| |
|
Events for Friday, August 26, 2005
8:30 AM-5:00 PM
CRC Visual Arts Committee Members' Exhibit CNY Arts
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Milton Rogovin Art Exhibit: Photos of the Forgotten Ones Onondaga Community College
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Comic Drawings: Little Squares Westcott Community Center
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
A City Rises from the Banks of the Canal Erie Canal Museum
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
View from Here: Works of Kanako Sasaki Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
I Wish That My Sister Would Talk One Day: Photographs by Fifth Graders from the Ed Smith Elementary School Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Secret Games: Collaborative Works With Children 1969-1999 Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
The Poster Project: See What Is Possible Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Georges Rouault -- Cirque de L'Etoile Filante Syracuse University Art Museum
2:00 PM-5:00 PM
Body Art: Duane Sauro Redhouse
7:00 PM
Mystery Dinner Theater
8:00 PM
Chamber Music Concert Skaneateles Festival, featuring Steven Doane, cello; Pacifica Quartet; Rose Shlyam Grace, piano; Karin Ursin, flute; Phillip Ying, viola
Events for Saturday, August 27, 2005
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
A City Rises from the Banks of the Canal Erie Canal Museum
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
The Poster Project: See What Is Possible Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Georges Rouault -- Cirque de L'Etoile Filante Syracuse University Art Museum
12:30 PM
Alice in Wonderland Magic Circle Children's Theatre
2:00 PM-5:00 PM
Body Art: Duane Sauro Redhouse
7:00 PM
Mystery Dinner Theater
8:00 PM
Chamber Orchestra Concert Skaneateles Festival
Events for Sunday, August 28, 2005
10:00 AM-3:00 PM
A City Rises from the Banks of the Canal Erie Canal Museum
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Secret Games: Collaborative Works With Children 1969-1999 Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
I Wish That My Sister Would Talk One Day: Photographs by Fifth Graders from the Ed Smith Elementary School Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
View from Here: Works of Kanako Sasaki Light Work Gallery
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
The Poster Project: See What Is Possible Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Georges Rouault -- Cirque de L'Etoile Filante Syracuse University Art Museum
7:00 PM
Vive L'Amour Redhouse
Events for Monday, August 29, 2005
8:30 AM-5:00 PM
CRC Visual Arts Committee Members' Exhibit CNY Arts
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Works of Donal and Shel Little
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Milton Rogovin Art Exhibit: Photos of the Forgotten Ones Onondaga Community College
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
LOT-EK Syracuse University School of Architecture
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Comic Drawings: Little Squares Westcott Community Center
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
View from Here: Works of Kanako Sasaki Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
I Wish That My Sister Would Talk One Day: Photographs by Fifth Graders from the Ed Smith Elementary School Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Secret Games: Collaborative Works With Children 1969-1999 Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)
Events for Tuesday, August 30, 2005
8:30 AM-5:00 PM
CRC Visual Arts Committee Members' Exhibit CNY Arts
9:00 AM-9:00 PM
Works of Donal and Shel Little
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Milton Rogovin Art Exhibit: Photos of the Forgotten Ones Onondaga Community College
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
LOT-EK Syracuse University School of Architecture
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Comic Drawings: Little Squares Westcott Community Center
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
A City Rises from the Banks of the Canal Erie Canal Museum
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Secret Games: Collaborative Works With Children 1969-1999 Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
I Wish That My Sister Would Talk One Day: Photographs by Fifth Graders from the Ed Smith Elementary School Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
View from Here: Works of Kanako Sasaki Light Work Gallery
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
The Poster Project: See What Is Possible Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Georges Rouault -- Cirque de L'Etoile Filante Syracuse University Art Museum
7:00 PM
Vive L'Amour Redhouse
Events for Wednesday, August 31, 2005
8:30 AM-5:00 PM
CRC Visual Arts Committee Members' Exhibit CNY Arts
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Works of Donal and Shel Little
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Milton Rogovin Art Exhibit: Photos of the Forgotten Ones Onondaga Community College
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
LOT-EK Syracuse University School of Architecture
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Comic Drawings: Little Squares Westcott Community Center
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
A City Rises from the Banks of the Canal Erie Canal Museum
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
View from Here: Works of Kanako Sasaki Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
I Wish That My Sister Would Talk One Day: Photographs by Fifth Graders from the Ed Smith Elementary School Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Secret Games: Collaborative Works With Children 1969-1999 Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)
11:00 AM
KidsFest:! A Morning with Hilary Skaneateles Festival
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Modern Prints from the International Graphic Arts Society Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
W. Eugene Smith: From Light into Darkness Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
The Poster Project: See What Is Possible Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Georges Rouault -- Cirque de L'Etoile Filante Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
The Artist Revealed: Artists Portraits and Self-Portraits Syracuse University Art Museum
7:00 PM
E.S.P. Liverpool is the Place
Events for Thursday, September 1, 2005
8:30 AM-5:00 PM
CRC Visual Arts Committee Members' Exhibit CNY Arts
9:00 AM-9:00 PM
Works of Donal and Shel Little
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Milton Rogovin Art Exhibit: Photos of the Forgotten Ones Onondaga Community College
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
LOT-EK Syracuse University School of Architecture
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
A City Rises from the Banks of the Canal Erie Canal Museum
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Secret Games: Collaborative Works With Children 1969-1999 Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
I Wish That My Sister Would Talk One Day: Photographs by Fifth Graders from the Ed Smith Elementary School Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
View from Here: Works of Kanako Sasaki Light Work Gallery
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
W. Eugene Smith: From Light into Darkness Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Modern Prints from the International Graphic Arts Society Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
The Poster Project: See What Is Possible Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
Georges Rouault -- Cirque de L'Etoile Filante Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
The Artist Revealed: Artists Portraits and Self-Portraits Syracuse University Art Museum
2:00 PM-5:00 PM
Body Art: Duane Sauro Redhouse
7:00 PM
Contemporary Film Series: Dogtown and Z-Boys Everson Museum of Art
8:00 PM
Chamber Concert with Hilary Hahn Skaneateles Festival, featuring Steven Copes, violin; Hilary Hahn, violin; Judy Loman, harp; Lesley Robertson, viola; Maria Schleuning, violin; David Ying, cello; Natalie Zhu, piano (Read a review!)
8:00 PM
Solo Piano Recital Syracuse University Setnor School of Music, featuring Fred Karpoff, piano
Events for Friday, September 2, 2005
8:30 AM-5:00 PM
CRC Visual Arts Committee Members' Exhibit CNY Arts
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Works of Donal and Shel Little
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Milton Rogovin Art Exhibit: Photos of the Forgotten Ones Onondaga Community College
9:00 AM-5:00 PM
LOT-EK Syracuse University School of Architecture
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
A City Rises from the Banks of the Canal Erie Canal Museum
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
View from Here: Works of Kanako Sasaki Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
I Wish That My Sister Would Talk One Day: Photographs by Fifth Graders from the Ed Smith Elementary School Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
Secret Games: Collaborative Works With Children 1969-1999 Light Work Gallery (Read a review!)
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
Modern Prints from the International Graphic Arts Society Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-4:30 PM
W. Eugene Smith: From Light into Darkness Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
The Poster Project: See What Is Possible Everson Museum of Art
12:00 PM-5:00 PM
The Artist Revealed: Artists Portraits and Self-Portraits Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-6:00 PM
Über Urban ThINC
2:00 PM-5:00 PM
Body Art: Duane Sauro Redhouse
8:00 PM
Chamber Music Concert Skaneateles Festival, featuring Steven Copes, violin; Elinor Freer, piano; Allan Kolsky, clarinet; Judy Loman, harp; Lesley Robertson, viola; Maria Schleuning, viloin; Maria Schleuning, violin; David Ying, cello (Read a review!)
