongside the work of other Americans who were practicing in Italy in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The juxtaposition of these works allows the viewer to appreciate Whistler's innovations and his effect on the artists who followed him. Artists such as Mortimer Menpes, Frank Duveneck, Otto Bacher, and Joseph Pennell owe much to Whistler's innovative style and approach and, in turn, their work had an impact on the artists who made prints of Venice during the 20th century.


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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, September 21



In Gratitude: The Museum Project
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

"In Gratitude: The Museum Project," on display in the Photography Study Gallery, examines the Museum Project, an artist collective formed by over a dozen preeminent American artists seeking a way to express their gratitude for the institutional support of, and commitment to, photography as an art form. This exhibition, curated by exhibition and collection manager Emily Dittman, features a multitude of contemporary perspectives and a rich diversity of styles, concepts, and photographic materials as it explores the recent donation of artwork to the SU Art Collection.


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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, September 21



Monumental
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

The Everson's expansive exhibition spaces, designed by I.M. Pei, allow the Museum to acquire and display monumentally-sized artwork. With this opportunity comes the unique challenges of caring for and exhibiting oversized work. Monumental features rarely seen large-scale pieces by
John de Andrea, Harmony Hammond, Sadashi Inuzuka, Sol LeWitt, Dennis Oppenheim, and Arnie Zimmerman, drawn from the Everson's collection, in order to foster a community conversation about the benefits and challenges associated with displaying oversized work.



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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, September 21



That Day Now: Shadows Cast by Hiroshima
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

A changing project room of curated objects and original works

On August 6, 1945, the United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, killing as many as 200,000 people, severely injuring countless more, and immediately raising the specter, still with us, of total annihilation. Three days later Nagasaki, Japan, suffered the same fate. The impact of these bombings on the way we view the world cannot be understated. Historian Robert Jay Lifton has written: "You cannot understand the twentieth century without Hiroshima."

Yet, how exactly do we regard Hiroshima (understood not only as referring collectively to both the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but also all such possible catastrophes to come), particularly as it fades in cultural memory? How can we find its present urgency? This exhibition is one humble attempt to grapple with this difficult question. It takes the form of a project room that will undergo three transformations between August 19 and November 26.

For the first phase of the exhibition (August 19-October 18), Syracuse University Professors Yutaka Sho, Susannah Sayler, and Edward Morris have curated images and objects from Syracuse University and Everson collections that were created in 1945, the year that bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. None of these images and objects were made with Hiroshima specifically in mind. Some of them relate directly to the war; some of them do not. Together, however, they form a montage made from the artifacts of history and bear upon the spirit of the times in a way that could not be accomplished by a direct or literal treatment. The montage needs to be activated with reflection.

Students in a studio class taught by Professors Sho and Morris will continue to transform the exhibition in two additional phases, opening on October 18 and November 16 respectively.

The exhibition is part of a larger program at Syracuse University and other locations in the city that centers around a visit in October of one survivor from Hiroshima, Keiko Ogura. Ms. Ogura was eight years old when the bomb fell, and she has since become the official A-bomb storyteller for the city of Hiroshima and tireless advocate for peace and nuclear nonproliferation issues that have gained an unexpected urgency in recent months.


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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, September 21



Arise Unique
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Coordinated by Arise, a non-profit agency based in Syracuse, Unique celebrates the artistic talents of Central New Yorkers living with disabilities. The works included in this exhibition eloquently speak to the myriad thoughts, ideas, and feelings that all humans share, regardless of individual ability or circumstance. The annual competition invites submissions of art and literature which are then selected for display by a panel of judges, and the works are exhibited in several venues throughout CNY.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, September 21



Focus
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

A new exhibition series at the Everson, "FOCUS" presents a few selected works from the Museum's collection in order to spark dialogue about how objects relate to one another across time, medium, and subject matter. For its first iteration, Adelaide Alsop Robineau's Cinerary Urn is paired with 19th-century paintings.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, September 21



Suné Woods: When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Based in Los Angeles, Suné Woods works in multi-channel video installations, photography, and collage. Presenting intimate vignettes of couples or solitary actions of individuals in two video installations, "When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter" is a vulnerable exploration of desire, forgiveness, and resilience.


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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, September 21



TR Ericsson: I Was Born To Bring You Into This World
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

TR Ericsson uses the story of his mother to present a searing, soft, and complex portrait of post-industrial life in America. Ericsson constructs his work using traditional art materials such as canvas, bronze, photography, and clay as well as video, found objects, and heirlooms taken from his family archives. This exhibition is a specific reinterpretation of Crackle & Drag, Ericsson's ongoing project started during the years following his mother's suicide in 2003.

"I Was Born To Bring You Into This World" begins as an intimate encounter with an artist's family archive and becomes a potent opportunity to reflect and scrutinize the trials and tribulations of our own lives.

Read a review!


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 21



Pedro Roth: Aleph
Point of Contact Gallery

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

Born in Budapest and raised in Buenos Aires, where he currently lives, Roth has exhibited extensively between Prague and Buenos Aires in venues such as the Laura Haber Gallery, Centro Cultural Borges and the Wussman Gallery, among others. His works can be found in collections of the Museo de Arte Moderno de Buenos Aires (MAMBA), Museo de Arte Contemporaneo Latinoamericano, La Plata (MACLA); Jewish Museum of Prague; Museo de Bellas Artes de Azul, Provincia de Buenos Aires, Museo Contemporaneo de Santa Fe (MAC); and the Jewish Museum of Buenos Aires. In 2010, he was recognized as a Distinguished Citizen of the Culture by the City Council of Buenos Aires.


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2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, September 21



Seen and Heard: Embracing Our Past, Empowering Our Future
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

This fall marks the 100th anniversary of New York State signing women's suffrage into law. As we mark the historic milestone of our ancestors' activism we recognize that the struggle for gender equality is far from over and today's women know it.

In collaboration with the Everson Museum's exhibition of the same title, ArtRage will feature the work of CNY women artists who use their art to speak out about issues still facing women in 2017. Exhibiting Artists: Suzanne Gaffney Beason, Lisa Brasier, Christine Chin, Anne Cofer, Mary Giehl, Denise Harrington, Gail Hoffman, Joyce Day Homan, Vanessa Johnson, Laurie Oot Leonard, Judy Lieblein, Emily Luther, Lorena Molina, Candace Rhea, Sharon Bottle Souva, Cherie Spara and Mary Stanley.

Read a review!


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Theater
 

6:45 PM, September 21



Montana Smith and the Curse of the Golden Crocodile
Acme Mystery Company

Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St., Syracuse

Montana Smith has snatched the Golden Crocodile of the Amazon from its South American home. Now it's about to be unveiled at the Municipal Museum of Natural History, but everyone's been acting rather strangely. Could it be the dreaded Curse of the Golden Crocodile? Hmm? Join us for the gala event of the season to find out (but don't turn your back on the museum staff).


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7:00 PM, September 21



The Little Dog Laughed
Redhouse

Price: $32
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

Mitchell, an impossibly handsome Hollywood ?lm star, is trying to come of out the closet, while Diane, his impossibly ballsy agent, is trying to keep him in. Don't miss this Tony Award-winning comedy sure to keep you laughing from start to ?nish. Written by Douglas Carter Beane, and starring Instagram sensation Max Emerson.

Note: This production contains nudity and is not appropriate for children or young audiences.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

7:30 PM, September 21



Preview: The Three Musketeers
Syracuse Stage
Robert Hupp, director

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

It's all for one and fun for all when Alexandre Dumas' legendary tale comes to life on the stage. When a young man arrives in Paris to join the King's musketeers, he soon finds himself caught up in political plots, romance, and of course multiple swordfights. Robert Hupp makes his Syracuse Stage directorial debut in swashbuckling style. En garde!

Co-produced with The Syracuse University Department of Drama.

Read a Review!


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8:00 PM, September 21



A Little Night Music
Central New York Playhouse
Abel Searor, director

Price: $25
CNY Playhouse
Shoppingtown Mall, Entrance No. 4 (adjacent to parking garage), Dewitt

Set in 1900 Sweden, A Little Night Music explores the tangled web of affairs centered around actress Desirée Armfeldt and the men who love her: a lawyer by the name of Fredrik Egerman and the Count Carl-Magnus Malcom. When the traveling actress performs in Fredrik's town, the estranged lovers' passion rekindles. This strikes a flurry of jealousy and suspicion between Desirée; Fredrik; Fredrick's wife, Anne; Desirée's current lover, the Count; and the Count's wife, Charlotte. Both men — as well as their jealous wives — agree to join Desirée and her family for a weekend in the country at Desirée's mother's estate. With everyone in one place, infinite possibilities of new romances and second chances bring endless surprises.

A Little Night Music is full of hilariously witty and heartbreakingly moving moments of adoration, regret, and desire. This dramatic musical celebration of love is perfect to showcase your highly trained singers with its harmonically advanced score and masterful orchestrations, and contains Sondheim's popular song, the haunting "Send in the Clowns."

Read a Review!


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Friday, September 22, 2017


Art
 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 22



Wonder Women: Fourteen Directions in Art Across CNY
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

Featuring recent works by Constance Avery, Diana Bukowski, Arianna Coursen, Erin Davies, Renee Fair, Karmin Schafer Hansen, Prudence Haze, Eva M. Hunter, Caroline A. Locatelli, Alexandra Mailtais, Maria Janina Rizzo, Allison Sarenski, Melissa Zawacki, and Sarah Allam.