Friday, August 26, 2005
|
|
Art |
|
|
8:30 AM - 5:00 PM, August 26 |
|
|
|
CRC Visual Arts Committee Members' Exhibit CNY Arts
Price: Free WCNY
415 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, August 26 |
|
|
|
Milton Rogovin Art Exhibit: Photos of the Forgotten Ones Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
The exhibit features 70 black and white images taken by Rogovin throughout his prolific career, including those of people living on Buffalo's Lower West Side, a project that eventually documented the plight of more than 100 families. Also included in the exhibit are photographs of the Native American and Yemeni communities in western New York, and the "The Family of Miners" series that chronicles the lives of miners and their families in Appalachia, Mexico, Cuba, Zimbabwe and China. Rogovin, age 95, has spent a lifetime photographing the "forgotten ones" all over the world, saying, "The rich have their own photographers. I photograph the forgotten ones." His work has appeared in more than 160 journals, magazines and other publications.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 26 |
|
|
|
Comic Drawings: Little Squares Westcott Community Center
Price: Free Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
The exhibit features the unique visual imagery and storytelling of four Syracuse alternative cartoonists, Mike Stevens, Phil McAndrew, Tyler McAndrew, and Stuv. The exhibit is a collection of original inked comic strips, doodles, and sketches, many of which have been published in anthology books, alternative newspapers, on the internet, or as printed mini comics and cartoons, and some more polished, illustrative work.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 26 |
|
|
|
A City Rises from the Banks of the Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Donations accepted Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
Vast stretches of wilderness areas sparsely populated and dotted with small settlements would aptly describe New Yorks interior in early 1800s. Then, in 1825, a man-made waterway stretching 363 miles from Albany to Buffalo was completed. Once ridiculed as "Clinton's Folly," the Erie Canal quickly became known as the "Mother of Cities" as it gave rise to hundreds of canal-side communities and reshaped Upstate New York's geography and economy forever. The history of the City of Syracuse, located on the banks of the Erie and Oswego Canals, is told through its unique canal-era architectural structures. The buildings represented in the exhibition were selected for their proximity to the Erie Canal, as well as, if the buildings use was canal related. Historic images, original paintings and prints feature a host of canal-era banks, warehouses, private residences and businesses, as well as canal structures such as locks and aqueducts. An Exhibition catalog is available.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 26 |
|
|
|
View from Here: Works of Kanako Sasaki Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Photography has the ability to wrap whole novels into a single image. One look and the viewer can absorb the mood, the narrative, and the key characters. Much like reading a book, the story unfolds and an event unravels. Some stories are short and to the point; others are lengthy and complicated. Kanako Sasaki's images are both. By casting herself as the single protagonist or including just a few characters in each frame, Sasaki is able to build many layers of suggested narrative into each image. These layers hold many surprises built with humor and a quirky, unexpected depth. In her images Sasaki captures energy and joy, childlike wonder, and naivety. In the world of her pictures social etiquette does not matter, and occasional embarrassment is accepted as a fact of life. Only the expression of emotion as action is important in Sasakis sometimes upside-down world. She sets her figures apart within the grandness of nature, inspired by childhood memories, novels, and Ukiyo-e paintings. Ukiyo, literally translated as "floating world," is a Japanese genre in literature and painting that developed in the sixteenth century. It depicts a reality that embraces the coexistence of life and death. By wrapping whole novels into each of her images, Kanako Sasaki gives us a rich and poetic description of her imagination and memory. Gallery reception Thurs., Sept. 29, 6-8pm
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 26 |
|
|
|
I Wish That My Sister Would Talk One Day: Photographs by Fifth Graders from the Ed Smith Elementary School Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
To accompany the Wendy Ewald exhibition, the members' wall of Community Darkrooms is currently the exhibition site of photographs made by fifth grade students from Ed Smith Elementary school in Syracuse. The students participated in a project of photographing their lives and then writing about their images with the guidance of their teacher Mary Lynn Mahan.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 26 |
|
|
|
Secret Games: Collaborative Works With Children 1969-1999 Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The hallway space of Light Work's main gallery features the work of internationally renowned artist and educator Wendy Ewald in an exhibition consisting of about 100 images from Mexico, Canada, Saudi Arabia, and the US. For over 30 years Ewald has taken an unusual artistic path exploring the visual imaginations of children and adults around the world in a sustained evolving artistic project. Addressing conceptual, formal, and narrative concerns, Ewald's work challenges traditional notions of documentary photography and the role of the artist. Using creative collaboration as the basis for the artistic process, she has traveled throughout the world working in communities in Labrador, Appalachia, Colombia, India, South America, Holland, Mexico, and the US. Starting initially as a documentary investigation of places and communities connected to teaching, Ewald's project has evolved over the years to focus on questions of identity and cultural difference. In all these projects, she partners her keen observational and creative skills with her subjects' visual inventions. She encourages children to use cameras to create portraits of self and community, to articulate their own personal fantasies, dreams, and hopes. Ewald herself makes photographs, sometimes giving her negatives to collaborators to mark and write on, mixing the images in such a way that it is challenging to know who actually "created" a given image. In blurring the distinction of individual authorship and throwing into doubt the artist's identity, Ewald crosses the border that separates the photographer from the subject and creates a new artistic form.
Read a review!
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 26 |
|
|
|
The Poster Project: See What Is Possible Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The Everson Museum of Art and the Learning Disabilities Association of Central New York are proud to present The Poster Project: See What Is Possible. Participating in three workshops at the museum, children ages 10-15 from the LDA/CNY created artworks inspired by the museum's permanent collection. Working with the participants, Syracuse University Professor Ann Clarke, who supervised the project, designed this composite poster utilizing artwork created by each of the students. Through this experience, the children learned about the museum, expressed their own creativity through making art, and gained an understanding of digital imaging technology. The young artists whose work will be displayed at the museum are Alex Melnik, Matthew Rushlo, Patrick Stanton, Nick Sheridan, Matthew Bettis, Andrew Roache, Ryan Scholl and Corey Cuipylo.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 26 |
|
|
|
Georges Rouault -- Cirque de L'Etoile Filante Syracuse University Art Museum
University Art Collection
Sims Hall, Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The circus was an important theme in Rouault's work, and when Parisian publisher Ambrose Vollard suggested a portfolio of prints on the subject, Rouault spent 12 years creating designs for Cirque de L'Etoile Filante (Circus of the Shooting Star), color aquatints, and wood engravings.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
2:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 26 |
|
|
|
Body Art: Duane Sauro Redhouse
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
Bodies have long been adorned with ink. Body decorations are sometimes purely artistic and often symbolic, but always a personal statement. An individual chooses to be tattooed and selects the subject matter as a manner of self-expression and individuality. In this collection of works, the photographer's intention is to acclaim the art of tattoo in conjunction with the character of the recipient. Soft, bold, gory, surreal, a tattoo is a visual window, a veneer, through which a person wishes to be perceived. Tattoos themselves are proudly displayed on a wall of skin. The images in this exhibition are graphic and emotional art statements that express something personal to those that choose to display them on a wall of their own.
|
Back to list |
|
|
Music |
|
|
8:00 PM, August 26 |
|
|
|
Chamber Music Concert Skaneateles Festival Featuring Steven Doane, cello; Pacifica Quartet; Rose Shlyam Grace, piano; Karin Ursin, flute; Phillip Ying, viola
Price: $21, $16 regular; $18, $13 students/seniors; children under 13 free First Presbyterian Church of Skaneateles
97 E. Genesee St.,
Skaneateles
Maurice Duruflé Prélude, Récitatif, et Variations for Flute, Viola, Piano Janácek String Quartet No. 2,"Intimate Letters" Brahms Sextet for Strings in G major, "Agathe"
|
Back to list |
|
|
Theater |
|
|
7:00 PM, August 26 |
|
|
|
Mystery Dinner Theater
Price: $32, dinner and show Cucina di Amore
Bayberry Plaza, Oswego Rd.,
Liverpool
Information: 622-9402
|
Back to list |
|
|
Saturday, August 27, 2005
|
|
Art |
|
|
10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 27 |
|
|
|
A City Rises from the Banks of the Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Donations accepted Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
Vast stretches of wilderness areas sparsely populated and dotted with small settlements would aptly describe New Yorks interior in early 1800s. Then, in 1825, a man-made waterway stretching 363 miles from Albany to Buffalo was completed. Once ridiculed as "Clinton's Folly," the Erie Canal quickly became known as the "Mother of Cities" as it gave rise to hundreds of canal-side communities and reshaped Upstate New York's geography and economy forever. The history of the City of Syracuse, located on the banks of the Erie and Oswego Canals, is told through its unique canal-era architectural structures. The buildings represented in the exhibition were selected for their proximity to the Erie Canal, as well as, if the buildings use was canal related. Historic images, original paintings and prints feature a host of canal-era banks, warehouses, private residences and businesses, as well as canal structures such as locks and aqueducts. An Exhibition catalog is available.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 27 |
|
|
|
The Poster Project: See What Is Possible Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The Everson Museum of Art and the Learning Disabilities Association of Central New York are proud to present The Poster Project: See What Is Possible. Participating in three workshops at the museum, children ages 10-15 from the LDA/CNY created artworks inspired by the museum's permanent collection. Working with the participants, Syracuse University Professor Ann Clarke, who supervised the project, designed this composite poster utilizing artwork created by each of the students. Through this experience, the children learned about the museum, expressed their own creativity through making art, and gained an understanding of digital imaging technology. The young artists whose work will be displayed at the museum are Alex Melnik, Matthew Rushlo, Patrick Stanton, Nick Sheridan, Matthew Bettis, Andrew Roache, Ryan Scholl and Corey Cuipylo.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 27 |
|
|
|
Georges Rouault -- Cirque de L'Etoile Filante Syracuse University Art Museum
University Art Collection
Sims Hall, Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The circus was an important theme in Rouault's work, and when Parisian publisher Ambrose Vollard suggested a portfolio of prints on the subject, Rouault spent 12 years creating designs for Cirque de L'Etoile Filante (Circus of the Shooting Star), color aquatints, and wood engravings.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
2:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 27 |
|
|
|
Body Art: Duane Sauro Redhouse
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
Bodies have long been adorned with ink. Body decorations are sometimes purely artistic and often symbolic, but always a personal statement. An individual chooses to be tattooed and selects the subject matter as a manner of self-expression and individuality. In this collection of works, the photographer's intention is to acclaim the art of tattoo in conjunction with the character of the recipient. Soft, bold, gory, surreal, a tattoo is a visual window, a veneer, through which a person wishes to be perceived. Tattoos themselves are proudly displayed on a wall of skin. The images in this exhibition are graphic and emotional art statements that express something personal to those that choose to display them on a wall of their own.