The exhibit was co-curated by Sofía Márquez Paniagua from the Below 40 Public Arts Task Force and Steve Nyland, the Tech Garden's Artist in Residence.

Read a review!


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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, September 22



Nature Observed
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Bob Ripley: Finely detailed watercolors depicting imagery where people and nature meet
Alan Hart: Photo-realistic acrylic wildlife paintings on illustration board
Steve Fland: Detailed wood sculpture of birds involving their habitat or behavior
Judi Witkin: Nature-themed beaded jewelry

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 22



In Full Color: Mixed Media Collage by Shannon Crandall
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

Twenty years ago, Shannon Crandall began experimenting with acrylic and collage. She loved the intuitive nature of the art. Today she lets the various elements reveal themselves as she creates many layers of acrylic paint and collage.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 22



Suné Woods: To Sleep With Terra
Light Work Gallery

Price: free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

In the exhibition, "To Sleep with Terra," Los Angeles-based artist Suné Woods uses a variety of source material from books, magazines, and news media to create three-dimensional collages and video. Together, this body of work challenges our notions of photography and explores the terror of a technological society spinning out of control. Woods created this work in 2015 during a period of extreme racial violence, police brutality, and mass shootings.

Woods says 2015 was no more violent than previous years, but what shifted was growing documentation by citizen journalists that undermined the public's denial and disbelief. For the artist, the process of tearing, crumpling, layering, and recombining photographic imagery was "the best way for me to articulate the complicated sensations that were arising while processing these streamed documentations of violence, ecological disaster, and a desire to understand more deeply how seemingly disparate things relate when they are mashed up in a visual conversation."

This mash-up of imagery is reminiscent of how we consume information every day?sometimes minute by minute?as we scroll through a frenetic onslaught of global disasters, degradation, and violence.

Suné Woods' collage work makes art of the ordinary ephemera in our daily lives and clarifies and reveals a truth just beneath its surface. Unafraid to confront us with the brutality that surrounds us, her work only grows in relevance and urgency.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 22



2017 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, Stephanie Mercedes
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

Light Work is pleased to announce a group exhibition of works by recipients of the 43rd annual Light Work Grants in Photography. The 2017 recipients are Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, and Stephanie Mercedes. The Light Work Grants in Photography program is part of Light Work's ongoing effort to provide support and encouragement to artists working in photography.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 22



The War to End All Wars: Onondaga County Encounters World War I
Onondaga Historical Association

Price: Free
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the United States' entry into World War I, Onondaga Historical Association will present an exhibit on Onondaga County's role in the Great War.

The exhibit will feature photographs, posters, uniforms, gas masks, helmets and other military accoutrements, war souvenirs, home-front conservation items, letters, diaries, and other archival material and objects. These items will illustrate the impact World War I had on Onondaga County and the world at large. The exhibit will focus on the people, places, and events at home and abroad including military personnel and units, the nurse corps, Camp Syracuse, food conservation, the Split Rock munitions explosion, and the Spanish Influenza epidemic.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 22



All That Jazz: 35 Years of Syracuse Jazz Fest
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Recognizing 35 successful years of Syracuse Jazz Fest, OHA offers a visual exhibit on the history of Jazz Fest. OHA's visual exhibit will feature highlights of the musical festival, from the different venues, to music industry superstars and jazz legends, as well as some of our own homegrown musical talent.

With help from Jazz Fest founder and executive director, Frank Malfitano, the exhibit will be a walk down memory lane for some die-hard local music fans: Dizzy Gillespie's bulging cheeks while playing trumpet, Jean Luc Ponty's electrifying violin, B.B. King's guitar Lucille, Buckwheat Zydeco's accordion, Wynton Marsalis' big band style orchestra, or Kenny G's saxophone; or maybe singing to the songs of Aretha Franklin, the Doobie Brothers, Boz Scaggs, Natalie Cole, or Smokey Robinson. Whatever musical tastes exist in Central New York, Syracuse Jazz Fest has touched almost all of them.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 22



Meant to Be Shared: Selections from the Arthur Ross Collection of European Prints at Yale University Art Gallery
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Beginning in the late 1970s, philanthropist Arthur Ross (1910-2007) avidly collected for his eponymous foundation works of art by some of the most renowned printmakers of the last several centuries. The Arthur Ross Collection eventually came to comprise more than 1,200 17th- to 20th-century Italian, Spanish, and French prints of exceptional quality. Highlights include works by Francisco Goya, the first artist whom Ross collected; Giovanni Battista Piranesi's views of 18th-century and ancient Rome, which reflect Ross's love of classicism and the Eternal City; and Édouard Manet's illustrations for Edgar Allan Poe's famous poem The Raven.

From the collection's early years, The Arthur Ross Foundation frequently lent to academic institutions, museums, and cultural organizations, such that for three decades, some portion of the collection was accessible to the public.

Organized by the Yale University Art Gallery, and made possible by the Ross Foundation, Syracuse University Art Galleries is the final venue for this touring exhibition.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 22



In Gratitude: The Museum Project
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

"In Gratitude: The Museum Project," on display in the Photography Study Gallery, examines the Museum Project, an artist collective formed by over a dozen preeminent American artists seeking a way to express their gratitude for the institutional support of, and commitment to, photography as an art form. This exhibition, curated by exhibition and collection manager Emily Dittman, features a multitude of contemporary perspectives and a rich diversity of styles, concepts, and photographic materials as it explores the recent donation of artwork to the SU Art Collection.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 22



Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

"Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints," curated by SUArt Galleries director Domenic Iacono, presents six prints by James McNeill Whistler from this period, placing them alongside the work of other Americans who were practicing in Italy in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The juxtaposition of these works allows the viewer to appreciate Whistler's innovations and his effect on the artists who followed him. Artists such as Mortimer Menpes, Frank Duveneck, Otto Bacher, and Joseph Pennell owe much to Whistler's innovative style and approach and, in turn, their work had an impact on the artists who made prints of Venice during the 20th century.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 22



Focus
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

A new exhibition series at the Everson, "FOCUS" presents a few selected works from the Museum's collection in order to spark dialogue about how objects relate to one another across time, medium, and subject matter. For its first iteration, Adelaide Alsop Robineau's Cinerary Urn is paired with 19th-century paintings.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 22



Arise Unique
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Coordinated by Arise, a non-profit agency based in Syracuse, Unique celebrates the artistic talents of Central New Yorkers living with disabilities. The works included in this exhibition eloquently speak to the myriad thoughts, ideas, and feelings that all humans share, regardless of individual ability or circumstance. The annual competition invites submissions of art and literature which are then selected for display by a panel of judges, and the works are exhibited in several venues throughout CNY.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 22



That Day Now: Shadows Cast by Hiroshima
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

A changing project room of curated objects and original works

On August 6, 1945, the United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, killing as many as 200,000 people, severely injuring countless more, and immediately raising the specter, still with us, of total annihilation. Three days later Nagasaki, Japan, suffered the same fate. The impact of these bombings on the way we view the world cannot be understated. Historian Robert Jay Lifton has written: "You cannot understand the twentieth century without Hiroshima."

Yet, how exactly do we regard Hiroshima (understood not only as referring collectively to both the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but also all such possible catastrophes to come), particularly as it fades in cultural memory? How can we find its present urgency? This exhibition is one humble attempt to grapple with this difficult question. It takes the form of a project room that will undergo three transformations between August 19 and November 26.

For the first phase of the exhibition (August 19-October 18), Syracuse University Professors Yutaka Sho, Susannah Sayler, and Edward Morris have curated images and objects from Syracuse University and Everson collections that were created in 1945, the year that bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. None of these images and objects were made with Hiroshima specifically in mind. Some of them relate directly to the war; some of them do not. Together, however, they form a montage made from the artifacts of history and bear upon the spirit of the times in a way that could not be accomplished by a direct or literal treatment. The montage needs to be activated with reflection.

Students in a studio class taught by Professors Sho and Morris will continue to transform the exhibition in two additional phases, opening on October 18 and November 16 respectively.

The exhibition is part of a larger program at Syracuse University and other locations in the city that centers around a visit in October of one survivor from Hiroshima, Keiko Ogura. Ms. Ogura was eight years old when the bomb fell, and she has since become the official A-bomb storyteller for the city of Hiroshima and tireless advocate for peace and nuclear nonproliferation issues that have gained an unexpected urgency in recent months.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 22



Monumental
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

The Everson's expansive exhibition spaces, designed by I.M. Pei, allow the Museum to acquire and display monumentally-sized artwork. With this opportunity comes the unique challenges of caring for and exhibiting oversized work. Monumental features rarely seen large-scale pieces by
John de Andrea, Harmony Hammond, Sadashi Inuzuka, Sol LeWitt, Dennis Oppenheim, and Arnie Zimmerman, drawn from the Everson's collection, in order to foster a community conversation about the benefits and challenges associated with displaying oversized work.



Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 22



TR Ericsson: I Was Born To Bring You Into This World
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

TR Ericsson uses the story of his mother to present a searing, soft, and complex portrait of post-industrial life in America. Ericsson constructs his work using traditional art materials such as canvas, bronze, photography, and clay as well as video, found objects, and heirlooms taken from his family archives. This exhibition is a specific reinterpretation of Crackle & Drag, Ericsson's ongoing project started during the years following his mother's suicide in 2003.

"I Was Born To Bring You Into This World" begins as an intimate encounter with an artist's family archive and becomes a potent opportunity to reflect and scrutinize the trials and tribulations of our own lives.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 22



Suné Woods: When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Based in Los Angeles, Suné Woods works in multi-channel video installations, photography, and collage. Presenting intimate vignettes of couples or solitary actions of individuals in two video installations, "When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter" is a vulnerable exploration of desire, forgiveness, and resilience.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 22



Pedro Roth: Aleph
Point of Contact Gallery

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

Born in Budapest and raised in Buenos Aires, where he currently lives, Roth has exhibited extensively between Prague and Buenos Aires in venues such as the Laura Haber Gallery, Centro Cultural Borges and the Wussman Gallery, among others. His works can be found in collections of the Museo de Arte Moderno de Buenos Aires (MAMBA), Museo de Arte Contemporaneo Latinoamericano, La Plata (MACLA); Jewish Museum of Prague; Museo de Bellas Artes de Azul, Provincia de Buenos Aires, Museo Contemporaneo de Santa Fe (MAC); and the Jewish Museum of Buenos Aires. In 2010, he was recognized as a Distinguished Citizen of the Culture by the City Council of Buenos Aires.


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2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, September 22



Seen and Heard: Embracing Our Past, Empowering Our Future
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

This fall marks the 100th anniversary of New York State signing women's suffrage into law. As we mark the historic milestone of our ancestors' activism we recognize that the struggle for gender equality is far from over and today's women know it.

In collaboration with the Everson Museum's exhibition of the same title, ArtRage will feature the work of CNY women artists who use their art to speak out about issues still facing women in 2017. Exhibiting Artists: Suzanne Gaffney Beason, Lisa Brasier, Christine Chin, Anne Cofer, Mary Giehl, Denise Harrington, Gail Hoffman, Joyce Day Homan, Vanessa Johnson, Laurie Oot Leonard, Judy Lieblein, Emily Luther, Lorena Molina, Candace Rhea, Sharon Bottle Souva, Cherie Spara and Mary Stanley.

Read a review!


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5:00 PM - 8:00 PM, September 22



Opening: Fire Marks
Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

Price: Free
Clayscapes Pottery Studio
1003 W. Fayette St., Suite L1, Syracuse

There will be an opening reception this evening 5:00-8:00 pm.

New ceramic works by Liz Lurie, Fred Herbst, and Julie Crosby.


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Dance
 

7:00 PM, September 22



An Intimate Evening with SCB
Syracuse City Ballet

Price: $25
Landmark Theatre
362 S. Salina St., Syracuse

Our debut performance of the fall season will be presented at our brand new studios. An Intimate Evening with Syracuse City Ballet will offer an eclectic mix of new works, both classical and contemporary, and showcase the multi-dimensional talents of our dancers.

See our special Guest Artist Rachel Richardson, of American Ballet Theater, as well as our resident dancers and corps de ballet dancers in a versatile show. Sit up close and personal as the pieces come to life right in our own studio.

All guests are welcome to enjoy a special talk-back session after the performance with the dancers and choreographers.


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Music
 

8:00 PM, September 22



Masterworks Series: From the New World
Syracuse Orchestra (formerly Symphoria)
Joshua Gersen, conductor
Featuring Anne Akiko Meyers, violin

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

Barber School for Scandal: Overture
Mason Bates Concerto for Violin
Dvorak Symphony No. 9 in E minor, op. 95, B. 178, "From the New World"


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Poetry/Reading
 

7:00 PM, September 22



Poet Chen Chen
Downtown Writer's Center

Price: Free
YMCA
340 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Chen Chen is the author of When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities, winner of the A. Poulin, Jr., Poetry Prize and out now from BOA Editions. His work has appeared in two chapbooks and in publications such as Poetry, The New York Times Magazine, and The Best American Poetry. He has received fellowships from Kundiman, Lambda Literary, and the Saltonstall Foundation. He holds an MFA from Syracuse University and is currently pursuing a PhD in English and Creative Writing at Texas Tech University.


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Theater
 

8:00 PM, September 22



Noises Off
Baldwinsville Theatre Guild
Dan Rowlands, director

First Presbyterian Church of Baldwinsville
64 Oswego St., Baldwinsville


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8:00 PM, September 22



A Little Night Music
Central New York Playhouse
Abel Searor, director

Price: $28
CNY Playhouse
Shoppingtown Mall, Entrance No. 4 (adjacent to parking garage), Dewitt

Set in 1900 Sweden, A Little Night Music explores the tangled web of affairs centered around actress Desirée Armfeldt and the men who love her: a lawyer by the name of Fredrik Egerman and the Count Carl-Magnus Malcom. When the traveling actress performs in Fredrik's town, the estranged lovers' passion rekindles. This strikes a flurry of jealousy and suspicion between Desirée; Fredrik; Fredrick's wife, Anne; Desirée's current lover, the Count; and the Count's wife, Charlotte. Both men — as well as their jealous wives — agree to join Desirée and her family for a weekend in the country at Desirée's mother's estate. With everyone in one place, infinite possibilities of new romances and second chances bring endless surprises.

A Little Night Music is full of hilariously witty and heartbreakingly moving moments of adoration, regret, and desire. This dramatic musical celebration of love is perfect to showcase your highly trained singers with its harmonically advanced score and masterful orchestrations, and contains Sondheim's popular song, the haunting "Send in the Clowns."

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, September 22



An Act of God
Rarely Done Productions

Price: $20
Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St., Syracuse

A CNY premiere, An Act of God, by David Javerbaum, was called "sinfully funny" by Vanity Fair. God takes the form of Jimmy Curtin, joined by his "angels" Michael-Dean Anderson and Peter Irwin, who answer together the deepest questions that have plagued mankind since creation.

Intended for mature audiences.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, September 22



The Little Dog Laughed
Redhouse

Price: $32
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

Mitchell, an impossibly handsome Hollywood ?lm star, is trying to come of out the closet, while Diane, his impossibly ballsy agent, is trying to keep him in. Don't miss this Tony Award-winning comedy sure to keep you laughing from start to ?nish. Written by Douglas Carter Beane, and starring Instagram sensation Max Emerson.

Note: This production contains nudity and is not appropriate for children or young audiences.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, September 22



Opening: The Three Musketeers
Syracuse Stage
Robert Hupp, director

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

It's all for one and fun for all when Alexandre Dumas' legendary tale comes to life on the stage. When a young man arrives in Paris to join the King's musketeers, he soon finds himself caught up in political plots, romance, and of course multiple swordfights. Robert Hupp makes his Syracuse Stage directorial debut in swashbuckling style. En garde!

Co-produced with The Syracuse University Department of Drama.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 


 

Saturday, September 23, 2017


Art
 

9:00 AM - 1:00 PM, September 23



Fire Marks
Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

Price: Free
Clayscapes Pottery Studio
1003 W. Fayette St., Suite L1, Syracuse

New ceramic works by Liz Lurie, Fred Herbst, and Julie Crosby.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 23



Suné Woods: When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Based in Los Angeles, Suné Woods works in multi-channel video installations, photography, and collage. Presenting intimate vignettes of couples or solitary actions of individuals in two video installations, "When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter" is a vulnerable exploration of desire, forgiveness, and resilience.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 23



TR Ericsson: I Was Born To Bring You Into This World
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

TR Ericsson uses the story of his mother to present a searing, soft, and complex portrait of post-industrial life in America. Ericsson constructs his work using traditional art materials such as canvas, bronze, photography, and clay as well as video, found objects, and heirlooms taken from his family archives. This exhibition is a specific reinterpretation of Crackle & Drag, Ericsson's ongoing project started during the years following his mother's suicide in 2003.

"I Was Born To Bring You Into This World" begins as an intimate encounter with an artist's family archive and becomes a potent opportunity to reflect and scrutinize the trials and tribulations of our own lives.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 23



Monumental
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

The Everson's expansive exhibition spaces, designed by I.M. Pei, allow the Museum to acquire and display monumentally-sized artwork. With this opportunity comes the unique challenges of caring for and exhibiting oversized work. Monumental features rarely seen large-scale pieces by
John de Andrea, Harmony Hammond, Sadashi Inuzuka, Sol LeWitt, Dennis Oppenheim, and Arnie Zimmerman, drawn from the Everson's collection, in order to foster a community conversation about the benefits and challenges associated with displaying oversized work.



Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 23



That Day Now: Shadows Cast by Hiroshima
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

A changing project room of curated objects and original works

On August 6, 1945, the United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, killing as many as 200,000 people, severely injuring countless more, and immediately raising the specter, still with us, of total annihilation. Three days later Nagasaki, Japan, suffered the same fate. The impact of these bombings on the way we view the world cannot be understated. Historian Robert Jay Lifton has written: "You cannot understand the twentieth century without Hiroshima."

Yet, how exactly do we regard Hiroshima (understood not only as referring collectively to both the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but also all such possible catastrophes to come), particularly as it fades in cultural memory? How can we find its present urgency? This exhibition is one humble attempt to grapple with this difficult question. It takes the form of a project room that will undergo three transformations between August 19 and November 26.