|
Back to list |
|
|
Music |
|
|
8:00 PM, August 27 |
|
|
|
Chamber Orchestra Concert Skaneateles Festival Mark Davis Scatterday, conductor, conductor
Price: $24; $18; children under 13 free Brook Farm
2.5 miles south of the village on Route 41A,
Skaneateles
Gounod Petite Symphonie Mozart Serenade for Winds, No. 10 in B-flat major,"Gran Partita" Dvorák Serenade for Winds, Cello, and Double Bass Rain location: Skaneateles High School
|
Back to list |
|
|
Theater |
|
|
12:30 PM, August 27 |
|
|
|
Alice in Wonderland Magic Circle Children's Theatre
Price: $5 Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St.,
Syracuse
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
7:00 PM, August 27 |
|
|
|
Mystery Dinner Theater
Price: $32, dinner and show Cucina di Amore
Bayberry Plaza, Oswego Rd.,
Liverpool
Information: 622-9402
|
Back to list |
|
|
Sunday, August 28, 2005
|
|
Art |
|
|
10:00 AM - 3:00 PM, August 28 |
|
|
|
A City Rises from the Banks of the Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Donations accepted Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
Vast stretches of wilderness areas sparsely populated and dotted with small settlements would aptly describe New Yorks interior in early 1800s. Then, in 1825, a man-made waterway stretching 363 miles from Albany to Buffalo was completed. Once ridiculed as "Clinton's Folly," the Erie Canal quickly became known as the "Mother of Cities" as it gave rise to hundreds of canal-side communities and reshaped Upstate New York's geography and economy forever. The history of the City of Syracuse, located on the banks of the Erie and Oswego Canals, is told through its unique canal-era architectural structures. The buildings represented in the exhibition were selected for their proximity to the Erie Canal, as well as, if the buildings use was canal related. Historic images, original paintings and prints feature a host of canal-era banks, warehouses, private residences and businesses, as well as canal structures such as locks and aqueducts. An Exhibition catalog is available.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 28 |
|
|
|
Secret Games: Collaborative Works With Children 1969-1999 Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The hallway space of Light Work's main gallery features the work of internationally renowned artist and educator Wendy Ewald in an exhibition consisting of about 100 images from Mexico, Canada, Saudi Arabia, and the US. For over 30 years Ewald has taken an unusual artistic path exploring the visual imaginations of children and adults around the world in a sustained evolving artistic project. Addressing conceptual, formal, and narrative concerns, Ewald's work challenges traditional notions of documentary photography and the role of the artist. Using creative collaboration as the basis for the artistic process, she has traveled throughout the world working in communities in Labrador, Appalachia, Colombia, India, South America, Holland, Mexico, and the US. Starting initially as a documentary investigation of places and communities connected to teaching, Ewald's project has evolved over the years to focus on questions of identity and cultural difference. In all these projects, she partners her keen observational and creative skills with her subjects' visual inventions. She encourages children to use cameras to create portraits of self and community, to articulate their own personal fantasies, dreams, and hopes. Ewald herself makes photographs, sometimes giving her negatives to collaborators to mark and write on, mixing the images in such a way that it is challenging to know who actually "created" a given image. In blurring the distinction of individual authorship and throwing into doubt the artist's identity, Ewald crosses the border that separates the photographer from the subject and creates a new artistic form.
Read a review!
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 28 |
|
|
|
I Wish That My Sister Would Talk One Day: Photographs by Fifth Graders from the Ed Smith Elementary School Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
To accompany the Wendy Ewald exhibition, the members' wall of Community Darkrooms is currently the exhibition site of photographs made by fifth grade students from Ed Smith Elementary school in Syracuse. The students participated in a project of photographing their lives and then writing about their images with the guidance of their teacher Mary Lynn Mahan.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 28 |
|
|
|
View from Here: Works of Kanako Sasaki Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Photography has the ability to wrap whole novels into a single image. One look and the viewer can absorb the mood, the narrative, and the key characters. Much like reading a book, the story unfolds and an event unravels. Some stories are short and to the point; others are lengthy and complicated. Kanako Sasaki's images are both. By casting herself as the single protagonist or including just a few characters in each frame, Sasaki is able to build many layers of suggested narrative into each image. These layers hold many surprises built with humor and a quirky, unexpected depth. In her images Sasaki captures energy and joy, childlike wonder, and naivety. In the world of her pictures social etiquette does not matter, and occasional embarrassment is accepted as a fact of life. Only the expression of emotion as action is important in Sasakis sometimes upside-down world. She sets her figures apart within the grandness of nature, inspired by childhood memories, novels, and Ukiyo-e paintings. Ukiyo, literally translated as "floating world," is a Japanese genre in literature and painting that developed in the sixteenth century. It depicts a reality that embraces the coexistence of life and death. By wrapping whole novels into each of her images, Kanako Sasaki gives us a rich and poetic description of her imagination and memory. Gallery reception Thurs., Sept. 29, 6-8pm
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 28 |
|
|
|
The Poster Project: See What Is Possible Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The Everson Museum of Art and the Learning Disabilities Association of Central New York are proud to present The Poster Project: See What Is Possible. Participating in three workshops at the museum, children ages 10-15 from the LDA/CNY created artworks inspired by the museum's permanent collection. Working with the participants, Syracuse University Professor Ann Clarke, who supervised the project, designed this composite poster utilizing artwork created by each of the students. Through this experience, the children learned about the museum, expressed their own creativity through making art, and gained an understanding of digital imaging technology. The young artists whose work will be displayed at the museum are Alex Melnik, Matthew Rushlo, Patrick Stanton, Nick Sheridan, Matthew Bettis, Andrew Roache, Ryan Scholl and Corey Cuipylo.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 28 |
|
|
|
Georges Rouault -- Cirque de L'Etoile Filante Syracuse University Art Museum
University Art Collection
Sims Hall, Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The circus was an important theme in Rouault's work, and when Parisian publisher Ambrose Vollard suggested a portfolio of prints on the subject, Rouault spent 12 years creating designs for Cirque de L'Etoile Filante (Circus of the Shooting Star), color aquatints, and wood engravings.
|
Back to list |
|
|
Film |
|
|
7:00 PM, August 28 |
|
|
|
Vive L'Amour Redhouse
Price: $8 Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
The award-winning Vive L'Amour, directed by Tsai-Ming-Liang, is a heartbreaking comedy about longing in a fast modern city. The story unfolds in an upscale abandoned apartment in Taipei while three people pass through its empty rooms. Real estate agent May, punky street vendor Ah-Jung, and shy burial plot salesman Shiao-Kang; together they create a funny and riveting portrait of isolation, despair, selfishness and love. (Not Rated; Adult themes and language; Mandarin with English subtitles; 118 minutes.)