For the first phase of the exhibition (August 19-October 18), Syracuse University Professors Yutaka Sho, Susannah Sayler, and Edward Morris have curated images and objects from Syracuse University and Everson collections that were created in 1945, the year that bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. None of these images and objects were made with Hiroshima specifically in mind. Some of them relate directly to the war; some of them do not. Together, however, they form a montage made from the artifacts of history and bear upon the spirit of the times in a way that could not be accomplished by a direct or literal treatment. The montage needs to be activated with reflection.

Students in a studio class taught by Professors Sho and Morris will continue to transform the exhibition in two additional phases, opening on October 18 and November 16 respectively.

The exhibition is part of a larger program at Syracuse University and other locations in the city that centers around a visit in October of one survivor from Hiroshima, Keiko Ogura. Ms. Ogura was eight years old when the bomb fell, and she has since become the official A-bomb storyteller for the city of Hiroshima and tireless advocate for peace and nuclear nonproliferation issues that have gained an unexpected urgency in recent months.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 23



Arise Unique
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Coordinated by Arise, a non-profit agency based in Syracuse, Unique celebrates the artistic talents of Central New Yorkers living with disabilities. The works included in this exhibition eloquently speak to the myriad thoughts, ideas, and feelings that all humans share, regardless of individual ability or circumstance. The annual competition invites submissions of art and literature which are then selected for display by a panel of judges, and the works are exhibited in several venues throughout CNY.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 23



Focus
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

A new exhibition series at the Everson, "FOCUS" presents a few selected works from the Museum's collection in order to spark dialogue about how objects relate to one another across time, medium, and subject matter. For its first iteration, Adelaide Alsop Robineau's Cinerary Urn is paired with 19th-century paintings.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 23



In Full Color: Mixed Media Collage by Shannon Crandall
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

Twenty years ago, Shannon Crandall began experimenting with acrylic and collage. She loved the intuitive nature of the art. Today she lets the various elements reveal themselves as she creates many layers of acrylic paint and collage.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 23



All That Jazz: 35 Years of Syracuse Jazz Fest
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Recognizing 35 successful years of Syracuse Jazz Fest, OHA offers a visual exhibit on the history of Jazz Fest. OHA's visual exhibit will feature highlights of the musical festival, from the different venues, to music industry superstars and jazz legends, as well as some of our own homegrown musical talent.

With help from Jazz Fest founder and executive director, Frank Malfitano, the exhibit will be a walk down memory lane for some die-hard local music fans: Dizzy Gillespie's bulging cheeks while playing trumpet, Jean Luc Ponty's electrifying violin, B.B. King's guitar Lucille, Buckwheat Zydeco's accordion, Wynton Marsalis' big band style orchestra, or Kenny G's saxophone; or maybe singing to the songs of Aretha Franklin, the Doobie Brothers, Boz Scaggs, Natalie Cole, or Smokey Robinson. Whatever musical tastes exist in Central New York, Syracuse Jazz Fest has touched almost all of them.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 23



The War to End All Wars: Onondaga County Encounters World War I
Onondaga Historical Association

Price: Free
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the United States' entry into World War I, Onondaga Historical Association will present an exhibit on Onondaga County's role in the Great War.

The exhibit will feature photographs, posters, uniforms, gas masks, helmets and other military accoutrements, war souvenirs, home-front conservation items, letters, diaries, and other archival material and objects. These items will illustrate the impact World War I had on Onondaga County and the world at large. The exhibit will focus on the people, places, and events at home and abroad including military personnel and units, the nurse corps, Camp Syracuse, food conservation, the Split Rock munitions explosion, and the Spanish Influenza epidemic.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 23



Meant to Be Shared: Selections from the Arthur Ross Collection of European Prints at Yale University Art Gallery
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Beginning in the late 1970s, philanthropist Arthur Ross (1910-2007) avidly collected for his eponymous foundation works of art by some of the most renowned printmakers of the last several centuries. The Arthur Ross Collection eventually came to comprise more than 1,200 17th- to 20th-century Italian, Spanish, and French prints of exceptional quality. Highlights include works by Francisco Goya, the first artist whom Ross collected; Giovanni Battista Piranesi's views of 18th-century and ancient Rome, which reflect Ross's love of classicism and the Eternal City; and Édouard Manet's illustrations for Edgar Allan Poe's famous poem The Raven.

From the collection's early years, The Arthur Ross Foundation frequently lent to academic institutions, museums, and cultural organizations, such that for three decades, some portion of the collection was accessible to the public.

Organized by the Yale University Art Gallery, and made possible by the Ross Foundation, Syracuse University Art Galleries is the final venue for this touring exhibition.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 23



Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

"Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints," curated by SUArt Galleries director Domenic Iacono, presents six prints by James McNeill Whistler from this period, placing them alongside the work of other Americans who were practicing in Italy in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The juxtaposition of these works allows the viewer to appreciate Whistler's innovations and his effect on the artists who followed him. Artists such as Mortimer Menpes, Frank Duveneck, Otto Bacher, and Joseph Pennell owe much to Whistler's innovative style and approach and, in turn, their work had an impact on the artists who made prints of Venice during the 20th century.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 23



In Gratitude: The Museum Project
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

"In Gratitude: The Museum Project," on display in the Photography Study Gallery, examines the Museum Project, an artist collective formed by over a dozen preeminent American artists seeking a way to express their gratitude for the institutional support of, and commitment to, photography as an art form. This exhibition, curated by exhibition and collection manager Emily Dittman, features a multitude of contemporary perspectives and a rich diversity of styles, concepts, and photographic materials as it explores the recent donation of artwork to the SU Art Collection.


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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, September 23



Seen and Heard: Embracing Our Past, Empowering Our Future
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

This fall marks the 100th anniversary of New York State signing women's suffrage into law. As we mark the historic milestone of our ancestors' activism we recognize that the struggle for gender equality is far from over and today's women know it.

In collaboration with the Everson Museum's exhibition of the same title, ArtRage will feature the work of CNY women artists who use their art to speak out about issues still facing women in 2017. Exhibiting Artists: Suzanne Gaffney Beason, Lisa Brasier, Christine Chin, Anne Cofer, Mary Giehl, Denise Harrington, Gail Hoffman, Joyce Day Homan, Vanessa Johnson, Laurie Oot Leonard, Judy Lieblein, Emily Luther, Lorena Molina, Candace Rhea, Sharon Bottle Souva, Cherie Spara and Mary Stanley.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 23



Pedro Roth: Aleph
Point of Contact Gallery

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

Born in Budapest and raised in Buenos Aires, where he currently lives, Roth has exhibited extensively between Prague and Buenos Aires in venues such as the Laura Haber Gallery, Centro Cultural Borges and the Wussman Gallery, among others. His works can be found in collections of the Museo de Arte Moderno de Buenos Aires (MAMBA), Museo de Arte Contemporaneo Latinoamericano, La Plata (MACLA); Jewish Museum of Prague; Museo de Bellas Artes de Azul, Provincia de Buenos Aires, Museo Contemporaneo de Santa Fe (MAC); and the Jewish Museum of Buenos Aires. In 2010, he was recognized as a Distinguished Citizen of the Culture by the City Council of Buenos Aires.


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Music
 

7:30 PM, September 23



The Atta Boys
Steeple Coffee House

Price: $20 suggested donation covers entertainment, dessert, coffee/tea
United Church of Fayetteville
310 E. Genesee St., Fayetteville

Bluegrass, featuring John Dancks, Tom Hosmer, Judson Powell, and Dave Rybinski, with Cathy Cadley


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8:00 PM, September 23



Paul McCartney

Carrier Dome
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

Read a review!


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Theater
 

12:30 PM, September 23



Snow White
Magic Circle Children's Theatre

Price: $6 (cash only)
Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St., Syracuse

A modern interactive retelling of the children's classic.


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3:00 PM, September 23



The Three Musketeers
Syracuse Stage
Robert Hupp, director

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

It's all for one and fun for all when Alexandre Dumas' legendary tale comes to life on the stage. When a young man arrives in Paris to join the King's musketeers, he soon finds himself caught up in political plots, romance, and of course multiple swordfights. Robert Hupp makes his Syracuse Stage directorial debut in swashbuckling style. En garde!

Co-produced with The Syracuse University Department of Drama.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, September 23



Noises Off
Baldwinsville Theatre Guild
Dan Rowlands, director

First Presbyterian Church of Baldwinsville
64 Oswego St., Baldwinsville


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, September 23



A Little Night Music
Central New York Playhouse
Abel Searor, director

Price: $28
CNY Playhouse
Shoppingtown Mall, Entrance No. 4 (adjacent to parking garage), Dewitt

Set in 1900 Sweden, A Little Night Music explores the tangled web of affairs centered around actress Desirée Armfeldt and the men who love her: a lawyer by the name of Fredrik Egerman and the Count Carl-Magnus Malcom. When the traveling actress performs in Fredrik's town, the estranged lovers' passion rekindles. This strikes a flurry of jealousy and suspicion between Desirée; Fredrik; Fredrick's wife, Anne; Desirée's current lover, the Count; and the Count's wife, Charlotte. Both men — as well as their jealous wives — agree to join Desirée and her family for a weekend in the country at Desirée's mother's estate. With everyone in one place, infinite possibilities of new romances and second chances bring endless surprises.

A Little Night Music is full of hilariously witty and heartbreakingly moving moments of adoration, regret, and desire. This dramatic musical celebration of love is perfect to showcase your highly trained singers with its harmonically advanced score and masterful orchestrations, and contains Sondheim's popular song, the haunting "Send in the Clowns."

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, September 23



An Act of God
Rarely Done Productions

Price: $20
Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St., Syracuse

A CNY premiere, An Act of God, by David Javerbaum, was called "sinfully funny" by Vanity Fair. God takes the form of Jimmy Curtin, joined by his "angels" Michael-Dean Anderson and Peter Irwin, who answer together the deepest questions that have plagued mankind since creation.

Intended for mature audiences.

Read a review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, September 23



The Little Dog Laughed
Redhouse

Price: $32
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

Mitchell, an impossibly handsome Hollywood ?lm star, is trying to come of out the closet, while Diane, his impossibly ballsy agent, is trying to keep him in. Don't miss this Tony Award-winning comedy sure to keep you laughing from start to ?nish. Written by Douglas Carter Beane, and starring Instagram sensation Max Emerson.

Note: This production contains nudity and is not appropriate for children or young audiences.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 

 

8:00 PM, September 23



The Three Musketeers
Syracuse Stage
Robert Hupp, director

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

It's all for one and fun for all when Alexandre Dumas' legendary tale comes to life on the stage. When a young man arrives in Paris to join the King's musketeers, he soon finds himself caught up in political plots, romance, and of course multiple swordfights. Robert Hupp makes his Syracuse Stage directorial debut in swashbuckling style. En garde!

Co-produced with The Syracuse University Department of Drama.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 


 

Sunday, September 24, 2017


Art
 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 24



In Full Color: Mixed Media Collage by Shannon Crandall
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

Twenty years ago, Shannon Crandall began experimenting with acrylic and collage. She loved the intuitive nature of the art. Today she lets the various elements reveal themselves as she creates many layers of acrylic paint and collage.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 24



Suné Woods: To Sleep With Terra
Light Work Gallery

Price: free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

In the exhibition, "To Sleep with Terra," Los Angeles-based artist Suné Woods uses a variety of source material from books, magazines, and news media to create three-dimensional collages and video. Together, this body of work challenges our notions of photography and explores the terror of a technological society spinning out of control. Woods created this work in 2015 during a period of extreme racial violence, police brutality, and mass shootings.

Woods says 2015 was no more violent than previous years, but what shifted was growing documentation by citizen journalists that undermined the public's denial and disbelief. For the artist, the process of tearing, crumpling, layering, and recombining photographic imagery was "the best way for me to articulate the complicated sensations that were arising while processing these streamed documentations of violence, ecological disaster, and a desire to understand more deeply how seemingly disparate things relate when they are mashed up in a visual conversation."

This mash-up of imagery is reminiscent of how we consume information every day?sometimes minute by minute?as we scroll through a frenetic onslaught of global disasters, degradation, and violence.

Suné Woods' collage work makes art of the ordinary ephemera in our daily lives and clarifies and reveals a truth just beneath its surface. Unafraid to confront us with the brutality that surrounds us, her work only grows in relevance and urgency.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 24



2017 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, Stephanie Mercedes
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

Light Work is pleased to announce a group exhibition of works by recipients of the 43rd annual Light Work Grants in Photography. The 2017 recipients are Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, and Stephanie Mercedes. The Light Work Grants in Photography program is part of Light Work's ongoing effort to provide support and encouragement to artists working in photography.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 24



The War to End All Wars: Onondaga County Encounters World War I
Onondaga Historical Association

Price: Free
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the United States' entry into World War I, Onondaga Historical Association will present an exhibit on Onondaga County's role in the Great War.

The exhibit will feature photographs, posters, uniforms, gas masks, helmets and other military accoutrements, war souvenirs, home-front conservation items, letters, diaries, and other archival material and objects. These items will illustrate the impact World War I had on Onondaga County and the world at large. The exhibit will focus on the people, places, and events at home and abroad including military personnel and units, the nurse corps, Camp Syracuse, food conservation, the Split Rock munitions explosion, and the Spanish Influenza epidemic.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 24



All That Jazz: 35 Years of Syracuse Jazz Fest
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Recognizing 35 successful years of Syracuse Jazz Fest, OHA offers a visual exhibit on the history of Jazz Fest. OHA's visual exhibit will feature highlights of the musical festival, from the different venues, to music industry superstars and jazz legends, as well as some of our own homegrown musical talent.

With help from Jazz Fest founder and executive director, Frank Malfitano, the exhibit will be a walk down memory lane for some die-hard local music fans: Dizzy Gillespie's bulging cheeks while playing trumpet, Jean Luc Ponty's electrifying violin, B.B. King's guitar Lucille, Buckwheat Zydeco's accordion, Wynton Marsalis' big band style orchestra, or Kenny G's saxophone; or maybe singing to the songs of Aretha Franklin, the Doobie Brothers, Boz Scaggs, Natalie Cole, or Smokey Robinson. Whatever musical tastes exist in Central New York, Syracuse Jazz Fest has touched almost all of them.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 24



Meant to Be Shared: Selections from the Arthur Ross Collection of European Prints at Yale University Art Gallery
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Beginning in the late 1970s, philanthropist Arthur Ross (1910-2007) avidly collected for his eponymous foundation works of art by some of the most renowned printmakers of the last several centuries. The Arthur Ross Collection eventually came to comprise more than 1,200 17th- to 20th-century Italian, Spanish, and French prints of exceptional quality. Highlights include works by Francisco Goya, the first artist whom Ross collected; Giovanni Battista Piranesi's views of 18th-century and ancient Rome, which reflect Ross's love of classicism and the Eternal City; and Édouard Manet's illustrations for Edgar Allan Poe's famous poem The Raven.

From the collection's early years, The Arthur Ross Foundation frequently lent to academic institutions, museums, and cultural organizations, such that for three decades, some portion of the collection was accessible to the public.

Organized by the Yale University Art Gallery, and made possible by the Ross Foundation, Syracuse University Art Galleries is the final venue for this touring exhibition.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 24



In Gratitude: The Museum Project
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

"In Gratitude: The Museum Project," on display in the Photography Study Gallery, examines the Museum Project, an artist collective formed by over a dozen preeminent American artists seeking a way to express their gratitude for the institutional support of, and commitment to, photography as an art form. This exhibition, curated by exhibition and collection manager Emily Dittman, features a multitude of contemporary perspectives and a rich diversity of styles, concepts, and photographic materials as it explores the recent donation of artwork to the SU Art Collection.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 24



Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

"Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints," curated by SUArt Galleries director Domenic Iacono, presents six prints by James McNeill Whistler from this period, placing them alongside the work of other Americans who were practicing in Italy in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The juxtaposition of these works allows the viewer to appreciate Whistler's innovations and his effect on the artists who followed him. Artists such as Mortimer Menpes, Frank Duveneck, Otto Bacher, and Joseph Pennell owe much to Whistler's innovative style and approach and, in turn, their work had an impact on the artists who made prints of Venice during the 20th century.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 24



Focus
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

A new exhibition series at the Everson, "FOCUS" presents a few selected works from the Museum's collection in order to spark dialogue about how objects relate to one another across time, medium, and subject matter. For its first iteration, Adelaide Alsop Robineau's Cinerary Urn is paired with 19th-century paintings.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 24



Arise Unique
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Coordinated by Arise, a non-profit agency based in Syracuse, Unique celebrates the artistic talents of Central New Yorkers living with disabilities. The works included in this exhibition eloquently speak to the myriad thoughts, ideas, and feelings that all humans share, regardless of individual ability or circumstance. The annual competition invites submissions of art and literature which are then selected for display by a panel of judges, and the works are exhibited in several venues throughout CNY.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 24



That Day Now: Shadows Cast by Hiroshima
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

A changing project room of curated objects and original works

On August 6, 1945, the United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, killing as many as 200,000 people, severely injuring countless more, and immediately raising the specter, still with us, of total annihilation. Three days later Nagasaki, Japan, suffered the same fate. The impact of these bombings on the way we view the world cannot be understated. Historian Robert Jay Lifton has written: "You cannot understand the twentieth century without Hiroshima."

Yet, how exactly do we regard Hiroshima (understood not only as referring collectively to both the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but also all such possible catastrophes to come), particularly as it fades in cultural memory? How can we find its present urgency? This exhibition is one humble attempt to grapple with this difficult question. It takes the form of a project room that will undergo three transformations between August 19 and November 26.

For the first phase of the exhibition (August 19-October 18), Syracuse University Professors Yutaka Sho, Susannah Sayler, and Edward Morris have curated images and objects from Syracuse University and Everson collections that were created in 1945, the year that bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. None of these images and objects were made with Hiroshima specifically in mind. Some of them relate directly to the war; some of them do not. Together, however, they form a montage made from the artifacts of history and bear upon the spirit of the times in a way that could not be accomplished by a direct or literal treatment. The montage needs to be activated with reflection.

Students in a studio class taught by Professors Sho and Morris will continue to transform the exhibition in two additional phases, opening on October 18 and November 16 respectively.