|
Back to list |
|
|
Monday, August 29, 2005
|
|
Art |
|
|
8:30 AM - 5:00 PM, August 29 |
|
|
|
CRC Visual Arts Committee Members' Exhibit CNY Arts
Price: Free WCNY
415 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 29 |
|
|
|
Works of Donal and Shel Little
Price: Free Hazard Branch Library
1620 W. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Donal and Shel Little of LittlePath Studio display their most recent work, as well as some favorites at Hazard Branch Library beginning Friday September 2nd. Their art is created through a merging of photo-imagery and electronic design, which includes computer drawing, painting and sometimes text. Compositions are conceived primarily from representations of botanicals, landscapes or people and melded into highly original pigment prints. For more information, phone 315-484-1528.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, August 29 |
|
|
|
Milton Rogovin Art Exhibit: Photos of the Forgotten Ones Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
The exhibit features 70 black and white images taken by Rogovin throughout his prolific career, including those of people living on Buffalo's Lower West Side, a project that eventually documented the plight of more than 100 families. Also included in the exhibit are photographs of the Native American and Yemeni communities in western New York, and the "The Family of Miners" series that chronicles the lives of miners and their families in Appalachia, Mexico, Cuba, Zimbabwe and China. Rogovin, age 95, has spent a lifetime photographing the "forgotten ones" all over the world, saying, "The rich have their own photographers. I photograph the forgotten ones." His work has appeared in more than 160 journals, magazines and other publications.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 29 |
|
|
|
LOT-EK Syracuse University School of Architecture
Price: Free 108 Slocum Hall
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
An exhibition of recent work by LOT-EK, a design firm based in New York City. LOT-EK blurs the boundaries between art, architecture, entertainment and information. The studio re-thinks the ways in which the human body interacts with products and by-products of industrial and technological culture and through this, reinvents domestic/work/play spaces and their conventional configurations. One example, the CHK (Container Home Kit) display, combines multiple shipping containers to build modern, intelligent and affordable homes. Forty-foot-long shipping containers are joined and stacked to create configurations that vary in size, from approximately 1,000 to 3,000 square feet, and can be disassembled and reassembled anywhere.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 29 |
|
|
|
Comic Drawings: Little Squares Westcott Community Center
Price: Free Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
The exhibit features the unique visual imagery and storytelling of four Syracuse alternative cartoonists, Mike Stevens, Phil McAndrew, Tyler McAndrew, and Stuv. The exhibit is a collection of original inked comic strips, doodles, and sketches, many of which have been published in anthology books, alternative newspapers, on the internet, or as printed mini comics and cartoons, and some more polished, illustrative work.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 29 |
|
|
|
View from Here: Works of Kanako Sasaki Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Photography has the ability to wrap whole novels into a single image. One look and the viewer can absorb the mood, the narrative, and the key characters. Much like reading a book, the story unfolds and an event unravels. Some stories are short and to the point; others are lengthy and complicated. Kanako Sasaki's images are both. By casting herself as the single protagonist or including just a few characters in each frame, Sasaki is able to build many layers of suggested narrative into each image. These layers hold many surprises built with humor and a quirky, unexpected depth. In her images Sasaki captures energy and joy, childlike wonder, and naivety. In the world of her pictures social etiquette does not matter, and occasional embarrassment is accepted as a fact of life. Only the expression of emotion as action is important in Sasakis sometimes upside-down world. She sets her figures apart within the grandness of nature, inspired by childhood memories, novels, and Ukiyo-e paintings. Ukiyo, literally translated as "floating world," is a Japanese genre in literature and painting that developed in the sixteenth century. It depicts a reality that embraces the coexistence of life and death. By wrapping whole novels into each of her images, Kanako Sasaki gives us a rich and poetic description of her imagination and memory. Gallery reception Thurs., Sept. 29, 6-8pm
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 29 |
|
|
|
I Wish That My Sister Would Talk One Day: Photographs by Fifth Graders from the Ed Smith Elementary School Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
To accompany the Wendy Ewald exhibition, the members' wall of Community Darkrooms is currently the exhibition site of photographs made by fifth grade students from Ed Smith Elementary school in Syracuse. The students participated in a project of photographing their lives and then writing about their images with the guidance of their teacher Mary Lynn Mahan.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 29 |
|
|
|
Secret Games: Collaborative Works With Children 1969-1999 Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The hallway space of Light Work's main gallery features the work of internationally renowned artist and educator Wendy Ewald in an exhibition consisting of about 100 images from Mexico, Canada, Saudi Arabia, and the US. For over 30 years Ewald has taken an unusual artistic path exploring the visual imaginations of children and adults around the world in a sustained evolving artistic project. Addressing conceptual, formal, and narrative concerns, Ewald's work challenges traditional notions of documentary photography and the role of the artist. Using creative collaboration as the basis for the artistic process, she has traveled throughout the world working in communities in Labrador, Appalachia, Colombia, India, South America, Holland, Mexico, and the US. Starting initially as a documentary investigation of places and communities connected to teaching, Ewald's project has evolved over the years to focus on questions of identity and cultural difference. In all these projects, she partners her keen observational and creative skills with her subjects' visual inventions. She encourages children to use cameras to create portraits of self and community, to articulate their own personal fantasies, dreams, and hopes. Ewald herself makes photographs, sometimes giving her negatives to collaborators to mark and write on, mixing the images in such a way that it is challenging to know who actually "created" a given image. In blurring the distinction of individual authorship and throwing into doubt the artist's identity, Ewald crosses the border that separates the photographer from the subject and creates a new artistic form.
Read a review!
|
Back to list |
|
|
Tuesday, August 30, 2005
|
|
Art |
|
|
8:30 AM - 5:00 PM, August 30 |
|
|
|
CRC Visual Arts Committee Members' Exhibit CNY Arts
Price: Free WCNY
415 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, August 30 |
|
|
|
Works of Donal and Shel Little
Price: Free Hazard Branch Library
1620 W. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Donal and Shel Little of LittlePath Studio display their most recent work, as well as some favorites at Hazard Branch Library beginning Friday September 2nd. Their art is created through a merging of photo-imagery and electronic design, which includes computer drawing, painting and sometimes text. Compositions are conceived primarily from representations of botanicals, landscapes or people and melded into highly original pigment prints. For more information, phone 315-484-1528.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, August 30 |
|
|
|
Milton Rogovin Art Exhibit: Photos of the Forgotten Ones Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
The exhibit features 70 black and white images taken by Rogovin throughout his prolific career, including those of people living on Buffalo's Lower West Side, a project that eventually documented the plight of more than 100 families. Also included in the exhibit are photographs of the Native American and Yemeni communities in western New York, and the "The Family of Miners" series that chronicles the lives of miners and their families in Appalachia, Mexico, Cuba, Zimbabwe and China. Rogovin, age 95, has spent a lifetime photographing the "forgotten ones" all over the world, saying, "The rich have their own photographers. I photograph the forgotten ones." His work has appeared in more than 160 journals, magazines and other publications.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 30 |
|
|
|
LOT-EK Syracuse University School of Architecture
Price: Free 108 Slocum Hall
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
An exhibition of recent work by LOT-EK, a design firm based in New York City. LOT-EK blurs the boundaries between art, architecture, entertainment and information. The studio re-thinks the ways in which the human body interacts with products and by-products of industrial and technological culture and through this, reinvents domestic/work/play spaces and their conventional configurations. One example, the CHK (Container Home Kit) display, combines multiple shipping containers to build modern, intelligent and affordable homes. Forty-foot-long shipping containers are joined and stacked to create configurations that vary in size, from approximately 1,000 to 3,000 square feet, and can be disassembled and reassembled anywhere.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 30 |
|
|
|
Comic Drawings: Little Squares Westcott Community Center
Price: Free Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
The exhibit features the unique visual imagery and storytelling of four Syracuse alternative cartoonists, Mike Stevens, Phil McAndrew, Tyler McAndrew, and Stuv. The exhibit is a collection of original inked comic strips, doodles, and sketches, many of which have been published in anthology books, alternative newspapers, on the internet, or as printed mini comics and cartoons, and some more polished, illustrative work.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 30 |
|
|
|
A City Rises from the Banks of the Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Donations accepted Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
Vast stretches of wilderness areas sparsely populated and dotted with small settlements would aptly describe New Yorks interior in early 1800s. Then, in 1825, a man-made waterway stretching 363 miles from Albany to Buffalo was completed. Once ridiculed as "Clinton's Folly," the Erie Canal quickly became known as the "Mother of Cities" as it gave rise to hundreds of canal-side communities and reshaped Upstate New York's geography and economy forever. The history of the City of Syracuse, located on the banks of the Erie and Oswego Canals, is told through its unique canal-era architectural structures. The buildings represented in the exhibition were selected for their proximity to the Erie Canal, as well as, if the buildings use was canal related. Historic images, original paintings and prints feature a host of canal-era banks, warehouses, private residences and businesses, as well as canal structures such as locks and aqueducts. An Exhibition catalog is available.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 30 |
|
|
|
Secret Games: Collaborative Works With Children 1969-1999 Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The hallway space of Light Work's main gallery features the work of internationally renowned artist and educator Wendy Ewald in an exhibition consisting of about 100 images from Mexico, Canada, Saudi Arabia, and the US. For over 30 years Ewald has taken an unusual artistic path exploring the visual imaginations of children and adults around the world in a sustained evolving artistic project. Addressing conceptual, formal, and narrative concerns, Ewald's work challenges traditional notions of documentary photography and the role of the artist. Using creative collaboration as the basis for the artistic process, she has traveled throughout the world working in communities in Labrador, Appalachia, Colombia, India, South America, Holland, Mexico, and the US. Starting initially as a documentary investigation of places and communities connected to teaching, Ewald's project has evolved over the years to focus on questions of identity and cultural difference. In all these projects, she partners her keen observational and creative skills with her subjects' visual inventions. She encourages children to use cameras to create portraits of self and community, to articulate their own personal fantasies, dreams, and hopes. Ewald herself makes photographs, sometimes giving her negatives to collaborators to mark and write on, mixing the images in such a way that it is challenging to know who actually "created" a given image. In blurring the distinction of individual authorship and throwing into doubt the artist's identity, Ewald crosses the border that separates the photographer from the subject and creates a new artistic form.
Read a review!
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 30 |
|
|
|
I Wish That My Sister Would Talk One Day: Photographs by Fifth Graders from the Ed Smith Elementary School Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
To accompany the Wendy Ewald exhibition, the members' wall of Community Darkrooms is currently the exhibition site of photographs made by fifth grade students from Ed Smith Elementary school in Syracuse. The students participated in a project of photographing their lives and then writing about their images with the guidance of their teacher Mary Lynn Mahan.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 30 |
|
|
|
View from Here: Works of Kanako Sasaki Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Photography has the ability to wrap whole novels into a single image. One look and the viewer can absorb the mood, the narrative, and the key characters. Much like reading a book, the story unfolds and an event unravels. Some stories are short and to the point; others are lengthy and complicated. Kanako Sasaki's images are both. By casting herself as the single protagonist or including just a few characters in each frame, Sasaki is able to build many layers of suggested narrative into each image. These layers hold many surprises built with humor and a quirky, unexpected depth. In her images Sasaki captures energy and joy, childlike wonder, and naivety. In the world of her pictures social etiquette does not matter, and occasional embarrassment is accepted as a fact of life. Only the expression of emotion as action is important in Sasakis sometimes upside-down world. She sets her figures apart within the grandness of nature, inspired by childhood memories, novels, and Ukiyo-e paintings. Ukiyo, literally translated as "floating world," is a Japanese genre in literature and painting that developed in the sixteenth century. It depicts a reality that embraces the coexistence of life and death. By wrapping whole novels into each of her images, Kanako Sasaki gives us a rich and poetic description of her imagination and memory. Gallery reception Thurs., Sept. 29, 6-8pm
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 30 |
|
|
|
The Poster Project: See What Is Possible Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The Everson Museum of Art and the Learning Disabilities Association of Central New York are proud to present The Poster Project: See What Is Possible. Participating in three workshops at the museum, children ages 10-15 from the LDA/CNY created artworks inspired by the museum's permanent collection. Working with the participants, Syracuse University Professor Ann Clarke, who supervised the project, designed this composite poster utilizing artwork created by each of the students. Through this experience, the children learned about the museum, expressed their own creativity through making art, and gained an understanding of digital imaging technology. The young artists whose work will be displayed at the museum are Alex Melnik, Matthew Rushlo, Patrick Stanton, Nick Sheridan, Matthew Bettis, Andrew Roache, Ryan Scholl and Corey Cuipylo.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 30 |
|
|
|
Georges Rouault -- Cirque de L'Etoile Filante Syracuse University Art Museum
University Art Collection
Sims Hall, Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The circus was an important theme in Rouault's work, and when Parisian publisher Ambrose Vollard suggested a portfolio of prints on the subject, Rouault spent 12 years creating designs for Cirque de L'Etoile Filante (Circus of the Shooting Star), color aquatints, and wood engravings.
|
Back to list |
|
|
Film |
|
|
7:00 PM, August 30 |
|
|
|
Vive L'Amour Redhouse
Price: $8 Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
The award-winning Vive L'Amour, directed by Tsai-Ming-Liang, is a heartbreaking comedy about longing in a fast modern city. The story unfolds in an upscale abandoned apartment in Taipei while three people pass through its empty rooms. Real estate agent May, punky street vendor Ah-Jung, and shy burial plot salesman Shiao-Kang; together they create a funny and riveting portrait of isolation, despair, selfishness and love. (Not Rated; Adult themes and language; Mandarin with English subtitles; 118 minutes.)
|
Back to list |
|
|
Wednesday, August 31, 2005
|
|
Art |
|
|
8:30 AM - 5:00 PM, August 31 |
|
|
|
CRC Visual Arts Committee Members' Exhibit CNY Arts
Price: Free WCNY
415 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 31 |
|
|
|
Works of Donal and Shel Little
Price: Free Hazard Branch Library
1620 W. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Donal and Shel Little of LittlePath Studio display their most recent work, as well as some favorites at Hazard Branch Library beginning Friday September 2nd. Their art is created through a merging of photo-imagery and electronic design, which includes computer drawing, painting and sometimes text. Compositions are conceived primarily from representations of botanicals, landscapes or people and melded into highly original pigment prints. For more information, phone 315-484-1528.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, August 31 |
|
|
|
Milton Rogovin Art Exhibit: Photos of the Forgotten Ones Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
The exhibit features 70 black and white images taken by Rogovin throughout his prolific career, including those of people living on Buffalo's Lower West Side, a project that eventually documented the plight of more than 100 families. Also included in the exhibit are photographs of the Native American and Yemeni communities in western New York, and the "The Family of Miners" series that chronicles the lives of miners and their families in Appalachia, Mexico, Cuba, Zimbabwe and China. Rogovin, age 95, has spent a lifetime photographing the "forgotten ones" all over the world, saying, "The rich have their own photographers. I photograph the forgotten ones." His work has appeared in more than 160 journals, magazines and other publications.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 31 |
|
|
|
LOT-EK Syracuse University School of Architecture
Price: Free 108 Slocum Hall
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
An exhibition of recent work by LOT-EK, a design firm based in New York City. LOT-EK blurs the boundaries between art, architecture, entertainment and information. The studio re-thinks the ways in which the human body interacts with products and by-products of industrial and technological culture and through this, reinvents domestic/work/play spaces and their conventional configurations. One example, the CHK (Container Home Kit) display, combines multiple shipping containers to build modern, intelligent and affordable homes. Forty-foot-long shipping containers are joined and stacked to create configurations that vary in size, from approximately 1,000 to 3,000 square feet, and can be disassembled and reassembled anywhere.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 31 |
|
|
|
Comic Drawings: Little Squares Westcott Community Center
Price: Free Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St.,
Syracuse
The exhibit features the unique visual imagery and storytelling of four Syracuse alternative cartoonists, Mike Stevens, Phil McAndrew, Tyler McAndrew, and Stuv. The exhibit is a collection of original inked comic strips, doodles, and sketches, many of which have been published in anthology books, alternative newspapers, on the internet, or as printed mini comics and cartoons, and some more polished, illustrative work.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, August 31 |
|
|
|
A City Rises from the Banks of the Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Donations accepted Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
Vast stretches of wilderness areas sparsely populated and dotted with small settlements would aptly describe New Yorks interior in early 1800s. Then, in 1825, a man-made waterway stretching 363 miles from Albany to Buffalo was completed. Once ridiculed as "Clinton's Folly," the Erie Canal quickly became known as the "Mother of Cities" as it gave rise to hundreds of canal-side communities and reshaped Upstate New York's geography and economy forever. The history of the City of Syracuse, located on the banks of the Erie and Oswego Canals, is told through its unique canal-era architectural structures. The buildings represented in the exhibition were selected for their proximity to the Erie Canal, as well as, if the buildings use was canal related. Historic images, original paintings and prints feature a host of canal-era banks, warehouses, private residences and businesses, as well as canal structures such as locks and aqueducts. An Exhibition catalog is available.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 31 |
|
|
|
View from Here: Works of Kanako Sasaki Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Photography has the ability to wrap whole novels into a single image. One look and the viewer can absorb the mood, the narrative, and the key characters. Much like reading a book, the story unfolds and an event unravels. Some stories are short and to the point; others are lengthy and complicated. Kanako Sasaki's images are both. By casting herself as the single protagonist or including just a few characters in each frame, Sasaki is able to build many layers of suggested narrative into each image. These layers hold many surprises built with humor and a quirky, unexpected depth. In her images Sasaki captures energy and joy, childlike wonder, and naivety. In the world of her pictures social etiquette does not matter, and occasional embarrassment is accepted as a fact of life. Only the expression of emotion as action is important in Sasakis sometimes upside-down world. She sets her figures apart within the grandness of nature, inspired by childhood memories, novels, and Ukiyo-e paintings. Ukiyo, literally translated as "floating world," is a Japanese genre in literature and painting that developed in the sixteenth century. It depicts a reality that embraces the coexistence of life and death. By wrapping whole novels into each of her images, Kanako Sasaki gives us a rich and poetic description of her imagination and memory. Gallery reception Thurs., Sept. 29, 6-8pm
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 31 |
|
|
|
I Wish That My Sister Would Talk One Day: Photographs by Fifth Graders from the Ed Smith Elementary School Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
To accompany the Wendy Ewald exhibition, the members' wall of Community Darkrooms is currently the exhibition site of photographs made by fifth grade students from Ed Smith Elementary school in Syracuse. The students participated in a project of photographing their lives and then writing about their images with the guidance of their teacher Mary Lynn Mahan.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, August 31 |
|
|
|
Secret Games: Collaborative Works With Children 1969-1999 Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The hallway space of Light Work's main gallery features the work of internationally renowned artist and educator Wendy Ewald in an exhibition consisting of about 100 images from Mexico, Canada, Saudi Arabia, and the US. For over 30 years Ewald has taken an unusual artistic path exploring the visual imaginations of children and adults around the world in a sustained evolving artistic project. Addressing conceptual, formal, and narrative concerns, Ewald's work challenges traditional notions of documentary photography and the role of the artist. Using creative collaboration as the basis for the artistic process, she has traveled throughout the world working in communities in Labrador, Appalachia, Colombia, India, South America, Holland, Mexico, and the US. Starting initially as a documentary investigation of places and communities connected to teaching, Ewald's project has evolved over the years to focus on questions of identity and cultural difference. In all these projects, she partners her keen observational and creative skills with her subjects' visual inventions. She encourages children to use cameras to create portraits of self and community, to articulate their own personal fantasies, dreams, and hopes. Ewald herself makes photographs, sometimes giving her negatives to collaborators to mark and write on, mixing the images in such a way that it is challenging to know who actually "created" a given image. In blurring the distinction of individual authorship and throwing into doubt the artist's identity, Ewald crosses the border that separates the photographer from the subject and creates a new artistic form.