The exhibition is part of a larger program at Syracuse University and other locations in the city that centers around a visit in October of one survivor from Hiroshima, Keiko Ogura. Ms. Ogura was eight years old when the bomb fell, and she has since become the official A-bomb storyteller for the city of Hiroshima and tireless advocate for peace and nuclear nonproliferation issues that have gained an unexpected urgency in recent months.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 24



Monumental
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

The Everson's expansive exhibition spaces, designed by I.M. Pei, allow the Museum to acquire and display monumentally-sized artwork. With this opportunity comes the unique challenges of caring for and exhibiting oversized work. Monumental features rarely seen large-scale pieces by
John de Andrea, Harmony Hammond, Sadashi Inuzuka, Sol LeWitt, Dennis Oppenheim, and Arnie Zimmerman, drawn from the Everson's collection, in order to foster a community conversation about the benefits and challenges associated with displaying oversized work.



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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 24



TR Ericsson: I Was Born To Bring You Into This World
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

TR Ericsson uses the story of his mother to present a searing, soft, and complex portrait of post-industrial life in America. Ericsson constructs his work using traditional art materials such as canvas, bronze, photography, and clay as well as video, found objects, and heirlooms taken from his family archives. This exhibition is a specific reinterpretation of Crackle & Drag, Ericsson's ongoing project started during the years following his mother's suicide in 2003.

"I Was Born To Bring You Into This World" begins as an intimate encounter with an artist's family archive and becomes a potent opportunity to reflect and scrutinize the trials and tribulations of our own lives.

Read a review!


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 24



Suné Woods: When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Based in Los Angeles, Suné Woods works in multi-channel video installations, photography, and collage. Presenting intimate vignettes of couples or solitary actions of individuals in two video installations, "When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter" is a vulnerable exploration of desire, forgiveness, and resilience.


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Music
 

2:00 PM, September 24



CMM In Recital Live! Affairs of the Heart
Civic Morning Musicals
Featuring The Finger Lakes Trio: Sonya Stith Williams, violin; Heidi Hoffman, cello; Robert Auler, piano

Price: $20 adults, students free
Park Central Presbyterian Church
504 E. Fayette St., Syracuse

Brahms Piano Trio No. 1 in B Major, Op. 8
Clara Schumann Piano Trio in G Minor, Op. 17
Piazzola Le Grand Tango


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2:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 24



Jazz on Tap: Ronnie Leigh & Marcus Curry
CNY Jazz Arts Foundation

Finger Lakes On Tap
35 Fennell St., Skaneateles


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4:00 PM, September 24



Reason Gone Mad: Hausmann String Quartet
Malmgren Concert Series

Price: Free
Hendricks Chapel
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The critically-acclaimed Hausmann String Quartet of San Diego, CA, opens the Malmgren series with a program pairing new works with music of Haydn, a composer known for his humor. Miniatures by Ana Sokolovic, Igor Stravinsky, George Antheil frame two of Haydn's wittiest, funniest works, the "Joke" Quartet and circus-like Opus 74/2, adding up to a concert embodying Groucho Marx's definition of humor: "reason gone mad."


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4:30 PM, September 24



Honors Youth Wind Ensemble and Symphonic Band Concert
Syracuse University Setnor School of Music

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

For most concert events in Setnor Auditorium, free and accessible concert parking is available on campus in the Q-1 lot. When parking for concert events, please inform parking attendants that you are attending an event at Setnor Auditorium in Crouse College so they may direct you.


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Theater
 

2:00 PM, September 24



The Little Dog Laughed
Redhouse

Price: $32
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

Mitchell, an impossibly handsome Hollywood ?lm star, is trying to come of out the closet, while Diane, his impossibly ballsy agent, is trying to keep him in. Don't miss this Tony Award-winning comedy sure to keep you laughing from start to ?nish. Written by Douglas Carter Beane, and starring Instagram sensation Max Emerson.

Note: This production contains nudity and is not appropriate for children or young audiences.

Read a Review!


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2:00 PM, September 24



The Three Musketeers
Syracuse Stage
Robert Hupp, director

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

It's all for one and fun for all when Alexandre Dumas' legendary tale comes to life on the stage. When a young man arrives in Paris to join the King's musketeers, he soon finds himself caught up in political plots, romance, and of course multiple swordfights. Robert Hupp makes his Syracuse Stage directorial debut in swashbuckling style. En garde!

Co-produced with The Syracuse University Department of Drama.

Read a Review!


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7:00 PM, September 24



The Three Musketeers
Syracuse Stage
Robert Hupp, director

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

It's all for one and fun for all when Alexandre Dumas' legendary tale comes to life on the stage. When a young man arrives in Paris to join the King's musketeers, he soon finds himself caught up in political plots, romance, and of course multiple swordfights. Robert Hupp makes his Syracuse Stage directorial debut in swashbuckling style. En garde!

Co-produced with The Syracuse University Department of Drama.

Read a Review!


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Monday, September 25, 2017


Art
 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 25



In Full Color: Mixed Media Collage by Shannon Crandall
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

Twenty years ago, Shannon Crandall began experimenting with acrylic and collage. She loved the intuitive nature of the art. Today she lets the various elements reveal themselves as she creates many layers of acrylic paint and collage.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 25



2017 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, Stephanie Mercedes
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

Light Work is pleased to announce a group exhibition of works by recipients of the 43rd annual Light Work Grants in Photography. The 2017 recipients are Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, and Stephanie Mercedes. The Light Work Grants in Photography program is part of Light Work's ongoing effort to provide support and encouragement to artists working in photography.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 25



Suné Woods: To Sleep With Terra
Light Work Gallery

Price: free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

In the exhibition, "To Sleep with Terra," Los Angeles-based artist Suné Woods uses a variety of source material from books, magazines, and news media to create three-dimensional collages and video. Together, this body of work challenges our notions of photography and explores the terror of a technological society spinning out of control. Woods created this work in 2015 during a period of extreme racial violence, police brutality, and mass shootings.

Woods says 2015 was no more violent than previous years, but what shifted was growing documentation by citizen journalists that undermined the public's denial and disbelief. For the artist, the process of tearing, crumpling, layering, and recombining photographic imagery was "the best way for me to articulate the complicated sensations that were arising while processing these streamed documentations of violence, ecological disaster, and a desire to understand more deeply how seemingly disparate things relate when they are mashed up in a visual conversation."

This mash-up of imagery is reminiscent of how we consume information every day?sometimes minute by minute?as we scroll through a frenetic onslaught of global disasters, degradation, and violence.

Suné Woods' collage work makes art of the ordinary ephemera in our daily lives and clarifies and reveals a truth just beneath its surface. Unafraid to confront us with the brutality that surrounds us, her work only grows in relevance and urgency.


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Film
 

7:30 PM, September 25



The Mayor of Hell (1933)
Syracuse Cinephile Society

Price: $3.50 non-members, $3 members
Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St., Syracuse

Director: Archie Mayo
Cast: James Cagney, Madge Evans, Allen Jenkins, Dudley Digges, Frankie Darro, Allen "Farina" Hoskins
A tough political appointee (Cagney) discovers corruption and mistreatment at a boys' reform school and sets out to make some changes. The kind of gritty, hard-hitting drama that Warner Brothers was famous for.


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Tuesday, September 26, 2017


Art
 

9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 26



Fire Marks
Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

Price: Free
Clayscapes Pottery Studio
1003 W. Fayette St., Suite L1, Syracuse

New ceramic works by Liz Lurie, Fred Herbst, and Julie Crosby.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 26



In Full Color: Mixed Media Collage by Shannon Crandall
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

Twenty years ago, Shannon Crandall began experimenting with acrylic and collage. She loved the intuitive nature of the art. Today she lets the various elements reveal themselves as she creates many layers of acrylic paint and collage.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 26



2017 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, Stephanie Mercedes
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

Light Work is pleased to announce a group exhibition of works by recipients of the 43rd annual Light Work Grants in Photography. The 2017 recipients are Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, and Stephanie Mercedes. The Light Work Grants in Photography program is part of Light Work's ongoing effort to provide support and encouragement to artists working in photography.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 26



Suné Woods: To Sleep With Terra
Light Work Gallery

Price: free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

In the exhibition, "To Sleep with Terra," Los Angeles-based artist Suné Woods uses a variety of source material from books, magazines, and news media to create three-dimensional collages and video. Together, this body of work challenges our notions of photography and explores the terror of a technological society spinning out of control. Woods created this work in 2015 during a period of extreme racial violence, police brutality, and mass shootings.

Woods says 2015 was no more violent than previous years, but what shifted was growing documentation by citizen journalists that undermined the public's denial and disbelief. For the artist, the process of tearing, crumpling, layering, and recombining photographic imagery was "the best way for me to articulate the complicated sensations that were arising while processing these streamed documentations of violence, ecological disaster, and a desire to understand more deeply how seemingly disparate things relate when they are mashed up in a visual conversation."

This mash-up of imagery is reminiscent of how we consume information every day?sometimes minute by minute?as we scroll through a frenetic onslaught of global disasters, degradation, and violence.