Read a review!
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, August 31 |
|
|
|
Modern Prints from the International Graphic Arts Society Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free University Art Collection
Sims Hall, Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Included are prints by Garo Antresian, Gabor Peterdi, and Donald Saff, three printmakers who taught a generation of artists and had a profound impact on the art of printmaking in the latter half of the 20th century.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, August 31 |
|
|
|
W. Eugene Smith: From Light into Darkness Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free University Art Collection
Sims Hall, Syracuse University,
Syracuse
This exhibition of photojournalist Eugene Smith includes his service as a World War II photographer in the Pacific theater, a group from a 1950s Life magazine photo essay on the rise of America's chemical industry, and a selection of images from his Pittsburgh project.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 31 |
|
|
|
The Poster Project: See What Is Possible Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The Everson Museum of Art and the Learning Disabilities Association of Central New York are proud to present The Poster Project: See What Is Possible. Participating in three workshops at the museum, children ages 10-15 from the LDA/CNY created artworks inspired by the museum's permanent collection. Working with the participants, Syracuse University Professor Ann Clarke, who supervised the project, designed this composite poster utilizing artwork created by each of the students. Through this experience, the children learned about the museum, expressed their own creativity through making art, and gained an understanding of digital imaging technology. The young artists whose work will be displayed at the museum are Alex Melnik, Matthew Rushlo, Patrick Stanton, Nick Sheridan, Matthew Bettis, Andrew Roache, Ryan Scholl and Corey Cuipylo.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 31 |
|
|
|
Georges Rouault -- Cirque de L'Etoile Filante Syracuse University Art Museum
University Art Collection
Sims Hall, Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The circus was an important theme in Rouault's work, and when Parisian publisher Ambrose Vollard suggested a portfolio of prints on the subject, Rouault spent 12 years creating designs for Cirque de L'Etoile Filante (Circus of the Shooting Star), color aquatints, and wood engravings.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, August 31 |
|
|
|
The Artist Revealed: Artists Portraits and Self-Portraits Syracuse University Art Museum
University Art Collection
Sims Hall, Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Artists in the exhibition (in a range of media) are Berenice Abbott, Milton Avery, Leonard Baskin, Paul Cezanne, Chuck Close, Jim Dine, Edward Manet, Reginald Marsh, and Edward Steichens.
|
Back to list |
|
|
Music |
|
|
11:00 AM, August 31 |
|
|
|
KidsFest:! A Morning with Hilary Skaneateles Festival
Price: Free First Presbyterian Church of Skaneateles
97 E. Genesee St.,
Skaneateles
Festival favorite Hilary Hahn will charm young and old alike as she plays, chats and answers questions from the audience.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
7:00 PM, August 31 |
|
|
|
Liverpool is the Place E.S.P.
Price: Free Liverpool Public Library
310 Tulip St.,
Liverpool
Contemporary jazz quartet.
|
Back to list |
|
|
Thursday, September 1, 2005
|
|
Art |
|
|
8:30 AM - 5:00 PM, September 1 |
|
|
|
CRC Visual Arts Committee Members' Exhibit CNY Arts
Price: Free WCNY
415 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, September 1 |
|
|
|
Works of Donal and Shel Little
Price: Free Hazard Branch Library
1620 W. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Donal and Shel Little of LittlePath Studio display their most recent work, as well as some favorites at Hazard Branch Library beginning Friday September 2nd. Their art is created through a merging of photo-imagery and electronic design, which includes computer drawing, painting and sometimes text. Compositions are conceived primarily from representations of botanicals, landscapes or people and melded into highly original pigment prints. For more information, phone 315-484-1528.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 1 |
|
|
|
Milton Rogovin Art Exhibit: Photos of the Forgotten Ones Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
The exhibit features 70 black and white images taken by Rogovin throughout his prolific career, including those of people living on Buffalo's Lower West Side, a project that eventually documented the plight of more than 100 families. Also included in the exhibit are photographs of the Native American and Yemeni communities in western New York, and the "The Family of Miners" series that chronicles the lives of miners and their families in Appalachia, Mexico, Cuba, Zimbabwe and China. Rogovin, age 95, has spent a lifetime photographing the "forgotten ones" all over the world, saying, "The rich have their own photographers. I photograph the forgotten ones." His work has appeared in more than 160 journals, magazines and other publications.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 1 |
|
|
|
LOT-EK Syracuse University School of Architecture
Price: Free 108 Slocum Hall
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
An exhibition of recent work by LOT-EK, a design firm based in New York City. LOT-EK blurs the boundaries between art, architecture, entertainment and information. The studio re-thinks the ways in which the human body interacts with products and by-products of industrial and technological culture and through this, reinvents domestic/work/play spaces and their conventional configurations. One example, the CHK (Container Home Kit) display, combines multiple shipping containers to build modern, intelligent and affordable homes. Forty-foot-long shipping containers are joined and stacked to create configurations that vary in size, from approximately 1,000 to 3,000 square feet, and can be disassembled and reassembled anywhere.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 1 |
|
|
|
A City Rises from the Banks of the Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Donations accepted Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
Vast stretches of wilderness areas sparsely populated and dotted with small settlements would aptly describe New Yorks interior in early 1800s. Then, in 1825, a man-made waterway stretching 363 miles from Albany to Buffalo was completed. Once ridiculed as "Clinton's Folly," the Erie Canal quickly became known as the "Mother of Cities" as it gave rise to hundreds of canal-side communities and reshaped Upstate New York's geography and economy forever. The history of the City of Syracuse, located on the banks of the Erie and Oswego Canals, is told through its unique canal-era architectural structures. The buildings represented in the exhibition were selected for their proximity to the Erie Canal, as well as, if the buildings use was canal related. Historic images, original paintings and prints feature a host of canal-era banks, warehouses, private residences and businesses, as well as canal structures such as locks and aqueducts. An Exhibition catalog is available.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 1 |
|
|
|
Secret Games: Collaborative Works With Children 1969-1999 Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The hallway space of Light Work's main gallery features the work of internationally renowned artist and educator Wendy Ewald in an exhibition consisting of about 100 images from Mexico, Canada, Saudi Arabia, and the US. For over 30 years Ewald has taken an unusual artistic path exploring the visual imaginations of children and adults around the world in a sustained evolving artistic project. Addressing conceptual, formal, and narrative concerns, Ewald's work challenges traditional notions of documentary photography and the role of the artist. Using creative collaboration as the basis for the artistic process, she has traveled throughout the world working in communities in Labrador, Appalachia, Colombia, India, South America, Holland, Mexico, and the US. Starting initially as a documentary investigation of places and communities connected to teaching, Ewald's project has evolved over the years to focus on questions of identity and cultural difference. In all these projects, she partners her keen observational and creative skills with her subjects' visual inventions. She encourages children to use cameras to create portraits of self and community, to articulate their own personal fantasies, dreams, and hopes. Ewald herself makes photographs, sometimes giving her negatives to collaborators to mark and write on, mixing the images in such a way that it is challenging to know who actually "created" a given image. In blurring the distinction of individual authorship and throwing into doubt the artist's identity, Ewald crosses the border that separates the photographer from the subject and creates a new artistic form.
Read a review!
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 1 |
|
|
|
I Wish That My Sister Would Talk One Day: Photographs by Fifth Graders from the Ed Smith Elementary School Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
To accompany the Wendy Ewald exhibition, the members' wall of Community Darkrooms is currently the exhibition site of photographs made by fifth grade students from Ed Smith Elementary school in Syracuse. The students participated in a project of photographing their lives and then writing about their images with the guidance of their teacher Mary Lynn Mahan.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 1 |
|
|
|
View from Here: Works of Kanako Sasaki Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Photography has the ability to wrap whole novels into a single image. One look and the viewer can absorb the mood, the narrative, and the key characters. Much like reading a book, the story unfolds and an event unravels. Some stories are short and to the point; others are lengthy and complicated. Kanako Sasaki's images are both. By casting herself as the single protagonist or including just a few characters in each frame, Sasaki is able to build many layers of suggested narrative into each image. These layers hold many surprises built with humor and a quirky, unexpected depth. In her images Sasaki captures energy and joy, childlike wonder, and naivety. In the world of her pictures social etiquette does not matter, and occasional embarrassment is accepted as a fact of life. Only the expression of emotion as action is important in Sasakis sometimes upside-down world. She sets her figures apart within the grandness of nature, inspired by childhood memories, novels, and Ukiyo-e paintings. Ukiyo, literally translated as "floating world," is a Japanese genre in literature and painting that developed in the sixteenth century. It depicts a reality that embraces the coexistence of life and death. By wrapping whole novels into each of her images, Kanako Sasaki gives us a rich and poetic description of her imagination and memory. Gallery reception Thurs., Sept. 29, 6-8pm
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 1 |
|
|
|
W. Eugene Smith: From Light into Darkness Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free University Art Collection
Sims Hall, Syracuse University,
Syracuse
This exhibition of photojournalist Eugene Smith includes his service as a World War II photographer in the Pacific theater, a group from a 1950s Life magazine photo essay on the rise of America's chemical industry, and a selection of images from his Pittsburgh project.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 1 |
|
|
|
Modern Prints from the International Graphic Arts Society Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free University Art Collection
Sims Hall, Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Included are prints by Garo Antresian, Gabor Peterdi, and Donald Saff, three printmakers who taught a generation of artists and had a profound impact on the art of printmaking in the latter half of the 20th century.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 1 |
|
|
|
The Poster Project: See What Is Possible Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The Everson Museum of Art and the Learning Disabilities Association of Central New York are proud to present The Poster Project: See What Is Possible. Participating in three workshops at the museum, children ages 10-15 from the LDA/CNY created artworks inspired by the museum's permanent collection. Working with the participants, Syracuse University Professor Ann Clarke, who supervised the project, designed this composite poster utilizing artwork created by each of the students. Through this experience, the children learned about the museum, expressed their own creativity through making art, and gained an understanding of digital imaging technology. The young artists whose work will be displayed at the museum are Alex Melnik, Matthew Rushlo, Patrick Stanton, Nick Sheridan, Matthew Bettis, Andrew Roache, Ryan Scholl and Corey Cuipylo.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 1 |
|
|
|
Georges Rouault -- Cirque de L'Etoile Filante Syracuse University Art Museum
University Art Collection
Sims Hall, Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The circus was an important theme in Rouault's work, and when Parisian publisher Ambrose Vollard suggested a portfolio of prints on the subject, Rouault spent 12 years creating designs for Cirque de L'Etoile Filante (Circus of the Shooting Star), color aquatints, and wood engravings.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 1 |
|
|
|
The Artist Revealed: Artists Portraits and Self-Portraits Syracuse University Art Museum
University Art Collection
Sims Hall, Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Artists in the exhibition (in a range of media) are Berenice Abbott, Milton Avery, Leonard Baskin, Paul Cezanne, Chuck Close, Jim Dine, Edward Manet, Reginald Marsh, and Edward Steichens.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
2:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 1 |
|
|
|
Body Art: Duane Sauro Redhouse
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
Bodies have long been adorned with ink. Body decorations are sometimes purely artistic and often symbolic, but always a personal statement. An individual chooses to be tattooed and selects the subject matter as a manner of self-expression and individuality. In this collection of works, the photographer's intention is to acclaim the art of tattoo in conjunction with the character of the recipient. Soft, bold, gory, surreal, a tattoo is a visual window, a veneer, through which a person wishes to be perceived. Tattoos themselves are proudly displayed on a wall of skin. The images in this exhibition are graphic and emotional art statements that express something personal to those that choose to display them on a wall of their own.
|
Back to list |
|
|
Film |
|
|
7:00 PM, September 1 |
|
|
|
Contemporary Film Series: Dogtown and Z-Boys Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
|
Back to list |
|
|
Music |
|
|
8:00 PM, September 1 |
|
|
|
Chamber Concert with Hilary Hahn Skaneateles Festival Featuring Steven Copes, violin; Hilary Hahn, violin; Judy Loman, harp; Lesley Robertson, viola; Maria Schleuning, violin; David Ying, cello; Natalie Zhu, piano
Price: $21, $16 regular; $18, $13 students/seniors; children under 13 free Skaneateles High School
49 E. Elizabeth St.,
Skaneateles
Piazzolla Four Seasons in Buenos Aires Carlos Salzedo Theme and Variations for Harp Debussy Danses Sacrée et Profane for Harp and String Quartet Beethoven Sonata for Violin and Piano in E-flat major, Op. 12 No. 3 Enescu Sonata No. 3 for Violin and Piano
Read a review!
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
8:00 PM, September 1 |
|
|
|
Solo Piano Recital Syracuse University Setnor School of Music Featuring Fred Karpoff, piano
Price: Free Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Haydn Sonata in C, Hob. XVI: 48 Schumann Symphonic Etudes, Op. 13 Liszt Sonetto 123 del Petrarca Rachmaninoff 3 Etudes-Tableaux, Op. 33 Shostakovich Polka from The Age of Gold Barber Sonata for Piano, Op. 26 Those wishing to attend the dress rehearsal on Wed., Aug. 31 at 8:00 p.m. in Setnor Auditorium should leave a message at 315-443-1424, to ensure admittance to the building. Free parking is available in Irving Garage. Free parking is available in Quad 1 for seniors on a space available basis.