Suné Woods' collage work makes art of the ordinary ephemera in our daily lives and clarifies and reveals a truth just beneath its surface. Unafraid to confront us with the brutality that surrounds us, her work only grows in relevance and urgency.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 26



Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

"Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints," curated by SUArt Galleries director Domenic Iacono, presents six prints by James McNeill Whistler from this period, placing them alongside the work of other Americans who were practicing in Italy in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The juxtaposition of these works allows the viewer to appreciate Whistler's innovations and his effect on the artists who followed him. Artists such as Mortimer Menpes, Frank Duveneck, Otto Bacher, and Joseph Pennell owe much to Whistler's innovative style and approach and, in turn, their work had an impact on the artists who made prints of Venice during the 20th century.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 26



In Gratitude: The Museum Project
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

"In Gratitude: The Museum Project," on display in the Photography Study Gallery, examines the Museum Project, an artist collective formed by over a dozen preeminent American artists seeking a way to express their gratitude for the institutional support of, and commitment to, photography as an art form. This exhibition, curated by exhibition and collection manager Emily Dittman, features a multitude of contemporary perspectives and a rich diversity of styles, concepts, and photographic materials as it explores the recent donation of artwork to the SU Art Collection.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 26



Meant to Be Shared: Selections from the Arthur Ross Collection of European Prints at Yale University Art Gallery
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Beginning in the late 1970s, philanthropist Arthur Ross (1910-2007) avidly collected for his eponymous foundation works of art by some of the most renowned printmakers of the last several centuries. The Arthur Ross Collection eventually came to comprise more than 1,200 17th- to 20th-century Italian, Spanish, and French prints of exceptional quality. Highlights include works by Francisco Goya, the first artist whom Ross collected; Giovanni Battista Piranesi's views of 18th-century and ancient Rome, which reflect Ross's love of classicism and the Eternal City; and Édouard Manet's illustrations for Edgar Allan Poe's famous poem The Raven.

From the collection's early years, The Arthur Ross Foundation frequently lent to academic institutions, museums, and cultural organizations, such that for three decades, some portion of the collection was accessible to the public.

Organized by the Yale University Art Gallery, and made possible by the Ross Foundation, Syracuse University Art Galleries is the final venue for this touring exhibition.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 26



Pedro Roth: Aleph
Point of Contact Gallery

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

Born in Budapest and raised in Buenos Aires, where he currently lives, Roth has exhibited extensively between Prague and Buenos Aires in venues such as the Laura Haber Gallery, Centro Cultural Borges and the Wussman Gallery, among others. His works can be found in collections of the Museo de Arte Moderno de Buenos Aires (MAMBA), Museo de Arte Contemporaneo Latinoamericano, La Plata (MACLA); Jewish Museum of Prague; Museo de Bellas Artes de Azul, Provincia de Buenos Aires, Museo Contemporaneo de Santa Fe (MAC); and the Jewish Museum of Buenos Aires. In 2010, he was recognized as a Distinguished Citizen of the Culture by the City Council of Buenos Aires.


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Music
 

8:00 PM, September 26



Mbira Music
Syracuse University Setnor School of Music

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

HOM Performance Live presents Mbria Music.

For most concert events in Setnor Auditorium, free and accessible concert parking is available on campus in the Q-1 lot. When parking for concert events, please inform parking attendants that you are attending an event at Setnor Auditorium in Crouse College so they may direct you.


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Poetry/Reading
 

7:00 PM, September 26



Poetry and Belonging: A Reading by Poets Janice Harrington and Oliver de la Paz
Downtown Writer's Center

Price: Free
YMCA
340 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Janice Harrington's first book of poetry, Even the Hollow My Body Made Is Gone, won the A. Poulin, Jr. Poetry Prize from BOA Editions and also the Kate Tufts Discovery Award. Her other poetry collections are The Hands of Strangers: Poems from the Nursing Home, and Primitive: The Art and Life of Horace H. Pippin. Her children's books have won many awards, including a listing among TIME Magazine's top 10 children's books. She teaches in the creative writing program at the University of Illinois.

Oliver de la Paz is the author of four books of poetry, including Names Above Houses; Furious Lullaby (SIU Press 2001, 2007); Requiem for the Orchard; and Post Subject: A Fable (U. of Akron Press 2010, 2014). He co-chairs the advisory board of Kundiman, a not-for-profit dedicated to promoting Asian American Poetry, and serves on the Association of Writers and Writing Programs Board of Trustees.

Presented as part of the 2017 Syracuse Symposium on Belonging.


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Theater
 

7:30 PM, September 26



The Three Musketeers
Syracuse Stage
Robert Hupp, director

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

It's all for one and fun for all when Alexandre Dumas' legendary tale comes to life on the stage. When a young man arrives in Paris to join the King's musketeers, he soon finds himself caught up in political plots, romance, and of course multiple swordfights. Robert Hupp makes his Syracuse Stage directorial debut in swashbuckling style. En garde!

Co-produced with The Syracuse University Department of Drama.

Read a Review!


Back to list
 


 

Wednesday, September 27, 2017


Art
 

9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 27



Fire Marks
Clayscapes Pottery Gallery

Price: Free
Clayscapes Pottery Studio
1003 W. Fayette St., Suite L1, Syracuse

New ceramic works by Liz Lurie, Fred Herbst, and Julie Crosby.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 27



In Full Color: Mixed Media Collage by Shannon Crandall
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

Twenty years ago, Shannon Crandall began experimenting with acrylic and collage. She loved the intuitive nature of the art. Today she lets the various elements reveal themselves as she creates many layers of acrylic paint and collage.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 27



Suné Woods: To Sleep With Terra
Light Work Gallery

Price: free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

In the exhibition, "To Sleep with Terra," Los Angeles-based artist Suné Woods uses a variety of source material from books, magazines, and news media to create three-dimensional collages and video. Together, this body of work challenges our notions of photography and explores the terror of a technological society spinning out of control. Woods created this work in 2015 during a period of extreme racial violence, police brutality, and mass shootings.

Woods says 2015 was no more violent than previous years, but what shifted was growing documentation by citizen journalists that undermined the public's denial and disbelief. For the artist, the process of tearing, crumpling, layering, and recombining photographic imagery was "the best way for me to articulate the complicated sensations that were arising while processing these streamed documentations of violence, ecological disaster, and a desire to understand more deeply how seemingly disparate things relate when they are mashed up in a visual conversation."

This mash-up of imagery is reminiscent of how we consume information every day?sometimes minute by minute?as we scroll through a frenetic onslaught of global disasters, degradation, and violence.

Suné Woods' collage work makes art of the ordinary ephemera in our daily lives and clarifies and reveals a truth just beneath its surface. Unafraid to confront us with the brutality that surrounds us, her work only grows in relevance and urgency.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 27



2017 Light Work Grants Exhibit: Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, Stephanie Mercedes
Light Work Gallery

Price: Free
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University, Syracuse

Light Work is pleased to announce a group exhibition of works by recipients of the 43rd annual Light Work Grants in Photography. The 2017 recipients are Mary Helena Clark, Joe Librandi-Cowen, and Stephanie Mercedes. The Light Work Grants in Photography program is part of Light Work's ongoing effort to provide support and encouragement to artists working in photography.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 27



All That Jazz: 35 Years of Syracuse Jazz Fest
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Recognizing 35 successful years of Syracuse Jazz Fest, OHA offers a visual exhibit on the history of Jazz Fest. OHA's visual exhibit will feature highlights of the musical festival, from the different venues, to music industry superstars and jazz legends, as well as some of our own homegrown musical talent.

With help from Jazz Fest founder and executive director, Frank Malfitano, the exhibit will be a walk down memory lane for some die-hard local music fans: Dizzy Gillespie's bulging cheeks while playing trumpet, Jean Luc Ponty's electrifying violin, B.B. King's guitar Lucille, Buckwheat Zydeco's accordion, Wynton Marsalis' big band style orchestra, or Kenny G's saxophone; or maybe singing to the songs of Aretha Franklin, the Doobie Brothers, Boz Scaggs, Natalie Cole, or Smokey Robinson. Whatever musical tastes exist in Central New York, Syracuse Jazz Fest has touched almost all of them.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 27



The War to End All Wars: Onondaga County Encounters World War I
Onondaga Historical Association

Price: Free
Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the United States' entry into World War I, Onondaga Historical Association will present an exhibit on Onondaga County's role in the Great War.

The exhibit will feature photographs, posters, uniforms, gas masks, helmets and other military accoutrements, war souvenirs, home-front conservation items, letters, diaries, and other archival material and objects. These items will illustrate the impact World War I had on Onondaga County and the world at large. The exhibit will focus on the people, places, and events at home and abroad including military personnel and units, the nurse corps, Camp Syracuse, food conservation, the Split Rock munitions explosion, and the Spanish Influenza epidemic.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 27



Meant to Be Shared: Selections from the Arthur Ross Collection of European Prints at Yale University Art Gallery
Syracuse University Art Museum

Price: Free
Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Beginning in the late 1970s, philanthropist Arthur Ross (1910-2007) avidly collected for his eponymous foundation works of art by some of the most renowned printmakers of the last several centuries. The Arthur Ross Collection eventually came to comprise more than 1,200 17th- to 20th-century Italian, Spanish, and French prints of exceptional quality. Highlights include works by Francisco Goya, the first artist whom Ross collected; Giovanni Battista Piranesi's views of 18th-century and ancient Rome, which reflect Ross's love of classicism and the Eternal City; and Édouard Manet's illustrations for Edgar Allan Poe's famous poem The Raven.