|
Back to list |
|
|
Friday, September 2, 2005
|
|
Art |
|
|
8:30 AM - 5:00 PM, September 2 |
|
|
|
CRC Visual Arts Committee Members' Exhibit CNY Arts
Price: Free WCNY
415 W. Fayette St.,
Syracuse
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 2 |
|
|
|
Works of Donal and Shel Little
Price: Free Hazard Branch Library
1620 W. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Donal and Shel Little of LittlePath Studio display their most recent work, as well as some favorites at Hazard Branch Library beginning Friday September 2nd. Their art is created through a merging of photo-imagery and electronic design, which includes computer drawing, painting and sometimes text. Compositions are conceived primarily from representations of botanicals, landscapes or people and melded into highly original pigment prints. For more information, phone 315-484-1528.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 2 |
|
|
|
Milton Rogovin Art Exhibit: Photos of the Forgotten Ones Onondaga Community College
Price: Free Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery
Onondaga Community College,
Syracuse
The exhibit features 70 black and white images taken by Rogovin throughout his prolific career, including those of people living on Buffalo's Lower West Side, a project that eventually documented the plight of more than 100 families. Also included in the exhibit are photographs of the Native American and Yemeni communities in western New York, and the "The Family of Miners" series that chronicles the lives of miners and their families in Appalachia, Mexico, Cuba, Zimbabwe and China. Rogovin, age 95, has spent a lifetime photographing the "forgotten ones" all over the world, saying, "The rich have their own photographers. I photograph the forgotten ones." His work has appeared in more than 160 journals, magazines and other publications.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 2 |
|
|
|
LOT-EK Syracuse University School of Architecture
Price: Free 108 Slocum Hall
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
An exhibition of recent work by LOT-EK, a design firm based in New York City. LOT-EK blurs the boundaries between art, architecture, entertainment and information. The studio re-thinks the ways in which the human body interacts with products and by-products of industrial and technological culture and through this, reinvents domestic/work/play spaces and their conventional configurations. One example, the CHK (Container Home Kit) display, combines multiple shipping containers to build modern, intelligent and affordable homes. Forty-foot-long shipping containers are joined and stacked to create configurations that vary in size, from approximately 1,000 to 3,000 square feet, and can be disassembled and reassembled anywhere.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 2 |
|
|
|
A City Rises from the Banks of the Canal Erie Canal Museum
Price: Donations accepted Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
Vast stretches of wilderness areas sparsely populated and dotted with small settlements would aptly describe New Yorks interior in early 1800s. Then, in 1825, a man-made waterway stretching 363 miles from Albany to Buffalo was completed. Once ridiculed as "Clinton's Folly," the Erie Canal quickly became known as the "Mother of Cities" as it gave rise to hundreds of canal-side communities and reshaped Upstate New York's geography and economy forever. The history of the City of Syracuse, located on the banks of the Erie and Oswego Canals, is told through its unique canal-era architectural structures. The buildings represented in the exhibition were selected for their proximity to the Erie Canal, as well as, if the buildings use was canal related. Historic images, original paintings and prints feature a host of canal-era banks, warehouses, private residences and businesses, as well as canal structures such as locks and aqueducts. An Exhibition catalog is available.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 2 |
|
|
|
View from Here: Works of Kanako Sasaki Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Photography has the ability to wrap whole novels into a single image. One look and the viewer can absorb the mood, the narrative, and the key characters. Much like reading a book, the story unfolds and an event unravels. Some stories are short and to the point; others are lengthy and complicated. Kanako Sasaki's images are both. By casting herself as the single protagonist or including just a few characters in each frame, Sasaki is able to build many layers of suggested narrative into each image. These layers hold many surprises built with humor and a quirky, unexpected depth. In her images Sasaki captures energy and joy, childlike wonder, and naivety. In the world of her pictures social etiquette does not matter, and occasional embarrassment is accepted as a fact of life. Only the expression of emotion as action is important in Sasakis sometimes upside-down world. She sets her figures apart within the grandness of nature, inspired by childhood memories, novels, and Ukiyo-e paintings. Ukiyo, literally translated as "floating world," is a Japanese genre in literature and painting that developed in the sixteenth century. It depicts a reality that embraces the coexistence of life and death. By wrapping whole novels into each of her images, Kanako Sasaki gives us a rich and poetic description of her imagination and memory. Gallery reception Thurs., Sept. 29, 6-8pm
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 2 |
|
|
|
I Wish That My Sister Would Talk One Day: Photographs by Fifth Graders from the Ed Smith Elementary School Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
To accompany the Wendy Ewald exhibition, the members' wall of Community Darkrooms is currently the exhibition site of photographs made by fifth grade students from Ed Smith Elementary school in Syracuse. The students participated in a project of photographing their lives and then writing about their images with the guidance of their teacher Mary Lynn Mahan.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 2 |
|
|
|
Secret Games: Collaborative Works With Children 1969-1999 Light Work Gallery
Robert B. Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The hallway space of Light Work's main gallery features the work of internationally renowned artist and educator Wendy Ewald in an exhibition consisting of about 100 images from Mexico, Canada, Saudi Arabia, and the US. For over 30 years Ewald has taken an unusual artistic path exploring the visual imaginations of children and adults around the world in a sustained evolving artistic project. Addressing conceptual, formal, and narrative concerns, Ewald's work challenges traditional notions of documentary photography and the role of the artist. Using creative collaboration as the basis for the artistic process, she has traveled throughout the world working in communities in Labrador, Appalachia, Colombia, India, South America, Holland, Mexico, and the US. Starting initially as a documentary investigation of places and communities connected to teaching, Ewald's project has evolved over the years to focus on questions of identity and cultural difference. In all these projects, she partners her keen observational and creative skills with her subjects' visual inventions. She encourages children to use cameras to create portraits of self and community, to articulate their own personal fantasies, dreams, and hopes. Ewald herself makes photographs, sometimes giving her negatives to collaborators to mark and write on, mixing the images in such a way that it is challenging to know who actually "created" a given image. In blurring the distinction of individual authorship and throwing into doubt the artist's identity, Ewald crosses the border that separates the photographer from the subject and creates a new artistic form.
Read a review!
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 2 |
|
|
|
Modern Prints from the International Graphic Arts Society Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free University Art Collection
Sims Hall, Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Included are prints by Garo Antresian, Gabor Peterdi, and Donald Saff, three printmakers who taught a generation of artists and had a profound impact on the art of printmaking in the latter half of the 20th century.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, September 2 |
|
|
|
W. Eugene Smith: From Light into Darkness Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free University Art Collection
Sims Hall, Syracuse University,
Syracuse
This exhibition of photojournalist Eugene Smith includes his service as a World War II photographer in the Pacific theater, a group from a 1950s Life magazine photo essay on the rise of America's chemical industry, and a selection of images from his Pittsburgh project.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 2 |
|
|
|
The Poster Project: See What Is Possible Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The Everson Museum of Art and the Learning Disabilities Association of Central New York are proud to present The Poster Project: See What Is Possible. Participating in three workshops at the museum, children ages 10-15 from the LDA/CNY created artworks inspired by the museum's permanent collection. Working with the participants, Syracuse University Professor Ann Clarke, who supervised the project, designed this composite poster utilizing artwork created by each of the students. Through this experience, the children learned about the museum, expressed their own creativity through making art, and gained an understanding of digital imaging technology. The young artists whose work will be displayed at the museum are Alex Melnik, Matthew Rushlo, Patrick Stanton, Nick Sheridan, Matthew Bettis, Andrew Roache, Ryan Scholl and Corey Cuipylo.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 2 |
|
|
|
The Artist Revealed: Artists Portraits and Self-Portraits Syracuse University Art Museum
University Art Collection
Sims Hall, Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Artists in the exhibition (in a range of media) are Berenice Abbott, Milton Avery, Leonard Baskin, Paul Cezanne, Chuck Close, Jim Dine, Edward Manet, Reginald Marsh, and Edward Steichens.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, September 2 |
|
|
|
Über Urban ThINC
Company Gallery
110 W. Fayette St. (corner of Clinton),
Syracuse
Über Urban is youth driven exhibition of street and graffiti inspired artwork that will take place at Company Gallery in One Lincoln Center. The show features innovative street and graffiti inspired artwork by Central New York artists. Über Urban explores and exposes the core of our urban environment. The artists use canvas, wood, and even found objects as a platform through which they express themselves as city dwellers. The show highlights the work of Peter Baldwin, Bore, Camp, Chem One, Benjamin E. Critton, Dan Dippel, Dr. Jules, LaVigne, and Sosa.
|
Back to list |
|
|
|
2:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 2 |
|
|
|
Body Art: Duane Sauro Redhouse
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St.,
Syracuse
Bodies have long been adorned with ink. Body decorations are sometimes purely artistic and often symbolic, but always a personal statement. An individual chooses to be tattooed and selects the subject matter as a manner of self-expression and individuality. In this collection of works, the photographer's intention is to acclaim the art of tattoo in conjunction with the character of the recipient. Soft, bold, gory, surreal, a tattoo is a visual window, a veneer, through which a person wishes to be perceived. Tattoos themselves are proudly displayed on a wall of skin. The images in this exhibition are graphic and emotional art statements that express something personal to those that choose to display them on a wall of their own.
|
Back to list |
|
|
Music |
|
|
8:00 PM, September 2 |
|
|
|
Chamber Music Concert Skaneateles Festival Featuring Steven Copes, violin; Elinor Freer, piano; Allan Kolsky, clarinet; Judy Loman, harp; Lesley Robertson, viola; Maria Schleuning, viloin; Maria Schleuning, violin; David Ying, cello
Price: $21, $16 regular; $18, $13 students/seniors; children under 13 free First Presbyterian Church of Skaneateles
97 E. Genesee St.,
Skaneateles
Witold Lutoslawski Dance Preludes for Clarinet and Piano Bizet/Loman "Carmen" Suite Brahms Quintet for Piano and Strings
Read a review!
|
Back to list |
|
|
Next week >>>
|
|
|
|