From the collection's early years, The Arthur Ross Foundation frequently lent to academic institutions, museums, and cultural organizations, such that for three decades, some portion of the collection was accessible to the public.

Organized by the Yale University Art Gallery, and made possible by the Ross Foundation, Syracuse University Art Galleries is the final venue for this touring exhibition.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 27



In Gratitude: The Museum Project
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

"In Gratitude: The Museum Project," on display in the Photography Study Gallery, examines the Museum Project, an artist collective formed by over a dozen preeminent American artists seeking a way to express their gratitude for the institutional support of, and commitment to, photography as an art form. This exhibition, curated by exhibition and collection manager Emily Dittman, features a multitude of contemporary perspectives and a rich diversity of styles, concepts, and photographic materials as it explores the recent donation of artwork to the SU Art Collection.


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 27



Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

"Americans in Venice: Late 19th and Early 20th Century Prints," curated by SUArt Galleries director Domenic Iacono, presents six prints by James McNeill Whistler from this period, placing them alongside the work of other Americans who were practicing in Italy in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The juxtaposition of these works allows the viewer to appreciate Whistler's innovations and his effect on the artists who followed him. Artists such as Mortimer Menpes, Frank Duveneck, Otto Bacher, and Joseph Pennell owe much to Whistler's innovative style and approach and, in turn, their work had an impact on the artists who made prints of Venice during the 20th century.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 27



Monumental
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

The Everson's expansive exhibition spaces, designed by I.M. Pei, allow the Museum to acquire and display monumentally-sized artwork. With this opportunity comes the unique challenges of caring for and exhibiting oversized work. Monumental features rarely seen large-scale pieces by
John de Andrea, Harmony Hammond, Sadashi Inuzuka, Sol LeWitt, Dennis Oppenheim, and Arnie Zimmerman, drawn from the Everson's collection, in order to foster a community conversation about the benefits and challenges associated with displaying oversized work.



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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 27



That Day Now: Shadows Cast by Hiroshima
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

A changing project room of curated objects and original works

On August 6, 1945, the United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, killing as many as 200,000 people, severely injuring countless more, and immediately raising the specter, still with us, of total annihilation. Three days later Nagasaki, Japan, suffered the same fate. The impact of these bombings on the way we view the world cannot be understated. Historian Robert Jay Lifton has written: "You cannot understand the twentieth century without Hiroshima."

Yet, how exactly do we regard Hiroshima (understood not only as referring collectively to both the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but also all such possible catastrophes to come), particularly as it fades in cultural memory? How can we find its present urgency? This exhibition is one humble attempt to grapple with this difficult question. It takes the form of a project room that will undergo three transformations between August 19 and November 26.

For the first phase of the exhibition (August 19-October 18), Syracuse University Professors Yutaka Sho, Susannah Sayler, and Edward Morris have curated images and objects from Syracuse University and Everson collections that were created in 1945, the year that bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. None of these images and objects were made with Hiroshima specifically in mind. Some of them relate directly to the war; some of them do not. Together, however, they form a montage made from the artifacts of history and bear upon the spirit of the times in a way that could not be accomplished by a direct or literal treatment. The montage needs to be activated with reflection.

Students in a studio class taught by Professors Sho and Morris will continue to transform the exhibition in two additional phases, opening on October 18 and November 16 respectively.

The exhibition is part of a larger program at Syracuse University and other locations in the city that centers around a visit in October of one survivor from Hiroshima, Keiko Ogura. Ms. Ogura was eight years old when the bomb fell, and she has since become the official A-bomb storyteller for the city of Hiroshima and tireless advocate for peace and nuclear nonproliferation issues that have gained an unexpected urgency in recent months.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 27



Arise Unique
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Coordinated by Arise, a non-profit agency based in Syracuse, Unique celebrates the artistic talents of Central New Yorkers living with disabilities. The works included in this exhibition eloquently speak to the myriad thoughts, ideas, and feelings that all humans share, regardless of individual ability or circumstance. The annual competition invites submissions of art and literature which are then selected for display by a panel of judges, and the works are exhibited in several venues throughout CNY.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 27



Focus
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

A new exhibition series at the Everson, "FOCUS" presents a few selected works from the Museum's collection in order to spark dialogue about how objects relate to one another across time, medium, and subject matter. For its first iteration, Adelaide Alsop Robineau's Cinerary Urn is paired with 19th-century paintings.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 27



Suné Woods: When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Based in Los Angeles, Suné Woods works in multi-channel video installations, photography, and collage. Presenting intimate vignettes of couples or solitary actions of individuals in two video installations, "When a heart scatter, scatter, scatter" is a vulnerable exploration of desire, forgiveness, and resilience.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 27



TR Ericsson: I Was Born To Bring You Into This World
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

TR Ericsson uses the story of his mother to present a searing, soft, and complex portrait of post-industrial life in America. Ericsson constructs his work using traditional art materials such as canvas, bronze, photography, and clay as well as video, found objects, and heirlooms taken from his family archives. This exhibition is a specific reinterpretation of Crackle & Drag, Ericsson's ongoing project started during the years following his mother's suicide in 2003.

"I Was Born To Bring You Into This World" begins as an intimate encounter with an artist's family archive and becomes a potent opportunity to reflect and scrutinize the trials and tribulations of our own lives.

Read a review!


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 27



Pedro Roth: Aleph
Point of Contact Gallery

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

Born in Budapest and raised in Buenos Aires, where he currently lives, Roth has exhibited extensively between Prague and Buenos Aires in venues such as the Laura Haber Gallery, Centro Cultural Borges and the Wussman Gallery, among others. His works can be found in collections of the Museo de Arte Moderno de Buenos Aires (MAMBA), Museo de Arte Contemporaneo Latinoamericano, La Plata (MACLA); Jewish Museum of Prague; Museo de Bellas Artes de Azul, Provincia de Buenos Aires, Museo Contemporaneo de Santa Fe (MAC); and the Jewish Museum of Buenos Aires. In 2010, he was recognized as a Distinguished Citizen of the Culture by the City Council of Buenos Aires.


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2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, September 27



Seen and Heard: Embracing Our Past, Empowering Our Future
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

This fall marks the 100th anniversary of New York State signing women's suffrage into law. As we mark the historic milestone of our ancestors' activism we recognize that the struggle for gender equality is far from over and today's women know it.

In collaboration with the Everson Museum's exhibition of the same title, ArtRage will feature the work of CNY women artists who use their art to speak out about issues still facing women in 2017. Exhibiting Artists: Suzanne Gaffney Beason, Lisa Brasier, Christine Chin, Anne Cofer, Mary Giehl, Denise Harrington, Gail Hoffman, Joyce Day Homan, Vanessa Johnson, Laurie Oot Leonard, Judy Lieblein, Emily Luther, Lorena Molina, Candace Rhea, Sharon Bottle Souva, Cherie Spara and Mary Stanley.

Read a review!


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Dance
 

7:30 PM, September 27



Russian Grand Ballet's Swan Lake

Price: $33-$63
Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Russian Grand Ballet's full-length classical production for the first time includes the rarely seen Waltz of the Black Swans, and features Russia's brightest ballet stars.

Odette, a beautiful princess, falls under the spell of an evil sorcerer. Only Prince Siegfried's devotion can save her.

Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake combines pure romanticism and tragedy, in a magical tale of love and deception. The glorious score and gravity-defying choreography have enchanted audiences for over a century, and continue to inspire new generations of dancers and music lovers of all ages.

For more information, visit www.oncenter.org/event/russian-grand-ballets-swan-lake.


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Music
 

12:00 PM - 2:00 PM, September 27



Jazz at the Plaza: LuBossa
CNY Jazz Arts Foundation

Price: Free
LeMoyne Plaza
1135 Salt Springs Rd., Syracuse


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12:15 PM, September 27



Beloved Opera Arias ... and more!
Civic Morning Musicals
Featuring Phil Eisenman, bass; Maryna Mazhukhova, piano

Price: Free
Park Central Presbyterian Church
504 E. Fayette St., Syracuse

Beloved opera arias for basso from Der Freischütz, Macbeth, The Tales of Hoffmann, Eugene Onegin, and Tannhãuser, and some songs of lighter fare.


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Theater
 

2:00 PM, September 27



The Three Musketeers
Syracuse Stage
Robert Hupp, director

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

It's all for one and fun for all when Alexandre Dumas' legendary tale comes to life on the stage. When a young man arrives in Paris to join the King's musketeers, he soon finds himself caught up in political plots, romance, and of course multiple swordfights. Robert Hupp makes his Syracuse Stage directorial debut in swashbuckling style. En garde!

Co-produced with The Syracuse University Department of Drama.

Read a Review!


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7:30 PM, September 27



The Three Musketeers
Syracuse Stage
Robert Hupp, director

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

It's all for one and fun for all when Alexandre Dumas' legendary tale comes to life on the stage. When a young man arrives in Paris to join the King's musketeers, he soon finds himself caught up in political plots, romance, and of course multiple swordfights. Robert Hupp makes his Syracuse Stage directorial debut in swashbuckling style. En garde!

Co-produced with The Syracuse University Department of Drama.

Read a Review!


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